Sunday, December 24, 2006

D.C. - Bus riders get gifts from Secret Santa

SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -- A woman hopped aboard buses, greeted passengers with "Merry Christmas" and handed each an envelope containing a card and a $50 bill before stepping off and repeating the process on another bus.

She did it so quickly that descriptions of the woman varied among surprised Spokane Transit Authority passengers on several routes Thursday, The Spokesman-Review newspaper reported Friday.

"She kind of kept her head down. I don't remember ever seeing this lady before," said bus driver Max Clemons.

"I had a young man in the back of the bus. He looked like he was going to start crying. He said in broken English, 'She don't know how much this will mean to me at Christmas,'" Clemons said.

Transit authority spokesman Dan Kolbet said efforts to identify the gift-giver were unsuccessful. Her generosity didn't appear to be part of a marketing gimmick, he said.

The woman gave envelopes to about 20 passengers, he said. Each was sealed with a sticker that said: "To a friend from a friend."

The woman, accompanied by one or two young boys, pulled the envelopes out of a cloth satchel. The buses were pulling away from stops before riders even knew what happened.

"There was a lot of excitement. People were making calls on their cell phones," said driver Terry Dobson, who had two of his trips visited by the mystery woman. "The people on those buses really needed the money."

Hours after the impromptu gift-giving, Dobson was still giddy.

"It was just a neat thing," he said. "It makes you tingle all over."

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Atlanta - MARTA single tracking this weekend

WEEKEND OF DECEMBER 9 - 10, 2006 Trains will operate every 15 minutes on the North/South Line on Saturday, December 9, 2006 and Sunday, December 10, 2006. Anyone traveling from North Springs to the Airport or from the Airport to North Springs will have to change trains at Lindbergh Center. Single tracking will occur at Five Points, Peachtree Center, and Civic Center Stations. Rail Lines Affected: North-South Train Frequency: Every 15 minutes
Trains will operate every 25 minutes on the East/West Line on Sunday, December 10, 2006. Single tracking will occur at West Lake, Ashby, and Vine City Stations. Rail Lines Affected: East-West Train Frequency: Every 25 minutes

Friday, December 8, 2006

Chicago - Calls for conductors after chaotic evacuation

The Chicago Transit Authority, which phased out train conductors in 2000, is facing heavy pressure to bring conductors back after a train derailed in a blue line subway on July 11 causing chaos as 1,000 passengers evacuated without any employees or announcements to guide their way. A camera system has been proposed to keep transit officials informed on real-time conditions of the trains, but Alderman Isaac Carothers says,
"I have never seen a camera yet carry somebody off a train."

Alderman Freddrenna Lyle added,
"We know money is short everywhere. However, we also know there is no dollar value to place on human lives. ... We are not looking at reinstating a conductor on every train, but the ones that are in the subways, we really think we need another body."


Gary Washburn - Chicago Tribune

Lennon new GM for TSA's Mass Transit Sector

The Transit Security Administration today named Paul J. Lennon to run its Mass Transit sector, which involves representing the agency on issues regarding mass transit and acting as the agency's chief liaison with the transit industry. Lennon's specialty is counter-terrorism and he has 40 years of experience in the transit industry. His most recent position was as director of intelligence and emergency preparedness management for the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA). Lennon will be the 'go-to' guy for rapid transit security on the federal level.

PRNewswire / TSA

Baltimore - FTA fines MTA for leaky fuel tanks

The Maryland Transit Administration was fined yesterday by the Federal Transit Administration for having leaky underground diesel and gasoline fuel tanks used for transit buses. The cost to replace the tanks will be $24 million and $172,207 in FTA penalties. MTA says the tanks wouldn't have hurt drinking water if they had leaked, but regardless they are now out of the ground awaiting replacements. EPA says the tanks haven't met their standards since 2002.

Greg Garland - Baltimore Sun

D.C. - Street performers paid to liven up subway












The Washington Metro Transit Authority is one of the few transit systems in the country to ban street performers - until next week that is. WMATA is vetting performers of "all genres of music, from classical to cutting-edge world music." The performers would not be paid by WMATA, but rather by the D.C. arts councils.


Lena H. Sun - Washington Post, Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space,

Michigan - Rule revised after woman kept off bus

In Grand Rapids, Michigan, a rule preventing people with face-coverings has been revised today after a woman wearing a scarf as part of traditional Islamic dress was turned away from boarding a bus. The idea behind the rule was for bus cameras to help identify people and was created mainly due to haloween, face, and ski masks.

The Rapid officials regret the situation and have apologized to the woman and have promptly changed the rule in question, but this situation is bound to come up in other cities. Britain has a big problem with this issue, even drawing the attention of Tony Blair. Transit systems should not wait until the problem comes up and address it ahead of time to avoid the bad press The Rapid is now facing.

Nate Reens - Grand Rapids Press

D.C. - woman struck by train at Deanwood Station

Station temporarily closed

A six-car Orange Line train (train 908) headed downtown struck a woman at 10:26 a.m. at the Deanwood Metrorail station. The station is temporarily closed. Trains are taking turns sharing the outbound track to move customers around the scene of the incident. Trains are single-tracking from New Carrollton Metrorail station to Stadium-Armory Metrorail station.

Customers can expect major delays in that area. Emergency personnel are on the scene.

WMATA Press Release

Bay Area - BART board reverses alcohol ad policy

Bay Area Rapid Transit's month-old approval to allow alcohol advertising on the public transit system was canned as the board reversed itself 7-2 to reinstate the restrictions. The system could have made half a million dollars per year off the advertising, but industry watchdog groups and anti-alcohol groups lobbied the board so heavily with letters and activists that the board concluded the advertising revenue wasn't worth the grief. The bay area, more so than most places, is very protective of their transit system and can have a huge influence on the way BART is run.

Kiley Russell - Media News

Thursday, December 7, 2006

Minnesota - Quality coverage of bus-rapid-tranist

Minnesota Public Radio's Dan Olson has done 2 pieces this week for All Things Considered on rapid transit in Minnesota. The first story is on the decline in vehicle sales tax collections which may mean leaner times for Minnesota transit and the second story is a broader look at three bus-rapid-transit systems in various stages of development. Olsen does a wonderful job of showing the benefits and difficulties of BRT's and his stories are worth checking out.

Dan Olson - Minnesota Public Radio

Ottawa - Opinions mixed on transit improvements

Ottawa is trying to figure out if the improvements made to their transit system have been sufficient to deem it 'fixed'. Some areas have been improved and plans for a tunnel are being drawn up, yet many say the improvements so far haven't been enough because some areas were ignored during the repairing and current plans need to change. Right now the city is going back and forth between ideas for how to improve their transit before anything is done, but strong opinions on all fronts want to have input during the process.

CBC News for full story

D.C. - Second employee dies from train injuries

A second Metro employee died today after being struck by a train on Thursday, November 30.

Thirty-six-year-old Matthew Brooks of Waldorf, MD, today succumbed to injuries he sustained after being struck by a train seven days ago. Leslie Arvell Cherry of Clinton, MD, died on the day of the accident. His funeral was held today in Upper Marlboro, MD.

