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Amtrak Installing Cameras To Watch Train Engineers

An anonymous reader writes: In the aftermath of the derailment of an Amtrak train in Philadelphia a couple weeks ago, the company has caved to demands that it install video cameras to monitor and record the actions of the engineers driving their trains. The National Transportation Safety Board has been recommending such cameras for the past five years. Amtrak CEO Joe Boardman says the cameras will improve train safety, though the engineers' union disagrees. In 2013, the union's president said, "Installation of cameras will provide the public nothing more than a false sense of security. More than a century of research establishes that monitoring workers actually reduces the ability to perform complex tasks, such as operating a train, because of the distractive effect."

294 comments

  1. Engineers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Over here we call them drivers.

    1. Re:Engineers? by Darinbob · · Score: 4, Informative

      They used to be called engineers in the UK, in the early days, then the term fell out of use. The original term was "engine-man". BBC articles are so helpful.

    2. Re:Engineers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Next up, cams in the cubicles of software and hardware engineers to see which one is writing the most buggy code?

    3. Re:Engineers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Next up, cams in the cubicles of software and hardware engineers to see which one is writing the most buggy code?

      Don't be stupid. There's already an easy way to evaluate the quality of a person's code. It's called reading. If you want to see who's slacking off that's a different story.

    4. Re:Engineers? by Tokolosh · · Score: 1

      Here they call them computer programmers.

      --
      Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
    5. Re:Engineers? by fisted · · Score: 2

      Here they call them rockstar brogrammers

    6. Re:Engineers? by sound+vision · · Score: 1

      I've also heard "engine driver" used.

  2. It only increases accountability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It will not improve safety. It will increase accountability which MAY in turn improves safety.

    1. Re:It only increases accountability by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      Only if they're currently having accountability issues.

    2. Re:It only increases accountability by GoCrazy · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I don't know how they successfully marketed this as as preventative measure, but all it does is show them who to hang afterwards. It's retribution, not prevention.

      --
      No beer and no TV make Homer something something
    3. Re:It only increases accountability by suutar · · Score: 2

      at best, if it shows that the engineer did something wrong and it turns out they were trained to do that wrong thing, the training can be fixed. More likely however it's just to have a record of what the engineer did in their final moments.

    4. Re:It only increases accountability by Penguinisto · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Dunno - it's pretty hard to account for why the dude was doing 100+ mph on a 50mph curve.

      Not saying it's his fault, but at least the camera would have absolved/proven any culpability on his part almost immediately.

      Now normally, cameras would be a bad idea IMHO, but this is a public service operated by public funds.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    5. Re:It only increases accountability by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      Brings up a fun question... do Amtrak trains carry something similar to an aircraft in-flight recorder?

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    6. Re:It only increases accountability by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Brings up a fun question... do Amtrak trains carry something similar to an aircraft in-flight recorder?

      Yes, yes they do.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    7. Re:It only increases accountability by PlusFiveTroll · · Score: 2

      Uh, anyone that has ever been involved in a driver facing camera camera system says their decent at improving safety, if managed correctly.

      I say this as the IT manager of the storage system for the camera data of a fleet of taxi's. You review the cameras for safety issues before an incident occurs. The personnel management at this particular company does a very good job at only using the camera reviews to look for safety issues, other issues seen on safety reviews do not get turned in to the HR department. These reviews have dramatically dropped cell phone usage in public transport vehicles while moving at this particular company. I don't have good accident statistics at this time to tell you if it has made a huge difference, and that can vary greatly by weather events per year (we had two extremely dry years, then this year has been very wet and was icy during the winter).

    8. Re:It only increases accountability by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, cameras are never a bad idea for public-service employees. A good example of this is bus drivers. All the public buses I've taken in recent years had cameras on board, showing both the drivers and the passengers, along with signs warning that assaulting a bus driver carries a stiff prison sentence. The cameras are ostensibly to protect the drivers from bad passengers, but they obviously can also be used to see what the driver was doing in case of a crash, which is a good thing.

      There isn't much difference between a train driver and a bus driver, except that the train driver doesn't have to interact with the public/passengers. There's no good reason at all to not have their activities recorded on camera while they're working.

    9. Re:It only increases accountability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Culpability doesn't really help with the next train wreck. Some simple GPS maps with maximum speeds programmed in would help a lot.

