PROBLEMS WE FACE IF WE DON'T HAVE METRO
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For a few years after the 2009 Fort Totten Red Line crash, public confidence in Metro’s safety was growing. But a smoke fatality in January, a scathing federal report, and hearings last week have put safety back into the spotlight.
I talked about Metro’s safety on the Kojo Nnamdi Show last Monday, with guest host Jen Golbeck and Greater Washington Board of Trade head Jim Dinegar. Wednesday, I talked with Mike Coneen on NewsTalk with Bruce DePuyt after the first day of hearings.
During the first day, details emerged that the operator of the train in the smoky tunnel wanted to pull the train back out, but was told to wait.
A train behind it had already come into the station, and police decided to evacuate that train, which made it impossible to move it out of the way to make room for the train in the tunnel. There didn’t seem to be a clear response plan for this kind of situation or someone in charge who could coordinate all of the first responders.
After the Fort Totten crash, it became clear that the Tri-State Oversight Committee (TOC), a group of safety officials from DC, Maryland, and Virginia tasked with monitoring safety, wasn’t functioning well. Reforms supposedly set it up to succeed.
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