Two Trains Collide On Metro's Red Line In Washington, D.C.

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SARAH KARUSH and BRIAN WESTLEY | June 23, 2009 09:37 PM EST | AP

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Officials continue to work around the scene of a rush-hour collision between two Metro transit trains in northeast Washington, D.C., Tuesday morning, June 23, 2009. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

WASHINGTON — Investigators looking into the deadly crash of two Metro transit trains focused Tuesday on why a computerized system failed to halt an oncoming train, even though there is evidence that the operator tried to slow it down.

At the time of the crash, the train was also operating in automatic mode, meaning it was controlled primarily by computer. In that mode, the operator's main job is to open and close the doors and respond to emergencies.

Debbie Hersman, an investigator with the National Transportation Safety Board, said it was unclear if the emergency brake was actually engaged when Monday's crash occurred. But the mushroom-shaped button that activates it was found pushed down in the operator's compartment.

Hersman said it wasn't clear when the button was pressed or how it got that way. She also said there was evidence of braking on the train's rotors, indicating it was likely that the operator tried to slow down.

The train plowed into a stopped train ahead of it at the height of the Monday evening rush hour, killing nine people and injuring more than 70 in the deadliest accident in the 30-year history of the Metro.

Crews spent Tuesday pulling apart the wreckage and searching for bodies. Authorities also worked to determine why the train's safeguards apparently did not kick in.

"That train was never supposed to get closer than 1,200 feet, period," said Jackie Jeter, president of a union that represents Metro workers.

All Metro trains were running on manual control Tuesday as a precaution against computer malfunction.

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The cars in the moving train were some of the oldest in the transit network, dating to the founding of the system.

Federal officials had sought to phase out the aging fleet because of safety concerns, but the transit system kept the old trains running, saying it lacked money for new cars.

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."

Metro General Manager John Catoe said the agency expected to receive proposals "over the next month or so" to replace the old cars, but new trains were still years away from being installed. He insisted the existing cars were safe.

This isn't the first time that Metro's automated system has been questioned.

In June 2005, Metro had a close call because of signal troubles in a tunnel under the Potomac River. A conductor noticed he was getting too close to the train ahead of him even though the system indicated the track was clear. He hit the emergency brake in time, as did the operator of a train behind him.

Shortly afterward, Metro attributed the problem to a defective communications cable.

The signal relays that control trains were replaced after a serious safety warning in May 2000 by the Federal Railroad Administration. The warning came after failed relays were detected on the system, formally known as the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority.

The operator of the train that barreled into the stopped cars Monday was identified as Jeanice McMillan, 42, of Springfield, Va., according to Metro officials.

McMillan was hired in January 2007 as a bus driver and was tapped to become a train operator in January 2009, the NTSB said. McMillan completed training and began working as an operator in March. Metro officials say employees start out as bus drivers before moving to trains.

Investigators want McMillan's cell phone and texting records to determine whether she was distracted before the crash, Hersman said.

Safety officials also are investigating a passenger's statement that the train had stopped briefly then started again before the crash.

Iyesha Thomas, a Metro employee who worked with McMillan, said McMillan would often work the late shift. She did not have a car and if she was unable to get a ride home, she would sleep at Metro's offices, take the first train to Franconia, Va., and return to work later that day.

A neighbor, Aicha Mezlini, said McMillan was killed driving the first train on her 4 p.m.-to-11 p.m. shift. She said McMillan normally worked Tuesday and Wednesday, but last week Metro changed her shift to Monday.

"There is no evidence whatsoever that this driver has done anything to cause this accident," Catoe said Tuesday.

The crash occurred on the red line near the D.C. and Maryland border, in an area where higher train speeds are common because there is a longer distance between stops. Trains can go 55 to 59 mph, though it was not clear how fast the train that crashed was traveling.

Meanwhile on Tuesday, emergency crews cut away the top of the train that jackknifed on top of a stopped train. They removed the debris with help from a crane brought in overnight.

"The scene that I witnessed was one that no one should have to see," Catoe said. "It was unbelievable destruction."

Later, his voice choked with emotion as he addressed hundreds of employees at a prayer vigil Tuesday. He told them the agency will find out what caused the accident and develop a solution.

"We cannot afford to lose any more of our own, or any more of our customers," Catoe said. "I need your prayers. This agency needs your prayers."

Metro has long pleaded for more funding to ensure the system's safety. The transit network is supported by the District of Columbia, Maryland and the Virginia jurisdictions that it serves. However, unlike other major systems, Metro has no dedicated funding source.

Metro officials have long argued that the federal government should contribute because the trains serve the capital, and some 40 percent of rush-hour riders are federal workers.

Catoe said last year it would take $7 billion just to maintain current service and keep the system running safely and reliably from 2010 to 2020. That includes replacements for aging rail cars.

It would take billions more, he said, to deploy longer trains and more buses to meet the projected increase in demand. The number of trips taken on Metro trains is expected to grow 22 percent to about 1 million a day by 2020.

