Behind the scenes of DC Metro’s Tuesday night Red Line debacle - and - Rail Transit OPS
On Metro, rail enthusiasts fill communications void for riders
By Faiz Siddiqui
http://twitter.com/faizsays
April 30
When his Red Line train stalled in a tunnel near Friendship Heights last weekend, Chuck Holmes squeezed the barest of a 3G signal from his cellphone looking for any information. ... The panicked-sounding train operator wasnt answering questions, and it didnt help when another Metro employee, sounding distraught, told passengers: It is very important! Please close all doors between cars! as they began to see smoke.
Riders, some crying and climbing over seats, assumed that they would have to walk through the smoky tunnel to the platform, and thoughts of the January 2015 smoke incident near LEnfant Plaza which left one rider dead and more than 80 injured flashed through their minds.
Holmes searched Twitter for information. There was nothing from @Metrorailinfo the official Metro account. Then he saw this: RD/Shady Grove @ Friendship Heights report of smoke aboard train 107 - attempting to pull train back to platform .... {original text converts to DU symbol} ... The tweet was from
@RailTransitOPS, and R.B. is Roger Bowles, 36, a longtime Metro observer who co-founded
Rail Transit OPS in January as an independent operation to monitor the subway.
....
In some cities, people who are crime-obsessed make a hobby out of monitoring police scanners, chronicling the mesmerizing and often devastating incidents. In the District, transit wonks have made a habit out of monitoring the rails.
Rail Transit OPS on Twitter
Rail Transit OPS on Facebook