Talk:2015 Philadelphia train derailment: Difference between revisions
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== Misinformation regarding ATC presence and on its behavior relating a civil speed restriction == |
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== Admission by Amtrak administration == |
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There's a bit of misinformation on this page (and in the rather protracted discussion about ATC on this Talk page). |
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Searching the MSM news articles on the Philadelphia train crash, I find that usually they focus on the PTC (Positive Train Control) system, and how expensive and difficult it was to install, and how they were delayed in installing it due to the need to license certain radio frequencies. Presented in that way, that sounds plausible, and it is certainly the most positive spin that Amtrak officials might like to promote, in order to divert as much blame as possible from them or their equipment and lower staff. But I have found an eye-opening article, apparently from the reliable source Philadelphia Inquirer (Philly.com) http://articles.philly.com/2015-05-16/news/62192679_1_amtrak-train-train-188-train-control-system that states "If Amtrak Train 188 had been heading to Philadelphia from New York City, it would not have derailed at the sharp Frankford Junction curve, because an automatic braking mechanism has been in place for years on the southbound side of the tracks to stop a speeding train. But Amtrak never installed the same electronics on the northbound side, so Train 188 was able to enter the curve where the speed limit is 50 m.p.h. at more than 100 m.p.h.". The article goes on to say: |
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:"The positive train control system would have prevented Tuesday's derailment, National Transportation Safety Board member Robert Sumwalt said this week. So would the existing system, if it had been installed on the northbound side, railroad engineers say. Boardman said he and other top Amtrak management were unaware the speed-control mechanism was not in place on the northbound tracks before Tuesday night's crash. "I didn't know that particular condition existed until this occurred," Boardman said. "We probably would have changed it, but we didn't know about it." Engineers for Amtrak and other railroads operating on the Northeast Corridor, the nation's busiest rail route, were well aware of the anomaly." [end of quote] |
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The existing WP article mentions the PTC system and how it might have avoided the derailment, but it does not even give a hint that there was any other sort of deficiency known (or unknown) to management which, if it had been rectified, would also have avoided the accident. This WP article is, therefore, unbalanced as to POV. These facts should be brought to the attention of the reader to more accurately understand what Amtrak's staff had done wrong to precipitate the derailment. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 06:57, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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The official investigation by the [[National Transportation Safety Board]] has completed long ago, and the [https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/AccidentReports/Reports/RAR1602.pdf NTSB accident report] has been published. This report contains a distillation of the facts uncovered in the investigation. Further information in the form of raw factual reports are also available on the NTSB website in the accident [[docket]]. The [https://dms.ntsb.gov/pubdms/search/ NTSB docket search engine] makes direct links difficult, but the [https://dms.ntsb.gov/pubdms/search/ search engine] will yield information if one keys the accident ID ''DCA15MR010''. The information pertinent to this discussion is given in the document titled ''Signal factual''. |
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I should add that I just discovered another article, http://mobile.philly.com/news/?wss=/philly/news&id=305749951 which said, "Under orders from the Federal Rail Administration, Amtrak installed Automatic Train Control on the northbound side of the tracks shortly after the wreck and was examining other potentially dangerous curves where it could be used along the Northeast Corridor. Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/news/20150602_Lawmakers_to_grill_Amtrak_for_first_time_since_derailment.html#MUaOEWzlGSRWYWCv.99 ". In other words, don't bother claiming that there was some sort of unknown and unavoidable impediment to this installation. It could have been done years ago. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 07:27, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:I'm not sure who you are arguing against here except strawmen, because nobody here has said anything remotely resembling what you're ostensibly denouncing. We can certainly include mention of the fact that Amtrak's management said they weren't aware of the gap, and that the problem was corrected shortly after the accident. [[User:NorthBySouthBaranof|NorthBySouthBaranof]] ([[User talk:NorthBySouthBaranof|talk]]) 07:32, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::None of this is a secret, is already discussed in the article, and is sourced in footnote citations [http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/15/us/amtrak-says-it-was-just-months-away-from-installing-safety-system.html 17], [http://www.cnn.com/2015/05/13/us/philadelphia-amtrak-crash-positive-train-control/ 18], [http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/05/13/us-usa-train-derailment-safety-exclusive-idUSKBN0NY2DW20150513 19] and [http://www.democracynow.org/2015/5/14/as_train_crash_death_toll_reaches 20]. [[User:Centpacrr|Centpacrr]] ([[User talk:Centpacrr|talk]]) 18:26, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:::The "impediment", by the way is not "false" nor is it really "technical". It is primarily the failure of the Congress to adequately fund US transportation infrastructure in general -- and railroads in particular. It has been estimated that a fully operational nationwide PTC system would cost upwards of $14B to complete and close to another $1B to maintain and operate on an annual basis. Congressional funding of Amtrak is barely $1B/yr for ''everything'' it does. (China in comparison invests up to $125B annually in its rail systems.) [[User:Centpacrr|Centpacrr]] ([[User talk:Centpacrr|talk]]) 19:17, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::::No! Congress' funding of Amtrak was plenty to install the ATC (Automatic Train Control) at that location. Amtrak simply failed to do that, because their eyes were on the shiny object called PTC (Positive Train Control". So don't try to claim that Amtrak's funding was the cause of this accident. Funding is simply the perennial excuse always raised by government agencies that screw up in some way. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 19:23, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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With the accident report and docket completed and made public, IMHO there should no longer be any need to rely upon mass media accounts, which oftentimes reflect an ignorance of railroad terminology and technology, or are sensationalist in the hope of adding to advertising revenue. |
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:::Above, I said "Lest this article become a mere apologist for Amtrak, it should identify simpler methods mentioned by the news media that would, if followed, have prevented the accident here. This is probably yet another case of "the perfect is the enemy of the good"". Fortunately, I have found evidence of precisely that kind of simpler method, called "Automatic Train Control", that if it had been installed at that location (and was in fact installed, presumably days after the accident, in response to that accident) would have prevented that accident. Therefore, I will add reference to it in the article, and not merely in a Reference that few people will ever see. To me, the future existence of the PTC system is no excuse: Amtrak had known since 2008 (since PTC was authorized by Congress) that PTC wouldn't actually exist for many years. Amtrak management clearly made a terrible decision to omit installing ATC at that location. Presumably, Engineer Bostian knew of the absence of that hardware at that point. It is worthwhile looking for media coverage of the question: {{redacted}} As for your claim that this matter was "already discussed in the article": But https://billypenn.com/2015/07/07/two-months-since-amtrak-188-derailed-whats-changed-and-why-big-problems-remain-its-actually-cheaper-to-kill-people/ noticed that "The company also is quick to point out that in the immediate aftermath of the crash, it installed (read: fixed) a “code change point” in the signal system on the eastbound tracks just west of the Frankford Curve, meaning that trains traveling east from Philadelphia to New York approach the curve at 45 mph in accordance with the speed limit there. They’re not so quick to point out that this technology was previously required." [end of quote] Sluefoot (talk) 19:15, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::::I have redacted an unsourced, unsupported statement about a living person which has no place either in an article or on a talk page. [[User:NorthBySouthBaranof|NorthBySouthBaranof]] ([[User talk:NorthBySouthBaranof|talk]]) 19:36, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:::::Don't you dare! This is a TALK PAGE, NOT an encyclopedia page! You may want to defend him, but my comment was in no way libelous or provably false. You display your clear biases in this way. You already have demonstrated a conflict of interest based on your voluntary disclosure of your employment, and you probably have another, secret conflict that you just demonstrated by manipulated my reasonable comments on this Talk page. It is very likely your kind of biases which have kept this article nearly free of any references to Brandon Bostian {{redacted}} Cite your justifications immediately. