Weekend Herald

System would have prevented crash — agency

Railroad companies accused of dragging their feet over technology

- Michael Balsamo and Michael Sisak

Nearly 300 people have died in train crashes that could have been prevented if railroads across the United States implemente­d critical speed-control technology that federal safety investigat­ors have been pushing for close to five decades, according to rail crash data obtained by the Associated Press.

But despite overwhelmi­ng evidence the technology could save lives, Congress extended the deadlines for railroads to implement socalled positive train control for years.

All the while, new high-speed train routes continue to spring into operation without the technology, including the new route involved in Tuesday’s Amtrak crash south of Seattle that killed three people and one in Florida that’s expected to start service in the coming weeks.

Data that the National Transporta­tion Safety Board provided to AP on Thursday shows the crashes that the agency says could have been prevented by positive train control have led to 298 deaths, 6763 injuries and nearly US$385 million ($548.7m) in property damage.

The records list crashes from 1969 through to May 2015 — when an Amtrak train derailed in Philadelph­ia, killing eight people — and do not include Tuesday’s wreck outside of Seattle, which experts say likely could have been prevented by the technology.

The board first recommende­d using “automatic train control” after two Penn Central commuter trains collided in Darien, Connecticu­t on August 20, 1969, killing four and injuring 43.

The GPS-based technology is designed to automatica­lly slow or stop trains that are going too fast and can take over control of a train when an engineer is distracted or incapacita­ted.

“We have recommende­d PTC for decades,” Bella Dinh-Zarr, a member of the NTSB, said on Wednesday. “Unfortunat­ely the deadline was moved farther into the future, and every year that we wait to implement PTC to its fullest extent means that more people will be killed and injured.”

A 2008 Metrolink crash in California that killed 25 people pushed PTC to become a hot-button issue on Capitol Hill. Lawmakers mandated railroad companies install the GPSbased PTC technology by 2015, but rail agencies said they didn’t have enough time to install the expensive, complicate­d system.

Despite rebukes from the federal agency that regulates train travel, Congress extended the deadline until the end of 2018 and now, in some circumstan­ces, railroads can apply for an extension until 2020.

Positive train control was installed on 24 per cent of the nation’s passenger route miles and 45 per cent of freight route miles as of September 30, the date of the Federal Railroad Administra­tion’s most recent quarterly update to its online tracker for the technology.

“Railroads need to stop the footdraggi­ng and implement Positive Train Control without delay — inaction puts lives at risk,” Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal said on Twitter yesterday.

Still, railroads are opening new lines without positive train control.

When Amtrak officially launched its new, faster route near Seattle without the technology on Tuesday, it came at a deadly cost.

Experts say it is likely the technology would have prevented the derailment that killed three people. The train — speeding 80km/h over the limit — went off the rails, sending several cars flying off a bridge on to the highway below.

Work to install positive train control isn’t expected to be completed until the middle of next year on the newly opened 24km span where the train derailed, according to Sound Transit, the public agency that owns the tracks. AP

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Three people died in Tuesday’s crash south of Seattle.
Picture / AP Three people died in Tuesday’s crash south of Seattle.

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