DC Metro Crash: The Real Tragedy

  • Jun. 24th, 2009 at 12:27 AM
news

Originally published at Durosia.com. You can comment here or there.

2009 DC Metro Accident: Originally from the AP (via Google)District of Columbia Fire and Emergency workers remove a victim from the site of a rush-hour collision between two Metro transit trains in northeast Washington, D.C. Monday, June 22, 2009. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)2009 DC Metro Accident: Originally from the AP (via Google)
District of Columbia Fire and Emergency workers remove a victim from the site of a rush-hour collision between two Metro transit trains in northeast Washington, D.C. Monday, June 22, 2009. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

If you're in the DC area, this news has been unavoidable the last couple of days.

If you're a commuter in the DC area who uses the Red Line of the Metro system, you're struggling through one of the worst times the system's seen. At least the worst time that's not related to tourists and security scares.

I worked from home on Tuesday so I wouldn't have to deal with the crazy problems caused by this terribly accident. Getting home Monday night, just a few hours after it happened, was a challenge. Not as much a challenge as it was for people actually on the trains involved... and far from as bad as those nine who didn't make it out alive.

That's a bunch of bad stuff right there. People dead. Transit disrupted. Expensive bit of commuter equipment destroyed.

The worst thing is that it's starting to look like this could have all been prevented.

I've held off commenting on all this until there was some small amount of actual fact coming through in the news reports. Some bit of investigation that pointed toward an actual cause. There were suppositions and insinuations of mechanical problems and driver error all over the place Monday night. People all up in arms over all sorts of things that had little basis in any facts connected with this particular DC Metro accident.

Now there are some facts and I'm rightly pissed off.

From the LA Times:

Debbie Hersman of the National Transportation Safety Board said the emergency brake was depressed, and the steel rails showed evidence that the brakes were engaged. Investigators also said the moving train had been in automatic mode, which means onboard computers should have controlled its speed and stopped it before it got too close to the stationary train.

This is a system failure. This crash should not have happened.

Back in 2004, there was a similar accident at the Woodley Park metro station, also on the Red Line. One train rolled backward down the track, building up enough speed to end up sitting on top of the front of the train that had stopped at the platform. Thankfully, the trains weren't full of people. But the main train involved in that accident was also one of these 1000 series trains--some of the oldest equipment in use in the DC Metro system.

That 2004 accident prompted a lot of attention from the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB).

From The Roanoke Times:

Hersman told The Associated Press that the NTSB had warned in 2006 that the old fleet should be replaced or retrofitted to make it better able to survive a crash.

Neither was done, she said, which the NTSB considered "unacceptable."

"Unacceptable," indeed.

Metro (and the officials who fund it) knew this could happen--that it already had happened--and the major source of the problem wasn't dealt with.

From CNN.com:

There should be nine data recorders aboard the first train, which will aid the investigation a great deal if they aren't damaged, Hersman said. The recorders provide data on such things as speed, braking and emergency applications. She said there were no recorders on the rear train.

"We've recommended for years that WMATA either retrofit those cars or phase them out of the fleet. They have not been able to do that. And our recommendation was not addressed, so it has been closed in an unacceptable status," she said.

The facts, as they stand now, are these:

  • The train was in auotmatic mode
  • Auotmatic mode is supposed to keep trains a certain distance apart
  • The driver tried to apply the brakes
  • The structure of the old cars can not handle a collision without massive internal structural failure
  • Nine people are dead

This is nothing short of some sort of negligent homicide.

Unfortunately, since there were no "black box" type recording devices in the 1000-Series cars, we may never know exactly what happened.

All we know for sure, right now, is that this a tragedy that could have been prevented--if Metro had listened to the NTSB, if funding had been there to upgrade the cars, if those upgrade happened in a timely manner, if... if... if...

We have wheels!

  • May. 25th, 2007 at 3:42 PM
Alien Ship V the Miniseries
[info]spirit_o_fire has come through with a way to get me to Faustus... and I didn't even have to sell my soul to make it happen! Huzzah! :)

In other travel-related news... my boss just left for a week-long trip to Alaska. What's he going to be doing up there? Working. What does that entail? Filming stuff for Greenpeace. I know he'll be coming back with interesting stories.

Last night, I finally got around to signing up for one of the short-term car rental services. Both Zipcar and Flexcar are everywhere now, which is nice. In fact, my mother says she even saw one of them up in my neck of the woods in NY. I went with Zipcar. Not because of it's sexy and hip image (which, really, annoys me a little) but because I was handed a promotional flier last month with a $50 driving credit code. That won't cover the application fee, first year's membership fee and one rental I have planned, but it should make it come out to a little less than I would have spent on the Flexcar. Though, in the long run, Flexcar seems cheaper. We'll see how this year with Zipcar goes.

This, of course, means I won't have to worry quite so much about getting my groceries delivered through Peapod. This is a good thing. In the four times I've ordered stuff through Peapod, one time they showed up many hours after the scheduled drop-off window and, just last week, they showed up on time but every last bit of my frozen stuff was melted. Ice cream should not slosh when you pick up the container. Unfortunately, I didn't get that far until after the delivery guy had left. Otherwise I would have just sent the non-frozen frozen stuff back with him. And there would have been no tip.

Paycheck gets deposited today. Bill that can be scheduled to be paid will be scheduled this weekend. We'll see how much money I actually end up with in the bank account. Then I can really work out a budget and be on my way to getting out of debt.

This whole having money left over after paying bills is a nice thing. I think I'll keep that up for a while. :)

So... play tonight. Parties tomorrow. Pirates on Sunday. Nothing for Monday just yet. Maybe sleep?

Hope everyone's Friday is going as well as mine is (or better)!

hrm... unfortunate...

  • Sep. 22nd, 2006 at 9:40 PM
Skull
It appears that my trip to the faire tomorrow may not happen. I have yet to come up with a way of getting there.

No pirates for me, I guess. Couldn't get in touch with some of the other people I was hoping to see, either.

Bummer.

But, I suppose, cheaper.
Me - hair down with hat
So the plan is to hit Pirate Weekend at the ren faire this Saturday with a bunch of people.

Seems the bunch of people is accounted for.

I'm just seriously lacking a way of getting my own self there.

Since I haven't had a car, it has occurred to me that I'm not exactly on anyone's way to anywhere most of the time.

I think I've got a phone call or two I may be able to make and some arms I can twist to press people into the pirate crew and commandeer their skiffs, but if anyone wants to beat my begging for a ride by making an offer, I'd be greatly appreciative.

Yar. I be needin' me teleportation device.

I could be a sci fi pirate. :)

Latest Month

November 2009
S M T W T F S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930