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 21:08, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::::::You are accusing an identifiable named person of serious crimes without providing any source for this accusation. You may not use this talk page to make unsupported attacks on living people. Please read the [[WP:BLP|Biographies of Living Persons policy]] - we are an encyclopedia based on reliable sources, and unsourced negative claims about living people are categorically prohibited from any page on the encyclopedia. [[User:NorthBySouthBaranof|NorthBySouthBaranof]] ([[User talk:NorthBySouthBaranof|talk]]) 21:12, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:::::::No, I didn't accuse anyone. See this, from Newsweek: http://www.newsweek.com/no-evidence-amtrak-train-hit-philadelphia-332735 "But Sumwalt said on Sunday that if the train was operating as it should, it would have taken a deliberate move by the engineer for the train to gain speed." Newsweek has a lot of experience in the news field. This quote clearly involves a description of a plausible "deliberate move by the engineer for the train to gain speed". I have done no more than what Newsweek did. I don't intend to make any claim in the article itself, and I haven't made one here, either: Rather, I believe that I made clear that edits should be made from material published by the media (or other reliable sources) on that subject. You apparently don't like that, which is why you took it upon yourself to play cop and invent rules that you find convenient to enforce. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 21:56, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::::::::The complete context for your quote is as follows: '''The NTSB has not ruled out mechanical issues, human error or a deliberate act by the engineer, among other factors. But Sumwalt said on Sunday that if the train was operating as it should, it would have taken a deliberate move by the engineer for the train to gain speed. "The only way that an operable train can accelerate would be if the engineer pushed the throttle forward," Sumwalt said on CNN's "State of the Union."''' |
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::::::::It would be correct to state that the NTSB has not ruled out the possibility of a deliberate act. It would not be correct to use the quote to support your claim that Bostian is "almost-certainly responsible" for the derailment, because that's not remotely what Sumwalt said. We are not a tabloid, nor do we play host to speculation about what people may or may not have done. We are an encyclopedia, and we can afford to wait for the independent investigative process to reach conclusions about what occurred to cause this derailment. Once that investigative process has been completed, reliable sources will no doubt report upon those conclusions and this article will be chock-full of those conclusions. [[User:NorthBySouthBaranof|NorthBySouthBaranof]] ([[User talk:NorthBySouthBaranof|talk]]) 22:13, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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Hey folks, can we dial this back a little bit? This discussion is contributing more heat than light and isn't improving the article. Thanks, [[User:Mackensen|Mackensen]] [[User_talk:Mackensen|(talk)]] 21:10, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:The reason it "isn't improving the article" (yet) is that I have chosen to discuss the issues prior to doing what, to some people, are evidently controversial edits. Not that they should be controversial, but seemingly they have turned out to be so. If you are suggesting that I should go ahead and make my edits now, that is okay to believe and to say. I hear you. But you ought to address the material that has just been redacted by NorthbySouth: "Did Bostian know that this was one of the few, and perhaps the only, locations on this route where a train could be deliberately crashed?". First, note that I framed it in the form of a question, not a statement. Secondly, I was referring to a search for media-published material that the news media (or others) may have already covered, and if so, could be legitimately covered in this article. Clearly, some people don't like to see references to Bostian in this article, which explains why his role is almost entirely ignored here. There are probably powerful reasons (involving Political Correctness) why some people want to maintain that status quo. Bostian is fairly clearly the only human (I am excluding faulty railroad equipment, here) who could possibly be immediately responsible for the crash. If it is reasonable to say that the accident wouldn't have happened if they had installed PTC (or ATC), why isn't it reasonable to look into the media's handling of Bostian possible guilt? [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 21:33, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::Hypothetical "questions" which ask whether or not a living person committed murder are not permitted. The role of Bostian in the derailment is as yet unknown, and as an encyclopedia, not a tabloid, we can afford to wait for the investigatory process to take its course. [[User:NorthBySouthBaranof|NorthBySouthBaranof]] ([[User talk:NorthBySouthBaranof|talk]]) 22:29, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:::WP is NOT the place for speculation -- especially in the main space -- about anything. The NTSB, FRA, Amtrak, the Congress, DoJ, DoT, PENDOT, City of Philadelphia, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, plaintiffs in lawsuits, and others who have some ''official'' and/or legal interest in this event are all conducting investigations into it right now and will be for many months if not years to come before all the questions still pending are answered. Wikipedia, however, is NOT such a party in interest and thus has no business speculating -- let alone "reaching conclusions" -- about anything. What the project does is objectively and dispassionately compile information that is supported by reliable, verifiable sources when that becomes available. The NTSB will eventually issue a report with a "probable cause", litigation -- both civil and, if warranted, criminal -- will be tried, settled, dismissed, or otherwise disposed of, the FRA will issue orders and regulations, the Congress will pass legislation, Amtrak will install new equipment and change operating rules, and other actions will be taken by all the parties in interest. When those things happen they will be recognized and added to the article. But unless and until they do speculation as to what they may be does not belong in here. [[User:Centpacrr|Centpacrr]] ([[User talk:Centpacrr|talk]]) 22:48, 2 September 2015 (UTC) |
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I quote a very long passage from the ''Signal factual'' document verbatim (with some less pertinent parts omitted). The highlighting has been added by me to emphasize the most significant details: |
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== No ATC on entry to northbound Frankford Curve== |
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: '''4.1 Description of Railroad Signal System''' |
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I have previously shown that this article has an unbalanced POV because while it mentions Amtrak's statement that the PTC system could have prevented the incident but hadn't been installed due to "regulatory requirements" (lack of radio frequency allocation), nevertheless it doesn't disclose to the reader that a different and simpler system (ATC; Automatic Train Control) was not yet installed on the northbound track, though it had been present and active for years on the southbound track at that curve. Here is the relevant reference establishing this: http://mobile.philly.com/news/?wss=/philly/news&id=305749951 . The relevant section states: "The older, less sophisticated safety system - Automatic Train Control - was installed on dangerous curves after a 1990 crash in Boston. But Amtrak officials have said it was only used in areas where the approaching speed limit exceeds the speed that would cause a derailment. That planning did not appear to account for the possibility that a train might be pushed far past the speed limit. Train 188 was traveling over 100 m.ph., past the 80 m.p.h. speed limit approaching the Frankford Junction curve and the 50 m.ph. limit in the curve. Under orders from the Federal Rail Administration, Amtrak installed Automatic Train Control on the northbound side of the tracks shortly after the wreck and was examining other potentially dangerous curves where it could be used along the Northeast Corridor. Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/news/20150602_Lawmakers_to_grill_Amtrak_for_first_time_since_derailment.html#Eby1UkdosjPIV10P.99 " |
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: Shore Interlocking, MP 82.1 consists of 15 Union Switch and Signal M-3 power switch machines. There are a total of 10 PL-3 Signals. {{font color||#ffe090|All main tracks on the Northeast Corridor are equipped with Cab Signals and all trains operating on the NEC are equipped with Automatic Train Control (ATC) consisting of cab signals with speed control.}} |
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I invite anyone to insert this reference; being a newbie, it'll take me awhile to figure out how do so otherwise. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 21:46, 5 September 2015 (UTC) |
