I understand that, but the point is simply that if PTC was there, in operation, it would have prevented the collision.
Ed
Yes,
And under the rules Anderson is hinting at, there would have been no service run through a signal suspension, so there would have been no crash when signal suspension was in force.
Now if the bus used as a substitute crashed into something that is a different matter, and there has been a lengthy discussion of that and the relatively probability etc. in a different place already.
It seems as though Amtrak is forgetting that Metro North is not on pace to meet the 12/31 deadline IINM.. But it's the NEC.. It gets a "pass" cause it makes money...
According to FRA's latest report, Metro North is not at risk of meeting the deadline. Quoting straight from FRA's latest press release on this matter:
[SIZE=10pt]The nine at-risk railroads are: New Mexico Rail Runner Express (Rio Metro), Capital Metropolitan Transportation Authority, New Jersey Transit, Altamont Corridor Express, Maryland Area Regional Commuter, Trinity Railway Express, South Florida Regional Transportation Authority, Peninsula Corridor Joint Powers Board (Caltrain) and Central Florida Rail Corridor (SunRail). [/SIZE]
Of these as far as I am aware, both SFRTA and CFRC will be requesting alternate schedule, which they have to do before the end of September. I suspect now that Rio Metro got funding, they will probably be able to do so too. Incidentally CFRC is now fully funded for its PTC program. NJT will meet the requirements for alternate schedule, and will have hardware and training in place by deadline. Dunno about the rest of 'em.
I am still scratching my head to figure out what the exact rule is that they propose to follow. From the Trains article it would appear that it is all about segments that have obtained PTC exemption due to insufficient traffic.There is very little logic supporting such a position, but it has to be admitted that for many years there has been a lot of daylight between logic and Amtrak's actions on many issues.
Anderson in a statement several weeks back clearly stated that Amtrak will abide by any alternative schedule approved by the FRA for segments that are getting PTC installed, so this is not about segments that are getting alternative schedules approval from the FRA. Considering that Amtrak itself will most likely fail to complete all interoperability testing on all routes with most Class I railroads by Dec 31, it stands to reason that they have backed off on this part.
I am also wondering if that list of trains was provided by Amtrak or one put together by Trains and written up making it look like Amtrak said so, not that it matters a heck of a lot if the net final result is that.
BTW, Railway Age published the following Open Letter to Anderson, for what it may be worth...
https://www.railwayage.com/passenger/open-letter-to-richard-anderson/