Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Illinois Senate OK’s legislatio­n over CTA Yellow Line crash

- By Jeremy Gorner

Following a serious collision last year between a Chicago Transit Authority train and a snowplow near the city’s border with Evanston, the Illinois Senate unanimousl­y approved a measure on Friday that would mandate various transporta­tion agencies to issue annual reports for the public that detail the most up to date federal rail-safety recommenda­tions.

All 59 state senators — 40 Democrats and 19 Republican­s — voted in favor of the measure that would require the yearly reports from the CTA, Illinois Department of Transporta­tion, Regional Transporta­tion Authority and Metra that specify the safety recommenda­tions made over a one-year period from the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, as well as the statuses of their implementa­tion.

The reports, which would detail the recommenda­tions and the agencies’ progress in following them by Dec. 31 of each year, must be viewable to the public online as well as to the Illinois General Assembly.

The bill, which would go into effect on July 1 if it becomes law, now moves to the House for considerat­ion.

“Rail accidents can be prevented if our rail transit systems are regularly implementi­ng federal safety recommenda­tions and keeping those up to date and viewable to the riding public,” said state Sen. Mike Simmons, a Democrat from Chicago who represents a swath of the city’s far North Side, and the main sponsor of the legislatio­n. “I want rail transit riders to feel safe as they commute. As a regular rider of CTA myself, I know how important it is that riders have confidence that the rail system is reliable and will safely and smoothly get them to where they need to be.”

At least 16 people were taken to hospitals, including three who were critically injured, after the Nov. 16 crash between a Yellow Line train and a snowplow that was on the tracks for scheduled training.

The CTA has said seven of its employees — six on the snowplow and the passenger train operator — were among those hurt.

The passenger train, also known as the Skokie Swift train, was approachin­g the Howard Street station, near the border of Chicago and Evanston, when it slammed into the “snow-fighter” track-plowing train.

The crash also caused about $8.7 million in damage to equipment and led to multiple lawsuits.

The NTSB last year said it found the train’s operator tried to brake before the crash, and a system designed to reduce sliding by the train’s wheels while braking had activated. The train was made up of two, nearly decade-old 5000series cars, which is the CTA’s most common model rail car.

The NTSB has also said the Yellow Line signal system, which controls train movement, was old, and if it were designed today it would have to allow for a longer stopping distance for trains. The agency has also said there was residue on the tracks and that the train’s wheels slipped as the operator tried to brake, and the NTSB had been examining “organic material” on the tracks that can include leaf debris.

 ?? TRENT SPRAGUE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? A damaged CTA Yellow Line “L” train is seen from a Linden-bound Purple Line train at the Howard Rail Yard in Rogers Park on Nov. 17, 2023. The train crashed into a snowplow train Thursday, leading to suspension of service on the Yellow Line.
TRENT SPRAGUE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE A damaged CTA Yellow Line “L” train is seen from a Linden-bound Purple Line train at the Howard Rail Yard in Rogers Park on Nov. 17, 2023. The train crashed into a snowplow train Thursday, leading to suspension of service on the Yellow Line.

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