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Washington DC is shutting down the entire subway system on Wednesday with no notice - safety checks
Daily Mail ^ | 3/15/16 | Kelly Mclaughlin & AP

Posted on 03/16/2016 2:24:19 AM PDT by Libloather

Washington DC is shutting down the entire subway system on Wednesday with no notice for urgent safety checks

The entire Washington, DC, subway system will shut down for at least 29 hours to inspect electrical components on the tracks following a fire near one of the system's tunnels, officials said on Tuesday.

The shutdown comes after a fire broke out on Monday about 4.30am in the tunnel outside the McPherson Square station in downtown Washington. The fire led to delays on the orange, blue and silver lines, which go through the station.

The Metro subway system will shut down at midnight on Tuesday and remain closed until at least 5am Thursday, which is the regularly scheduled opening time, an official said.

(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: District of Columbia; US: Maryland; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: biggovernment; dc; dcmetro; maryland; metrorail; safety; subway; virginia; washington; washingtonmetro; wmata
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Mass transit is the way to go - until you can't.
1 posted on 03/16/2016 2:24:19 AM PDT by Libloather
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To: Libloather

This is what happens when government takes over. The history behind this is utterly sordid; government prohibited fare increases for years until they bankrupted private companies, ad nauseam. A private company would not shut down the whole system like this.


2 posted on 03/16/2016 2:28:01 AM PDT by Olog-hai
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To: Libloather

Have you ever ridden the Washington D.C. Metro. It is run by arrogant, incompetent liberal Democrats. Trains are dirty. At almost every station the escalators are broken. Employees tend to be indifferent at best and often rude. Contract are given out based on political connections and affirmative action so they overpay for shoddy work.

And increasingly it is becoming unsafe in certain areas.


3 posted on 03/16/2016 2:33:09 AM PDT by detective
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To: detective

Couple years ago we rode the subway from the Virginia side to the baseball field several times.
Thought it was nice.

As far as the fire. Likely someone trying to steal copper. /g


4 posted on 03/16/2016 2:49:50 AM PDT by Vinnie
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To: Libloather

Just heard from my little sister who is in Washington or rather was, just heard from her, she and her friends managed to get out of town before the shutdown, she said signs of discomfort already evident on residents, timing is everything...


5 posted on 03/16/2016 2:50:27 AM PDT by Exeter (What do you call someone who digs up dirt on Bernie Sanders? An archaeologist)
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To: detective
I used the Metro when I worked in DC. I "slugged" in from Northern Virginia, but had to use the Metro to get from the Pentagon to meetings that were all over the place. I also worked in Crystal City for awhile.

Your assessment is 100% correct. The Metro was an engineering marvel when first opened. Politics ruins all achievement.

6 posted on 03/16/2016 2:51:16 AM PDT by SkyPilot ("I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me." John 14:6)
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To: SkyPilot

With LIB-idiots in charge you can count of demolition eventually...of anything and everything.


7 posted on 03/16/2016 3:10:19 AM PDT by hal ogen (First Amendment or Reeducation Camp?)
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To: detective

This is actually no big deal, as the entire federal workforce takes a day off every week anyway.


8 posted on 03/16/2016 3:14:37 AM PDT by Rome2000 (SMASH THE CPUSA-SIC SEMPER TYRANNIS-CLOSE ALL MOSQUES)
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To: detective

Black thugs target whites in unprovoked attacks. Sometimes as many as once a day.


9 posted on 03/16/2016 3:21:40 AM PDT by Uncle Lonny
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To: detective

I spent 3.5 years living in the DC area, and did it with no car. So I survived the whole time on Metro and the bus system.

First, when it was built in the 1970s...it was state of the art. You would think that some crew would have been there planning renovation phases every fifteen years. Basically, they’ve inched forward and the whole system is increasingly unfit.

Second, if you tried to compare it against Amsterdam, Melbourne, Frankfurt or Vienna....it would rate down near the bottom of every single comparison.

Third, crime...particularly along the Green-Line and it intersects in mid-DC...is a minute-by-minute episode. Punk kids hang out and either attempt simple assaults or attempt pick-pocketing you.

Fourth, the whole gang surrounding it are geared to a political machine of some type (I wouldn’t even say solely Democrat anymore). They can’t run honest contracts or handle a simple bidding process for even potted plants.

Fifth, incompetence to the ninth degree. It took them three decades to agree upon the Silver-Line extension which would take you from DC to the Dulles Airport. Every major city in Europe has connections from it’s local city to the regional airport.

Sixth, go bring up the Paul S. Sarbanes Transit Center in Silver Springs. The idiots for Metro handed out the contract for a multi-platform station which a bus would go down into a tunnel....dump passengers off next to the platform area, and exit (brilliant idea). Then the idiots built the whole foundation for the bus traffic with no reinforcement. The mistake was caught near the end....so they had to tear out this whole project and rebuild. They are still trying to blame someone in court for the extra millions that this cost.

I could write a 500 page book on the incompetence that I saw on a daily basis. You simply are lucky on a weekly basis that a dozen people don’t die by transit on the DC metro.