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* [https://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=2015_Philadelphia_train_derailment&type=revision&diff=679643271&oldid=674090998 This], your original edit, isn't acceptable because it contains a non sequitur. PTC ''does'' have regulatory delays; right now Congress is considering extending the mandate's effective date because numerous companies, public and private, won't meet it and the FCC's delay in releasing spectrum is a major part of that. ATC is a different technology and isn't subject to that constraint but it isn't installed everywhere, and of course Amtrak wouldn't roll out ATC when it was in the process of rolling out PTC, a far superior system. The missing piece here is whether Amtrak was negligent in not including this curve in the ATC rollout which followed the Back Bay crash (and note that ATC was already active on the Northeast Corridor well before). We'll need a reliable source on that, though the lack of a crash since 1943 on a dense railroad line suggests that the risk was reasonable. That the FRA ordered it installed afterwards doesn't affect that one way or the other. I would expect the final NTSB report to address this in detail. [[User:Mackensen|Mackensen]] [[User_talk:Mackensen|(talk)]] 00:16, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::I don't see a contradiction here, or perhaps I don't understand your comment. I KNOW PTC has regulatory delays. That's why I wrote it the way I did. It's ATC which DOESN'T have regulatory delays, at least not sufficient to prevent it from having been installed within days of the incident. Go back and re-read what I wrote. I also have to laugh when you said, "and of course Amtrak wouldn't roll out ATC when it was in the process of rolling out PTC, a far superior system." Hey, buddy, people DIED precisely because PTC wasn't yet installed, and many others were maimed. Millions of dollars of equipment was destroyed. Are you saying that the mere possibility in 2008 that PTC might be completed in 2015 would justify keeping ATC inactivated for 7 years?!? How many dead bodies do you consider acceptable? Are you really suggesting that Amtrak could justify failing to install ATC, merely because someday PTC will be better?!? Remember the old saying, "The perfect is the enemy of the good". People DIED because of that principle. It appears you have no problem with that. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 00:40, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::: I'm not sure what you're trying to argue here. ATC was ''never'' installed on this curve, and there were no plans to do so in 2008, unless you have a source which claims otherwise. There are many places in this country where ATC is not installed, on the Northeast Corridor and elsewhere. As indicated in the article and elsewhere, ATC is installed in those places considered dangerous or otherwise suitable. Amtrak apparently judged that this curve wasn't sufficiently dangerous. The safe operation between 1943-2015 may or may not have justified that view. Without the final word from the NTSB on why the accident occurred, we don't know. As I said, I expect the NTSB to address this issue in its report (conversely, if it does not, that amounts to the NTSB saying that the issue was irrelevant). Regarding the FRA, it saw no need to install ATC on that curve prior to the crash, unless (again) you have a source which says otherwise. That Amtrak was able to carry out the order quickly has no relevance unless it was supposed to have done something and had not done so. |
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:::If I may, your mode of engagement on this talk page isn't very helpful to your argument, or the article. Wikipedia needs to be written from sources. What you're lacking is sources prior to 2015 criticizing Amtrak for not expanding ATC on the Northeast Corridor, especially around Philadelphia, or maybe a reliable source urging Amtrak to expand ATC coverage as the PTC rollout was delayed. Otherwise, as I've said elsewhere, it's just original research. [[User:Mackensen|Mackensen]] [[User_talk:Mackensen|(talk)]] 01:23, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::::The 1943 derailment at the Frankford Curve was not even a speed related accident. That train was moving at a speed of 56 miles per hour where the maximum authorized speed was 70 miles per hour when the train became derailed. The derailment was the result of the left front journal of the front truck of PRR1860, the seventh car of the consist, being broken off. [[User:Centpacrr|Centpacrr]] ([[User talk:Centpacrr|talk]]) 02:25, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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: ... |
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:::::Mackensen: You said "ATC was ''never'' installed on this curve". Wrong! It was indeed installed at this curve...but it was installed only on the southbound track, not on the northbound track. As for your statement, "and there were no plans to do so in 2008", I say, "Precisely!!!" You finally got the point! Amtrak COULD HAVE installed ATC on the northbound curve as early as 2008, and perhaps even years earlier, but chose not to do so: Presumably, and if you're right, they failed to do so because they were waiting for the superior system, PTC, to be ready to install and activate. (you said, "and of course Amtrak wouldn't roll out ATC when it was in the process of rolling out PTC, a far superior system.") And in the end, they finally waited until late May 2015, AFTER the derailment, to do that. They deliberately failed to install ATC, because they were waiting for PTC. Exactly what I have been saying all along. If the public realized what they had done/failed to do, they would be enraged. I will add: I don't think it's necessary to cite a source (before 2015) criticizing Amtrak for not installing ATC while waiting for PTC: It would certainly be proper to find and quote such a source, but it's sufficiently damning to find a source pointing out that Amtrak DIDN'T install ATC prior to 2015, when ATC had already been installed on the southbound track at that curve. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 21:10, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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: {{font color||#ffe090|Following an accident that occurred at Boston’s Back Bay station on December 12, 1990, Amtrak and FRA reviewed all curves on the Northeast Corridor (NEC) where trains might reach overturning speed if the operator failed to reduce speed from Normal Speed as the train approached the restricted curve. There were 10 curves where this could possibly occur between Boston and Washington, DC. On each of these curves where the overturning speed of the curve was less than the Normal Speed approaching the curve, a cab signal change point was added to drop the cab signal from Clear to Approach Medium for a calculated period of time. The time was calculated such that a train traveling at Normal Speed would be forced to slow down to the curve speed or well below overturning speed before the cab signal was upgraded back to clear.}} |
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:::::::The decision to install ATC in particular locations, and the decision to install PTC over an entire route, are completely separate. You've ignored my comments above, in which I noted that no one (not the Pennsylvania Railroad, not Penn Central, not Conrail, not Amtrak, not the FRA, not the NTSB), considered it necessary to install ATC on the northbound track. If there is a reliable source which demonstrates otherwise, then that's a different matter. I'll ask the same question I asked below: are you planning to bring forward a source? Otherwise, this is all original research. [[User:Mackensen|Mackensen]] [[User_talk:Mackensen|(talk)]] 21:38, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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: {{font color||#ffe090|Using the criteria described above and agreed to by FRA and Amtrak, a cab signal downgrade was installed to slow westbound trains traveling from Holmes interlocking to Shore interlocking to enforce a speed reduction from the Normal Speed of 110 mph to the curve speed. Since Normal speed for trains traveling eastbound towards Shore interlocking was 80 mph, which was below overturning speed (98 mph) for the curves east of Shore, no cab signal code change was installed. The thinking at that time was that no train would be exceeding 80 mph and even if it continued at that speed, the train would be well under overturning speed.}} Amtrak is now in the process of reviewing what was done in 1991 and intends to modify the signal system such that trains traveling eastbound toward Shore interlocking will receive a cab signal downgrade to Approach Medium ensuring that their speed will be down to, or below, the timetable speed for the curves east of Shore before reaching them. |
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::::::::I guess you must have missed the earlier stated justification for not installing ATC at that curve. It's in some of the media articles. The reasoning was that the curve was close to the Philadelphia terminal, so the limited power of previous locomotives was thought not to be sufficient to allow a train to exceed the safe speed allowed on the curve. However, a new, more powerful locomotive became available, and was ordered in October 2010, was purchased, and was operated beginning on February 7, 2014. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siemens_ACS-64 This means that Amtrak had at least 4.5 years to prepare the track equipment to accept the more-powerful locomotive, until the eventual accident. It was plenty powerful enough to accelerate a typical Amtrak train, leaving the Philadelphia terminal, to dangerous speeds by the time it arrived at that curve, and in the case of the Philadelphia derailment, it did exactly that: 106 mph was the maximum speed it reached prior to the brief application of the brakes prior to the derailment. In other words, Amtrak had 4.5 years to fix the upcoming problem, but failed to do so. Amtrak's decision to not install ATC, when they knew or should have known PTC would not be available by the time they began running the Siemens ACS-64, was inexcusable. The hypothetical excuse, that a better system, PTC, would eventually become available did not fix the problem until PTC was actually installed and operating. Critical note: If it was a reasonable excuse in, say, early 2014 to not install ATC at the that northbound track at that curve, why wasn't it also a good-enough excuse _after_ the accident (May 2015) to continue to not install ATC until PTC was scheduled to become available and operating at that track and location in about December 2015? What had changed? Maybe Amtrak was sufficiently embarrassed that it "had to" do what it had previously failed to do. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 00:13, 8 September 2015 (UTC) |
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: '''4.1A Positive Train Control''' |