Some passengers involved in Monday's crash returned to the site Tuesday to get another look at the destruction.

Jamie Jiao, 20, of Vienna, Va., said he was aboard the first car of the moving train just a few feet from where the car was smashed.

"It was only a split second," he said. "We were probably traveling pretty fast. No one had time to react."

Jiao had two bandages on his face, and his foot was in a splint. He was walking with a cane and complained of aches in his back. "I'm thankful it isn't more serious," he said.

Tijuana Cox, 21, was in the train that was hit. She had her sprained arm in a sling Tuesday.

"Everybody just went forward and came back," with people's knees hitting the seats in front of them, said Cox, of Lanham, Md.

The only other fatal crash in the Metro subway system occurred Jan. 13, 1982, when three people died as a result of a derailment. That was a day of disaster in the capital: Shortly before the subway crash, an Air Florida plane slammed into the 14th Street Bridge immediately after takeoff from Washington National Airport. The plane crash, during a severe snowstorm, killed 78 people.

In January 2007, a subway train derailed in downtown Washington, sending 20 people to the hospital and requiring the rescue of 60 others from the tunnel.

In November 2006, two Metro track workers were struck and killed by an out-of-service train. An investigation found that the train operator failed to follow safety procedures. Another Metro worker was struck and killed in May 2006.

___

Associated Press writers Brian Witte, Brett Zongker, Matthew Barakat, Gillian Gaynair, Alex Dominguez and Sagar Meghani contributed to this report.

WASHINGTON — Investigators looking into the deadly crash of two Metro transit trains focused Tuesday on why a computerized system failed to halt an oncoming train, even though there is evidence ...
WASHINGTON — Investigators looking into the deadly crash of two Metro transit trains focused Tuesday on why a computerized system failed to halt an oncoming train, even though there is evidence ...
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6/22/09
8:45pm
Milford, CT

This is tragic.

The trains move very fast but I was never worried about an accident when I rode the Metro--I didn't think this was possible.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:45 PM on 06/22/2009
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After the last 8 years anything is possible.....................

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:29 PM on 06/22/2009
- Solja I'm a Fan of Solja 117 fans permalink
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Maybe it's just me, but I seem to recall more than 3 fatal Metro accidents. So I Googled it, and I was right.

Here are the accidents that I remember:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Metro#Accidents

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:33 PM on 06/22/2009
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Having the first car go up and over might have saved a lot of lives. In the last L.A. Metrolink horror-show, the engine of an oncoming freight train acted like a trash compactor as it traveled into the lighter weight ML operator/passenger combo car. Everything in the first car was pulverized to pap, completely hollowed out empty.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:27 PM on 06/22/2009
- Downtown I'm a Fan of Downtown 5 fans permalink
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Just made it home from downtown DC... I was a train or two behind the ones that collided, got offloaded at NY Ave and snagged a ride up to Silver Spring... its a massive wreck, lots of helicopters and emergency crews all over in Takoma Park around the site of the collision.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:21 PM on 06/22/2009

What a terrible tragedy. Glad you're okay.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 PM on 06/22/2009
- slj316 I'm a Fan of slj316 7 fans permalink
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Thank God you're safe. I'm sure traffic was bad all around considering people had to find alternate routes to get where they had to go.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:57 PM on 06/22/2009
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my dad comes from NY Ave, but fortunately he comes home later...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:11 PM on 06/22/2009

The trains that collided were headed into the city, not out. right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:28 AM on 06/23/2009
- fnygy I'm a Fan of fnygy 6 fans permalink

OMG.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:18 PM on 06/22/2009
- annis I'm a Fan of annis 10 fans permalink

My daughter was on the train behind and just got out and is getting a ride home. She said D.C. is chaos right now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:14 PM on 06/22/2009

I was on the green line behind the accident when it happened...at both my origin and destination stops there was nothing on the screens about the accident, just a "mechanical problem" on the red line... there *was* a mechanical problem earlier, but by the time I was at each of the stations it was 15-30 minutes after it happened, and we were given NO indication of what was going on and no warnings as to avoid northbound travel... It wasn't until I got above ground from the station that I got a CNN text on my phone that I knew what had happened.

Tragic. Thoughts going out to those on the train and their friends and families.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:16 PM on 06/22/2009

Deepest sympathies to the victims who were riding this train.

And I wonder, might the rear train operator have been texting messages? A bus driver rear ended another bus a few weeks ago while he was texting. Young drivers don't appreciate the dangers in being distracted while they are in charge of other people's lives on public vehicles.

As I recall the DC Metro was remodeled a few years ago. It is true that in the US we like glitz and glamour more than solid infrastructure projects and since Ford bought up all the rail systems in the 30s we have undervalued our trains, but the activities of the driver, or the health of the driver must also be questioned--like the pilot who died mid flight last week. It might not be the fault of the equipment itself.

