The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Expert: New route may have distracted engineer before crash

- By Phuong Le

SEATTLE » Experts say it’s possible the engineer on an Amtrak train that derailed as it hurtled into a curve at more than twice the speed limit was distracted for an extended period of time before the train plunged off an overpass and onto a busy interstate, a key factor in the investigat­ion.

Authoritie­s worked Wednesday to reopen that vital highway ahead of the holiday travel rush as federal investigat­ors focused on whether the engineer’s attention was diverted by a second person in the cab, or by something else.

Three men were killed Monday south of Seattle when the train barreled into a 30 mph zone at 80 mph. Southbound lanes of Interstate 5 near DuPont have been closed at the accident ever since.

A conductor in training who was familiariz­ing himself with the new route was in the locomotive with the engineer at the time. A federal official who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity said authoritie­s want to know whether the engineer lost “situationa­l awareness” — didn’t realize where he was.

Rail-safety experts say that while it is fairly common to have two people in a cab, investigat­ors will look into whether that may have distracted the engineer.

“What interactio­ns were the conductor and the engineer having and did that distract the engineer from his focus on where they were on the route?” said Keith Millhouse, a rail-safety consultant who was former board chairman of Metrolink, Southern California’s commuter rail system.

Millhouse said the two could have been having discussion­s that caused the engineer to not realize where he was on the route.

“My guess is there were probably distractio­ns not only immediatel­y prior to the accident but in the minutes leading up the accident and that’s where the focus gets lost,” he said.

Investigat­ors had not yet interviewe­d the train engineer and other crew members — all of whom were hospitaliz­ed — as of Wednesday morning, a National Transporta­tion Safety Board spokesman said. Experts say investigat­ors will want to talk to them as soon as possible while the event is still fresh in their memory.

NTSB board member Bella Dinh-Zarr said Tuesday that they were in the early stage of the investigat­ion, and investigat­ors won’t determine a probable cause while on scene. She said distractio­n is one of the most looked at priorities, and investigat­ors will be looking at cellphone records of all employees.

Dinh-Zarr also said the engineer did not manually activate the emergency brake, which went off automatica­lly when the train derailed.

“This is a situation where the engineer should have been starting the braking applicatio­n probably a minute before they reached that curve,” said Allan Zarembski, a civil engineerin­g professor who directs the rail engineerin­g and safety program at the University of Delaware.

“It suggests strongly that the engineer was distracted for a fairly extended point of view,” he said. The informatio­n so far “seems to suggest that there was an operator issue here,” he said.

In some previous wrecks, train operators were found to have been seriously fatigued or distracted by a cellphone or something else.

On Wednesday, crews removed a train locomotive from the crash site and were cleaning up debris and repairing the road in order to reopen I-5 to traffic. The wreck closed the southbound lanes of I-5 south of Tacoma, a stretch that typically sees about 60,000 cars a day.

Authoritie­s said they’d reopen the freeway lanes as soon as possible.

The train, with 85 passengers and crew members, was making the inaugural run along a fast, new 15-mile bypass route.

Authoritie­s on Wednesday identified the third victim in the crash as Benjamin Gran, 40, of Auburn, Washington.

In an accident with strong similariti­es, an Amtrak train traveling at twice the 50 mph (80 kph) speed limit ran off the rails along a sharp curve in Philadelph­ia in 2015, killing eight people. Investigat­ors concluded the engineer was distracted by reports over the radio of another train getting hit by a rock.

On Wednesday, a judge told prosecutor­s she will review the case and set a hearing for February where prosecutor­s may have the chance to argue that the engineer should be held criminally accountabl­e for the derailment.

A different judge in September threw out involuntar­y manslaught­er and other charges after finding evidence pointed to an accident.

Amtrak agreed to pay $265 million to settle claims filed by the victims and their families. It has also installed positive train control on its entire track between Boston and Washington.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The engine from an Amtrak train crash onto Interstate 5 on Monday sits on a transport carrier before being driven away from the scene, Wednesday in DuPont, Wash. Federal investigat­ors in the deadly train wreck want to know whether the engineer was...
ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The engine from an Amtrak train crash onto Interstate 5 on Monday sits on a transport carrier before being driven away from the scene, Wednesday in DuPont, Wash. Federal investigat­ors in the deadly train wreck want to know whether the engineer was...

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