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::::::::: There's two issues here. The first is that the FRA ordered Amtrak to install ATC after the accident. The primary purpose of this order was public-relations, although there's some safety benefit as well. This is not unusual. The FRA often issues emergency orders after an accident. This has no bearing on previous decisions, as I've said above, unless you have a source which says otherwise. As to the second, you're now saying that the potential delivery of the [[Siemens ACS-64]] changed the safety situation for the curve? I suppose that's possible, although I would expect that the acceleration of the Acela Express is also superior to the AEM-7. For all that, the Metroliners and TurboTrains which operated on the corridor in the 1960s and 1970s may have had superior acceleration. I don't know. What I do know is that this discussion is becoming farcical. Do you have a reliable source for any of this, or is it all speculation on your part? If you don't have sources then this is a waste of everyone's time. [[User:Mackensen|Mackensen]] [[User_talk:Mackensen|(talk)]] 00:27, 8 September 2015 (UTC) |
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: In 2000 Amtrak installed an overlay system to the ATC system known as ACSES, which stands for Advanced Civil Speed Enforcement System on portions of the Northeast Corridor. Specifically this overlay system was installed between Cove interlocking in Boston, MA and Mill River interlocking in New Haven, CT on the New England Division; between County interlocking and Ham interlocking in New Jersey and between Ragan interlocking and Prince interlocking in Delaware and Maryland. The system was installed with the startup of the Acela service under an “Order or Particular Applicability” from FRA as a condition for operating at speeds over 125 mph. |
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: {{font color||#ffe090|The ACSES system was designed to enforce speeds that could not easily be enforced by the ATC system such as permanent speed restrictions on curves, bridges, etc. and maximum authorized speeds as prescribed in the operating timetable. The system was also designed to enforce a positive stop at interlocking home signals and also enforce temporary speed restrictions via a data radio communication system.}} |
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:::::::*As I noted in the now closed discussion below, NTSB investigations, determinations of probable cause(s), and the adoption and publication of final reports in complex accidents such as this one always take at least a year and often considerably longer to complete. There is no "deliberate slow-playing" of the "release of the information" in this case. This is how it is always done and properly so. So Sluefoot you just need to relax and keep your personal speculation and interpretations of incomplete information to yourself. They do not belong here. Discussion of this matter will not be ripe until the NTSB releases its report. You can be sure that the details of its findings of fact and conclusions will be added to the article very quickly and completely then. [[User:Centpacrr|Centpacrr]] ([[User talk:Centpacrr|talk]]) 21:57, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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: In 2010 FRA issued regulations for Positive Train Control systems in accordance with the Railroad Safety Improvement Act of 2008. {{font color|black|#ffe090|FRA recognized ACSES as meeting the requirements of a PTC system. ACSES was the first PTC system to be certified by FRA. Since the time the first ACSES system was installed technology had changed and some of the components of the system had become obsolete. For these reasons, and the fact that the commuter railroads announced that they would be installing ACSES on their property, required Amtrak to update the system. Part of this update was to replace the obsolete unlicensed 900 MHz data radio system with a licensed, secure data radio system for better coverage, security and reliability.}} |
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== RE: NTSB lead investigator Sumwalt's Claim == |
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{{hat|Unsourced speculation doesn't belong here; Wikipedia talk pages are not a general discussion forum.}} |
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The section labelled "Investigation" ends with a statement, "Earlier, Sumwalt had said, "for somebody who's been through a traumatic event, this is not at all unusual for human behavior to have the mind blank out things like that, at least for the short term."[1][24][46]" I have to question that statement. I am not questioning that Sumwalt said it; rather, I'm questioning whether he is sufficiently a competent, credible source to have a valid opinion on the issue of trauma-induced amnesia. For example, I found the following source http://www.webmd.com/brain/memory-loss , which said, "It's the stuff movies are made of: After a blow to the head, a person wanders aimlessly, unable to remember who he is or where he came from. While such sudden, profound loss of memory is rare, memory loss is a problem that affects most people, to a degree." "Rare" versus "not at all unusual". I'd say there's a major contradiction here. Sumwalt may be an expert on accidents involving transportation, but that does not mean that he is an expert on trauma-induced amnesia. Further, even Sumwalt himself limits his statement by including the comment, "at least for the short term". Well, it's no longer "the short term", is it?. His may very well have been reasonable speculation at the time he said what he did, days after the incident, but the passage of time (so far, nearly 4 months) has made his opinion stale, to say the least. And no, I'm not saying we should replace his comment with the WebMD quote. Rather, we should decide that Sumwalt's statement was at least questionable when it was made, and it has become apparent over time that it is merely speculative and misleading, particularly since Bostian's claimed loss of memory has not been reported as ending even today. Perhaps there is a more recent, more-applicable news report out there, which makes a more realistic claim about the likelihood of a 3-4-month memory loss. For instance, do any of the passengers who had been on that train report memory loss? Probably not. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 00:28, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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* Is there a reliable source questioning Sumwalt? Using WebMD to question Sumwalt, leaving aside WebMD's reliability, would be original research. [[User:Mackensen|Mackensen]] [[User_talk:Mackensen|(talk)]] 00:31, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::You REALLY can't read, can you? Above, I said, "Perhaps there is a more recent, more-applicable news report out there, which makes a more realistic claim about the likelihood of a 3-4-month memory loss.". There's no reason to believe that Sumwalt is the last word on the matter, or certainly not the best. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 00:45, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:::Then what's the purpose of your initial, 341-word posting? Sumwalt is the lead NTSB investigator and it makes sense to quote him. If a reliable source takes issue with Sumwalt, or the NTSB's conclusions, then we would include that. Otherwise, there's nothing to do here. We have no basis for "questioning" Sumwalt's assertion unless a reliable source did so. That's [[Wikipedia:No original research|original research]]. [[User:Mackensen|Mackensen]] [[User_talk:Mackensen|(talk)]] 01:10, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::::A quick perusal of Google News finds nothing pertinent to this question; perhaps because reliable sources are, like Wikipedia, content to wait for the NTSB's independent investigators to complete their work rather than offering tabloidy speculation, rumormongering or innuendo about what might have happened. Once the NTSB releases its findings about the derailment, we will no doubt have a surplus of reliable sources discussing what happened ''based on solid scientific and investigatory conclusions'' from the world's leading accident investigation organization. Until then, we wait. [[User:NorthBySouthBaranof|NorthBySouthBaranof]] ([[User talk:NorthBySouthBaranof|talk]]) 01:13, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:::::There is no rush here. NTSB accident investigations, issuing of final reports, and making determinations of probable cause(s) usually take a year or more to complete in complex major accidents such as this one. [[User:Centpacrr|Centpacrr]] ([[User talk:Centpacrr|talk]]) 02:35, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::::::Okay, what is the purpose of keeping a quotation that appears to be false or misleading, even if it was given in good faith soon after the incident? I've already shown that there is a large inconsistency between what Sumwalt said ("not at all unusual") and what appears to be credible medical opinion. ("rare"). And, it is now very much out of date. While it makes sense to quote Sumwalt on subjects where he is indeed a credible expert, his medical opinions about amnesia do not appear to be among those. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 05:52, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:Here's a couple of bits of anecdotal evidence that would be completely inadmissible in a court of law, or if we tried to include them on the article page, but which should go some distance towards pointing out that, yes, short-term memory loss--and, to a smaller extent, permanent memory loss--is not uncommon after a traumatic brain injury (in both cases, a concussion). First off, 21 December 1993, I was driving on snow for the first time, lost control of the '88 Taurus on a patch of black ice under the snow, and stopped an oncoming '85 Buick with my passenger door at a closing speed of about 60 mph; to this day, I recall looking out the passenger window as I slid, realizing we were going to hit, but that it looked like it wasn't going to be too hard a hit, with the Buick maybe twenty feet away--and then opening my eyes to see the windshield completely shattered. Everything in that last tenth of a second before impact is permanently gone. Likewise, professional wrestler [[Mick Foley]], following his infamous Hell in a Cell match at [[King of the Ring (1998)|WWF King of the Ring '98]], had no memory of that entire '''day''' initially (for example, backstage after the match, he asked his opponent, the Undertaker, if he had remembered to use the thumbtacks in the match as planned... while he still had hundreds of thumbtacks stuck in his arm, back, and scalp); even with the passage of time, discussions with friends and family and coworkers, and watching the match repeatedly on video, he still can't remember going through the roof of the cage and falling into the ring proper. |