Mr. Brooks, 36, and Mr. Cherry, 52, were both track inspectors who were working together when they were struck by a four-car Yellow Line train on an elevated track between the Huntington and Eisenhower Avenue Metrorail stations at about 9:30 a.m. on Nov. 30.

“Our thoughts are with the family members of Mr. Brooks and Mr. Cherry,” said Metro Acting General Manager Jack Requa. “We are grieving the family’s loss—our loss--and it strengthens our resolve to work harder to ensure the safety of each one of our colleagues. Each life is precious, and it’s unfortunate that an incident such as this reminds all of us in such a harsh way that safety must be a top priority for the Authority and the employees themselves.”

Metro is cooperating with the National Transportation Safety Board on its independent investigation. Metro officials are also conducting their internal investigation in coordination with and on behalf of the Tristate Oversight Committee (TOC), which is in accordance with TOC’s procedures.

The Yellow Line train (train 307) involved in the incident was leaving the Huntington station and heading into the Alexandria rail yard. There were no passengers aboard the train because it was not in service.

The deaths of Mr. Brooks and Mr. Cherry represent the third employee fatalities this year. On May 14, an automatic train control technician was struck and killed by a Red Line train at the Dupont Circle Metrorail station. Seven Metro employees, including these recent deaths, have died after being struck by a train in Metro’s 30-year history.

WMATA Press Release

D.C. - Persuading FTA the benefits of tunnel

At a special called meeting hosted by Tyson Tunnel Inc. with the Federal Transit Administration and the communities near Dulles International Airport, speakers from the public gave very persuasive reasons for running a new line underground rather than on elevated rails. The FTA said federal funding would be jeapordized if the tunnel option was chosen, but nevertheless, the arguments stand on their own. The persuasive efforts of Tyson Tunnel Inc., who in all probability already knew the outcome of the meeting, are intended to cause the FTA to reconsider its position in view of the potential advantages of the tunnel option.

The (D.C.) Times

Pune - Day 3: BRTS is Back to Business

Pune's BRTS went back to business today, its third day of service, with no mention of the death of a pedestrian yesterday. The buses were out again with an increased special squad of wardens to guard the dedicated bus lane from the inconsiderate traffic and other parts had fenced dividers installed today. Commuters remained overall pleased with their new service but drivers seemed to care less, a nod to the traffic lawlessness on Pune's roads.

... several motorists and riders refused to listen to the wardens and entered the dedicated lane. Two wardens at the Kasturchand Ramlal Surana chowk, trying in vain to control the traffic, said: “We have been deputed to stop people using the dedicated lane. However, motorists hardly listen.’’ And just then, a BRTS bus jumped the red signal. “Nobody pays heed to the red signal too,’’ said one.

Those crazy drivers also seem to be behind the wheel of BRTS buses as well. A PMC official stated the traffic-light timing problem would be sorted out in a few days (buses are supposed to have right-of-way and traffic lights are supposed to change as they approach). Will traffic wise up to restrictions on the bus lane, or will the lawless cars reign supreme over the infant transit system born too early?


Express News Service

Dallas - Another person killed by DART train??

A 59-year-old woman was killed Wednesday afternoon after a DART light-rail train struck her while she was crossing the tracks near the Lovers Lane station.

The accident caused a ripple-effect of delays of about 15 minutes on all northbound rail traffic during rush hour. The train operator told Dallas Area Rapid Transit investigators that he saw the woman crossing the tracks about 3:15 p.m., sounded the train’s horn and attempted to stop the train.

“There were indications that the person saw the train but continued walking to the other side,” said Morgan Lyons, a DART spokesman.

DART dispatched shuttle buses to link northbound rail traffic around the investigation site. Commuters stopped at the Mockingbird Station, then were transported to the Lovers Lane Station and then taken to Park Lane station, where they boarded another Red Line train. Regular rail service was restored at 5:18 p.m., officials said.

No other injuries were reported. The medical examiner’s office has not yet release the identity of the woman.

This follows on the heels of the death of a man in his twenties last Monday, November 30th. In both cases, the person struck was reported to have ignored the oncoming train and remained in harms way. What is going on with DART and how could these deaths happen a Week Apart?

Dallas Morning News

Wednesday, December 6, 2006

Bay Area - Is the car culture slipping?

Talk is in the air that car culture is slipping against the new wave of rapid transit alternatives. Granted this talk comes from the Bay Area, one of the most successful transit systems in the country for its high ridership stats, but this kind of good news in transit is worth reporting. From today's Oakland Tribune:
In the Bay Area as well as the nation, commuters' eyes are wandering in the direction of transit and other alternatives to the automobile, and for the first time in a generation people are driving a bit less than they used to.

The Bay Area Rapid Transit system had record ridership for the quarter that ended Sept. 30, according to figures released this week. Other area transit agencies, such as Caltrain and the Valley Transportation Authority's light rail system, also recorded record ridership, mirroring a nationwide public transit boost that began with this summer's high fuel prices and continued even as gas prices plunged.

"Ridership has always lagged behind gas prices," said BART spokesman Linton Johnson. With Bay Area bridge tolls going up to $4 next month, he said, this latest shift in commuting habits could be permanent.

And last week an energy analysis company announced that for the first time in a quarter-century, the number of miles Americans had driven was no longer growing, and had, in fact, dropped slightly.

Let's not kid ourselves, the car is still on top, and probably will be for a while despite rising gas prices. Yet transit alternatives are also on the rise. Transit systems usually don't dramatically improve until the demand by commuters is high enough. Clearly trends show we're moving in a positive direction toward transit alternatives. Can you smell the electricity in the air? Demand more of your transit system and you just might.

Oakland Tribune for all the stats

Boston - Silver Line gets boost toward US funding

Senators John F. Kerry and Edward M. Kennedy, along with Representatives Michael E. Capuano and Stephen F. Lynch, announced Monday that the Federal Transit Administration has notified Congress that within days it will approve the entry of Phase III of the Silver Line project in Boston into preliminary engineering, a milestone in the federal review of the project that is required to make the project eligible for hundreds of millions of dollars in federal support.

The project consists of a 1.1-mile tunnel under downtown Boston, connecting Roxbury to Logan International Airport. It also allows for the building of new platforms at two subway stations and surface-bus lanes between Charles and Washington streets. The Silver Line Phase III project is expected to cost $1.2 billion. If the Federal Transit Administration gives the project final approval, the federal government may provide about $700 million in funding.

Boston Globe

New Zealand - Tolls could cover long-term transit

Transport planners are talking about setting up toll roads to pay for future transit systems. New Zealand it seem is looking far into the future, as far as 2016 according to Mr. Kirby, the Auckland Manukau Eastern Transport Initiative project manager.
From Howick-Botany Times:

Mr Kirby’s progress report to the steering group and transport committee says passenger transport needs ‘beyond 2016’ need to be thought over.

“This is primarily aimed at when rapid transit (bus or rail) is needed between Panmure and Manukau [Pakuranga]. The main focus of this work is to identify areas where longer term route protection is appropriate,” says Mr Kirby.

