I hope that the Feds object to this & make them put some of them back on!!
The Feds, whose contribution to this mess has been to wake up from their usual stasis in order to intervene
because the T's become so abominably bad and unsafe, is going to, what, tell the MBTA to
ignore actual or feared safety concerns and make them return equipment even
they (the agency now under Federal babysitting because of its safety, financial, and operational misadventures) aren't sure is appropriately safe?!?!?!?
No. Enough of this nonsense, please. They're new equipment, with all the teething problems that entails. Whether they're
actually worse-made or have a higher rate of (significant) issues than other new equipment purchases is a question I will leave to people with more data (and better memories). Even
if they are crap, that's on the last administration for signing the contract with the untried (in North America, anyway) manufacturer at least as much as it is with the T now.
I wouldn't be surprised if the damn things are back on the rails by the end of the week. For all we know, it could be nothing significant. "It's probably nothing" isn't a great attitude when it comes to safety concerns to begin with, and it's downright suicidal when the agency in question is
literally under Federal supervision for its safety practices! The Feds will take one look at this and more likely than not say, "finally you're doing something
right for a change" in making sure your equipment isn't defective rather than taking a risk in order to keep the shiny things in service.
No one needs to be
happy about this happening, but annoyance at both the troubled EIS of the new cars and the depressing condition of the old ones is
not reason to suggest that they should skimp on making sure the damn things are properly safe, let alone imagine for a second that the Feds would be the ones to force them to do so!