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:Now, could we please stop [[WP:POINT|trying to disrupt Wikipedia to make a point]], whatever that point may be, and wait for the NTSB to finish its investigation? (Oh, and as for the acceleration? I could easily imagine that being accidental--he's sitting at the controls, the windshield is hit by the foreign object, making him jump and accidentally bump the power lever forward, causing the train to accelerate, and by the time he realizes he did, it's too late. So please, stop beating the dead horse...) [[User:Rdfox 76|rdfox 76]] ([[User talk:Rdfox 76|talk]]) 22:08, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::I am astonished at your pointless comment. First, you admit that your personal experience is anecdotal, and it is. It is, at best, a single incident. You don't even hint that you are aware how probable this would be. It would be relevant if I (or somebody else) had claimed, "Nobody ever loses their memory due to an accident". Nobody who reads your comment has ANY indication of "how common" this memory loss is, and that is the relevant issue, not whether it ever occurs. Moreover, you claim that the length of your memory loss is one-tenth of a second (!!!), not many minutes. Four months is approximately 10 million seconds. Big difference, so what is your point? |
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::Further, you are then quite rude to say, " Now, could we please stop trying to disrupt Wikipedia to make a point". First, you don't explain why I (or anyone else) is actually "trying to disrupt Wikipedia". I am making valid points on the Talk page. The only edits I made on the main article were seemingly well-received. Do you believe that merely to discuss on a Talk page somehow automatically becomes "trying to disrupt Wikipedia"? If that's your position, you don't explain how you came to that conclusion. And the fact that you failed even to identify WHO was "disrupting" Wikipedia is a strong indication that you know you don't have a logical argument to present. Further, your silly speculation where you say "I could easily imagine that being accidental..." is really, truly laughable. Clearly, you have a not-so-hidden agenda to try to defend Brandon Bostian. Very few people have ever been in the cab of a locomotive (I, neither), and if you haven't either, that means that you are simply and foolishly inventing a defensive scenario out of virtually nothing. Give it up! We should be happy to hear a comment, on this Talk page, from a person who actually knows how to start, run, and accelerate a locomotive, and especially how difficult it would be to "accidently" raise the acceleration, even for a moment, and not be able to correct it immediately, all as you suggested. Particularly it is nonsense to say, "causing the train to accelerate, and by the time he realizes he did, it's too late...". You can't even do that with the fastest car!!! And even the most powerful locomotive can't behave like a sports car, able to accelerate a 10+ car train from 0-60 in 10 seconds. If you really have operated a locomotive, explain how long it would take such a locomotive to accelerate a train of that accident's length from the proper speed (50 mph) to the maximum speed that could safely negotiate that curve, 80 mph. If the correct answer is less than 1 minute, I would be shocked. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 04:26, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:::Quote: 70 mph (110 km/h) at 65 seconds before the crash, 100 mph (160 km/h) just 16 seconds before... That's an acceleration from 70 to 100 in 49 seconds. Seems a not unreasonable rate of acceleration to me. If the engineer was struck on the head by a missile several minutes before the crash while still accelerating away from the previous station, he may have been temporarily unconscious while the train continued to accelerate, and by the time he came to, the train was already into the curve and there was almost nothing he could do. Give him the benefit of the doubt. [[User:Akld guy|Akld guy]] ([[User talk:Akld guy|talk]]) 04:38, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::::I saw a time of 30 seconds for an 8-car train from 50 to 80 at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BFlqosKHPuU. Unfortunately, you too are stretching things to defend Bostian. Your speculation, "If the engineer was struck in the head by a missile..." is precisely that: A speculation. As I understand it, whatever was said to have hit the window didn't even break though the material. When you say, "give him the benefit of the doubt", you are assuming that there is a "doubt". There may be "doubt" about some things, but there is no doubt at all that a "missile" didn't break though the window, and so it didn't strike Bostian. He was not knocked unconscious, temporarily or otherwise. He did not "come to": He was always conscious. You do not even have a credible speculation. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 04:50, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:::::Just wait for the official report. No need to assign blame yet. [[User:Akld guy|Akld guy]] ([[User talk:Akld guy|talk]]) 05:00, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::::::Your statement is merely a suggestion. You are free to make such a suggestion. I, and everyone else, are free to ignore your suggestion. We are not obliged to act as though we are in a court of law, bringing a criminal case. We are not obliged to treat Bostian (or anyone else) as being "innocent until proven guilty": That is the proper standard for a criminal charge, nothing else. Furthermore, those doing the "official investigation" are apparently deliberately slow-playing the release of the information, especially that of the black box. By now, we should know precisely at what point on the journey were the controls on the locomotive were set to "accelerate", how high up the range it went, and how long those controls were allowed to stay at this reading. Consider that if some person accelerates his car to 80 mph, and drives into a crowd of people, the prosecutor isn't not required to (and generally does not) wait for 4+ months to do a long investigation and find the results: Instead, he generally brings charges immediately, unless there appears to be some obvious excuse present. Mere speculation about what might have caused the accident is a matter for a trial to decide. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 05:36, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:::::::As a matter of fact, "innocent until proven guilty" is ''exactly'' how we treat people on this encyclopedia. Please read [[WP:BLP|the biographies of living persons policy]] which explicitly discusses how we deal with negative claims about people, particularly ''wholly unsourced negative claims''. Your claims about Bostian are wholly unsourced and highly-negative speculation about a living person, and as such are expressly and firmly prohibited on the encyclopedia — '''including talk pages'''. Moreoever, you now seem to be attempting to spread a wholly-unsourced conspiracy theory accusing the accident investigators of some sort of coverup. This is not a general discussion forum for your personal opinions, ideas and thoughts about the derailment. This is a place to discuss writing a [[WP:RS|reliably-sourced]] encyclopedia article about the derailment. If you do not have sources to support your speculative [[WP:FRINGE|fringe]] claims, you're best advised to discontinue discussing them here. [[User:NorthBySouthBaranof|NorthBySouthBaranof]] ([[User talk:NorthBySouthBaranof|talk]]) 05:41, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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::::::::Here is the preliminary investigation report. http://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/AccidentReports/Reports/DCA15MR010_preliminary.pdf It is exceedingly sparse. Notice that the described "impact damage" to the front window is no more detailed than this brief description, issued about June 1, 2015. Amtrak and other government agencies are going to stretch this out as long as they possibly can. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 06:00, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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: {{font color||#ffe090|Since 2010 Amtrak has made several attempts to secure radio spectrum in the 217-220 MHz band. Amtrak appealed to FCC to no avail. FCC insisted that Amtrak procure the spectrum on the secondary market and Amtrak was unable to do so until late last year and has only very recently secured licenses from FCC. Meanwhile most of the installation of the wayside components (transponders, wayside interface units, radio towers and houses) has been completed. Large sections of the new territory are tested and ready for service except for the fact that the locomotive fleet is not yet equipped with the new data radios.}} Amtrak has installed new wayside data radios in parallel with the existing 900 MHz wayside radios so that conversion of the locomotive fleet to the new radio system can begin. Once the entire NEC locomotive fleet is equipped with the new radios, new sections of ACSES territory will be placed in service. The first section that will be placed in service is the section between Philadelphia and Washington, DC. This section has been fully installed and tested but cannot be placed in service until the locomotive fleet is fully equipped. This section will be followed by the Philadelphia to New York territory, then the Hellgate Line, Harrisburg Line, etc. |