    10. Re:It only increases accountability by tompaulco · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Dunno - it's pretty hard to account for why the dude was doing 100+ mph on a 50mph curve.

      Oh, I could probably imagine a few scenarios. Probably the most likely being that dispatch told him to make up some time.
      Ultimately, the engineer is responsible for the safety of the passengers, but if he chose to obey the speed limit when he was told to get there faster, the fact that he saved all those people will be of little consolation when he gets fired and can't get hired on anywhere else because 1) there isn't anyone else and 2) he disobeyed a direct order from dispatch.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    11. Re:It only increases accountability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm saying it's his fault. I'm also saying installing cameras will not prevent unqualified stooges from criminally stupid homicide. It won't prevent the cops from shooting people either.
      What it will do is allow criminally stupid managers a chance to continue making criminally stupid decisions for a criminally stupid public who are so stupid they will die stupid. Lets face it, if you are the type of intelectual moron who is easily amused by the arguments presented in these stupid comments, you should throw yourself in front of a train. Stupidity is the leading cause of death. Chances a no matter how smart you are, you will be killed by somone/something stupid.

    12. Re:It only increases accountability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Uh, anyone that has ever been involved in a driver facing camera camera system says their decent at improving safety, if managed correctly.

      Well, except for the ones who know how to spell "they're" correctly. Also, the plural of taxi is taxis or taxies.

    13. Re: It only increases accountability by sonamchauhan · · Score: 1

      Ignore this pedant. Thanks for the interesting grandparent post.

    14. Re:It only increases accountability by hey! · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well, speaking of Amtrak employee accountability, I have a story about that. A few years ago my family took a train ride across the country. When we changed trains in Chicago I noticed that the reading light in my sleeping compartment was stuck on, which of course was bad if I wanted to actually sleep. I found the friendly and helpful attendant and reported it, and her reaction was like watching a balloon deflate.

      "What's wrong?" I asked.

      "If we report damage they take it out of our wages," she said.

      "What! What do you mean take it out of your wages?" I asked.

      "If a car is damaged under my watch I have to pay for it," she said.

      "Well," I said, taking out my swiss army knife, "I guess there's nothing to see here."

      I have to say that I've never encountered such a nice, enthusiastic, friendly group of people with such an abysmally low morale as the crew of a cross-country train. With passengers they're great, but all through the trip I'd see two or three congregated having low muttered conversations. It didn't take me long to figure out they were talking about management. And while the experience was wonderful, the equipment was in horrible shape. It was like traveling in a third world country.

      With management that bad, more data doesn't equal more accountability and better performance. It means scapegoating.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    15. Re:It only increases accountability by ChromaticDragon · · Score: 1

      Cameras would seem to be great for establishing or discounting liability.

      It might not be terribly easy for the engineer to sue Amtrak in order to obtain the video showing that his refusal to obey an order which would have placed the passengers in danger. But it would certainly serve as decent evidence in the wrongful dismissal lawsuit.

      But if the engineer DID obey such an order and the wreck occurred, the liability of Amtrak would be damning. I'm not an expert in tort. But I imagine the amount of damages would be signficantly greater in this case in comparison to if the video just showed the engineer was texting.

      And that fact might also serve to increase safety.

    16. Re: It only increases accountability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      You have no clue. I've been running Amtrak trains for 18 years. There is no intentional speeding, over 10mph and you lose your federally issued lisence for 30 days, second time you get caught 6 months and probably won't have a job to come back to. That's all laid out in the CFR. Everything is recorded, no one would dare. Remember we mess up and we're right there in an accident with you. Here's what I assume happened from my experience. He was newish to that route, I've read 2 -3 weeks, thought he was somewhere else, sped up, realized it and dumped the brakes. It takes years to know a route.

    17. Re:It only increases accountability by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1

      Now normally, cameras would be a bad idea IMHO, but this is a public service operated by public funds.

      If only... a private service operated by public funds is closer to the truth.

