Posted on 09/13/2008 6:49:23 PM PDT by BenLurkin
CHATSWORTH, Calif. (CBS) ― Metrolink officials Saturday put the blame squarely on the engineer of the train for the deadly crash that has claimed at least 25 lives. They say he ran a red light.
But a group of local teens, train enthusiasts, who know the engineer well doubt that he was to blame.
They called their friend professional and caring and said he helped them learn about trains and being an engineer. To a man, they said he would "never" have been reckless or unprofessional or run a red light.
But one minute before the deadliest crash in Metrolink history, one teen -- Nick Williams -- said he received a text message on his cell phone from the engineer, whom the teens identified as Robert Sanchez.
Williams' received text was brief, "Just two lines", reported KCAL 9 and CBS 2 reporter Kristine Lazar, exclusively.
The text apparently told Williams and his friends where Sanchez would be meeting another passenger train.
The teens posted a tribute to their friend on YouTube.
A Metrolink spokeswoman earlier stated that the train's engineer, who has not officially been named, ran a red signal.
Another one of the teens, Evan Morrison, told Lazar that Sanchez " was not the kind of guy who would run a red light."
None of them believe he was at fault.
Saturday, Sanchez's teen friends all went to the crash site. Mark Speer, choking back tears said, "this is absolutely devastating."
Denise Tyrell, a spokesperson for Metrolink commented on the report that Sanchez might have been texting immediately before the crash.
She said, "I can't believe someone could be texting while driving a train."
Just imagine if while Obama was texting he hit the red button!
Trains cannot deviate from the ‘track’.
The engineer has very little to do, compared to the driver of an automobile.
Pilots of airliners have no locked in path, like a train does, yet pilots rarely look out the window while flying.
This whole thing is being so erroneously explained by the media, and officials, that I have to wonder what really happened.
Trains don’t ‘go’ and ‘stop’ like automobiles, and even if there was such a thing as a ‘red light’ (as described in the articles so far), by the time the engineer ‘saw’ it, there would be absolutely nothing he could do to stop the train.
A cars ‘stopping’ distance is measured in feet, a train’s stopping distance is measured in miles.
Anyone who has ever had model trains and tracks, or experience in real trains, knows this whole story stinks.
I know nothing of how the systems work, but I have to agree with you that there must be more to this than a simple matter of missing a signal. I find it hard to believe that any system today would permit two trains going in opposite directions to on the same piece of track at the same time.
“BUT that message was a reply to some message previously: They were having an extended conversation. THESE MESSAGES (both inbound, read, and outbound were what was distracting the engineer as he approached the other train.”
Baloney.
The ‘red light’ is a series of red lights, and once on the siding, stay red until the other train passes.
The only way to get onto the siding, is that the track ‘switches’. The engineer doesn’t control these switches.
Since these two trains were on the same track, that means someone or something switched over the track and turned the lights green. There is no other way a train gets from a siding and back onto the main track.
There ain’t no steering wheel in a train.
You need to read up on the specifics.
I know that this will sound like I'm a conspiracy theorist, but I do hope that this is thoroughly investigated by an outside agency. I wouldn't put it past government officials to utilize a 'fall guy' on which to place blame. Sort of a cover-up for some other significant failure.
And evidence that this engineer was texting while he was being paid to pay attention is a pretty clear indictment.
There's a reason for local laws about vehicle drivers not using a hand-held cell phone while driving. This is the worst-case real-world proof that those laws make sense. And save lives.
If there were red lights, they were before the siding, and just prior to the end of the siding.
If they are on, the engineer slows down, the track is ‘switched’ and the train routes off to the siding.
After it clears the switch, the switch changes back for thru traffic.
At the end of the siding, the switch is set for thru traffic, and the train on the siding must wait until the lights go green and the switch changes to allow the train back onto the main track.
Somehow, this didn’t happen. The engineer does not control the lights or switches.
Methinks the RR company is trying to lay off blame on the engineer, because of lawsuits.
Or it was a terrorist act, and the feds are keeping it under wraps until they can investigate further.
I guess that is supposed to be humorous, but the situation isn’t, and the truth is that trains don’t have a steering wheel.
Since the lights change only when the track ‘switches’, this cannot be a simple matter of an engineer not ‘stopping’ at a red light.
The whole ‘explanation’ we are getting in the media is nothing but misinformed caca.
Perhaps you could explain how a train gets to a ‘siding’ while another train passes.
At about 4:22 PM PST. The sam time as the message showed.
This accident wasnt on a siding. The switch was lined for the s/b freight while the n/b Metrolink went through it, and passed the red light.
I do not understand the mechanics of trains and tracks but I do hope there is some final explanation as to what happened. It doesn’t make sense.
The red light indicates a train occupying the next block.
“I didnt know a train COULD pass a red without the brakes coming on.”
Of course they can - just like you can go through a stop light with the car.
Even in cab-signalled territory where I work (Northeast Corridor), with continuous cab signals that indicate block occupancy, trains can _still_ pass Stop Signals, albeit at speeds of 15-20mph. The cab signal system can slow you down, but it WON’T _stop_ you.
The only exception that I know of in the United States is that portion of Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor in which the “ACSES” system is in place. There, a train will be forced to stop before passing a Stop Signal.
In the overwhelming majority of track in the U.S., there is no speed enforcement system at all. Signals are in place that indicate the occupancy of blocks ahead, but it is up to the engineman to live up to what they indicate.
Before anyone reading this posting comes out with the remark that “if that’s the case, the government should require that safety systems be installed everywhere”, you should realize the cost of doing this would be billions of dollars. Ain’t gonna happen any time soon....
- John
Let’s lay the blame on the dead man who can not defend himself instead of bureaucrats higher up that have careers to protect.
“Just imagine if while texting he missed seeing the red light.
Texting or talking on the phone while driving or operating a train is highly irresponsible.”
That’s probably what happened.
Where I work, it’s against the rules to use a cell phone while at the controls of a train. It’s even against the rules to copy railroad-related instructions from the train dispatcher, while in control of the train. In the latter case, either the train must be stopped first, or someone else must do the copying.
Of course, it’s premature to speak with certainty before the post-accident investigations are completed, but from the results, you can well understand WHY they don’t want the engineman distracted while running the train.
- John
This hits me hard. I live in Southern California and know several people who take the MetroLink daily. People just like those who lost their lives Friday who we’re just going about their daily routine, coming home from work to be with their families. My heart and prayers with for all those who have lost thier dear loved ones.
Hey now.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.