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::::::::I think you (NorthbySouth) are jumping the gun a lot by suggesting that what I'm talking about is a "fringe theory". As I understand it, in order to actually be a "fringe theory", it is first necessary that there already exist some other, NON-fringe theory (or theories) which are much more accepted by the public. I am not aware of any polling yet to determine what the public actually believes. And 20+ years ago, the public would probably have been shocked at the idea that the pilot of a vehicle would deliberately crash (and thereby kill himself, too.) But there was a crash in the Southeast Asia area in December 1997 that investigators subsequently was the product of just that: Suicide by Pilot. And that recent Germanwings case, pilot Andreas Lubitz, did that as well. I am not yet aware of ANY credible theory (let alone a theory which might be described as mainstream) that {{redacted}}. Please note that in the Germanwings case, it was well-publicized within just a few days that Lubick deliberately crashed the plane, and despite the fact that his plane was clearly far more messed up than the Philadelphia locomotive, and there were no survivors at all. Contrary to that, in the Amtrak case investigators have possessed the black box for nearly four months, and still haven't released most of the information contained on it. I don't label Rdfox 76's as even rising to the level of being a theory: He said, "I could easily imagine that being accidental--he's sitting at the controls, the windshield is hit by the foreign object, making him jump and accidentally bump the power lever forward, causing the train to accelerate, and by the time he realizes he did, it's too late." Totally unbelievable, even as a bad movie script. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 20:33, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:::::::::I have redacted your unsupported, unsourced and highly-negative claim about a living person, and intend to file an arbitration enforcement request that you be prohibited from editing articles related to this matter. You have demonstrated your inability to comply with our fundamental content policies, even after being repeatedly informed of what we are here to do as encyclopedists and what is demanded of us when we write about living people. You may not use the encyclopedia as a [[WP:SOAPBOX|soapbox]] to express your personal opinions, theories, ideas or beliefs about what happened in the derailment and what may have caused it. [[User:NorthBySouthBaranof|NorthBySouthBaranof]] ([[User talk:NorthBySouthBaranof|talk]]) 20:49, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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Can you even admit the possibility that the engineer may have had a medical episode which is ongoing, as a result of which he is entitled to non-disclosure on privacy grounds unless he consents to that disclosure? Is he well enough to fully comprehend any such disclosure entitlement yet, if one is applicable? You're accusing the authorities of stalling for time, but if this is a medical episode incident, they may be mindful that his early consent, either voluntarily or by coercion, may bring about a lawsuit at some point in the future. I'm merely pointing out that there are possible factors that you don't seem able to appreciate. Other than that, I'm in entire agreement with the post of NorthBySouthBaranoff directly above yours. [[User:Akld guy|Akld guy]] ([[User talk:Akld guy|talk]]) 06:28, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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To sum up this very large excerpt from the NTSB document: |
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{{Ping|Sluefoot}} do you have an actual source to bring forward? If not, then this discussion can serve no further purpose. [[User:Mackensen|Mackensen]] [[User_talk:Mackensen|(talk)]] 13:04, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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* ATC, which Amtrak calls Cab Signal System or CSS, is a system on Amtrak's lines that's capable of displays four signal indications in the cab, each indication being associated with a particular speed. The system enforces speed restrictions through a penalty brake application if the train's engineer fails to comply with the indicated speed reduction within a certain time period. |
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:NTSB investigations, determinations of probable cause(s), and the adoption and publication of final reports in complex accidents such as this one ''always'' take at least a year and often considerably longer to complete. There is no "deliberate slow-playing" of the "release of the information" in this case. This is how it is always done and properly so. So Sluefoot you just need to relax and keep your ''personal'' speculation and interpretations of incomplete information to yourself. It does not belong here. When the NTSB releases its report you can be sure that the details of its findings of fact and conclusions will be added to the article very quickly and completely. [[User:Centpacrr|Centpacrr]] ([[User talk:Centpacrr|talk]]) 14:34, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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* Per the report, ATC ''was'', in fact, installed on the tracks in question -- and was probably installed in the area involved well over a half century ago during the [[Pennsylvania Railroad]] era. |
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* Since its inception, ATC has typically been applied ''only'' to enforce signal-related speed restrictions, such as when one train is closing in on another train, or when a turnout or crossover is set for the diverging movements, say, to cross a train from one track to another. The geometry of these switches is such that, when set for a diverging movement, they can only be traversed at a reduced speed. Since spacing between trains and the exact routing it takes often depends on day-to-day positions, this information on wayside signals and cab signals is essential to speed control and avoiding collisions and overspeed derailments. |
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:Akld: I must admit you have a prolific imagination, saying "the engineer may have had a medical episode which is ongoing, as a result of which he is entitled to non-disclosure on privacy grounds unless he consents to that disclosure?" I don't deny that medical conditions exist that can quickly cause incapacitation, for instance epilepsy. But your hypothetical seems to require that Amtrak would consent to a situation where an engineer on a train, with millions of dollars of value, and potentially hundreds of lives, would be entitled to prevent the disclosure of such a disability on an ongoing basis to his employer. Imagine the liability! Hardly seems plausible, huh? Further, I think Bostian didn't merely keel over and twitch; for your idea to work he's have to FIRST set the speed control to "maximum" and THEN keel over and twitch. If he had merely keeled over, the train would have proceeded at 50 mph for many more minutes, and presumably would have automatically stopped at the end of its run by the ATC system. [[User:Sluefoot|Sluefoot]] ([[User talk:Sluefoot|talk]]) 20:46, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
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* ATC has not typically been applied to permanent civil speed restrictions like curves because those features and the associated speed restrictions are permanent, and qualified personnel know of their existence from the very first day they were trained on a line's physical characteristics. The thinking over the years was that a curve that had been in place since the 1800s didn't need cab signals. |
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{{hab}} |
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* That view notwithstanding, Amtrak's experience with the [[1990 Back Bay, Massachusetts train collision]] suggested changing the ''existing'' ATC to enforce a 45 mph speed restriction for certain curves where a train's maximum authorized speed approaching the curve was above overturning speed. This is why the ATC at Frankford Jct. was altered for westward trains -- they were approaching the curve from 110 mph track. |
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* The same change was not applied for ''eastward'' trains because they were approaching the curve from track with lower speeds, below overturning speed, and it was not considered likely that a train would accelerate prematurely before entering the curve. I think many people have conflated the absence of this modification for absence of ATC, which is not a correct interpretation of the facts. |
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* Since the accident, the [[Federal Railroad Administration]] has ordered the modification to be made at Frankford Jct. and elsewhere. Similar modifications were made after the [[December 2013 Spuyten Duyvil derailment]]. The two accidents bear a great deal in common, though in the New York derailment, it's likely that the engineer had a microsleep event at a critical time, just as the distraction by rock throwers and radio traffic about that subject may have played a part at Frankford Jct. [[User:JonRoma|JonRoma]] ([[User talk:JonRoma|talk]]) 21:40, 28 July 2019 (UTC) |
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== Citations needed == |
== Citations needed == |
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Line 102: | Line 64: | ||
There may be new details in this [http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/31/magazine/the-wreck-of-amtrak-188.html beautifully written piece, just published]. (Pinging {{u|E.M.Gregory}}, who worked hard on [[Rachel Jacobs]]' page; that said, she is mentioned here only in passing.) [[User:Vesuvius Dogg|Vesuvius Dogg]] ([[User talk:Vesuvius Dogg|talk]]) 01:02, 27 January 2016 (UTC) |