And this kind of accident should never happen. I wonder what the statistics are for Europe where trains are valued?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:11 PM on 06/22/2009
- Samalabear I'm a Fan of Samalabear 73 fans permalink
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Text messaging is what happened in that Metrolink collision in Los Angeles in September 2008

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:50 PM on 06/22/2009
- ladyv I'm a Fan of ladyv 26 fans permalink

It looks like there's going to have to be some sort of x-ray machine system implemented to keep drivers from being able to bring cell phones onto the trains. Maybe a system where they get to bring them but they have to be put in a lockbox that is on a time control lock so it can't be opened until the shift is over. It's ridiculous. There is no reason someone operating public transit needs to be on their cell. They have communication with the control center, that's all they need. If their family needs them they can go through the control center.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:29 AM on 06/23/2009
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i was kinda nervous on the train ride home tonight, and i could see from the looks of the train riders that many of them were too. luckily i live in the opposite direction. but i don't understand why these things always happens on dc's metro trains. i never hear about trains colliding in nyc. what's up with that?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:07 PM on 06/22/2009
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I'm not positive about this but I THINK the subway trains in Boston and NYC may have automatic systems that keep the trains a certain distance apart and override the operator if they get too close. That said, MBTA dispatchers are the WORST (absolutely) train timers in the world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 PM on 06/22/2009

Actually DC's metro is for the most part automatically controlled. Operators are in the cab primarily for safety reasons and to operate the doors. I believe that NYC and Boston are manually controlled though.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:08 PM on 06/22/2009
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Even after this, the senate will continue to prop up Wall Street and banks with tens of billions of additional dollars, while not even an additional billion is spared for our ailing public transportation. That could have been me since I used to take the Red line to Shady Grove to go up to Germantown for a summer internship. Even then, there were issues because of the strain of everyone using their air conditioners (during the summer) on the power grid forcing the metro to come to slow down or even come to a halt. Now almost every metro in the U.S. is third Class while in countries like in Japan are second to none. Now lives are needlessly lost while others are needlessly injured. However, staunch conservatives and those alike will keep singing that same song about how those shuffling the money on top work hard for the pile of cash that they sit on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:06 PM on 06/22/2009
- missusam I'm a Fan of missusam 8 fans permalink
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I used to drive the train here and it could only be a couple of things. Not saying all transit rail systems are the same but I would imagine they are similar.

1. Driver ran a red light

2. The train computer system did not warn properly. Meaning that the train computer system warns a driver that there is a train ahead by only letting the train go a certain speed and usually flashes a signal meaning caution something is up ahead

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:03 PM on 06/22/2009
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I hope the driver of the second train wasn't texting or doing something stupid besides paying attention.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:53 PM on 06/22/2009
- Solja I'm a Fan of Solja 117 fans permalink
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Well she can't tell anyone what she was doing because she is deceased.

RIP young lady.

It's sad because Metro didn't always have women train operators. They've hired a lot more over the past couple of years. She was one of the very few train operators, which takes years to get that coveted position in the company. I think you have to be a station manager for many years to move up to a train operator, and they make AT LEAST $70k a year, and that doesn't include special events, ie, sporting events, concerts, parades, 4th of July, New Year's, etc., all mandatory overtime.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 PM on 06/22/2009
- BlackYowe I'm a Fan of BlackYowe 58 fans permalink
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The came into my mind too. Let's hope not!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:00 PM on 06/22/2009
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says he was waiting for a signal to go as a train up ahead left the station.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:03 PM on 06/22/2009
- Jakealoper I'm a Fan of Jakealoper 9 fans permalink

Even the old NYC subways had an automatic trainstop if there was a train in the block ahead.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:52 PM on 06/22/2009
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Yeah...the subways aren't pretty but in a lifetime of riding I've never heard of a mechanical incident.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 PM on 06/22/2009
- MANK I'm a Fan of MANK 23 fans permalink

All that wasted money in Iraq...billions of it. But the thought of rebuilding this country for the 21 century would put Congress in a tailspin the likes of which we have never seen before.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:52 PM on 06/22/2009
- Servility I'm a Fan of Servility 12 fans permalink

So once again..... It's Bush's Fault! Excellent.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 PM on 06/22/2009
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4 confirmed dead now. Pack you patience for the next few days if you commute in the area of the red line tonight and tomorrow.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:44 PM on 06/22/2009
- triplbee I'm a Fan of triplbee 30 fans permalink

This is my hometown. I'm deeply saddened by this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:41 PM on 06/22/2009
- Solja I'm a Fan of Solja 117 fans permalink
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Same here. Native Washingtonian here in the mid-west praying my friends & family are okay.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:39 PM on 06/22/2009
- dutchman I'm a Fan of dutchman 433 fans permalink
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You have my sincerely sympathies. I hope everyone you know is safe.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:50 PM on 06/22/2009
- dutchman I'm a Fan of dutchman 433 fans permalink
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That's "sincerest". Sorry.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 PM on 06/22/2009
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