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America’s Socialized Transit
By Randal O'Toole of Cato.
"On the heels of a National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) report that found that Washington Metro “has failed to learn safety lessons” from previous accidents, Metro general manager Paul Wiedefeld will announce a plan today that promises to disrupt service for months
in an effort to get the lines safely running again. While ordinary
maintenance can take place during the few hours the system isn’t running
every night, Wiedefeld says past officials have let the system decline
so much that individual rail lines will have to be taken off line for
days or weeks at a time to get them back into shape.
The Washington Post blames the problems
on “generations of executives and government-appointed Metro board
members, along with Washington-area politicians who ultimately dictated
Metro’s spending.” That’s partially true, but there are really two
problems with Metro, and different parties are to blame for each.
First is the problem with deferred maintenance. The Metro board
recognized that maintenance costs would have to increase as long ago as
2002, when they developed a plan to spend $10 billion to $12 billion
rehabilitating the system. This plan was ignored by the “Washington-area
politicians who ultimately dictated Metro’s spending” and who decided
to fund the Silver and Purple lines instead of repairing what they
already had.
Second is the problem with the agency’s safety culture, or lack of
one. According to the NTSB report, in violation of its own procedures,
Metro used loaded passenger trains
to search for the sources of smoke in the tunnels. Metro at first
denied doing so, then said it wouldn’t do it any more. But Metro’s past
actions sent a signal to employees that passenger safety isn’t
important.
The safety problem can be blamed on the executives and board. So it’s no
surprise that Secretary of Transportation Anthony Foxx has replaced three board members with people who, he hopes, will place a higher priority on safety than the board members he fired.
Transit unions, meanwhile, deny
that they are responsible for any of the problems. Yet demands for high
pay, sorting of employees into different categories that sometimes
rival one another, and other union-led practices probably contributed to
both the safety problems and the funding shortages. Four track workers were killed by trains
in 2005 and another in 2009, suggesting that train operators were
careless with the lives of fellow employees, which probably discouraged
track workers from effectively doing their jobs.
Ultimately, both the safety and maintenance problems can be traced to
the fundamental flaws of socialized transportation. Where systems
funded out of user fees would build no more than people are willing to
pay for, political decisions led Washington and other regions to build
hundreds of miles of expensive rail lines they can’t afford to maintain.
Where managers of systems funded out of user fees tend to do a better
job at maintenance, political decisions failed to provide Metro with
the money it needed to keep trains operating. Where user-fee driven
systems learn quickly to motivate their employees to work safely and
efficiently, political decisions put people on the Metro board who were
more in love with their transit fantasies than the reality of managing
more than 10,000 employees.
General manager Wiedefeld may be able to correct some of the
maintenance problems by disrupting service over the next year, but it is
unlikely that he will have the funds to fix all of them. Even if he had
all the money he needed, it will take more than money to create a
system that is more responsive to user needs than to contractors,
unions, and politicians."
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