There may be new details in this [http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/31/magazine/the-wreck-of-amtrak-188.html beautifully written piece, just published]. (Pinging {{u|E.M.Gregory}}, who worked hard on [[Rachel Jacobs]]' page; that said, she is mentioned here only in passing.) [[User:Vesuvius Dogg|Vesuvius Dogg]] ([[User talk:Vesuvius Dogg|talk]]) 01:02, 27 January 2016 (UTC) |
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:You refer to this article as being "beautifully written". However, Tolkien's Lord of the Rings was also beautifully written, and yet it was complete fiction. Are you suggesting this article is accurate and complete, as well as being unbiased? Curiously, it was published a few days prior to the release of an extensive amount of information on the accident. It's hard to imagine that the author wouldn't have gotten early word of that release, which occurred on 1 Feb 2016. I wonder why the author would simply rehash the same old story when he probably knew that there would very shortly be an update as to the facts. [[User:Lurie2|Lurie2]] ([[User talk:Lurie2|talk]]) 21:56, 13 February 2016 (UTC) |
:You refer to this article as being "beautifully written". However, Tolkien's Lord of the Rings was also beautifully written, and yet it was complete fiction. Are you suggesting this article is accurate and complete, as well as being unbiased? Curiously, it was published a few days prior to the release of an extensive amount of information on the accident. It's hard to imagine that the author wouldn't have gotten early word of that release, which occurred on 1 Feb 2016. I wonder why the author would simply rehash the same old story when he probably knew that there would very shortly be an update as to the facts. [[User:Lurie2|Lurie2]] ([[User talk:Lurie2|talk]]) 21:56, 13 February 2016 (UTC) |
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== Charges against Engineer Bostian renewed about Feb 6, 2018 == |
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https://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/amtrak-crash/charges-reinstated-against-amtrak-engineer-deadly-philadelphia-crash-n845141 "PHILADELPHIA — An Amtrak engineer was ordered Tuesday to stand trial for a deadly 2015 derailment in Philadelphia as a judge reinstated involuntary manslaughter and reckless endangerment charges." [[Special:Contributions/2601:1C2:4E02:3020:4146:2231:C4F1:8E76|2601:1C2:4E02:3020:4146:2231:C4F1:8E76]] ([[User talk:2601:1C2:4E02:3020:4146:2231:C4F1:8E76|talk]]) 22:39, 4 April 2018 (UTC) |
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Apparently there have been a series of dismissals of this case, followed by reinstatements. See: https://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2020/05/15/judge-reinstates-charges-against-brandon-bostian-in-deadly-philadelphia-amtrak-crash/ "Ruling on an appeal brought by the state attorney general’s office, Stabile found the dismissal was based on fact-finding that should happen in a trial, a decision that McMonagle said would be appealed. Stabile said ''the lower court’s role was only to determine whether the state presented enough evidence to warrant a trial,'' and prosecutors met that burden, he ruled." It appears that at least two judges dismissed these charges based on false fact-finding that should have occurred at a trial, by a jury. Are there any factors involved that might motivate a judge or judges to improperly defend Brandon Bostian from these charges? [[User:Allassa37|Allassa37]] ([[User talk:Allassa37|talk]]) 06:01, 17 January 2021 (UTC) |
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== Prosecutors' original dismissal of possible charges == |
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The section '''Criminal investigation, charges, and dismissal''' contains this sentence: |
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"''On May 9, 2017, Philadelphia prosecutors said Bostian, the train's engineer, would not face any criminal charges because there was no evidence that he had acted with criminal intent.''" |
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The incompetence of such reasoning leaves me speechless. |
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Were the prosecutors seriously unaware that there exist laws against involuntary manslaughter? |
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This is just astonishing. |
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'''Note''': I am in no way passing judgment on the engineer. I am only pointing out that lack of "criminal intent" is '''not''' sufficient reason not to charge someone. |
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This ought to be so obvious to anyone who has graduated from law school (as well as to any educated adult who has not graduated from law school) that I have to wonder exactly what was going through the prosecutors' minds (and palms) who initially decided that no criminal intent was reason to not charge the engineer. [[Special:Contributions/2601:200:C000:1A0:E480:78DC:C9A5:A603|2601:200:C000:1A0:E480:78DC:C9A5:A603]] ([[User talk:2601:200:C000:1A0:E480:78DC:C9A5:A603|talk]]) 02:47, 21 February 2022 (UTC) |
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Misinformation regarding ATC presence and on its behavior relating a civil speed restriction
[edit]There's a bit of misinformation on this page (and in the rather protracted discussion about ATC on this Talk page).
The official investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board has completed long ago, and the NTSB accident report has been published. This report contains a distillation of the facts uncovered in the investigation. Further information in the form of raw factual reports are also available on the NTSB website in the accident docket. The NTSB docket search engine makes direct links difficult, but the search engine will yield information if one keys the accident ID DCA15MR010. The information pertinent to this discussion is given in the document titled Signal factual.
With the accident report and docket completed and made public, IMHO there should no longer be any need to rely upon mass media accounts, which oftentimes reflect an ignorance of railroad terminology and technology, or are sensationalist in the hope of adding to advertising revenue.
I quote a very long passage from the Signal factual document verbatim (with some less pertinent parts omitted). The highlighting has been added by me to emphasize the most significant details:
- 4.1 Description of Railroad Signal System
- Shore Interlocking, MP 82.1 consists of 15 Union Switch and Signal M-3 power switch machines. There are a total of 10 PL-3 Signals. All main tracks on the Northeast Corridor are equipped with Cab Signals and all trains operating on the NEC are equipped with Automatic Train Control (ATC) consisting of cab signals with speed control.
- ...
- Following an accident that occurred at Boston’s Back Bay station on December 12, 1990, Amtrak and FRA reviewed all curves on the Northeast Corridor (NEC) where trains might reach overturning speed if the operator failed to reduce speed from Normal Speed as the train approached the restricted curve. There were 10 curves where this could possibly occur between Boston and Washington, DC. On each of these curves where the overturning speed of the curve was less than the Normal Speed approaching the curve, a cab signal change point was added to drop the cab signal from Clear to Approach Medium for a calculated period of time. The time was calculated such that a train traveling at Normal Speed would be forced to slow down to the curve speed or well below overturning speed before the cab signal was upgraded back to clear.
- Using the criteria described above and agreed to by FRA and Amtrak, a cab signal downgrade was installed to slow westbound trains traveling from Holmes interlocking to Shore interlocking to enforce a speed reduction from the Normal Speed of 110 mph to the curve speed. Since Normal speed for trains traveling eastbound towards Shore interlocking was 80 mph, which was below overturning speed (98 mph) for the curves east of Shore, no cab signal code change was installed. The thinking at that time was that no train would be exceeding 80 mph and even if it continued at that speed, the train would be well under overturning speed. Amtrak is now in the process of reviewing what was done in 1991 and intends to modify the signal system such that trains traveling eastbound toward Shore interlocking will receive a cab signal downgrade to Approach Medium ensuring that their speed will be down to, or below, the timetable speed for the curves east of Shore before reaching them.
- 4.1A Positive Train Control
- In 2000 Amtrak installed an overlay system to the ATC system known as ACSES, which stands for Advanced Civil Speed Enforcement System on portions of the Northeast Corridor. Specifically this overlay system was installed between Cove interlocking in Boston, MA and Mill River interlocking in New Haven, CT on the New England Division; between County interlocking and Ham interlocking in New Jersey and between Ragan interlocking and Prince interlocking in Delaware and Maryland. The system was installed with the startup of the Acela service under an “Order or Particular Applicability” from FRA as a condition for operating at speeds over 125 mph.
- The ACSES system was designed to enforce speeds that could not easily be enforced by the ATC system such as permanent speed restrictions on curves, bridges, etc. and maximum authorized speeds as prescribed in the operating timetable. The system was also designed to enforce a positive stop at interlocking home signals and also enforce temporary speed restrictions via a data radio communication system.
- In 2010 FRA issued regulations for Positive Train Control systems in accordance with the Railroad Safety Improvement Act of 2008. FRA recognized ACSES as meeting the requirements of a PTC system. ACSES was the first PTC system to be certified by FRA. Since the time the first ACSES system was installed technology had changed and some of the components of the system had become obsolete. For these reasons, and the fact that the commuter railroads announced that they would be installing ACSES on their property, required Amtrak to update the system. Part of this update was to replace the obsolete unlicensed 900 MHz data radio system with a licensed, secure data radio system for better coverage, security and reliability.
