Sounds almost like the Greek approach, sort of.... The Engineer said there is a red signal staring at me, the controller said ignore it and carry on.I guess the hot box detectors were working!
"The complaint alleges that the conductor, now concerned that the "trending hot" warning could lead to an overheated wheel, radioed the desk back and suggested that they stop the train and inspect it. But the dispatcher overruled the crew and urged them onward."
The big corporations these days have this 'robber baron' mentality that completely dismisses employee concerns and well-being, and throws safety issues to the winds in the pursuit of exorbitant profits. And they're helped by the current political climate that says ''do anything you want until you get caught, then claim it's a conspiracy and deny any wrongdoing.''I guess the hot box detectors were working!
"The complaint alleges that the conductor, now concerned that the "trending hot" warning could lead to an overheated wheel, radioed the desk back and suggested that they stop the train and inspect it. But the dispatcher overruled the crew and urged them onward."
hey, I thought those red lights in Greece are there purely because they look so pretty?Sounds almost like the Greek approach, sort of.... The Engineer said there is a red signal staring at me, the controller said ignore it and carry on.
They are exactly as pretty as here in the US or for that matter anywhere else when a Form D or equivalent are issued. In this case in Greece an equivalent of Form D was issued without adequate verification, by the Larissa station master.hey, I thought those red lights in Greece are there purely because they look so pretty?
Good thing they divested all passenger operations a while back
Norfolk Southern issued orders to take the cars with these wheels out of service until the wheelsets could be replaced, and are removing the model and series from service for inspection. The company also says they notified the manufacturer and "worked urgently" to inform the rest of the railroad industry since these wheelsets are not proprietary to Norfolk Southern.
The Association of American Railroads has now issued guidance to pull relevant cars off the tracks and inspect them -- and to immediately replace suspect wheelsets with new ones.
As someone who has dealt with numerous situations like this, it doesn’t sound like we’re getting the full story here. On our end, we frequently have cars that get picked up as “trending warm” but aren’t triggering critical alarms…more often than not the crew is told to proceed to an area where they can safely inspect vs an immediate stop and inspect that is required when a critical alarm is received. If a car does require setout, the train can continue to the next setout point at a restricted speed so as to limit the heating of the bearing/wheel.I guess the hot box detectors were working!
"The complaint alleges that the conductor, now concerned that the "trending hot" warning could lead to an overheated wheel, radioed the desk back and suggested that they stop the train and inspect it. But the dispatcher overruled the crew and urged them onward."
It has not gone unnoticed around these parts that Norfolk Southern has had a lot more high-profile problems since their entirely profit-driven corporate headquarters move from Norfolk to Atlanta. The city of Atlanta (and possibly the state of Georgia) gave NS $Billions in tax incentives and other freebies to move their HQ to Atlanta. This undoubtedly pushed the BOD even farther towards the "more profit, less everything else" mentality. All that trickles down to management, who pushes their people to cut corners and ignore safety warnings.
Corporate headquarters city issues are worth study. Greyhound's downward spiral seems to have begun when it was moved from Cleveland and Calgary to Phoenix. Boeing's move from Seattle to Chicago seems to match up with their problems. Is it a cause or an effect?It has not gone unnoticed around these parts that Norfolk Southern has had a lot more high-profile problems since their entirely profit-driven corporate headquarters move from Norfolk to Atlanta. The city of Atlanta (and possibly the state of Georgia) gave NS $Billions in tax incentives and other freebies to move their HQ to Atlanta. This undoubtedly pushed the BOD even farther towards the "more profit, less everything else" mentality. All that trickles down to management, who pushes their people to cut corners and ignore safety warnings.
On the run from the French border to Barcelona in 1971 on my first ever ride on RENFE we were held up by a lengthy red block. The conductor hit the ballast and I watched him call (thanks to the non-AC open windows). He penciled a note and gave the Spanish equivalent of a highball and we proceeded at a restricted speed to the next signal which was clear.They are exactly as pretty as here in the US or for that matter anywhere else when a Form D or equivalent are issued. In this case in Greece an equivalent of Form D was issued without adequate verification, by the Larissa station master.
I really don't see why people are so surprised by this; this concept is the entire point of capitalism. There's no end goal but more profit at all costs.The big corporations these days have this 'robber baron' mentality that completely dismisses employee concerns and well-being, and throws safety issues to the winds in the pursuit of exorbitant profits. And they're helped by the current political climate that says ''do anything you want until you get caught, then claim it's a conspiracy and deny any wrongdoing.''
In India both the section dispatcher and the signalman in the cabin have to notionally sign off on an equivalent of a Form D before it can be issued.On the run from the French border to Barcelona in 1971 on my first ever ride on RENFE we were held up by a lengthy red block. The conductor hit the ballast and I watched him call (thanks to the non-AC open windows). He penciled a note and gave the Spanish equivalent of a highball and we proceeded at a restricted speed to the next signal which was clear.
A victim of stereotyping, I kept visualizing a little two column inch story about a Spanish train wreck that only killed one American, and countless foreigners. But, in fact, it was handled as professionally as it could be.
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