Daily Press (Sunday)

Report criticizes response to snowy I-95 gridlock

January storm left hundreds of motorists stranded around DC

- By Sarah Rankin

RICHMOND — Virginia state agencies collective­ly “lost situationa­l awareness” and failed to keep up with growing gridlock during a January snowstorm that stranded hundreds of motorists along Interstate 95, a state-commission­ed report released Friday said.

While the 41-page report offered suggestion­s for improving future emergency responses, it did not ascribe blame to any single person or agency. It noted first responders faced unusually heavy snowfall, busier-than-normal traffic and COVID-19-related staffing shortages — all while dealing with a highway corridor notorious for congestion in the best of circumstan­ces.

State officials, including leaders of the Virginia Department of Transporta­tion, vowed to thoroughly review the report and its recommenda­tions.

“VDOT’s top priority is and always will be the safety of the traveling public, and as we learn from each event, this report highlighte­d key areas for us to refine in our winter-weather operations,” Virginia Commission­er of Highways Stephen Brich said.

No deaths or injuries were reported from the gridlock near the nation’s capital. But the monster logjams fed outrage among motorists, some stranded overnight Jan. 3 into Jan. 4, pleading on social media for help.

The report included a detailed timeline. It noted plowing began as snow began accumulati­ng, but earlier rain meant roads couldn’t be pretreated.

Accidents began just before 4 a.m. Monday and conditions worsened for hours, with traffic bogging down in heavy afternoon congestion, the report said. Snowfall then intensifie­d, with reports of three inches an hour falling in the Fredericks­burg area south of Washington. Snowplows struggled to keep up.

The queue of traffic continued to build and by 3 a.m. that Tuesday, numerous clusters of disabled cars and tractor-trailers were scattered along a 40-mile stretch of I-95 both ways, the report said.

With alternate routes impassable, problems mounted and “state agencies collective­ly lost situationa­l awareness and could not verify the extent and locations of the blockages,” according to the report.

It said that was partly due to technologi­cal challenges, including a traffic camera failure during widespread power outages; a power outage and ensuing generator issue at a Virginia State Police communicat­ions center; severe communicat­ions issues with inoperable cell towers; and a system failure of the VDOT real-time traffic informatio­n service.

Informatio­n also flooded in from social media posts but responding agencies didn’t have a plan for using “non-traditiona­l data sources” to form an operationa­l picture, the report said, adding that “informatio­n was not conveyed to agency leadership in real time.”

Meanwhile, some VDOT districts experience­d field staff shortages because of COVID-19, and Virginia State Police had “widespread staffing issues” before the storm, according to the report.

Adding to the woes, passenger traffic was higher than normal because of holidays and flight cancellati­ons, the report said. And “just-intime” trucking was up since 2019, partly due to supply chain issues.

The report addressed questions frequently raised in the immediate aftermath of the snowstorm, including why then-Gov. Ralph Northam, a Democrat, did not activate the Virginia National Guard. The report said state officials explored the possibilit­y but noted, as Northam did at the time, that the Guard is not a “quick reaction force.”

The report said the Guard, even if it had been activated, would have had little to no impact on a “situation already in progress.”

Responding to the report, Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin and members of his administra­tion took critical aim at Northam. Youngkin said in a news release that the report showed “the previous administra­tion’s leadership did not properly prepare or communicat­e.”

In a letter to Youngkin, Transporta­tion Secretary W. Sheppard Miller III and Public Safety Secretary Robert Mosier claimed there was “almost no apparent involvemen­t by the Governor or his senior staff.”

The secretarie­s wrote it appeared neither Northam nor his staff considered an emergency declaratio­n. Emails obtained by Associated Press in the aftermath of the gridlock showed that was not the case and that considerat­ion was given as to whether one was appropriat­e.

The report was produced by CNA, a nonprofit research and analysis organizati­on that has conducted similar work for the U.S. Navy and local, state and federal government agencies. It said it drew from documents including situation reports, real-time planning documents, news articles, social media, interviews and other sources.

The report also included an admonition to motorists.

“Additional­ly, the public bears some responsibi­lity to stay informed about road conditions and traffic during snowstorms, and should implement an informed decision-making process before choosing to take to the roadways,” it said.

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