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    18. Re:It only increases accountability by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Ultimately, the engineer is responsible for the safety of the passengers

      Actually a lot of that responsibility is on the conductor and in this case possibly both. Duties of the conductor include,
      * Making sure the train stays on schedule
      * Ensuring the train follows applicable safety rules and practices
      * Jointly coordinate with the engineer and dispatcher the train's movement authority, and verifying this authority is not exceeded
      * Be alert to wayside signals, switch position, and other conditions that affect safe train movement
      The engineers responsibilities include
      * Their duties require that they control acceleration, braking and handling of the train underway.
      * They must know the physical characteristics of the railroad, including passenger stations, the incline and decline of the right-of-way and speed limits.
      (Above from wiki, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... )
      So two people in the cab and both responsible with the conductor managing and the engineer operating.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    19. Re: It only increases accountability by drkstr1 · · Score: 1

      You have no clue. I've been running Amtrak trains for 18 years. There is no intentional speeding, over 10mph and you lose your federally issued lisence for 30 days, second time you get caught 6 months and probably won't have a job to come back to. That's all laid out in the CFR. Everything is recorded, no one would dare. Remember we mess up and we're right there in an accident with you. Here's what I assume happened from my experience. He was newish to that route, I've read 2 -3 weeks, thought he was somewhere else, sped up, realized it and dumped the brakes. It takes years to know a route.

      (quoting informative AC rated at 0)

      --
      Fanboy Status: Apache Flex, C#, Eclipse, KDE, Pirate Party, Ron Paul, Slackware, Windows 7
    20. Re:It only increases accountability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a difficult time believing something like this when I talked to conductors and brakeman. Safety is very, very important to the railroads, and some railroads have a major focus on reportable incidents. Dispatch/MTOs would never tell an engineer to go twice the speed limit or disobey slow orders. That would be patently insane.

    21. Re:It only increases accountability by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      Dunno - it's pretty hard to account for why the dude was doing 100+ mph on a 50mph curve.

      Oh, I could probably imagine a few scenarios. Probably the most likely being that dispatch told him to make up some time.

      Ultimately, the engineer is responsible for the safety of the passengers, but if he chose to obey the speed limit when he was told to get there faster, the fact that he saved all those people will be of little consolation when he gets fired and can't get hired on anywhere else because 1) there isn't anyone else and 2) he disobeyed a direct order from dispatch.

      Which argues in favor not only of cameras but of recording conversations between the driver and dispatch.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    22. Re: It only increases accountability by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      To add to this from what I have read about this incident. This particular curve comes a little while after a stop. Previous models of engines could only get the train up to 85 before the signs for the curve came up, so there was plenty of time to slow for the curve. This newer engine was able to get the train up to 100, by which time the signs for the curve came up, it was too late for him to slow down.

      But all of that could also be the media making shit up, so hard to tell.
       

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    23. Re: It only increases accountability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you saying that the signs are bad / unreadable? Does that apply to both speed limits and mile markers?

    24. Re:It only increases accountability by operagost · · Score: 1

      I'm not really anti-union (except for white-collar government employees), but the Amtrak union has really proved themselves to be total asshats during this issue. They opposed the automatic speed controls, because they preferred that another dues-paying engineer be in the cab. I'm sure that doubling the engineer payroll won't have any impact on the budget at all. Now they oppose the cameras, saying they won't improve safety because they only increase accountability, and mumble mumble. Yeah, and cameras in banks and stores don't keep employees from stealing, either. Accountability is what keeps people from failing at their job. Barring a medical emergency, a camera will cover every scenario of human failure. Obviously, the speed controls are what we need and if the GOVERNMENT WHO MANDATED THEM made sure the GOVERNMENT AGENCY INSTALLED THEM we wouldn't be talking about this.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    25. Re:It only increases accountability by operagost · · Score: 1

      Considering that her claim of being docked for damage would indicate a violation of federal law-- and she's a friggin' federal government employee-- either she's a rube, or you are. The only disciplinary deductions allowed are for safety violations.

      Besides, a malfunctioning switch is not "damage", it's failure from normal wear and tear. They don't last forever. If the doors don't open or the wheels on the train have to be replaced, is that taken out of their paychecks, too?

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    26. Re:It only increases accountability by hey! · · Score: 1

      Amtrak employees are NOT federal employees. Amtrak is a publicly subsidized private for-profit corporation with common stock held by four other railroad companies. The Federal government is an investor, but holds only preferred stock.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    27. Re:It only increases accountability by davester666 · · Score: 1

      Next up...pilots.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    28. Re:It only increases accountability by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I can't imagine why they aren't already doing this, except maybe the technical challenge of storing video data in the "black box" where it'll survive a crash.

