• Font Size    
Advertising
E-mail

Close Window E-mail This Page

SF Supes Get Earful From Public On Muni Safety

Required fields are marked with an asterisk(*)



The information you provide will be used only to send the requested e-mail and will not be used to send any other e-mail communications. Read more in our Privacy Policy

Send E-mail

   Print     Share +    Comments

SF Supes Get Earful From Public On Muni Safety

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS 5 / AP / BCN) ― Despite assurances from San Francisco Municipal Railway officials, testimony at a public hearing Monday showed some residents consider public transportation in the city unsafe.

The transit agency said it was implementing new safety measures after the system had two major crashes within the past three weeks.

Muni's chief safety officer, James Dougherty, and other officials spoke at the hearing to try and address the safety concerns.

Dougherty said new measures include allowing the system's control center to remotely stop trains and expanding random safety performance inspections.

Two light rail trains collided at the West Portal station on July 18, injuring 47 people. Sixteen days later on Aug. 3, a train rear-ended an SUV and pushed it into another train. Six people had minor injuries in that crash.

Muni officials noted that there had been fewer collisions this year, compared to the same period last year.

Testimony before the Board of Supervisors committee hearing also included one of the victims of the Aug. 3 streetcar accident and another man who said he was on the streetcar at the time.

"It was a very frightening experience to be in that car," said Chris Ward, a Castro District resident who was driving his SUV at Market and Noe streets late that afternoon. He ended up sandwiched between two Muni streetcars after one failed to stop and plowed into his car.

"A driver smashed into me and had we not been in a gas-guzzling SUV, I'd be in critical condition right now, even dead," he explained.

Ward and his partner, who was in the car with him, were both hospitalized but released later that night. Four others were also injured, including the driver of the streetcar that struck Ward's car.

"I miss my car, but accidents do happen," Ward said.

What was most irritating, he said, was "that there appeared to have been some negligence."

"I think that our system needs to be run safely," Ward said.
 
Muni officials insisted that safety was the agency's "number one priority."

"We're looking certainly for a safer Muni," said Dougherty, hired by the agency this February to fill the safety director position, which had been open for 18 months.

"There is never an acceptable accident. There is never an acceptable injury," Dougherty said.

Muni was still conducting an investigation into the Aug. 3 crash, though officials have said a witness claimed the streetcar operator had been distracted at the time.

The agency said the operator began braking only 14 feet before impact, and that there appeared to have been no brake or other mechanical failure.

Muni also said the operator did not follow its rule requiring at least 250 feet between streetcars.

Dougherty called the accident "very, very unfortunate."

Supervisor Bevan Dufty, who initiated the hearing before the City Operations and Neighborhood Services Committee, said it was lucky no one died or was critically injured. 

Norman Tanner, an outreach coordinator for the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, told supervisors that he had been on the streetcar that struck the SUV but had only spoken with the driver five to 10 minutes before the crash, and then returned to his seat.

"I know that he was not talking to no one (at the time of the crash), and I do not understand how he was distracted," Tanner said.

Tanner told reporters that he came to the hearing "to set the record straight."

However, when asked if he thought Muni was safe, Tanner responded, "No."

In addition to overcrowding, "they raised the fare and cut the services," he said.

Dufty said the crash, and the other, more serious incident on July 18 appeared "avoidable" and "raised questions about the direction of Muni's safety program."

Still, Dufty lauded Dougherty's "skill set and commitment since he's been on the job."

Though a federal investigation into the West Portal crash will likely not be completed for several months, the Muni train operator has reportedly told investigators he blacked out moments before the crash.

But the investigation has also determined that the train had been switched from automatic to manual before the crash, against Muni procedure. Muni is now citing operators going to manual without prior authorization from the agency's Central Control.

Union officials have said it had been common practice for Muni train operators to go to manual in order to speed up on-time performance.

"We are not emphasizing on-time performance versus safety," San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency director Nathaniel Ford insisted last week.

"For me, it's a bigger issue than just two accidents," Supervisor Chris Daly said Monday. He cited insufficient public oversight over Muni, and recent service cuts and fare increases implemented to help make up the agency's massive budget deficit.

"Now you gotta pay $2 to get into an accident on Muni," Daly quipped.

"Mine was free," Ward later responded.

"We have a broken transportation system," said Daly. "Muni is not working to anyone's standards."

Georgetta Gregory, who manages the consumer protection and safety division of the California Public Utilities Commission, told the supervisors that Muni has made "substantial accomplishments" in the past three years.

"SFMTA has recognized the urgency of promoting a safety culture," she said. That includes encouraging Muni employees to report safety issues "without fear of reprisal," she said.

Gregory highlighted improvements to Muni track conditions and record keeping, quicker completion of accident investigations, and safety improvements such as cameras in buses and signal improvements at 4th and King streets, the site of another light-rail injury crash in June 2008.

Gregory said she has assigned three full-time engineers to oversee Muni safety operations, in contrast to the one engineer that is normally assigned to each transit agency.

"Three years ago to today, it is a stark improvement," Gregory said.

Other recent safety improvements include the addition of more Muni street supervisors, retraining for drivers, and public safety campaigns, Dougherty noted.

One SFMTA poster showing a woman with headphones crossing in front on an oncoming Muni train bears the words, "Do you want Beethoven to be the last thing you hear?"

An updated Muni rail rulebook for operators is planned for September, and one for bus drivers for the end of the year, Dougherty said.

Also in effect is stricter enforcement of rule violations by Muni employees.

Muni has had 231 disciplinary cases involving transit operators in the fiscal year 2008-09 resulting in 217 suspensions and 14 firings, the agency reported today.

Supervisor Sean Elsbernd has called for a second hearing before the committee on the SFMTA's safety standards, including medical screening procedures for bus and light-rail operators.


(© CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. The Associated Press and Bay City News contributed to this report.)

Add Comment

here. here. Need a log in? Register here
  •  * Will not be displayed with comment
  •  * e.g. (http://www.mywebsite.com)
  •  
  • Click here to refresh with new letters

Close Window Login


Close Window Flag Comment


loading...
You need the latest Flash player to view video content.
Click here to download.

Click here to bypass this detection if you already have the latest Flash Player.