- Since 2010 Amtrak has made several attempts to secure radio spectrum in the 217-220 MHz band. Amtrak appealed to FCC to no avail. FCC insisted that Amtrak procure the spectrum on the secondary market and Amtrak was unable to do so until late last year and has only very recently secured licenses from FCC. Meanwhile most of the installation of the wayside components (transponders, wayside interface units, radio towers and houses) has been completed. Large sections of the new territory are tested and ready for service except for the fact that the locomotive fleet is not yet equipped with the new data radios. Amtrak has installed new wayside data radios in parallel with the existing 900 MHz wayside radios so that conversion of the locomotive fleet to the new radio system can begin. Once the entire NEC locomotive fleet is equipped with the new radios, new sections of ACSES territory will be placed in service. The first section that will be placed in service is the section between Philadelphia and Washington, DC. This section has been fully installed and tested but cannot be placed in service until the locomotive fleet is fully equipped. This section will be followed by the Philadelphia to New York territory, then the Hellgate Line, Harrisburg Line, etc.
To sum up this very large excerpt from the NTSB document:
- ATC, which Amtrak calls Cab Signal System or CSS, is a system on Amtrak's lines that's capable of displays four signal indications in the cab, each indication being associated with a particular speed. The system enforces speed restrictions through a penalty brake application if the train's engineer fails to comply with the indicated speed reduction within a certain time period.
- Per the report, ATC was, in fact, installed on the tracks in question -- and was probably installed in the area involved well over a half century ago during the Pennsylvania Railroad era.
- Since its inception, ATC has typically been applied only to enforce signal-related speed restrictions, such as when one train is closing in on another train, or when a turnout or crossover is set for the diverging movements, say, to cross a train from one track to another. The geometry of these switches is such that, when set for a diverging movement, they can only be traversed at a reduced speed. Since spacing between trains and the exact routing it takes often depends on day-to-day positions, this information on wayside signals and cab signals is essential to speed control and avoiding collisions and overspeed derailments.
- ATC has not typically been applied to permanent civil speed restrictions like curves because those features and the associated speed restrictions are permanent, and qualified personnel know of their existence from the very first day they were trained on a line's physical characteristics. The thinking over the years was that a curve that had been in place since the 1800s didn't need cab signals.
- That view notwithstanding, Amtrak's experience with the 1990 Back Bay, Massachusetts train collision suggested changing the existing ATC to enforce a 45 mph speed restriction for certain curves where a train's maximum authorized speed approaching the curve was above overturning speed. This is why the ATC at Frankford Jct. was altered for westward trains -- they were approaching the curve from 110 mph track.
- The same change was not applied for eastward trains because they were approaching the curve from track with lower speeds, below overturning speed, and it was not considered likely that a train would accelerate prematurely before entering the curve. I think many people have conflated the absence of this modification for absence of ATC, which is not a correct interpretation of the facts.
- Since the accident, the Federal Railroad Administration has ordered the modification to be made at Frankford Jct. and elsewhere. Similar modifications were made after the December 2013 Spuyten Duyvil derailment. The two accidents bear a great deal in common, though in the New York derailment, it's likely that the engineer had a microsleep event at a critical time, just as the distraction by rock throwers and radio traffic about that subject may have played a part at Frankford Jct. JonRoma (talk) 21:40, 28 July 2019 (UTC)
Citations needed
[edit]As per WP:BURDEN, the burden for inserting material into an article lies with the editor who proposes to insert it. As a large chunk of material currently in the lede of the article has no source, I'm formally requesting that the editor in question provide sources for those statements. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia based on reliable sources, and material that can't be supported by a reliable source must be removed. NorthBySouthBaranof (talk) 04:32, 23 October 2015 (UTC)
- Initially, there was talk of a projectile, which Bostian does not remember. There was also a claim by some conductor that she heard Bostian and another locomotive engineer discussing this by radio, a report which was apparently false. http://billypenn.com/2015/06/09/amtrak-188-four-weeks-later-what-weve-learned-and-what-we-still-dont-know/ Quote: "Was the train hit by a projectile, like a rock or a gunshot? Two others trains (one SEPTA and one Acela) operating on the same night reported being hit by projectiles of some sort in the same area where the Amtrak train derailed. One of the train’s conductors also told investigators that she overheard Bostian speaking over the radio about possibly being hit by something. However, the NTSB says tapes show that report never happened. FBI experts are examining the locomotive to search for other evidence of projectiles." 71.214.89.93 (talk) 04:52, 23 October 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks for finding the appropriate citation for that section. NorthBySouthBaranof (talk) 05:08, 23 October 2015 (UTC)
New York Times Magazine piece, Matthew Shaer
[edit]There may be new details in this beautifully written piece, just published. (Pinging E.M.Gregory, who worked hard on Rachel Jacobs' page; that said, she is mentioned here only in passing.) Vesuvius Dogg (talk) 01:02, 27 January 2016 (UTC)
- You refer to this article as being "beautifully written". However, Tolkien's Lord of the Rings was also beautifully written, and yet it was complete fiction. Are you suggesting this article is accurate and complete, as well as being unbiased? Curiously, it was published a few days prior to the release of an extensive amount of information on the accident. It's hard to imagine that the author wouldn't have gotten early word of that release, which occurred on 1 Feb 2016. I wonder why the author would simply rehash the same old story when he probably knew that there would very shortly be an update as to the facts. Lurie2 (talk) 21:56, 13 February 2016 (UTC)
Charges against Engineer Bostian renewed about Feb 6, 2018
[edit]https://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/amtrak-crash/charges-reinstated-against-amtrak-engineer-deadly-philadelphia-crash-n845141 "PHILADELPHIA — An Amtrak engineer was ordered Tuesday to stand trial for a deadly 2015 derailment in Philadelphia as a judge reinstated involuntary manslaughter and reckless endangerment charges." 2601:1C2:4E02:3020:4146:2231:C4F1:8E76 (talk) 22:39, 4 April 2018 (UTC)
Apparently there have been a series of dismissals of this case, followed by reinstatements. See: https://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2020/05/15/judge-reinstates-charges-against-brandon-bostian-in-deadly-philadelphia-amtrak-crash/ "Ruling on an appeal brought by the state attorney general’s office, Stabile found the dismissal was based on fact-finding that should happen in a trial, a decision that McMonagle said would be appealed. Stabile said the lower court’s role was only to determine whether the state presented enough evidence to warrant a trial, and prosecutors met that burden, he ruled." It appears that at least two judges dismissed these charges based on false fact-finding that should have occurred at a trial, by a jury. Are there any factors involved that might motivate a judge or judges to improperly defend Brandon Bostian from these charges? Allassa37 (talk) 06:01, 17 January 2021 (UTC)
Prosecutors' original dismissal of possible charges
[edit]The section Criminal investigation, charges, and dismissal contains this sentence:
"On May 9, 2017, Philadelphia prosecutors said Bostian, the train's engineer, would not face any criminal charges because there was no evidence that he had acted with criminal intent."
The incompetence of such reasoning leaves me speechless.
Were the prosecutors seriously unaware that there exist laws against involuntary manslaughter?
This is just astonishing.
Note: I am in no way passing judgment on the engineer. I am only pointing out that lack of "criminal intent" is not sufficient reason not to charge someone.
This ought to be so obvious to anyone who has graduated from law school (as well as to any educated adult who has not graduated from law school) that I have to wonder exactly what was going through the prosecutors' minds (and palms) who initially decided that no criminal intent was reason to not charge the engineer. 2601:200:C000:1A0:E480:78DC:C9A5:A603 (talk) 02:47, 21 February 2022 (UTC)
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