Mr Kirby says Auckland City has budgeted for about $800 million for AMETI inside its boundary over the next 10 years, but its project partner is still to decide.

“It appears that Manukau City Council has yet to programme significant funding for the project in its Long Term Council Community Plan.”



Howick and Botany Times

Pune - Day 2: BRTS grinds to a deadly halt














India's newest transit system was shut down today - its second day of service. The Pune Municipal Transport halted all services in the city after a 20-year-old was crushed to death by a mini bus. Fearing public backlash, the PMT shut down the entire system for the day.


PMT's manager of operations Shivraj Rane assured the public that "operations of BRTS buses would resume tomorrow morning." Rane placed blame for the accident on the public for not also being safety-oriented, stating “the PMT and PMC (city hall) are trying to eliminate systemic problems that have come to [our attention], but it is high time the public also followed traffic discipline.”

Local residents were "dissatisfied" with the safety precautions the PMT have put in place and major traffic problems are being blamed on continuing construction work on the incomplete transit lines. One onlooker reported that the heavier-than-usual traffic "rarely paid heed to traffic wardens and kept entering the dedicated lane." A local newspaper vendor explained that "this system has made the road even more accident-prone. Pedestrians are bound to face difficulties in crossing the road due to the rapid movement of buses in the central lanes."

The heated debate over BRTS is not going to cool down anytime soon. This evening the Bharatiya Janata Party staged demonstrations against the hasty manner in which BRTS's first line was inaugurated. A major portion of the 13-km (8-mi.) BRTS corridor is still not completed.

They were doing so well on their first day, but, judging by my analysis in yesterday's article, safety has been the most overlooked element of the BRTS. What good are the clean floors and illuminated signs if the outside of the bus is dented and spattered with blood? Instead of months or years, the PMT is facing its first challenge right off the bat. Such is the price for opening early amidst political pressure. Right now showing the public they can handle this situation responsibly and in a timely matter should be the PMT's number one priorities. Without public support through this insanity, the BRTS doesn't stand a chance of succeeding.

Express (India) News Service

Tuesday, December 5, 2006

Toronto - Mayor Addresses Transit Priority













Here's to big thinkers. Today during Mayor Davis Miller's inaugural address to his fellow Torontonians, he shared his thoughts on transit:

We have a great transit system for a city of 1.5 million people. But Toronto is now home to 2.6 million - and that number is expected to grow in the coming decades.

We can't have all those people driving cars.

However, providing real transit alternatives is not easy or cheap.

With dedicated rights-of-way like the one on St. Clair, we can turn a streetcar into an above ground subway at about a tenth of the cost and bring rapid transit to all parts of the city in the process. To Northern Scarborough and Northern Etobicoke ... areas where residents have, for too long, relied on multiple bus transfers to do the most basic of things like getting to work or going shopping.

But that's just the beginning. We should be thinking big. That means working with other governments to develop a National Transit Strategy and with the GTTA to develop a region wide strategy, recognizing that Toronto, and the TTC, are at the core of this region's mobility.

Throughout the election campaign Miller made transit and bus right-of-ways one of his main talking points. However, Miller is trying to please both sides of the finance issue, and his rhetoric becomes taxing near the end of his bit on transit. Funny how he wants to think big to make a National Transit Strategy when he is cutting costs every way he can like putting transit rails right in the middle of traffic instead of underground where it can be out-of-the-way instead of a right-of-way.

CNW Group

Detroit - Commuter train to Anne Arbor planned















A demonstration commuter train is in the works to connect Anne Arbor, Michigan and Detroit by next summer. So far talks seem to focus on Amtrak, but rapid transit has been one of the major options. According to the Anne Arbor News:

The analysis of five rapid transit options - two using rapid transit buses, two using commuter "heavy'' rail, and one using light rail - was made public last month. That analysis revealed that none of the options, as configured, would be competitive for federal dollars.

Everything is still in the discussion phase currently, but a regional commuter train would be good news for the Detroit area which is only serviced by the Detroit People Mover , a single-line ( looped) elevated rail in the downtown area.


Anne Arbor News

India - Pune's BRTS finds many fans on first day

Regardless of the ever-present bureaucracy in Pune forcing the new transit system to open unprepared and ahead of schedule, the citizens flocked to the new Bus Rapid Transit System today for its first full day of service.

Buses were packed and many Indian riders were impressed by many of the features on buses most transit commuters already take for granted. Enthusiasm is high, yet there were still rational voices who worry the sparkling new buses won't be maintained and kept clean. The four most important issues: timeliness, cleanliness, education, and safety, all seem to be present in the public discussion.

As far as timeliness, transit officials were coming short of their 10min. wait-time goals but ridership was so heavy the buses were behind - something passengers are more than willing to forgive at the start, but how long will it take before commuters take BRTS for granted? Sooner than you may think. Hopefully transit officials will keep the 'Rapid' part of their title at the forefront.

Cleanliness seems to be addressed for now, as well as education with all stops announced on the intercom to the surprise of many riders sadly not used to this level of information yet. Safety is a concern brought up and I'm sure police presence on buses in the evenings will probably be addressed.

Just remember, regardless of the hype or early starting problems,
new systems are in the best position at the outset because of high public support. The true test will come months, if not years, down the line when maintenance becomes a more pressing issue as ridership increases. All eyes are on Pune's BRTS as it develops. For now, they are putting on a good show.

Pune Newsline

Monday, December 4, 2006

Atlanta - MARTA back on track after derailment

By Paul Donsky and Mike Morris

MARTA has restored service on the north-south line following a derailment this morning at the Medical Center station in Dunwoody.

MARTA officials say human error is likely to blame for the 8:40 a.m. accident that caused no injuries but led to 20-minute delays on the north rail line for much of the day.

MARTA spokeswoman Joselyn Baker said the derailment happened as a northbound train was being taken out of service. Baker said the train had stopped just north of the station due to an as-yet undetermined mechanical problem.

The train was traveling at a low rate of speed when the front two wheels encountered a switched portion of the track and ran off the rails, officials said.

An undetermined number of passengers were taken off the train and evacuated by bus and train, said Fulton County Fire spokesman Gregory Chambers.

“MARTA responded fast and got folks off the train and onto buses,” Chambers said. Others were put on other trains, Baker said.

Service resumed on a single track, delaying both northbound and southbound service, Baker said.

Baker said a derailment on the MARTA system was very unusual.

“It is not a common occurrence,” she said. “It’s something that will be fully investigated.”

The last derailment occurred in 1996, officials said.

The problem began after MARTA began “single-tracking” around the stalled vehicle, enabling northbound trains to use southbound tracks. The trains switch back to the northbound tracks just north of the Medical Center station.

The stalled train, however, improperly moved north into the switched portion of track. When the train began to move back south toward the platform to offload passengers, the wheels ran off the rails, officials said.

Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Milan - Cat-girl lap-dancer entertains on train

Paul Bompard, Rome

A pretty pole-dancer is giving a new twist to busking and brightening up late-night journeys for commuters on Milan’s underground trains.

