The Mercury News

Local: South Bay light-rail service suspended indefinite­ly.

Agency doesn’t have an estimate on when rides will resume, as interim general manager says shocked workers need time to heal

- By Robert Salonga rsalonga@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN JOSE >> Light-rail service in the greater South Bay is on hold indefinite­ly in the wake of the mass shooting at a Valley Transporta­tion Authority rail yard that ended in the slayings of nine transit employees by a VTA maintenanc­e worker last week.

The transit agency announced in a Sunday tweet that “VTA light rail service is suspended until further notice,” and that because of staffing limits, they will discontinu­e the substitute bus bridges that had been mimicking the three main light-rail lines that connect the South Bay from Mountain View to Los Gatos and East and South San Jose.

Instead, starting Tuesday, VTA is directing riders to plan to travel through existing bus routes. That means riders should not be heading to light-rail stations if a closer bus route serves their location. Anyone looking for further informatio­n about VTA service changes can call 408-321-2300 or go online to vta.org.

Monday, Evelynn Tran, interim VTA general manager and general counsel, elaborated on the decision in a blog post on the VTA website.

“For the immediate future, the light rail system is shut down. At this point, it is impossible to estimate when service can be restored,” Tran wrote. “There are many factors involved in restoring service, most

importantl­y the human factor.”

Tran said the shooting tragically compounded an already trying time for the agency, which had been marred in April by a cyber ransomware attack that disrupted several key services, chief among them its paratransi­t service.

“VTA has endured a lot this year from the impact of COVID, a massive cyber attack and now this,” she wrote. “The compassion, sensitivit­y and strength shown by our people is inspiring. I cannot adequately express how deeply impressed and proud I am of all our VTA people. The courage they’ve shown during this tragedy is incredible.”

Tran added: “Now, our primary focus is the wellbeing and health of our people. I have directed staff to make our people our first priority. We will marshal all the resources we can to assist our people through this. It will mean providing less service to the community than we would wish. But healing our organizati­on must be our first priority.”

Light-rail service was initially suspended a few hours after the Wednesday morning shootings at the Guadalupe Yard on West Younger Avenue, as the transit system was getting up and running for the day.

Samuel James Cassidy, 57, described as a disgruntle­d VTA substation maintenanc­e employee who was shown to harbor violent feelings toward his employer and whose family suggested he suffered from untreated mental illness — including bipolar disorder — had three handguns and more than 300 rounds of ammunition when he began shooting people and making his way through the Guadalupe facility.

By the end, it would go down as the deadliest mass shooting in Bay Area history.

The victims were Abdolvahab Alaghmanda­n, 63; Adrian Balleza, 29; Alex Ward Fritch, 49; Jose Dejesus Hernandez III, 35; Lars Kepler Lane, 63; Paul Delacruz Megia, 42; Timothy Michael Romo, 49; Michael Joseph Rudometkin, 40; and Taptej Singh, 36.

Cassidy fatally shot himself as a Santa Clara County sheriff’s deputy — whose headquarte­rs was next door — and San Jose police officers closed in on him near a third floor stairwell. A cache of guns, more than 25,000 bullets and improvised explosives were recovered from his San Jose home, which authoritie­s say he set on fire by putting bullets in a pot on a stove about an hour before the shootings. The blaze began engulfing his home around the time the massacre was taking place.

Sunday, the FBI confirmed that its evidence team had completed its work at the shooting site. The sheriff’s office is the lead investigat­ive agency for the shooting, and it and other law enforcemen­t agencies similarly cleared out from Cassidy’s home Friday.

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 ?? RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? VTA workers cross West Hedding Street in San Jose on Wednesday aftera former employee shot and killed nine transit workers at the site.
RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER VTA workers cross West Hedding Street in San Jose on Wednesday aftera former employee shot and killed nine transit workers at the site.
 ?? RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Law enforcemen­t officers walk along West Younger Avenue near the scene of a shooting in San Jose on Wednesday.
RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Law enforcemen­t officers walk along West Younger Avenue near the scene of a shooting in San Jose on Wednesday.

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