    29. Re:It only increases accountability by davester666 · · Score: 1

      Nope. The pilots are adamantly against it. They REALLY don't want people to see what happens in the cockpit.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    30. Re:It only increases accountability by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      Nope. The pilots are adamantly against it. They REALLY don't want people to see what happens in the cockpit.

      But it could be a source of mile-high porn!

    31. Re:It only increases accountability by davester666 · · Score: 1

      More likely to be a source of extended sleeping videos.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
  3. And what about the infrastructure issues? by etinin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While I'm not fully aware of the details of this story, it really seems to me that they are only looking to put the blame on the weakest side, which is obviously the workers. Even if the guy did screw up, it would be ridiculous to think a camera would be capable of preventing an accident. Where are the technical failsafes to limit the train's speed? Guess true security updates have been eaten by their desire for profit and instead been replaced with cheap cameras so they can say "oh no, we were watching the guy but he was a terrorist who shut down the camera" or any other crap to get their fat a$$es out of the way.

    --
    "I decided I could write something better than everything out there in two weeks. And I was right." - Linus Torvalds
    1. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3

      While I'm not fully aware of the details of this story, it really seems to me that they are only looking to put the blame on the weakest side, which is obviously the workers.

      WTF does "weakest side" have to do with anything? People farking died.

      If the weakest side is responsible then the weakest side should get it's act together.

    2. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      It does not always help...

      One of the UK train operators has just had its permission to operate on the main lines pulled after the driver having failed to acknowledge an automatic alert in time and having had the automation apply the brakes, took it upon himself to close the valve between the brake pipe and the automatic protection system (to avoid having to come to a stop), while doing so he missed a signal set at caution (The rules require that an activation of the train protection system brings the train to a complete stop, the driver must then contact the signal box having responsibility before moving on).....

      Not having slowed down the train then could not stop in time when the driver spotted the next signal (at danger), causing the train to then plow across the main line only 1 minute after the high speed commuter train that was the reason for the red signal had passed.....

      This was not just a spad, this was a grade A, full monty, "hey y'all watch this' SPAD, we can only be thankful nobody was hurt.

      The slightly unfortunate thing is that the train in question was a special being pulled by a steam locomotive, and the company in question specializes in running such things, but safety comes first, and the management failed totally to take the thing seriously (and not for the first time, they have a spectacularly poor record).

      The RAIB writeup should be interesting (In a comments on NASAs management after Challenger sort of way).

      Automatic brakes are good, but given a sufficient numpty on the foot plate, there really is nothing you can do.

    3. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by maxlybbert · · Score: 1

      I think the idea is "the side with the least political muscle." Although the side in question has a generally effective trade union (if not, then how about a law allowing workers to fire their unions and sign with different unions?).

    4. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by suutar · · Score: 2

      the weakest side, however, is also the one with the least ability to add automatic preventatives.

    5. Re: And what about the infrastructure issues? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you punish a guy who makes little money when you could install comprehensive safety systems to prevent any deaths?

    6. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      Where are the technical failsafes to limit the train's speed? Guess true security updates have been eaten by their desire for profit ...

      Or, you could ask Congressional Republicans, who -- even as recently as 5 days ago -- cut/limit/deny funding for Amtrak.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    7. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Howitzer86 · · Score: 1

      Etinin, you are fined one credit for a violation of the Verbal Morality Statute.

    8. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      Question... was it an actual cut in current baseline funding, or a "cut" insofar as "we wanted $10 zillion extra for next year's budget, but those bastards in Congress only want to give us $9 zillion extra!" ?

      If it's the former, I'd love to see proof. If it's the latter, then kindly take that partisan sound-bite-mimicking bullshit elsewhere.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    9. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 0

      Where are the technical failsafes to limit the train's speed? Guess true security updates have been eaten by their desire for profit ...

      Or, you could ask Congressional Republicans, who -- even as recently as 5 days ago -- cut/limit/deny funding for Amtrak.

      More funding doesn't help Amtrak. Ever. They had the hardware to limit the speed, they just hadn't bothered to turn it on.

      Why does the left think the answer to every problem is "more of other people's money"?

    10. Re: And what about the infrastructure issues? by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 1

      So you punish a guy who makes little money when you could install comprehensive safety systems to prevent any deaths?