The girl, in her twenties and made up to resemble a cat, boards trains wearing a long black overcoat and carrying a portable stereo. When the doors close she throws off her coat and dances to the stereo in a black latex girdle with red silk ribbons, black fishnet stockings with pink ribbons around her thighs, black boots to just above the knee and shiny, black, fingerless gloves.

After a bump-and-grind routine using the carriage’s grab handles and vertical poles as props, she takes a collection and leaves the train.

Michela Proietti, a journalist, saw her when she was on her way home last Monday. She wrote in the daily Corriere Della Sera: “I was on the platform at the Porta Genova stationbetween 11.30 and midnight,” said Proietti. “She was very good looking and she had cat’s ears made of cloth.”

The girl danced for two stops and at one point she sat on a young woman’s lap, who thought it was all very funny. “All the passengers seemed to enjoy the show. It was not at all vulgar — everyone was smiling and laughing.”

Ms Proietti received an avalanche of e-mails from readers who said they had seen the phantom lap-dancer on different days at different times and on other lines. Most said that it made a welcome change from the beggars and dubious musicians who normally inhabit Milan’s Metropolitana.

London Underground said: “We would frown upon any behaviour that would upset other passengers.”

TimesOnline (UK)

Taiwan - Costly Ultimatum for THSRC

CHALLENGING TASK: Taiwan's bullet train must operate without any accidents for a month despite losing NT$60 million each day before it is inaugurated. The committee from the Ministry of Transportation and Communications made the decision after a series of minor accidents occurred during test runs, putting the safety and reliability of the train system in question.

Taipei Times for full story

China - Pushing public transit to fight congestion

BEIJING, Dec 4 (Reuters) - China will promote public transit as its cities strain to cope with a rapid increase in private vehicle ownership, a state newspaper said on Monday. The government should increase investment on public transport systems and subsidise their development, the China Daily reported, citing a document released by the National Development and Reform Commission and finance and construction ministries.

Beijing faces particular problems, with an average of 1,000 new cars appearing on the city's roads daily, the newspaper said.

"It is unrealistic to attempt to resolve the city's traffic jams simply by widening roads because any effort to widen the roads would lag behind the increase in automobiles," it quoted construction ministry official Wang Fengwu as saying.
Choking pollution exacerbated by rising traffic levels has been another cause for concern in many Chinese cities.

Worsening traffic in the capital has also proved to be a headache for organisers of the 2008 Beijing Olympic games, despite the government investing some $40 billion to expand the antiquated subway system and build new roads.

"We had not foreseen five years ago that we would be in such a situation," said Hein Verbruggen, International Olympic Committee coordinating commission chairman, according to the official Xinhua news agency.

But he added that officials did not think traffic would be a problem for the event.
"It's a big challenge, not a problem. I am not talking about problems, but an issue. We are confident because I know they will resolve it," he said.

If Beijing's most ambitious expansion plan is approved, the capital could have the world's longest subway network by 2020, exceeding that of London, state media said last month.

Guardian Unlimited

Mobile - Amtrak discusses restoring service

Despite pleas from at least two rail passenger advocacy groups, Amtrak has made no move to reinstate some form of the Sunset Limited service east of New Orleans, though the company says it has not ruled out the possibility of restoring passenger service to Mobile. Meanwhile, Amtrak has implemented indirect service from Mobile via its Thruway Motor Coach Connection, where passengers take a Greyhound bus leaving Mobile at 7 a.m. bound for Jackson, Miss., where they may board an Amtrak train and arrive in Memphis that night or in Chicago the next morning. Tickets must be purchased separately through Greyhound and Amtrak. "We continue to discuss restoration of a direct rail connection," Amtrak spokesman Marc Magliari of Chicago told the Press-Register last week. (Here for full story)

According to Press-Register reports, the Sunset Limited was both unprofitable and unpopular, with about 1,600 passengers traveling to or from Mobile on it in 2004, its last full year of operation. In contrast, the Birmingham station sees more than 30,000 passengers each year.

But Amtrak maintains it hasn't ruled out the return of passenger service for Mobile, noting that an Amtrak station is still part of the condo-retail plan. The transit commission's Sanders said "America in general needs to be serious about providing the opportunity to travel by rail." As a major city in the region, Mobile should have direct service, she said.

Press-Register

India - Pune's BRTS inaugurated in turmoil












The Bus Rapid Transit System (BRTS) began with an inagural ceremony today with the first city, Pune, coming online. The Indian government rewarded the city of Pune with "a sanction of Rs 550 crore ($$) from the Union government under the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM). Supposedly this urban renewal incentive program puts Pune on the "transit map." Union urban development minister Jaipal Reddy on Sunday said that "Pune is on top of the list of important cities that the government has been considering under the JNNURM. Pune has a glorious history, and the way it is developing in various fields and implementing JNNURM projects, its future is going to be far more glorious," he added.

On the surface this appears to be nothing more than local political rumblings for upgrading transportation networks throughout India, but with major rail systems already established in cities such as Mumbai (Maharashtra), Kolkata/Calcutta (West Bengal), and Delhi, a new bus system in India shouldn't deem international attention.

Under the surface, however, the flowery speech at the BRTS inauguration revealed political rumblings of another sort. , and the Pune Municipal Corporation (city government) "hastily inaugurated the incomplete Bus Rapid Transit System (BRTS) pilot project on Katraj-Swargate corridor." Reddy who is coming into election season, eagerly praised the new bus system and promised more lines to come. With civic elections are around the corner, promises are common but so can be diverting responsibility. According to the Pune Newsline:
Reddy made it clear that the Centre would not provide funds for purchasing buses for the BRTS project, saying "It is the role of the State government and not the Centre to fund infrastructure development projects." ... Meanwhile, the inaugural function saw all the political parties except the Congress boycotting it with NCP’s PMT committee member Prashant Jagtap alleging the members were kept in the dark about the function. He said the PMT infrastructure had to be strengthened before inaugurating the project.
Local Indian politics may or may not have much in common with democratic systems elsewhere. However, similarities can be drawn between Pune and transit systems across the globe. For starters, cities municipalities placing funding and organizational responsibility on the State is a common trend when weak transit authorities do not have very strong direction and guidance. Also, keeping officials in the dark is a common strategy by opportunistic politicians wishing not only to secure the lime-light, but to also avoid a critical audience.

The city of Pune may be far removed from the larger, involved "metro-complexes" of interconnected transit systems of Europe, Japan, and the United States northeast. They may not ever get as much attention as, say, Seattle's ambitious rail system costing billions of dollars to construct, yet in 'puny' Pune we still clearly see the same problems and trends which plague even the largest metro systems.

Times of India, Pune Newsline,


Update:

Pune isn't exactly so small anymore. Already the next big thing in India, Pune is getting a lot of attention recently for it's "Highest Per-Capita City in India" status and information-technology companies are pouring. Well. . . sifting would be a better word. Traffic is horrendous. According to the Chicago Tribune, the reason a transit system in Pune is getting international attention is because "traffic on the city's narrow roads is occasionally at a standstill. Chaos rules. On a Wednesday evening at 7:30, driving 1 mile took 40 minutes.

