Metrolink Refuses to Admit Failure of Rotem Anti-Derailment Blade
Recently, both Ventura County Star and 
L.A. Times articles reported on Metrolink’s unexpected decision to place
 newly  leased Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNSF) freight engines at 
the head-end of  all Metrolink trains. Both articles omit important 
safety related information.  In the Star article, Moorpark City 
Councilman Keith Millhouse, a member of the railroad's board of 
directors said, “…  since we don’t know what role, if any, the cab cars 
played, we won’t speculate  on it. The only way to run the railroad and 
take away a potential risk, if any, until we know the answer, is to put 
locomotives up front.”
 In February 2015, a Metrolink passenger train with a  Hyundai-Rotem
 cab car in front derailed after hitting a Ford F-450 utility truck and 
 trailer. Predawn, that rig became high-centered on to the tracks near 
the 5th St. and  Rice Ave. grade crossing outside of Oxnard. After the collision, Metrolink officials were  quick to declare
 that the state-of-the-art cars with energy absorbing crush  zones, 
heavier construction and anti-derailing features appeared to reduce  
deaths and injuries in the accident.
In February 2015, a Metrolink passenger train with a  Hyundai-Rotem
 cab car in front derailed after hitting a Ford F-450 utility truck and 
 trailer. Predawn, that rig became high-centered on to the tracks near 
the 5th St. and  Rice Ave. grade crossing outside of Oxnard. After the collision, Metrolink officials were  quick to declare
 that the state-of-the-art cars with energy absorbing crush  zones, 
heavier construction and anti-derailing features appeared to reduce  
deaths and injuries in the accident.
The direct quote, at that time was: "We can safely say that the 
technology worked," Metrolink spokesman Jeff Lustgarten told reporters. 
"It minimized the impact of what (could have been) a very serious 
collision. It would have been much worse without it." Now, almost six 
months after the deadly Oxnard collision, Metrolink spokesman Jeff 
Lustgarten, or is it now Scott Johnson should retract those erroneous 
and  self-serving statements. It was a "very serious collision". As a result,
 Sr. Engineer Glenn Steele died. There were twenty-seven injured, 
including some with life-changing consequences. What could be worse; if 
everybody died?
In the recent L.A. Times article, Keith
 Millhouse  said, “This is an interim measure until the plow can be 
evaluated and beefed up  if necessary. This is going to be costly for 
the railroad, but you can't put a  price on safety.” Further, the 
article read, “Millhouse stressed that the  temporary restrictions on the Rotem vehicles relate specifically to how the plow  performed in the crash, not the larger  debate over the safety of cab cars”.
debate over the safety of cab cars”.
With the Hyundai-Rotem anti-derailment plow, there is no “performance” 
issue. It  is a clear-cut case of structural failure. As demonstrated by
 news photos taken  soon after the collision, the plow, which was 
formerly attached to Hyundai-Rotem  cab car No. 645 is nowhere in sight.
 As the most important piece of forensic  evidence from that  deadly collision,
 what happened to that anti-derailment plow? Is it in the  custody of 
the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB)? Did contractors who  
cleaned up the crash site discard it along with other assorted debris? 
If no one  saved that blade, how can Metrolink or the NTSB determine the
 circumstances of  its detachment from the cab car?
 To
 add insult to injury, Metrolink announced just days ago, that it will 
purchase up to forty-nine state-of-the-art Electro-Motive Tier 4 
locomotives. The new locomotives will be replacements for its aging,  
unreliable and admittedly un-maintained fleet of 1990’s diesel 
locomotives. With  not so much as a prototype of the new Electro-Motive 
Tier 4 locomotive available  for inspection or testing, an artist’s 
rendering is all that we have to go on.
To
 add insult to injury, Metrolink announced just days ago, that it will 
purchase up to forty-nine state-of-the-art Electro-Motive Tier 4 
locomotives. The new locomotives will be replacements for its aging,  
unreliable and admittedly un-maintained fleet of 1990’s diesel 
locomotives. With  not so much as a prototype of the new Electro-Motive 
Tier 4 locomotive available  for inspection or testing, an artist’s 
rendering is all that we have to go on.