      Since when does the amount of money he makes factor into this? If his negligence resulted in the death or injury of people on the train, he should be punished. I don't care if he's a pauper or the richest man in the world, if you take responsibility for a train carrying hundreds of people and you don't respect that responsibility, you deserve every iota of punishment that can be mustered against you.

      --
      In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    11. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 2

      Why does the left think the answer to every problem is "more of other people's money"?

      Why does the right want stuff, but not want to pay for it?

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    12. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by fche · · Score: 1

      The right doesn't "want stuff" taken from other people. They want to earn it.

    13. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 2

      The right doesn't "want stuff" taken from other people. They want to earn it.

      Right. That's why most "red" states take more money from the federal government than they contribute and the top 10 states receiving federal assistance are "red" and the bottom 10 are "blue":
      http://www.politifact.com/trut...
      http://www.slate.com/blogs/the...
      http://www.motherjones.com/pol...
      http://taxfoundation.org/blog/...

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    14. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I'd like to know why no one ever talks about the other, fairly cheap and easy method of preventing train-driver error: hiring a second driver.

      Every single passenger-carrying airplane in the US has two pilots, a pilot and a co-pilot. If the pilot screws up badly, or becomes incapacitated (people do have seizures and blackouts sometimes, you never know), or just needs to go to the bathroom badly because of some shitty Mexican food he ate earlier, then the co-pilot is there to take over.

      Why do trains not have co-engineers? These aren't taxis with a handful of passengers, or even buses with up to ~50 passengers, these are trains with hundreds of passengers, just like large airliners.

      We can talk about PTC (I think that's the acronym, positive train control) systems, and how effective they are, but a simple fix to this problem is to simply put a second engineer in the cabin.

    15. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by jklovanc · · Score: 1

      Where are the technical failsafes to limit the train's speed?

      In the brain of any competent engineer actually doing his job.

    16. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by fche · · Score: 1

      (Sorry, but "the right" in context means conservative type people, not those states that happen to vote republicans. Equivocating the two is a category error.)

    17. Re: And what about the infrastructure issues? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We did, the Amtrak and the Union negotiated them away in 1992 on routes with a scheduled run time of less than 6 hours. The runs over 6 hours still have them. The old term was a fireman, from when the second guy shoveled the coal lol. The term is still common r.r. vernacular.

    18. Re: And what about the infrastructure issues? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question is why you, as the train company, would put a person in a position where he would need to take that kind of responsibility, when you could install automatic safety systems that other train companies are already using.

      Surely the executive(s) making the decision to put the sole responsibility on the engineer (because he needs a job, so he'll have to agree) when more comprehensive options are possible and practical bear some responsibility.

    19. Re: And what about the infrastructure issues? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Areas without any PTC or cab signals or ATS( automatic train stop,older primitive system been around forever) at all are governed to 79mph or a penalty brake application is applied.

    20. Re: And what about the infrastructure issues? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Pay matters. If there's such a safety issue that's so sensitive and important, why are they paid so low? The low pay can lead to safety problems by attracting people who can't do anything else.

    21. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Tokolosh · · Score: 1

      I don't think they want to ride on trains at other peoples' expense.

      --
      Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
    22. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They did have the hardware to limit speed. The thing they didn't have were the licenses to use the wireless spectrum that those systems needed to operate. Congress had mandated that Amtrak would have to buy those on the public market, but with population densities in the north east being what they are wireless spectrum is really expensive. Unfortunately, while they were failing to provide the spectrum, Congress also failed to provide the funding to purchase the spectrum, so Amtrak didn't have the funds to buy it (because as mentioned, it's really expensive in the north east).

    23. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Camera is just a distraction. Regardless of the workplace.

      See this is what happens, when there is a camera (or even desktop recording), it makes employees afraid to think for themselves, because the footage will be used against them, regardless of their action.

      But in the case of airlines, trains, buses, and taxis, Camera's need to be pointed at the nose of the vehicle as well as back towards the driver. The reason is, in accident reconstruction, it makes it far easier to determine at what point the driver noticed the issue with the track. PTC (Positive Train Control) is a mechanism that can help prevent accidents caused by overspeed, but it won't solve a situation where signaling or tracks have sagged due to weather.

      If you look at accidents from Trimet (Portland), Houston, and Sacramento (places with some of the worst planned light rail systems that run in the street parallel with cars) you'll frequently see comments about how the driver gets blamed, even though the collision with a car or person is entirely the fault of how the railway was designed.

