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Manhattan Subway Fire Cripples 2 Lines
NY Times ^ | January 25, 2005 | SEWELL CHAN

Posted on 01/24/2005 7:24:53 PM PST by neverdem

Two of the city's subway lines - the A and the C - have been crippled and may not return to normal capacity for three to five years after a fire Sunday afternoon in a Lower Manhattan transit control room that was started by a homeless person trying to keep warm, officials said yesterday.

The blaze, at the Chambers Street station used by the A and C lines, was described as doing the worst damage to subway infrastructure since the terrorist attack of Sept. 11, 2001. It gutted a locked room that is no larger than a kitchen but that contains some 600 relays, switches and circuits that transmit vital information about train locations.

The A line will run roughly one-third the normal number of trains - meaning that riders who used to wait six minutes for a train might now have to wait 18 minutes - while the C train will cease to exist as a separate line, at least for the time being. The C will be replaced by the V in Brooklyn. Long waits and erratic service are likely to be the norm for 580,000 passengers who previously relied on the A and C each weekday.

Riders on the West Side of Manhattan and in the Brooklyn neighborhoods of East New York and Ocean Hill-Brownsville will find the available trains more crowded, and will likely seek alternate subway lines, crowding them as well.

"This is a very significant problem, and it's going to go on for quite a while," said Lawrence G. Reuter, the president of New York City Transit. He estimated it would take "several millions of dollars and several years" to reassemble and test the intricate network of custom-built switch relays that were destroyed in the blaze, which officials believe began when the homeless person - who has not been found - set fire to wood and refuse in a shopping cart in the tunnel about 50 feet north of the Chambers Street station.

The flames quickly spread to a series of electrical cables. "Those cables short-circuited as a result of the fire, causing arcing as well as fire inside a relay room," said a Fire Department spokesman, Michael R. Loughran.

The fire underscored the fragility of the antiquated mechanical equipment that keeps the subways moving and of the sensitive nodes where that equipment is stored. Officials said they believed that there were only two companies in the world that were able to repair the signals. One is based in Pittsburgh, and the other in Paris.

The fixed-block signaling system has been in use since the New York subway's inception in 1904. The transit agency has invested $288 million on its first computerized signaling system, scheduled to make its debut on the L line in Brooklyn and Manhattan in July. Computer-based train operation has been a goal of transit planners for decades, but since 1982 the transit agency has focused its capital spending on basic maintenance.

Dozens of signal relay rooms like the one destroyed on Sunday are scattered throughout the 722-mile subway system, and it is impossible to fireproof them, Mr. Reuter said. Firefighters had to forcibly remove the bolts when they arrived at the locked relay room on Chambers Street, but the locks did nothing to prevent the fire from entering.

Until Wednesday, there will be no A service between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m. at Spring, Canal and Chambers Streets and at the Broadway-Nassau station in Manhattan and at the High Street station in Brooklyn to allow workers to perform critical repairs. During those hours, the A will operate on the F track between West Fourth Street in Manhattan and Jay Street in Brooklyn. Supervisors will manually operate signals using two-way radios and observation.

The transit agency said in a statement that there were "no plans for the restoration of C service in the near future."

An expert on the city's subways expressed amazement that a single fire in a confined space could have such a long-lasting impact. "It seems astonishing that a single signal room would be so central to the operation of the line that it would take five years to recover from," said Clifton Hood, a transit historian at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva, N.Y. "That's about as long as it took to build that entire line of the IND."

The first segment of the Independent Subway System, of which the A and C are a part, opened in 1932. The city's three subway divisions were unified in 1940. Professor Hood noted that four stations that were closed after the Sept. 11 attack were reopened in a year.

Yesterday morning, the first commute since the blaze gave a taste of the irritation that awaits riders in the days and weeks to come. "All I can do is wait here and hope for the best," said Ana Reyes, 51, a medical receptionist from Boerum Hill who had waited half an hour for the A train at the Jay Street station in Brooklyn. "Nobody tells you anything, so I just follow everyone else. If a train comes, I'm getting on it, and I don't care where it goes."

Johanna Jainchill contributed reporting for this article.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: New York
KEYWORDS: subway; terroristattack; transportation
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To: Former Dodger

Now that I think of it----you're right!

The TROLL did it!


61 posted on 01/25/2005 6:19:08 PM PST by fastattacksailor (We interrupt your jihad to bring you a Crusade)
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To: Salman

It may have been a homeless person with motion sickness.


62 posted on 01/25/2005 6:20:48 PM PST by Palladin (Proud to be a FReeper!)
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To: fastattacksailor

Thank you very kindly. If my old man were here today, I think he'd be a Freeper, too.


63 posted on 01/25/2005 6:32:44 PM PST by andy58-in-nh
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To: Palladin

Maybe those of us who actually live here are sick and tired of those who know nothing about this city trying to scare us by declaring every single crime and accident as being terrorism.

The very fact that nobody knows if it's terrorism means that it's not -- terrorists aren't vague and nuanced, and they like to kill people, not just disrupt subway service on one branch.


64 posted on 01/25/2005 6:39:39 PM PST by NYC GOP Chick (www.Hillary-Watch.org)
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To: andy58-in-nh

Oh, I daresay he is!
Certainly in spirit......

:-)


65 posted on 01/25/2005 6:40:13 PM PST by fastattacksailor (We interrupt your jihad to bring you a Crusade)
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To: NYC GOP Chick; fastattacksailor
"I don't know where on W.77th you're headed, but the 1 or 9 trains (Seventh Ave. local) should take you to 79th @ Broadway."

I'm headed to the block on the west side of Central Park - not far from the Museum of Natural History. Thanks, guys.

66 posted on 01/26/2005 7:02:50 AM PST by Sam Cree (Democrats are herd animals)
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To: Sam Cree; fastattacksailor; lavrenti
No need to worry, folks! The MTA is on the job!


67 posted on 01/26/2005 8:06:19 AM PST by NYC GOP Chick (www.Hillary-Watch.org)
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To: NYC GOP Chick

I know nothing about your city? You've got to be kidding.
I was born in NYC 6 decades ago, and lived there for half my lifetime.

I know every subway line, and have nephews who work for NYPD, FDNY, and the Transit Authority.

One of my cousins with FDNY laid down his life in 9-11 trying heroically to extract people from an elevator at WTC.

Most New Yorkers, whether native-born or imports, are lovely people.

Then there are the snotty, know-it-all, pretentious bitches like you.


68 posted on 01/26/2005 1:06:10 PM PST by Palladin (Proud to be a FReeper!)
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To: Palladin

Hey, you're a real classy guy! Does it make you feel like a man to namecall and curse at a woman?

You *may* know something about the subways here, but you obviously don't know the difference between a terrorist attack and a nuisance fire on the tracks, thanks to bums. You also don't seem to understand that terrorists *attack* -- they don't pull pranks. And setting a fire in the subway tunnels on a Sunday afternoon is a nuisance -- something that could be done as a prank, not a deadly attack. Bombing the World Trade Center was terrorist attacks. Blowing up Fraunces Tavern was a terrorist attack. Sheesh.


69 posted on 01/26/2005 5:58:20 PM PST by NYC GOP Chick (www.Hillary-Watch.org)
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To: neverdem

the wall street journal print edition had an excellent editorial on this today!

if there ever were an argument against the democrats, their unions, and their public employees destroying the public good, this is it.


70 posted on 01/26/2005 6:01:22 PM PST by ken21
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