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Trains going into Philadelphia are maxed to capacity as phans try to get down to the Phillies Parade of Champions.
LATEST UPDATE - 6:15 PM
UPDATE - 5:15 PM
If you or someone you know is making their way to the Phillies Championship Parade via public transit, be prepared to wait!
45 minutes before the parade was set to begin, scores of passengers were still waiting at regional rail stations across the area.
SEPTA trains were running at capacity Friday morning and causing at least one-hour backups at many regional rail stations.
The problems started at the first stops, where trains filled up. Down the line, would-be riders were left waiting, as train after train rolled by.
A SEPTA spokesperson said “the system is simply swamped” and that “people need to be patient.”
The transit authority temporarily suspended all inbound regional rail trains from 1 - 2 pm in order to shuttle parade goers out of Center City following the celebration.
Phillies fans coming in from the Garden State were getting hung up too. PATCO spokesman Ed Kasuba confirmed that all of their parking lots are full and that they were also running at full capacity sending six car trains every six minutes.
Kasuba said as of 11:30 am there are two hour delays getting into a station to buy a ticket.
Some fans did not mind the wait. “I left Haddonfield Station at 9:30 am. It was packed and took about an hour to get to Broad and Locust, but it was not that bad,” said NBC10 employee Jamie Simmons.
The roads are not fairing much better Friday afternoon.
The Delaware River Port Authority (DRPA) is also urging drivers to steer clear of the Walt Whitman Bridge eastbound into New Jersey because of massive traffic jams. The DRPA suggests drivers use the Ben Franklin Bridge until further notice.
Philadelphia police expected up to two million people at the parade for the World Champion Phillies.