The Sentinel-Record

Toll of railroads’ speed control lag: 150 crashes, 298 deaths since 1970

- MICHAEL BALSAMO MICHAEL SISAK

For nearly 50 years, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board has been pushing railroads to implement critical speed-control technology — which the agency says could’ve prevented

150 crashes since 1970 — but despite the overwhelmi­ng evidence it could save lives, Congress extended the deadlines for railroads to implement 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 Monday’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 provided to The Associated Press Wednesday shows the crashes the NTSB says could’ve been prevented by positive train control have caused 298 deaths,

6,763 injuries and nearly $ 385 million in property damage. The board first recommendi­ng using “automatic train control” after two Penn Central commuter trains collided in Darien, Connecticu­t on Aug, 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 Tuesday. “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 GPS-based 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 23 percent of the nation’s passenger route miles and

37 percent of freight route miles as of July, the last time the Federal Railroad Administra­tion updated its online tracker for the technology.

“Railroads need to stop the foot- dragging and implement Positive Train Control without delay - inaction puts lives at risk,” U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat from Connecticu­t, said Thursday on Twitter.

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

When Amtrak officially launched its new, faster route near Seattle without the technology on Monday, it came at a deadly cost. Experts say it is likely the technology would’ve prevented the derailment that killed three people when the train — speeding at 50 mph (80.46 kph) over the limit — went off the rails, sending several cars flying off a bridge onto the highway below. Work to install positive train control isn’t expected to be completed until next spring on the newly opened

15-mile (24-kilometer) span where the train derailed, according to Sound Transit, the public agency that owns the tracks.

“Should they have just waited to inaugurate service? In hindsight, maybe yes,” said David B. Clarke, who runs the Center for Transporta­tion Research at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. “Clearly, if PTC was active, this would not have happened.”

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee said Amtrak had committed to trying to ensuring the technology will be in place statewide before the Dec. 31, 2018 deadline. Amtrak also offered to pay all costs associated with deadly train derailment, as well as medical and other expenses of the victims, Inslee, a Democrat, said.

Positive train control is activated on the tracks Amtrak owns along the Northeast Corridor, from Boston to Washington, D.C., and on Amtrak’s Michigan line. Many of its locomotive­s are equipped for positive train control. Throughout the rest of the country, Amtrak operates on track owned by freight carriers and other entities that have made varying progress on installing the technology.

In Florida, a higher- speed passenger rail service known as Brightline is expected to launch in the next few weeks. But positive train control will not be operationa­l when the trains roll out on those lines, drawing the ire of some local officials and community groups.

A spokeswoma­n for Brightline said the trains have automatic train control, which can sound an alert in the train’s cab to alert the engineer if the train is going too fast and positive train control is expected to be implemente­d by the federal deadline at the end of 2018.

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