Every day, government officials say, people register more than 400 new vehicles in Pune. The city is spilling over its limits, with a population that grew from 2.54 million in 2001 to an estimated 3.19 million this year. About 4,000 people fly in and out daily, compared with a year ago, when only 1,800 people did." It doesn't help that "the Pune Airport . . . has only one runway, which served about 10 passenger flights a day four years ago and now juggles more than 30."


Politics and bureaucracy really are as bad as it sounds though. "Change here, as in much of India, often happens in spite of government, not because of it." BRTS is no different. With most of the system yet to be built, the Municipal Corporation is 'good-to-go'. Here's hoping Pune's Bus Rapid Transit System offers as many solutions as problems they've reminded us exist elsewhere.

Chicago Tribune

Chicago - CTA chooses TieTek composites

The Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) has chosen to buy and install 7,000 TieTek composite railroad ties for transit installation, to be supplied as part of Menard's Railroad Materials supply to CTA.

The CTA operates more than 1,000 rapid transit cars over eight routes and provides 500,000 customer trips each day to 144 stations in Chicago and 40 surrounding suburbs. The TieTek ties will be used for maintenance and spot replacement along CTA's 222 miles of track.

"TieTek composite cross-ties deliver significant performance and financial benefits," says Bob Menard, Owner and President of Menard's Railroad Materials. "They are a smart choice for transit rail applications and we look forward to working with them."

The cross-ties are made from 80% recycled materials and have a projected lifespan of more than 40 years. New York City Transit also recently purchased 11,000 TieTek composite crossties in what has been a busy year for the company.

"Our partnership with the CTA is another exciting development for TieTek," says TieTek CEO Neal Kaufman. "TieTek professionally engineered composite cross-ties are a great choice for our transit customers who want to improve performance and reduce operating costs for their entire system."

TransitSource is not just for commuters, railfans, and journalists. Any new information on successful companies, contractors, and designers will be included in an effort to inform those within transit systems of new trends in technology and engineering as pertaining to rapid-transit.

NetComposites

Saturday, December 2, 2006

D.C. - Online Real-Time Arrival Schedules

Union Station information displays By Richard Layman

I know that WMATA does a bunch of feeds for PDAs, but I don't use a PDA. While at the Regional Bus Transit conference yesterday, I learned that the feeds to the signs that we see in the subway stations are also available online.


1. On the homepage, pick maps and stations, the first tab on the left hand of the screen.
2. Then pick "Find a stop/station."
3. Choose a station, such as Union Station.
4. On the screen, click on this text: Next Train Arrival.
5. And you'll get the information for the next three trains.

Thank you to Fred Candelaria of WMATA for showing me this!

I haven't heard of many systems which have been able to supply this service efficiently, but WMATA has done a great job with bringing their information to their riders. In an era where PDA's and internet-capable phones like Blackberry's and Treo's, having real-time arrival schedules posted on the web is a wonderful idea and shouldn't be too hard to do for transit systems already tracking arrival times for station monitors.

Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space (Blog), WMATA

Bay Area - BART train derails in Oakland

Hours after a mysterious accident jolted a Bay Area Rapid Transit train partly off the track, Oakland City Center station reopened Friday night and BART trains are running on time, though workers still were removing the stranded train and repairing damaged track.

A single axle of the Fremont-Richmond train (Orange Line) hopped the track at 2:55 p.m. PST Friday, stopping the four-car train carrying about 100 passengers in the tunnel between the Lake Merritt and 12th Street stations just before rush hour. Passengers experienced system-wide delays of up to 30 minutes during the evening commute.

BART officials struggled for an hour to get passengers to and around the East Bay, bypassing trains around the stranded cars and then programming the Richmond and Pittsburg-Bay Point trains to alternate on the same 12th Street platform.

Oakland firefighters helped BART police and linguistic translators evacuate both the station and the stranded train 200 feet down inside the tunnel. One person was shaken up by the incident and taken to the hospital "for nerves".

BART officials were unsure whether repairs could be completed by this morning. "I'm going to cross my fingers and hope it will get done tonight," said BART spokesman Linton Johnson. What made the train leave the track isn't clear, Johnson said, and is something that happens "once every decade or so." Another BART spokesman, Jim Allison, says the train became immobile as the result of a damaged switch. According to Allison, there was a report of smoke in the tunnel, but no fire could be seen.

BART crews planned to split the train in two after service ended early today, tow half to a yard and lift the other half back onto the tracks, which need repair as well. The lead car apparently slammed back down on the rail and deformed it, requiring a replacement, Johnson said.

"We hope to have it done by morning, but that may not be possible," Johnson said. He added that regardless, Saturday service should not be affected, as trains are being re-routed around the area.

Until the track is repaired, Platform 1 at the Oakland City Center/12th St. Station and at the 19th St. Station in Oakland are closed and there will be no transfers between Richmond and Pittsburg-Bay Point trains at Oakland City Center. Transfers will be made at MacArthur Station.

The Oakland Tribune, Alameda Star-Times, CBS 5, ABC 7,

Friday, December 1, 2006

Public Service Announcement - Drink and Ride

As in Moscow, if you're going to drink, please don't drink and drive. Drink and ride instead (but preferably not at the same time; That would make you a bum).

EnglishRussia.com

Phoenix - Boston firm awarded light rail contract

Boston-based Alternate Concepts Inc. bid on the five-year contract for $3 million under the official estimate, beating out four competitors. It will operate trains and run the central control center. Metro's governing board on Thursday awarded a $27 million contract to the firm that will run the light-rail system when it opens in late 2008. So far Alternate Concepts Inc. has been responsible for oversight of the Puerto Rico and Houston transit systems, both of which have been known to be troublesomely maintained.

The Arizona Republic

Taiwan - Bullet Train will see profits in 2nd year











TAICHUNG (XFN-ASIA) - Taiwan High Speed Rail Corp (THSRC), which has built Taiwan's first bullet train system
(it reaches speeds of 300 km per hour) and is still awaiting the final go-ahead to begin service, said that it expects operations to be profitable by its second year.

'We are targeting operational profits in the second year of commercial services,' company chief executive officer Ou Chin-der told XFN-Asia on the sidelines of a media gathering.

It expects to break even 12 months after its first commercial run. An official quoted estimates from the Council of Economic Planning and Development that construction of the high-speed rail network has created 480,000 jobs and may contribute 1 percentage point to economic growth.

Forbes.com / AFX News Limited

New Orleans - DOT gives $15.7M for Pub. Trans.

The DOT waived funding matching requirements for the New Orleans Regional Transit Authority today. The DOT, which has been very kind to Louisiana since hurricane Katrina, is changing requirements and population records for more funding and support for the whole state, specifically the Baton Rogue/New Orleans region.

The RTA, which employed 1,357 people before the storm, has already shed more than 750 workers who have been laid off, relocated because their homes were flooded or left the agency voluntarily through resignations or retirements. The agency's current payroll stands at 599. This move should temporarily save 50 employees from being laid off. Said Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters,
“this investment is as much about bringing energy and vitality back to the streets of New Orleans as it is about keeping bus and trolley service running. Nobody should be left without a way to get to work because of a set of rules that don’t take into account all this incredible city has been through."
Source:
DOT Office of Public Affairs, The Times-Picayune


Thursday, November 30, 2006

Dallas - Man killed by DART train

A man was killed Wednesday night when he was struck by a DART train near Skillman Street and LBJ Freeway.

