As part of its plan to exercise direct safety oversight of the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) Metrorail system, the U.S. Department of Transportation’s (USDOT) Federal Transit Administration (FTA) has issued Safety Directive16-1. The directive was issued to the Tri-State Oversight Committee (TOC) and a letter was sent to the WMATA Board chair and interim general manager detailing the new roles, responsibilities and reporting relationships between the organizations.
“We recognize the urgency of setting the transit system of our nation’s capital in much better shape,” stated U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx. “While we will work to direct Metro into a new era of safety, our actions do not remove the need for state and local leaders to govern and prove that they can successfully execute their charge to provide safe, reliable service.”
Under the new safety directive, FTA assumes lead responsibility from the TOC for safety oversight of Metrorail and realigns the work the TOC will continue to perform at FTA’s direction. It also identifies activities for which FTA will be primary lead to achieve compliance with current federal law and regulations related to the rail transit State Safety Oversight Program.
In the letter to the WMATA board chair and Interim General Manager, FTA Acting Administrator Therese McMillan wrote that FTA will exercise its authority to direct the use of federal funds received by WMATA to ensure that federal dollars are invested first and foremost to correct Metrorail safety deficiencies.
“This is the strictest level of federal safety oversight ever placed on a rail transit agency,” said McMillan. “Our goals are to improve Metrorail safety, direct the TOC oversight activities and assist regional leadership as they establish a new, stronger and more effective State Safety Oversight Agency to replace the TOC.”
The FTA will conduct on-the-ground inspections of WMATA, lead accident investigations as warranted and work to close out more than 100 open accident investigation reports. The agency will also ensure and verify that WMATA implements the 78 corrective actions related to Metrorail arising from Safety Directive 15-1 issued by FTA in June 2015 as well as the more than 200 other corrective actions previously approved by the TOC, but still unfulfilled by WMATA, some dating as far back as 2008.
FTA’s role is temporary and will continue only until Virginia, Maryland and the District of Columbia set up a new State Safety Oversight Agency that is fully functioning.
Secretary Foxx has emphasized that WMATA must have strong and consistent leadership combined with a strong safety culture throughout its organization. “The WMATA board of directors must immediately hire a capable General Manager who is able to correct the agency’s course,” said Foxx. “The urgency of having accountable leadership at the helm of WMATA cannot be overstated.”
FTA has designated one of its safety professionals as the Director for WMATA Safety Oversight and is assembling a team of multidisciplinary staff from its Office of Transit Safety and Oversight, inspectors and investigators from other DOT agencies and experienced consultants to carry out its safety oversight responsibilities. FTA is funding these activities with its own agency resources and will direct the use of federal State Safety Oversight program grant funding distributed to the TOC.