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The Metro Accident

I gotta tell you, it is beyond surreal to see that about 9 people have now died in the DC subway accident. Not only is it just down the street from my house, but this is my train. The accident happened between the Takoma Park and Fort Totten stations, and I get on at Takoma Park and off at Dupont Circle every day for work.

Metro is such a basic part of our lives here that you don’t really ever think about it, its always there. In fact, the system was opened here about 2 years before I was born. The last thing you could imagine is that somebody could ever die on it. I feel so badly for the families of the victims.

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12 Responses to “The Metro Accident”

  1. Jaim says:

    Peace to the families of all the victims. As a former red-liner myself, I’m quick to let people know what a great transit system DC has, especially with regards to the Metro. This is just really sad.

    Any word on the cause yet? Driver error? I know that heat can play a role too when the metal of the tracks expand and warp the discs of the train.

  2. Randy Brown says:

    OW, my GF and I were in DC on Sat. (trip to the zoo), and we rode the Red Line a few times as well as the Green/Yellow…this scares me.

    What’s worse is how some ash-holes are using this tragedy as an excuse to spew racial and political hate (”She MUST have been on her cellphone!” “It’s Obama’s fault!”).

    Jaim, I’m betting the cause was a massive computer error…

  3. tom says:

    I lived a mile from the 35W bridge in Minneapolis and drove on that bridge just about every day. Same feeling.

  4. Jay Tea says:

    I’ve ridden that line a few times, too… and likely will again in about a month. Whoa…. a bit of empathy for you, Oliver.

    I’m not an avid follower of such things, but it seems that at least several of the last few rounds of transit crashes have involved drivers text messaging. So that’s not completely out of line.

    When I was younger, my grandfather had a book on railroad crashes. One thing that’s stuck with me was the phenomenon of “telescoping” — when one train actually ends up inside another. That’s all I could think of when I saw the picture of the rear-ended train, most of its chassis pointing skywards.

    From now on, whenever I take a train, I’m going to try to ride in one of the middle cars.

    J.

  5. Aptiva Dave says:

    I can’t believe that this happened. Whenever I am in the DC area I take the Metro, since it is the cleanest and fastest train system I’ve been on in my life.

  6. SFC B says:

    …but it seems that at least several of the last few rounds of transit crashes have involved drivers text messaging.

    It will be a combination of driver inattentivness and technology breaking down.

  7. Randy Brown says:

    Aptiva Dave…Fast, yes, especially parts of the Green/Yellow Line. Clean, not always. Kim and I were on a Yellow train that looked like it had original 1976 carpet that had never been cleaned.

  8. Randy Brown says:

    JT, the telescoping problem has been around for at least 91 years; it was a major factor in the NYC Malbone Street Disaster of 1918, the worst US subway accident in terms of fatalities.

  9. Jay Tea says:

    Oh, Randy, I wasn’t saying it was anything new. On the contrary, I agree it’s very, very old. I was trying to say that it was remarkable how much that image resembled the 19th-century pictures in my grandfather’s book. And when you think about the structure of train cars — essentially hollow tubes — it’s horrifyingly inevitable with crashes like this.

    I am SO riding in a middle car next month…

    J.

  10. Cory says:

    I personally think the “texting” angle is crap. From what I’ve read there’s no evidence she was texting and I find it an insult to her family to ponder that possibility until such evidence becomes available. I mean, they _will_ look at her sms records. Wait till then.

    I do think there is a very strong case, however, for arguments to the effect that that old car shouldn’t have been the lead car on the train, if on the tracks at all. The article in wapo that everyone’s been linking to certainly rattles on about it. Not as easy as the narrative “people shouldn’t text” but it shouldn’t be overlooked.

    I ride that train and that lead car from that station everyday and those old cars are obviously a problem. And, sure, I’ve watched the conductors ignore safety at that spot many times but I’m more worried about the fact that they’re expected to drive old, broken-down trains every day without question.

  11. Cory says:

    Oh, and, in addition, this had made me no more afeared of trains btw. To the contrary, I’m suddenly terrified of driving!

    Think of this:

    1. what if she was texting? — i see people texting whilst driving all the time

    2. what if the brakes were bad? — hell, MY brakes are bad and I know it!

    3. did you see the telescoping crumpling at 35mph? — I drive my gf’s scion 80mph on 95 all the time where I’m passed by hummer’s going 110mph.

    cars are the scary; i’ll take a train any day … but i’d prefer they phase out the “b cars”

  12. It’s a lot like a plane crash. Plane crashes rarely happen, but they make the news because a) they rarely happen and b) when they do, a lot of people die at once. Yet, still safer than driving up the street to Giant. Ditto for trains.