In the 2015 Oxnard collision, when it impinged upon a  Ford F-450 utility truck
 and trailer, the lightweight Hyundai-Rotem anti-derailment plow 
experienced a catastrophic  failure. Already, Electro-Motive is touting 
their new Tier 4 locomotive as the 
 lightest weight (280,000 lb.) locomotive available on the market today.
 If  lighter is better, why is Metrolink leasing up to fifty-eight of the
 heaviest  BNSF locomotives available to head up its commuter trains? 
Without a prototype to  test, how do we know if the anti-derailment plow
 installed on Metrolink’s new  Tier 4 locomotives will pass the “F-450 
Truck & Trailer Crash Test”?
 The
 Electro-Motive website shows a futuristic picture of a cab-forward  
locomotive “design” with an anti-derailment plow attached. With its 
slightly bulbous nose,  it looks like a bullet train from one of 
Governor Gerry Brown’s  high-speed rail dreams. If not for the 
thirty-plus grade crossings on the   Metrolink Ventura County Line alone, this lightweight locomotive might be a good idea.
The
 Electro-Motive website shows a futuristic picture of a cab-forward  
locomotive “design” with an anti-derailment plow attached. With its 
slightly bulbous nose,  it looks like a bullet train from one of 
Governor Gerry Brown’s  high-speed rail dreams. If not for the 
thirty-plus grade crossings on the   Metrolink Ventura County Line alone, this lightweight locomotive might be a good idea.
Until necessary grade-crossing safety improvements are completed, I will
 expect the  "heavy iron" of a BNSF freight locomotive up front on my 
next Metrolink Ventura County Line ride. In block letters, Metrolink 
should emblazon each BNSF locomotive with the words, "BNSF MEANS 
TONNAGE". Still we will have the uninformed or unsuspecting, such as Mr.
 Jose Sanchez Ramirez who's F-450 debacle led to all of this 
controversy. Most local commuters will slow to a stop when they see the 
Great BNSF Behemoth approaching their grade crossing. Suicide is still a
 potential factor, but with BNSF tonnage up front, most Metrolink 
commuters involved in a collision will probably survive and prosper, 
even after such an encounter.
For decades, airlines have told us what aircraft will service our 
flight. So too  should Metrolink tell us, what is the consort of any 
given train. If there is a  cab car up front or an obsolete, Bombardier bi-level coach anywhere in the mix, I will not board or ride that train. It is simply too dangerous.
Safety
 related information released by Metrolink, or its parent organization, 
the  Southern California Regional Rail Authority (SCRRA) is so rare and nuanced,
 that  it fosters conspiracy theories within me. Helping to cheer me up,
 a source close  to the Metrolink investigation recently told me, “I 
believe the NTSB has the  plow and there is no conspiracy to steal it or
 to foil the investigation.  Metrolink will not give details, but I 
believe that the NTSB informed the  railroad about the failure. It is 
amazing that they are replacing the Rotem cab  cars with engines, using 
an ‘emergency provision’ related to safety. More to  come.”
Being closed-mouthed and 
tight-lipped, SCRRA and Metrolink do little to create  or enhance a 
positive image for passenger rail service in Southern California.  It is
 time for someone or some organization to break through the “cloak of  
invisibility” that the SCRRA has thrown over its own proceedings. In 
violation  of the California Open Meeting Law (Brown  Act), the meeting 
in which the SCRRA board decided to lease the fifty-eight  freight locomotives was closed to both the press and the public. The public has the right to know details regarding the lease of fifty-eight BNSF  locomotives, as well as the cost, including who will be footing that bill.
Are the two interlocking passenger rail agencies (SCRRA & Metrolink)
 serious  about competing in the Southern California commuter 
marketplace? If so, they should reformulate the SCRRA board to include 
railroad operating and safety experts, not more politicians and 
political appointees. Until they do, you can expect Metrolink’s 
operational and legal costs  to skyrocket, while ridership continues its
 long, slow decline. SCRRA and Metrolink, it is time for transparency 
and reform.
  
By James McGillis at 11:29 PM | | Comments (0) | Link

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