Also wasn't there a stipulation from the Fed on all the COVID funding that service levels not be reduced?
IIRC it wasn't about service levels, but about retaining (Union) jobs. But if they willingly quit, fair game maybe?
Also wasn't there a stipulation from the Fed on all the COVID funding that service levels not be reduced?
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MBTA cutting subway service in response to federal safety orders
MBTA officials said the cuts are due to "staffing challenges" and a requirement to comply with the recent federal directives.www.wcvb.com
MBTA cutting heavy rail service to Saturday headways for the remainder of summer to comply with FTA safety directives. Green line unaffected. The MBTA states that this is due to the dispatcher staffing shortages at the OCC specifically.
Gas prices spiraling out of control and the MBTA is cutting service... good good.
What's so good about THAT?!!![]()
Exclusive Video: Runaway Red Line Train Rolls Through Braintree Station
Looks like four red line trains became decoupled and managed to roll out of the yard, through Braintree station eventually stopping on their own half a mile away. Good times keep on rolling on the MBTA.
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MBTA cutting subway service in response to federal safety orders
MBTA officials said the cuts are due to "staffing challenges" and a requirement to comply with the recent federal directives.www.wcvb.com
MBTA cutting heavy rail service to Saturday headways for the remainder of summer to comply with FTA safety directives. Green line unaffected. The MBTA states that this is due to the dispatcher staffing shortages at the OCC specifically.
The thing I can't reconcile is how since the winter of 2015 that there been so much noise including the Building a Better T program with its metrics, the long track work shut downs, the signal upgrades, and old weekend shutdowns - all in the name of "Transforming the T", yet somehow we still have 9.6% of heavy rail under a speed restriction with a specific mandate to fix the slow zone between Tufts and Back Bay.
Was the past 7 years just a noisy spectacle while things just stayed the same or got worse? Or was things even more dire back then?
And the above didn't even discuss the finding about staffing. Like the dispatchers should not be working 20 hour shifts, that can not be legal and I can't comprehend why is management is creating these conditions in the first place.
It seems like the writing is on the wall for another round of weeks-long shutdowns on Orange and Red -- particularly in the Core. At least Blue seems to be in state of good repair during the Sumner shutdowns.These repairs are gonna be quite painful for riders, but at least someone's finally applying pressure to fix them for longer term improvements..
We'll know what the plan/schedule is within 30 days.
It seems like the writing is on the wall for another round of weeks-long shutdowns on Orange and Red -- particularly in the Core. At least Blue seems to be in state of good repair during the Sumner shutdowns.
Weeks-long shutdowns aren't acceptable, but they've been the norm for the past few years, and seem like the norm going forward too.
He’s checked out. He could care less.those early buy-outs are looking awful for Chucky Baker's team right about now.
It is probably also a budget issue. If you only have money to fight fires, you don't think about the water damage immediately.I think part of the problem is that they invested in the wrong things. The first few years were focused on "winter resiliency," i.e. preventing 2015 from happening again. But that was an outlier winter weather event. Then the red line signal crash happened. At the same time, a lot of weekend shutdowns have focused on the infamous floating slab project that has been dragging on for 10+ years. They're going from crisis to crisis.
It also seems like there's no view that "while we have a shutdown for project A, we can do lower priority project B too," probably because they're too focused on putting out the infernos rather than the things that are just starting to smolder.
Headlines like “Rail experts say Orange Line battery ‘failure’ was likely a battery explosion; no answer from T” are a very bad look.
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Rail experts say Orange Line battery ‘failure’ was likely a battery explosion; no answer from T - The Boston Globe
MBTA spokesperson Lisa Battiston said the incident Monday while the car was out of service at Wellington Yard “dislodged the battery cover from an external underside compartment of the vehicle.” She didn’t respond to repeated questions if it was an explosion.www.bostonglobe.com
There isn't a failure mode. It's referring to the fact that the batteries failed and exploded. You can Google up "electric bus battery explode" and you'll see cases like this. This is why you're not allowed to bring lithium batteries on planes because they can fail, ignite, and explode very rapidly.Very, very, very bad look. Also, um, what kind of batteries do these things have that their failure mode is "explode"???