The Columbus Dispatch

Subway train derails, scaring passengers and injuring dozens

- By David Porter

MASS TRANSIT /

NEW YORK — A subway train derailed Tuesday as it entered a station, tossing people to the floor, forcing hundreds of shaken-up passengers to evacuate through darkened tunnels and delivering another jolt to a transit system plagued by aging equipment and reliabilit­y problems.

Nearly three dozen people suffered minor injuries in the derailment, which happened in Harlem just before 10 a.m.

Photos of the train posted on social media showed its metal side deeply scraped and dented from being dragged along the wall of the subway tunnel. Debris, including broken signaling equipment and chunks of concrete, were left in the train’s wake.

Passengers on the A train said it suddenly jerked and began shaking violently as it approached the station at 125th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue.

“We started seeing sparks through the windows. People were falling,” said passenger Susan Pak, of Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey.

Sparks from the skidding train briefly ignited garbage on the track, but there was no serious fire and the train stayed upright, said Joe Lhota, chairman of the Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority. The cause was under investigat­ion.

Lhota said the emergency braking system on the train triggered, but it was unclear why. He said he didn’t know if a passenger had pulled the emergency brake.

“This, to the best of my knowledge, does not look like a failure on the part of equipment, does not look like a failure on the part of the track itself,” Lhota said.

The derailment came after a winter and spring marked by mechanical failures, power outages and several episodes in which passengers were trapped on stuck trains for an hour or more. Some state lawmakers demanded that the legislatur­e take up emergency funding for the system in a special session scheduled for Wednesday.

Jack Cox, a software developer, said he felt a “large thump” and heard and felt the train grinding for as long as 30 seconds.

“During the whole time, it was just like ‘What’s going on? What’s going to happen?’ Then it stopped,” he said. “I didn’t have time to be scared before then, but I looked around and the woman next to me was curled up in some sort of fetal tuck.”

Cox said smoke started coming in from one end of the car.

“It wasn’t heavy smoke, but it was frightenin­g,” he said.

Passengers ended up walking through the darkened cars using their cellphone lights and exiting onto the platform.

 ?? [TRANSPORT WORKERS UNION, LOCAL 100] ?? Workers from the New York Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority examine damaged train tracks at the scene of a subway derailment Tuesday near a station in the Harlem neighborho­od.
[TRANSPORT WORKERS UNION, LOCAL 100] Workers from the New York Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority examine damaged train tracks at the scene of a subway derailment Tuesday near a station in the Harlem neighborho­od.

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