U.S.
Joseph Kaczmarek / AP Photo

Amtrak to restore full service Monday after derailment

Amtrak's Northeast Corridor trains will resume service Monday following a May 12 derailment that killed eight people

Amtrak's Northeast Corridor trains will resume service Monday in "complete compliance" with federal safety orders following last week's deadly derailment, officials announced Sunday.

Company president Joseph Boardman said Amtrak staff and crew have been working to restore service along the route between Washington and Boston following Tuesday night's crash that killed eight people and injured more than 200 others.

"Our infrastructure repairs have been made with the utmost care and emphasis on infrastructure integrity including complete compliance with Federal Railroad Administration directives," Boardman said in a statement Sunday.

Federal regulators on Saturday ordered Amtrak to expand use of a speed-control system long in effect for southbound trains near the crash site to northbound trains in the same area. The agency also ordered the company to examine all curves along the Northeast Corridor and determine if more can be done to improve safety, and to increase speed limit signs along the route.

Railroad Administration spokesman Kevin Thompson said Sunday the automatic train control system is now fully operational on the northbound tracks. Trains going through that section of track will be governed by the system, which alerts engineers to slow down when their trains go too fast and automatically applies the brakes if the train continues to speed.

Service along the corridor will resume Monday with the 5:30 a.m. southbound train leaving New York City and the 5:53 a.m. northbound train leaving Philadelphia, and all Acela Express, Northeast Regional and other services will resume for the first time since the accident, the company said.

At a service Sunday evening at the crash site to honor the victims, U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said that Amtrak acted on the measures ordered by federal regulators over the weekend. He said the company has installed new technology that will monitor and correct train speed, posted new speed limit signs and initiated a study of potentially dangerous curves.

Investigators with the National Transportation Safety Board, meanwhile, have focused on the acceleration of the train as it approached the curve, finally reaching 106 mph as it entered the 50-mph stretch north of central Philadelphia, and only managing to slow down slightly before the crash.

"The only way that an operable train can accelerate would be if the engineer pushed the throttle forward. And ... the event recorder does record throttle movement. We will be looking at that to see if that corresponds to the increase in the speed of the train," board member Robert Sumwalt told CNN's "State of the Union."

The Amtrak engineer, who was among those injured in the crash, has told authorities that he does not recall anything in the few minutes before it happened.

Investigators have also been looking into reports that the windshield of the train may have been struck by some sort of object, but Sumwalt said on CBS's "Face the Nation" program on Sunday that he wanted to "downplay" the idea that damage to the windshield might have come from someone firing a shot at the train.

However, in an interview on ABC television's "This Week," Sumwalt said: "We listened to the dispatch tape, and we heard no communications at all from the Amtrak engineer to the dispatch center to say that something had struck his train."

Sumwalt acknowledged, however, in an interview on Fox News Sunday that train engines are routinely struck by various projectiles without catastrophic consequences.

Almost 20 people injured in the train crash remained in Philadelphia hospitals, five in critical condition, but all were expected to survive.

Wire services

 

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