jis
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I suspect that this NTSB recommendation will be ignored except by the one railroad that is head by an ex-airline CEO perhaps
Almost every reporter on National Television has a script. I think that Holt reads a script, but will do actual reporting, and won't debase himself for mere ratings.Lester Holt is a teleprompter reader, and he does his job enthusiastically. And he reads what's written for him as if he actually believes it, as go the others.And as much as I totally disagree about your opinion of Holt, I will say this -- all he does is read the crap that is put before him. Don't entirely blame him; point the finger where it belongs...As much as I respect Lester Holt on NBC Nightly News, this evening NBC's reporting on this tragedy seemed to me to point the finger of responsibility at Amtrak. I would classify this "reporting" as "incomplete news". Like others, I want to see the NTSB report to determine what happened and where responsibility lies. For me, at this time, CSX seems to be the responsible culprit.
National News in just 20 minutes or so plus commercials... That's not "News" ... That's Entertainment !!
Changes the story of this accident, and what when wrong.The engineer of the stopped CSX train had exited the lead locomotive before the Amtrak train entered the siding, ran to safety, and was not injured. The conductor of the CSX lead locomotive saw the Amtrak train approaching in the siding and ran to the back of locomotive. The conductor was thrown off the locomotive and sustained minor injuries.
That is a new point. I wander after calling 911 if the freight crew started Monday Morning quartebacking among themselves wandering why the Amtrak train was on the wrong track.New to me the CSX train was staffed at the time of the accident.
Changes the story of this accident, and what when wrong.The engineer of the stopped CSX train had exited the lead locomotive before the Amtrak train entered the siding, ran to safety, and was not injured. The conductor of the CSX lead locomotive saw the Amtrak train approaching in the siding and ran to the back of locomotive. The conductor was thrown off the locomotive and sustained minor injuries.
Do you have a link where the quote comes from?New to me the CSX train was staffed at the time of the accident.
Changes the story of this accident, and what when wrong.The engineer of the stopped CSX train had exited the lead locomotive before the Amtrak train entered the siding, ran to safety, and was not injured. The conductor of the CSX lead locomotive saw the Amtrak train approaching in the siding and ran to the back of locomotive. The conductor was thrown off the locomotive and sustained minor injuries.
This restricted speed point, has me wondering. Just how slow would 91 need to have been going, to have successfully stopped once the engineer realized that the switch was set wrong? I would assume that this would be after 91 "turned" (right word?) into the siding, the engineer realized this, saw the CSX consist was already in that siding, ascertained the CSX was stopped, the engineer apply the brakes, and 91 fully stop before hitting the CSX engine.NTSB also says that because of this incident, they recommend that the Federal Railroad Administration issue an Emergency Order directing railroads to require that when signal suspensions are in effect and a switch has been reported relined for a main track, the next train or locomotive to pass the location must approach that location at restricted speed.
https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/AccidentReports/Reports/RSR1801.pdf?utm_source=news&utm_medium=email&utm_content=railroadDo you have a link where the quote comes from?New to me the CSX train was staffed at the time of the accident.
Changes the story of this accident, and what when wrong.The engineer of the stopped CSX train had exited the lead locomotive before the Amtrak train entered the siding, ran to safety, and was not injured. The conductor of the CSX lead locomotive saw the Amtrak train approaching in the siding and ran to the back of locomotive. The conductor was thrown off the locomotive and sustained minor injuries.
The first would mean that the CSX engineer and condutor, or their insurer, will be bankrupt; they don't have Amtrak indemnifying them. The second means that CSX would be in big trouble for improper training, or that the dispacher is at fault. Everything still points to gross negligence at CSX -- the protocols for this are *old* and deviation from them is supposed to be done with express written instructions, which clearly didn't happen.So the question remains whether they just happened to forget to realign the switch to the main or they were under the impression that giving up the warrant did not involve doing the switch realignment.
Only time, and a great deal of patience for the "system" to produce its investigative results, will give us the answer on what happened.Actually I'm pretty sure that crew was just going on duty. In normal operations that empty auto rack unit train departs between 91 and 92 every night. And the NTSB has previously said the train was put in the siding seven hours before. So that timeline makes sense to me who lives local.
Those CSX crew members reporting for duty need to buy a lottery ticket because they managed to get really lucky to escape with their lives.
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