USA TODAY US Edition

Our view: On the nation’s rails, speed kills, and so does delay

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Three people were killed and dozens injured last week in a horrific Amtrak derailment near Seattle — an accident that might have been prevented by a safety system that Congress mandated nine years ago. Making this all the more tragic, the automatic-braking system was installed on the tracks and on the train, but it was not yet operating.

Seconds before the crash, the locomotive was tilting as it headed at 80 mph into a curve posted at 30 mph, and the engineer appeared to be applying the brakes, investigat­ors said Friday. But like the Titanic, Amtrak's Cascades 501 would never complete its inaugural passenger-carrying run along a new bypass route.

While the official cause of the accident has not been determined, it’s not much of a stretch to think that the train’s speed — nearly three times the limit — contribute­d to what happened. Or that automatic braking, designed to handle just this sort of circumstan­ce, might have prevented cars from flying off the tracks.

How many more lives will be lost before the safety system — known as “positive train control” — will be operating on all passenger, commuter and freight railroads?

After a 2008 California accident in which the engineer of a Metrolink commuter train ran through a stop signal and hit a freight train, killing 25, Congress ordered the braking system installed on all passenger trains and those that carried hazardous chemicals by the end of 2015.

Two other deadly crashes underscore­d the need. In December 2013 in the Bronx, a commuter train derailed killing four, after the engineer headed into a 30-mph curve at 82 mph. And in May 2015, just north of Philadelph­ia, an Amtrak train barreled into a turn at more than 100 mph — twice the speed limit — and ran off the rails, killing sev- en and injuring more than 200.

What did Congress do? Five months later, after lobbying by the railroad industry, Republican­s and Democrats extended the deadline to install the system until the end of 2018.

Now, there’s another fatal crash, and no single entity is willing to take responsibi­lity. While Amtrak operated the train, the Washington state transporta­tion department owned the locomotive, and a third entity, Sound Transit, owns the tracks. The perfect scenario for finger-pointing.

Certainly, there are challenges to putting positive train control in place: high costs, standardiz­ing technologi­es and getting the radio spectrum that makes the system work. Complicate­d? Yes. But installati­on has already taken longer than it took to put a man on the moon, eight years after President Kennedy announced his ambitious goal in 1961. As of Sept. 30, the safety system was operating on just 24% of the miles passenger trains travel.

The rationale for Congress’ extension in 2015 was that the only alternativ­e was a shutdown of the nation’s rails. Huge fines for the laggards might have lit a fire under the industry. And saved the three lives lost last week.

 ??  ?? In DuPont, Wash., on Dec. 18. STEPHEN BRASHEAR, GETTY IMAGES
In DuPont, Wash., on Dec. 18. STEPHEN BRASHEAR, GETTY IMAGES

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