The northbound train struck the man on the track about 9:30 p.m., a few hundred yards south of the LBJ/Skillman station, said Morgan Lyons, spokesman for Dallas Area Rapid Transit.

The man's name had not been released, but he is believed to be in his 20s. The train's operator said she saw the man on the track with his legs crossed but was unable to stop the train in time.

Mr. Lyons said Wednesday night that it was too early to tell whether the death was a suicide or an accident. No one on the train was injured.

Source:
The Dallas Morning News

Just in the past week I've reported transit related deaths in cities including Washington D.C., Bradley Beach (New Jersey), and now Dallas. Passenger and worker deaths are more common on transit systems than I would have ever believed. However their passing does not really receive much attention in the national and international news. I do not list these stories simply for sensationalism. I feel these deaths need to be reported with more accuracy and proficiency, not only out of respect for those who lost their lives, but also as a reminder to readers of the dangers and challenges involved maintaining rapid transit systems. Thank you for understanding.

Vietnam - Britain/Japan Help Plan Massive Metrorail















In a nice example of international cooperation, both Britain and Japan are assisting Vietnam in the design and funding of a new rail system for the capital, Ho Chi Minh City. The project will cost an estimated 5 billion dollars with six lines and 60 percent underground, Vietnam is very fortunate to have the kind of support Britain and Japan are offering. Japan is spending $2.7 million on design and technical assistance through grants while Britain has promised $450 million over the next five years and another $7 million when Vietnam joins the World Trade Organization.


Source: ICON international Construction Review

D.C. - Two Struck by train, One Dead

Two Metro track walkers were struck by a four-car Yellow Line train on an elevated track between the Huntington and Eisenhower Ave Metrorail stations at 9:30 a.m. today, Nov. 30. One employee was killed, and the second person is in critical condition and has been transported to a local hospital.

The 29-year veteran employee who died was conducting routine track inspection along the rail line at the time of his death. The injured worker has been a Metro employee since April 2006. The accident is under investigation.

The Yellow Line train involved in the incident was leaving the Huntington station and heading into the Alexandria rail yard. There were no passengers aboard the train because it was not in service. The train operator, a Metro employee since 1999, was taken for routine drug and alcohol testing.

The Huntington and Eisenhower Ave stations are closed as emergency personnel investigate the incident. Yellow Line trains are terminating at the Braddock Road Metrorail station. Free shuttle bus service has been established between the Braddock Road, King Street, Eisenhower Ave and Huntington stations.

The Metro Transit Police and emergency personnel are on the scene. An internal investigation continues, and the National Transportation Safety Board is also investigating the accident.

This is the second employee fatality this year. On May 14, an automatic train control technician was hit and killed by a Red Line train at the Dupont Circle Metrorail station. Fourteen Metro employees have died on the job in the agency’s 30-year history.

Source:
WMATA Press Release

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

NYC Transit Makes Plans for Tree Lighting Tonight

Christmas Tree Lighting at Rockefeller Center 5pm - 9pm with the Radio City Rockettes and world-class ice skaters. Busses serving the Rockefeller Center area will be rerouted during the tree lighting ceremony to avoid congestion.

Source:
MTA NYC Transit

New York - Record Use for Manhattan Subways

Average weekday subway ridership rose to 5.076 million in September, the highest level since transit officials began making monthly calculations in 1970, New York City Transit said yesterday. It was the first time since 1970 that the average weekday figure passed 5 million on the subway. Combined subway and bus ridership in September was 7.61 million on an average weekday. That was the highest combined figure since December 1970, when it was 7.627 million.

Source:
NY Times

New Zealand - Monorail Plans for Capital

SkyCabs International, a New Zealand company based in Auckland, New Zealand, has announced that it is planning to build a monorail in New Zealand's capital, Wellington for about NZ$300 million.

SkyCabs International's plans are to build a monorail service that starts in Johnsonville which then travels into the central business district (cbd) and then finally goes to Wellington International Airport.

The chief executive of SkyCabs, Hugh Chapman, said that it could be "...economically feasible." And that the monorail would be "a real opportunity." The monorail would also be environmentally friendly, according to Mr Chapman.

"SkyCabs' cabs could run in opposite directions on both sides of the beam - instead of on the top as standard monorails do - at speeds of up to 80kmh and carrying 4800 people an hour in each direction. A monorail around Evans Bay and Oriental Bay would blow tourists' minds," said Mr Chapman.

SkyCabs is currently trying to raise $31.2 million so it can built a 600 metre track in Auckland to show investors and the public what the monorail will look like and how it will work as their technology is so far unproven and untested. The possible site is Rainbows End, a theme park in Auckland.

"Potentially, if we can prove it works, the market is about $25.4 billion a year," Mr Chapman said.

Andrew Cutler, spokesman for the greater Wellington regional council, said: "SkyCabs had briefed some council staff on its ideas. However, given the council and Government recently committed to a $50 million upgrade of the Johnsonville rail line, SkyCabs would certainly not be constructing a Johnsonville-to-city monorail."

Source:
Wikinews, Newswire, The Dominion Post,

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Seattle - The Reach for Rail

Cities seek funding for potential transit











Seattle's proposed light-rail rapid transit system had been merely hopes and dreams before today. Almost canceled for lack of support and funding, Seattle lawmakers got a big boost from the federal government today when the Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters told city and state officials that the Federal Transit Administration (DOT) has signed off on the final designs for the Puget Sound transportation project and has given the plan a "high" rating meaning it is on the FTA's "spending priorities" list. According to the
Seattle Times:

" Sound Transit's 3.1 mile underground extension to the University of Washington will cost about $1.7 billion; Seattle hopes to secure a funding grant from the federal government for up to $750 million of the total."

This leaves a big hole to fill in funding, but with the FTA on board, Seattle's hopes for advanced transit have gone from the cancellation of the
Seattle Monorail Project to a very real possibility of a basic light rail system.

Seattle is one of the biggest cities in the country without a light-rail transit system. Known for its minimalist approach to major city projects (see:
new arena rejected), Seattle has held back from rushed and image-driven designs such as the poorly planned transit system run by the Metro Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority. Other American cities seriously considering or already working on new transit systems are Phoenix, Charlotte, Kansas City, Louisville, and Tampa Bay:


Phoenix
's Valley Metro system, which has a very well developed bus system, is catching on in which the idea of "circulators" or buses which go out into neighborhoods (The new strategy has met with resounding approval of the public and will be implemented through the next two years). Phoenix is far ahead of other cities preparing their rail system. Deep in the middle of construction, the Phoenix Metro Light Rail system is "on time and on budget" to be completed by December, 2008.

Charlotte
is also in construction mode working on a 15-station, 10 mile long system with 7 "park-and-ride" locations.

Kansas City
's proposed system, while well structured and with voter approved special-option taxes, has not gone before the FTA yet.

