Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

NTSB: Crews failed to de-ice road before massive Texas crash

- By Jamie Stengle

DALLAS — The company responsibl­e for maintainin­g a Texas interstate where 130 vehicles crashed in icy conditions two years ago, killing six and injuring dozens, failed to address the deteriorat­ing road conditions, federal officials said Thursday.

That portion of Interstate 35 West in Fort Worth was not treated with salt the morning of the Feb. 11, 2021, crash, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board said. The NTSB said that the failure of North Tarrant Express Mobility Partners Segment 3 to address the conditions contribute­d to the crash, as did drivers’ speeds.

The NTSB said that because of the forecasted freezing rain and sleet, North Tarrant Express Mobility Partners Segment 3 had pretreated the southbound lanes of I-35W two days earlier with a liquid brine solution. But, the NTSB said, crews checking the road about 45 minutes before the crash didn’t recognize that the elevated portion of the interstate where the crash occurred needed additional de-icing treatment.

A spokesman for North Tarrant Express Mobility Partners Segment 3 did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Thursday. The Texas Department of Transporta­tion also did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The pileup that involved vehicles, trucks and semitraile­rs began just after 6 a.m. in the southbound toll lanes, which had a speed limit of 75 mph. Concrete barriers separated the southbound toll lanes from the northbound toll lanes and from the southbound general-use lanes.

The NTSB said that the crash began when a vehicle struck the concrete barrier on the right side of the toll lanes. Other vehicles then began sliding, spinning and striking the barriers. Then a large truck crashed into some of those vehicles, and other vehicles that were unable to stop also became part of the massive crash that blocked all of the southbound toll lanes.

Before the crash, the area experience­d 36 consecutiv­e hours of below-freezing temperatur­es. On the morning of the crash, crews had spottreate­d sections of the interstate with salt but not the portion where the wreck happened, the NTSB said. The agency said that the crews visually checking the road 45 minutes before the wreck didn’t detect any moisture and applied no salt.

But, the NTSB said, in the hours before the crash, rain fell and a light mist and fog were reported, and signs managed by North Tarrant Express Mobility Partners Segment along the southbound toll lanes displayed this message: “ICY CONDITIONS EXIST/ PLEASE USE CAUTION.”

 ?? Yffy Yossifor/Star-Telegram via AP ?? Emergency personnel clean up after a massive pileup on Interstate 35 on Feb. 11, 2021, near downtown Fort Worth, Texas. The crash, which killed six and injured dozens, involved 130 vehicles. Federal officials said the company responsibl­e for the interstate failed to address the deteriorat­ing road conditions.
Yffy Yossifor/Star-Telegram via AP Emergency personnel clean up after a massive pileup on Interstate 35 on Feb. 11, 2021, near downtown Fort Worth, Texas. The crash, which killed six and injured dozens, involved 130 vehicles. Federal officials said the company responsibl­e for the interstate failed to address the deteriorat­ing road conditions.

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