10 posted on 03/16/2016 3:25:20 AM PDT by pepsionice
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To: detective; Vinnie; SkyPilot; Exeter

It is a nice enough system compared with others. They have to discard that dizzying and confusing variable-rate fare system that causes long lines at the ticket kiosks.
Good grief...call it $2.00 per trip and leave it at that...for convenience for everyone. No private company would ever close a whole network simultaneously.
Perhaps there is another reason and they are using "maintenance" as a cover story?


11 posted on 03/16/2016 3:26:50 AM PDT by Blue Jays (Rock Hard, Ride Free)
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To: SkyPilot

*****The Metro was an engineering marvel when first opened. Politics ruins all achievement.****

Discussing my Metro ride at the Drs’ office, one of my colleagues introduced me to a gentleman (wearing a metro pin of 35 yrs service) as Carlton Sickles. I had no idea who he was and asked “Are you someone important then?”

He laughed and handed me the pin - I later learned he was the ‘father of the DC Metro, What a lovely and talented gentleman,


12 posted on 03/16/2016 3:56:48 AM PDT by sodpoodle (Life is prickly - carry tweezers.)
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To: Libloather

I think there is more here than they are saying.


13 posted on 03/16/2016 4:03:33 AM PDT by Williams (Dear God, please save us from the Democrats. And the Republicans.)
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To: Williams

Shutting down DC is no big deal, the entire place is asleep when it comes to getting positive things done.


14 posted on 03/16/2016 4:12:46 AM PDT by DaveA37
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To: pepsionice

All paid for by your tax dollars when it began.


15 posted on 03/16/2016 4:12:54 AM PDT by Mouton (The insurrection laws maintain the status quo now.)
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To: Williams

Yup. Unconfirmed terror threat. It is all over the net.


16 posted on 03/16/2016 4:13:33 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$ (Cruz=VAT tax= No thanks.)
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To: Libloather

One of the issues with government owned transit systems (and highways) is that there is no glamour in ongoing maintenance—it just costs a lot of money with minimal visible results.

When is the last time you saw a politician bragging how they upgraded an electrical system with photo ops deep in the tunnels—not going to happen.

If this is a cover story my guess would be that the subway was hit with a cyber attack of some kind.


17 posted on 03/16/2016 4:19:50 AM PDT by cgbg (Epistemology is not a spectator sport.)
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To: Mouton

Oh I think the initial investment and quality of work was four-star. You can go and look at almost every subway tunnel and the quality still stands out today. From the prospective of the trains (they needed replacement a decade ago), the safety features, the escalators and their maintenance cycle, and the people who run the system...it’s gone downhill for over twenty years.

I don’t where the they put the yearly billions spent on maintenance or training or hiring of employees...but appears to have gone into a black pit.

They had an episode three years ago where some local grocery had two METRO employess who’d show up and buy hundreds of bucks in lotto tickets...with a large assortment of coins and one-dollar bills. The owner finally called Metro and made a report. They followed the two guys (maintenance crew for the ticket machines), and eventually figured out that they had one single machine hooked to the system....which they routinely robbed all contents, but it was not in the audit system. They were careful how they said it, but it may have been there like this for 15 years. They fired the two guys, but behind this....you have to wonder...just how much yearly did they walk away with....maybe into the $100k range yearly that audit system simply couldn’t track.


18 posted on 03/16/2016 4:24:59 AM PDT by pepsionice
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To: Libloather

BKMK for future


19 posted on 03/16/2016 4:36:29 AM PDT by Faith65 (Isaiah 40:31)
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To: Libloather
I have been an occasional rider of Metro since it opened and used it on a daily basis for one six or seven year stretch. I never had a problem with it, other than frequent overcrowding during rush hour.

Yes, I am aware of all the negative stories. It is true that the system is showing its age. It is true that deferred maintenance is a big issue. (This tends to be a chronic problem in government systems because of political misdirection.) It is true that pay and benefits are cripplingly high, again because of political misdirection.

Meanwhile, traffic in DC is among the nation's worst, and it is only going to get worse. The car lobby, naturally, is eager to destroy other people's neighborhoods to ease congestion on their long commutes, but as a resident of one of those "in the way" neighborhoods, I am not in sympathy with that plan. Metro is just one piece of the puzzle, but it's one we need to get right because it will become increasingly important as time goes on.

Metro needs to get its cost structure straightened out (yes, this means pay and benefits). It needs a better governance structure; we have the city, the feds, two states, four inner ring counties and a dozen independent suburban municipalities constantly bickering over service and fares. It's a mess -- but as compared to adding lanes to those outdoor parking lots known as I-395, I-66, and I-270, or building entirely new arterial roads through densely populated areas (ha, ha, ha, good luck with that), Metro is the easiest part of the problem to fix.

The most useful thing, of course, would be for people to start living closer to their jobs. Suburbs are fine in smaller to mid-sized cities. Above a certain threshold, however, the suburban commute falls victim to scale. DC has reached that point. Those of us with minimal commutes don't have these problems. There are good neighborhoods all over the metro area, and gentrification is reopening many long-shunned neighborhoods in the core. (And some of these are becoming crown jewels of the real estate game.) We'll get there, eventually.

20 posted on 03/16/2016 4:36:57 AM PDT by sphinx
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