Louisville
is in a very heated debate on the issue with strong opinions on both sides of the issue. Even the Sierra Club and the Coalition for the Advancement of Regional Transportation have jumped on the bandwagon to get the ball rolling on a new federally assisted transit system.

Tampa Bay
passed a resolution last week to focus on transit, however the resolution "does not call for a specific solution to our transportation issues, it (only) indicates a need to address these issues and examine all opportunities."


Many cities like Tampa Bay will posture and present vague open-ended goals for a future transit system to show they are "forward thinkers" while more progressive cities like Phoenix and Charlotte have already committed their resources and plan to take their rapid-transit projects responsibly and seriously.
The most important cities to focus on are going to be those with the will and the voter support, yet still lack the funding to complete their systems. These cities, including Seattle and especially Louisville, need extra attention and support from outside resources if their plans are ever going to be realized.

Sources:
Charlotte News Observer, Kansas City Business Journal, Tampa Bay Business Journal, KVOA News 4, Tuscon, AZ, The (Louisville) Courier Journal, American Society of Civil Engineers, Urbanrail.net

Monday, November 27, 2006

Britain - Network Rail makes first profit

Network Rail, which runs Britain's railway tracks and signals, is expected to announce it has made a profit for the first time in its history. Financial results for the six months to September show a profit of £747m, which the not-for-profit firm is to spend on improving the rail network. This comes after the company cut costs by more than £1bn and the beginning of delayed payments from the government. In May, Network Rail announced a pre-tax loss of £232m for 2005-6.

Network Rail Chairman Ian McAllister said improved train safety and punctuality had turned Britain's railways into a success, but that new and greater challenges lay ahead. With more passengers, Network Rail had to find ways of easing overcrowding and boosting the capacity of the rail system, he said. The company said last year's losses were largely down to paying interest on money it had borrowed to fix the railway network. Network Rail replaced private firm Railtrack in 2002.

Global Perspective:
Cutting costs and overhead is always a quick way to turn a profit. Hopefully Network Rail will show a consistent profit rather than this single spike in improvement.

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Dublin - traffic plan begins tomorrow

The Operation Freeflow traffic management plan for Dublin will swing into action at 6.30am tomorrow. Dozens of dedicated traffic gardai will be backed by an extra 163 student officers for the six-week initiative to ease gridlock during Christmas and the New Year.

Trouble spots such as Quality Bus Corridors, major traffic junctions, Luas interchanges and Nitelink services will be targeted for special attention by officers.

Deputy Garda Commissioner Fachtna Murphy briefed officers this weekend on the operation and promised rigorous enforcement of the Road Traffic Act. "Traffic disruption will be kept to a minimum for users of both public and private transport," he said.

Specialist Garda services also being deployed between tomorrow and Friday, January 5 include the Air Support Unit, the Garda Mountain Bike Unit, the Garda Regional Traffic Division, the Garda Mounted Unit and Garda Communications.

"Gardai on motorcycle, car and on foot patrol will also have specific duties to target and tackle any problems that may arise," Deputy Commissioner Murphy said. Further information on the plan is available at www.freeflow.ie and on Live Drive 103.2 FM.

Global Perspective:
Dublin, Ireland is not known for having a major rapid-transit system - rather, they are known for congested traffic. However, they are showing great initiative in tackling the underlying problems that rapid transit systems strives to solve. It's good to see a city making transit issues a priority and finding efficient ways to ease commuter woes.

Source: The Irish Times

Saturday, November 25, 2006

New York - Public transit not wheelchair-friendly

New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), Boston's Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA), and the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) have all come under fire for severe negligence in meeting handicap codes. All are facing lawsuits or have already settled. Read about the problems facing handicapped commuters and the transit agencies striving to meet minimum standards.

Source: Associated Press Article by David Caruso

New York - System Down for Internet Upgrade

DISRUPTION OF SERVICE
A major system upgrade to NYCT's Internet access capabilities is scheduled for the Thanksgiving Holiday weekend. The web servers will be out of service for an extended time beginning at 5:00 PM, Wednesday, November 22nd. Normal Internet service will resume at latest by Monday, November 27, 2006.We appreciate your patience and cooperation as we implement this necessary upgrade.

D.C. - Weekend Delays On WMATA

Weekend track work to impact portions of Green and Yellow lines

Train car testing and maintenance work on the Green and Yellow Lines this weekend (Nov. 25 and 26) will cause moderate delays on those lines as inbound and outbound trains take turns sharing the same tracks. Inbound and outbound trains between Greenbelt and College Park will share tracks while new trains will be tested along the Green Line this Saturday, Nov. 25, and Sunday, Nov. 26, from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Inbound and outbound trains between Mt. Vernon Sq./7th St.-Convention Center and Navy Yard along the Green and Yellow lines will also share the same track while Metro conducts track maintenance on Saturday, Nov. 25, from 7 to 10 a.m. and from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. Delays are expected to be between 15 and 20 minutes.

Source: WMATA Press Release

Santa Express Kicks Off Holidays Today















Several transit systems across the country are celebrating the official beginning of the Holiday Season today with their version of the Santa Express with the Big Guy in Red arriving on a train rather than a sleigh. Here's a sampling of the various Santa Expresses planned for today and this weekend.

Philadelphia - SEPTA’s popular Santa Express trains return on BIG Friday, November 24th. Join the fun and enjoy a train ride into Center City with clowns, musicians and face painters, before meeting the big man himself – Santa Claus – at the Gallery at Market East. There will be two Regional Rail Santa Express Trains making all local stops – one departing Paoli (R5) at 9:10 a.m. and one departing Chestnut Hill West (R8) at 9:30 a.m. Santa Express El trains will also depart from Frankford Transportation Center, 69th Street Terminal, and Broad Street Subway Fern Rock Station at 10:00 a.m. Look for flyers and information at stations.

Anne-Arbor - ... see the Jolly Old Elf on the Santa Express, an excursion train running from Howell to the "North Pole'' (aka ... Byron) and back every weekend until Christmas, starting this weekend... This year's ride, with four departure times each Saturday and Sunday through Dec. 24, will include Christmas songs and refreshments on the journey north. There are four departures each day from Howell's Depot Museum at 128 Wetmore St. in the downtown area...
The train consists of comfortable, climate-controlled passenger cars built in the 1950s and pulled by vintage GP-35 diesel locomotives, built in 1964 for the Ann Arbor Railroad and owned now by the Great Lakes Central Railroad. Unfortunately, because of the historic nature of the equipment, the train is not handicapped accessible. One note: Several of those who have taken the tour, including Haleck, mentioned that the passenger cars can sometimes get a bit chilly, so it's advisable to dress warmly, in layers, for the trip. The trip takes about 90 minutes and costs $25 for adults and $20 for children under age 12 and seniors.

Atlanta - MARTA has held their own spectacular Santa Express in previous years. Hopefully it will be held this year as well, although information is not currently posted on their website.

