Washington state highway reopens after
deadly Amtrak derailment
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[December 21, 2017]
(Reuters) - A major West Coast
highway reopened on Wednesday after workers spent two days clearing the
wreckage from an Amtrak train that derailed in Washington state while
speeding onto a bridge, state transportation officials said.
Crews had carted off the biggest chunk by the afternoon: the
270,000-pound (122,470-kg) locomotive involved in the Monday morning
rush-hour crash in the city of Dupont, which killed three people and
sent another 100 to hospitals.
The affected southbound stretch of Interstate 5, which runs from the
Canadian border to Mexico, opened on Wednesday afternoon, the Washington
State Department of Transportation said. There was a gouge in a road
shoulder from where a train carriage slammed into the surface and guard
rails were crushed but the roadway surface did not suffer any major
damage, officials said.
Federal investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board
(NTSB) are seeking answers about the crash's cause in interviews with
the train's engineer and a trainee conductor who were in the
locomotive's cab.
NTSB members say they are focused on whether the engineer was
distracted, but are timing their interviews with the crew this week
around their recuperation from injuries. Investigators are also
examining the wrecked train cars, which have been taken to a nearby U.S.
military base.
The accident occurred during the train's inaugural run on a new,
slightly quicker route between Olympia and Tacoma, with 86 people
aboard, 80 of them passengers, Amtrak said. It was traveling at 80 miles
per hour, more than twice the speed limit for the curved portion of
track leading to the bridge.
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A damaged Amtrak passenger train car is lifted from the tracks at
the site of the derailment of Amtrak train 501 in Dupont,
Washington, U.S., December 19, 2017. REUTERS/Thomas James
NTSB investigators have found that the train's emergency brakes were
automatically activated during the derailment rather than being
engaged manually by the engineer.
They also said a safety system known as positive train control,
which automatically slows trains if they go too fast, was not
installed on the rail line. Congress had extended a mandatory
deadline for having the system installed on all passenger railways
to 2018.
The derailment placed Amtrak, the country's main passenger rail
service, under renewed scrutiny following a series of fatal
incidents.
The Pierce County Medical Examiner's Office identified the third
victim on Wednesday as Benjamin Gran, 40, of Auburn, Washington.
The other two people killed were Jim Hamre and Zack Willhoite,
transit enthusiasts who wanted to ride the inaugural run along the
new route.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Additional reporting by Jon
Herskovitz; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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