http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/14/AR2...

The Obama administration will propose that the federal government take over safety regulation of the nation's subway and light-rail systems, responding to what it says is haphazard and ineffective oversight by state agencies.

Under the proposal, the U.S. Department of Transportation would do for transit what it does for airlines and Amtrak: set and enforce federal regulations to ensure that millions of passengers get to their destinations safely. Administration officials said the plan will be presented in coming weeks to Congress, which must approve a change in the law.

The proposal would affect every subway and light-rail system in the country, including large systems in Washington, New York, Boston, Los Angeles and San Francisco.

Administration officials said they are responding to a growing number of collisions, derailments and worker fatalities on subways -- and in particular to the fatal June 22 crash on Metro's Red Line and failures in oversight that have surfaced in its wake. Those failures have been the subject of an ongoing investigative series in The Washington Post.

"After the [Metro] train crash, we were all sitting around here scratching our heads, saying, 'Hey, we've got to do something about this,' " Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said in an interview. "And we discovered that there's not much we could do, because the law wouldn't allow us to do it."

Metro spokeswoman Lisa Farbstein said the agency had not seen details of the proposal. "The bottom line is we welcome additional safety oversight with open arms," she said.
ad_icon

LaHood said he expects the proposal to be welcomed on Capitol Hill, but some Republicans said Saturday night that more federal oversight might not be the answer.

"The administration is right to raise this issue, but federal regulation should only apply to systems that cross state lines," said Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), who had not been briefed on the plan.

Rep. Frank R. Wolf (R-Va.) said the proposal sounded like a credible way to fix a broken oversight system. "Without seeing the details, it would make sense," Wolf said. "Some states have done a good job, while others have not. There needs to be consistent safety enforcement."

Critical details of the plan remain unclear, including how much it would cost, where the money would come from, how the federal government would enforce its rules and whether it is equipped to carry out enhanced oversight. Existing state oversight bodies could remain in place to enforce the new regulations but would need to meet federal standards and gain federal approval.

Safety experts praised the initiative.

"It's long overdue," said Kitty Higgins, a member of the National Transportation Safety Board until August. "I applaud the secretary and his team for recognizing the gap in oversight in the current law. I hope that Congress will act on it swiftly."

The federal government long has regulated the safe operation of airplanes, Amtrak and even ferries. But a law passed in 1965 prohibits federal regulation of subways. When that law was put into effect, there were only a handful of subways -- Metro wouldn't open its first line for another 11 years -- and lawmakers reasoned that federal oversight would hamper their growth.

As a result, rail transit operates under two very different federal systems offering disparate levels of safety oversight.

Commuter rail systems, such as MARC and the Virginia Railway Express, are subject to a long list of federal regulations and are regularly inspected by federal safety monitors.

Safety oversight of light-rail and subway systems, on the other hand, is delegated to 27 regional bodies controlled by states. Quality varies widely, as does funding and enforcement power. With a few notable exceptions, those agencies tend to be threadbare, averaging less than one staff person per agency, according to federal statistics.

The state organizations have been criticized for lacking expertise and independence. Some rely on the transit systems they oversee to supply their funding. Many lack the legal authority to force transit agencies to grant them access to equipment and documents, and cannot compel transit agencies to correct any deficiencies they identify.

For Metro, the second-busiest subway system in the nation, the monitoring body is the Tri-State Oversight Committee, which has six members but no employees, office or phone number. It also has no direct regulatory authority over Metro.

As it stands, the Transportation Department also cannot direct subway systems to adopt safety recommendations issued by the National Transportation Safety Board.
ad_icon

Details of the proposal

Under the administration's proposal, states that kept their oversight bodies would have to pass safety certification programs and demonstrate that they had an adequately trained staff, as well as financial independence and authority to compel compliance from systems they oversee.

States running their own programs would receive federal funds to cover salaries, training and other expenses. Federal regulations would ensure that the state programs established standards similar to those set by federal monitors.