Friday, November 24, 2006

SEPTA Restoring Full R2 Service Today

New R2 Warminster Schedules Effective (Today), Friday, Nov. 24

PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 21 /PRNewswire/ -- Following the completion of a railroad maintenance project, SEPTA will restore midday train service on the R2 Warminster Regional Rail Line and operate with new schedules beginning (today), Friday, November 24th. The new schedules are available at Market East, Suburban and 30th Street Stations and SEPTA sales offices. Passengers may also view the schedules online at http://www.septa.org. Regular midday R2 Warminster train service will now operate between Warminster and Center City Philadelphia in time for the start of the holiday shopping season. SEPTA had been operating shuttle buses during the midday in place of trains along a portion of the route since early August due to the project. During the maintenance project SEPTA performed various procedures to improve reliability and provide more efficient service for riders including removing operating restricting vegetation, replacing railroad ties and resurfacing track.

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Crew’s Role Checked in Passenger Death

Bradley Beach, N.J. (NY Times) - A preliminary investigation into the death of a passenger on a New Jersey Transit train has found that an assistant conductor might not have been at her post, the railroad said yesterday. Her responsibility was to watch the platform, the railroad has said.

The passenger, John D’Agostino, 49, died after being dragged nearly 50 feet as the train left the Bradley Beach station. The assistant conductor, with the conductor and the train’s engineer, were suspended with pay pending the outcome of drug and alcohol tests, said Dan Stessel, a spokesman for New Jersey Transit. Mr. D’Agostino was traveling on a replacement train after his train struck Joan Kelly, 22, of East Brunswick.

Source: NY Times

Transit Security Funding Declared a Priority

Newly leading Democrats in both the House and Senate have placed funding for transit security on their list of priorities for homeland security.

In the House Representative Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., the incoming chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said in an AP interview: "a real rail security plan doesn't exist. While between $8 and $9 is spent per air passenger on air security measures, only 2 cents to 3 cents per rail passenger is spent on rail security." Thompson wants to bring spending for mass transit and rail security more on a par with what is spent on security for air travel.

Senator Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., soon to take over the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, has made "more transit security funding" one of his top priorities. Other priorities include better information-sharing, homeland security grant distribution, more resources to state and local first responders, and
interoperable communications equipment

Source: Associated Press

Turkeys Try to Catch Train Out of N.J.


RAMSEY, N.J. (AP) -- Some wild turkeys, it appears, were trying to get out of New Jersey before Thanksgiving Day. A spokesman for the NJ Transit said train officials reported a dozen or so wild turkeys waiting on a station platform in Ramsey (Ramsey Station), about 20 miles northwest of New York City, on Wednesday afternoon. The line travels to Suffern, N.Y.

''For a moment, it looked like the turkeys were waiting for the next outbound train,'' said Dan Stessel, a spokesman for NJ Transit. ''Clearly, they're trying to catch a train and escape their fate.''

Transit workers followed the bird's movements on surveillance cameras. ''I have no idea how they got there,'' Stessel said. New Jersey Transit released this security camera photo to the AP.

A Ramsey police dispatcher said the department had received three calls about the traveling turkeys who also were blamed for causing morning rush hour traffic problems on a roadway.

''From time to time, I've heard calls that there are turkeys on the loose,'' said Erik Endress, president of the Ramsey Rescue Squad, a volunteer group. ''Maybe they're trying to make a break.''

NJ Transit spokesman Dan Stessel says the turkeys flew away after this video image was taken and it is still unknown where they came from.

Source: Associated Press, NY Times, Midland Daily News,

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Creative Advisories







Trains skipping stations are a not-so-common complaint amongst transit commuters. However, the problem does exist. Most authorities do not address this issue or put it off as conductor error, leaving some commuters baffled when their train slows down only to take off without ever stopping. SEPTA, the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority
actually address this issue. SEPTA gives a very creative and impressively well thought-out reason for the runaway trains involving a technical explanation of "Slippery Rail Season".

From SEPTA's Website:
"As you’re looking out your train or trolley window admiring the vivid colors of the autumn leaves, SEPTA rail maintenance personnel are also closely watching Mother Nature’s handiwork. While they appreciate the beauty of the season, they are more concerned about the effect on rail conditions when the leaves begin to fall. Known as “Slippery Rail Season”, every year information is posted ... reminding customers about this annual occurrence and the measures SEPTA takes to combat it.

What is Slippery Rail?
Slippery Rail is a condition that occurs when falling leaves, crushed by passing vehicles, deposit a residue on the tracks. This coating decreases the friction of a train’s wheels, creating slippery rails. When this happens, travel speeds are reduced to maintain safe operations, especially on inclines and declines and when vehicles approach the station platform.

How Does SEPTA Tackle Slippery Rail?
SEPTA has an aggressive maintenance program that employs a combination of water, gel, and sand to remove oily deposits on the tracks. Over the last several years, the Authority has invested in high pressure washing equipment, mounted on trains, to blast away the leaves and leaf residue. This action has proved to be effective in removing debris from the tracks, but, short of plucking every leaf from every tree, customers may still experience intermittent service delays caused by slippery rail.

Rider Tips
Getting you to your destination without delays or inconvenience is very important, but ensuring that your trip is safe always takes precedence. So please allow some extra time to complete your trip and be alert if trains “express” past selected stations. ... Thank you for your patience – we hope you will relax and enjoy the scenery."

This may sound costly and a bit too detail oriented, but capital funds have to be spent somewhere, and if leaf-blowers mounted to trains gets the job done, then more power to SEPTA. If this doesn't make commuters more complacent, I don't know what will.

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

New Jersey - 2 Killed on Transit Tracks




By: Associated Press
BRADLEY BEACH, N.J. (AP) -- A man was struck and killed early Tuesday by a commuter train sent to pick up passengers stranded after their first train hit and killed a woman, authorities said.

Two hundred passengers were aboard an NJ Transit train when it hit a woman in Matawan, 22 miles south of Newark, just before midnight Monday, agency spokesman Dan Stessel said.

A train was sent to pick up passengers from the first train while the death was being investigated, and the passengers continued south, Stessel said.

Around 2 a.m., the second train struck and killed a man in Bradley Beach, about 15 miles from Matawan. Stessel said crew members on the train did not know they had hit someone until they stopped in Spring Lake, about 4 miles away.

Authorities were investigating the deaths. NJ Transit said there were no significant delays for morning commuters.

The North Jersey Coast Line runs between New York's Penn Station and Bay Head, about 16 miles south of Asbury Park.

(SUBS last graf to correct train terminus to Penn Station sted Newark.)

Deeper Look:
According to NJTransit at 11:41 AM, trains have been unaffected and there are no delays:

"
NJ TRANSIT asks all customers to be aware of their surroundings. If you see any suspicious activity or unattended packages, please call NJ TRANSIT Police at 1-888-TIPS-NJT.

"
NEC #3835, the 10:29 AM departure from New York Penn Station, is operating up to 15 minutes late near Metropark.

"
NJ TRANSIT buses, trains and light rail lines are operating on or close to schedule."

Sources:
Associated Press
, NY Times, NJ Transit,


Site Managed By:

I'm a freelance journalist covering Seattle City Hall & Local Elections. Contact me for pitch ideas and syndication.