The Federal Transit Administration would assume direct oversight for states that opt out of safety monitoring. The agency also would take over for state organizations that the administration determined to be inadequate.

If subway or light-rail systems did not meet the new safety standards, they would risk losing federal funding for capital expenditures, according to an administration official who was briefed on the plan.

Transit systems would be responsible for shouldering the cost of complying with new federal safety requirements.

The plan would also allow the FTA to issue safety regulations for bus transit systems, but officials said early efforts would focus on rail.

In August, The Post reported that Metro's supposedly fail-safe crash avoidance system had failed in March on Capitol Hill, allowing two trains to come perilously close to colliding. A few weeks later, the newspaper reported that the automatic crash avoidance system also failed in 2005, when three trains narrowly escaped what records said would have been "disastrous collisions" in a tunnel under the Potomac River. That system is a focus of the federal investigation into the cause of the June 22 crash, which killed nine people and injured 80, making it the deadliest incident in the history of Metro.

Last week, an article revealed that Metro had barred independent safety monitors from walking along live subway tracks to assess compliance with safety rules. Since the ban began, two track workers have been fatally injured on the rails.

Metro board Chairman Jim Graham said Friday that the agency is increasing supervision of safety chief Alexa Dupigny-Samuels, who denied access to the monitors.

Also last week, Sen. Barbara A. Mikulski (D-Md.) called on LaHood to investigate Metro's oversight by the committee. And Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), who chairs a transportation subcommittee, said he would hold a hearing in the next few weeks that will look into issues raised as part of the investigation.

Views: 27

Reply to This

"Destroying the New World Order"

TOP CONTENT THIS WEEK

THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING THE SITE!

mobile page

12160.info/m

12160 Administrators

 

Latest Activity

Doc Vega posted a blog post

FBI Agent Admits Evidence of Sasquatch Existence

 We’ve had many astonishing relations over recent years and most of them have been federal…See More
4 hours ago
cheeki kea posted a photo
12 hours ago
cheeki kea commented on Doc Vega's blog post World Government Reveals itself Over Zelensky Oval Office Meltdown
"Great essay Doc V. We are seeing the world clowns reveal themselves in record time, often by left…"
12 hours ago
Less Prone favorited Doc Vega's photo
13 hours ago
Doc Vega posted photos
yesterday
Doc Vega posted blog posts
yesterday
Doc Vega posted a blog post

World Government Reveals itself Over Zelensky Oval Office Meltdown

 Was it simply President Trump’s scorched earth retaliatory reply to the disrespect of Ukraine’s…See More
Tuesday
cheeki kea favorited tjdavis's blog post GenAI fueling employee impersonation with biometric spoofs and counterfeit ID fraud
Tuesday
Doc Vega's blog post was featured

Blue Eyed and Blonde

I fell in love with her the very first timeShe was never subtle and hardly sublimeEven her mother…See More
Monday
cheeki kea commented on cheeki kea's video
Sunday
cheeki kea posted a video

FULL Body Language Analysis of Trump and Zelenskyy's MELTDOWN

Download my FREE 100+ Body Language and Persuasion tips, here:https://knesix.com/tipsChapters:0:00 Intro1:40 Critical context of the ceasefire agreement6:04 ...
Sunday
tjdavis posted videos
Saturday
tjdavis posted a blog post
Saturday
rlionhearted_3 posted photos
Feb 28
Doc Vega posted a blog post

The Illusion of a Fair Big Government

 What is government and what is it supposed to be? Government is a political institution that…See More
Feb 28
Doc Vega posted a blog post

Who is Really Behind the UAP Threat?

According to Steven Greer under the aegis of his “Disclosure Project” the first anti-gravity…See More
Feb 26
tjdavis's 4 blog posts were featured
Feb 26
Doc Vega's 5 blog posts were featured
Feb 26
Less Prone favorited tjdavis's video
Feb 26
Burbia commented on tjdavis's video
Feb 26

© 2025   Created by truth.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

content and site copyright 12160.info 2007-2019 - all rights reserved. unless otherwise noted