      Proper grade separation would eliminate all grade-crossing collisions, which are also the most dangerous and deadly ones. Camera's do not. They would have to install the cameras at every crossing and have the driver be able to see the camera footage before getting to those crossings with enough stopping distance.

      But damage to the tracks? Coins and cinderblocks on the tracks are something you can't ever see in advance.

    24. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by kwbauer · · Score: 1

      Why the hell should Amtrak receive any federal funding if it is a private corporation as people claim. Amtrak should raise their rates enough to operate in the black like all true private transportation companies are eventually forced to do or cease operations.

    25. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by kwbauer · · Score: 1

      I have no use for Amtrak.

    26. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by kwbauer · · Score: 1

      Why did you leave out Salt Lake City, UT and Zurich, Basel, Bern, St. Gallen, Luzern, Geneva and Lausanne, Switzerland and probably every other major city in Europe for having "light rail systems run in the street parallel with cars." That is probably a more common situation that having subway or elevated rails.

    27. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by mcrbids · · Score: 1

      It's easy to design something that people can do. It's tough to design a system that people can't fail at. And that's where there's a big, soft, squishy line that divides what people can generally keep up with and the things that people have to work at to get wrong.

      As a software engineer, I require the first, and aim for the latter. It's tough.

      My uncle was an BART engineer. He controlled BART ([San Francisco] Bay Area Rapid Transit) trains in the SF Bay Area for a living. The train had doors on both sides of the train and some stations opened on one side, or the other.

      BART trains are frequently "up in the air" as much as 50 feet, where the expectation is that you climb a flight or two of stairs to the BART station and board the train. And, for passengers, the doors automatically opened on the correct side so that nobody got hut.

      For passengers. But the engineers were expected to manually open the doors on the appropriate side when leaving their station. Now, it's not particularly difficult to look outside the door and see which side the station is on, and the doors for passengers automatically opened on the correct side.

      This is where that big, squishy line starts to rear its ugly head. Because while passengers weren't expected to remember which side to get off, engineers were. And my poor uncle made a mistake one day, and opened the wrong side. It was a fatal mistake.

      Answer me this: Why would we expect that passengers would never get it right, but engineers would never get it wrong?

      Intelligently designed systems that account for and prevent common human mistakes is a design goal. It's tough to do because you have to predict what the end user will likely get wrong and account for that. Nonetheless, it's a hallmark of engineering advancement that we've designed something so safe and resistant to human error as a car that casually travels 100 MPH with as low a death toll as we see today.

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    28. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      You personally might not, but I'm sure some of the people you interact with and rely on have use for it. Good public transport helps the entire country.

    29. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Because those systems are better planned than the examples he gave, and are not entirely pertinent to his claims? You might want to read his post again :)

    30. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm going to make a counter-point here, devil's advocate style... Perhaps it would be safer to just remove the human altogether, the train is on rails, points are controlled remotely anyway so routing is not the train drivers responsibility, the train just needs to do "speed" and "braking" control. If a safety system would be required to automatically reduce speed and stop when appropriate to do so, then that strikes me as the "hard bit" of a train autopilot. By comparison, the rest of a train auto-pilot would be fairly simple. Perhaps the train company owners should stop fielding the "weakest side" and replace them with machines that work 24/7 and don't make stupid mistakes. Then maybe the trains would run on time and tickets would cost less.

      While I personally don't particularly agree with my point above; Maybe, just maybe, workers rights have absolutely nothing to do with train safety? Maybe the National Transportation Safety Board (not the company) want train drivers to stop dicking around at the controls, but they can't police them because they're all alone at the front of a train full of people? Is it really unfair to watch a train driver work? My boss watches me work, sure it can be annoying, but isn't being checked-up on part of being employed? It may feel uncomfortable for the train driver to be watched by camera, but what are the alternatives? co-drivers who police each other but increase costs (and ticket prices)?

      I think the unions and the train drivers should stop moaning over non-issues because at some point they're going to become such a large pain in the ass that they get replaced by nice complacent hard working machines. As a rail user, I don't give a shit if it's a human driving or not as long as it's on time, convenient and affordable.

    31. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Seems like there should be no way to override the automatic brakes. Japanese shinkansen (bullet trains) are like that. When certain events happen they can't be overridden and will always stop no matter what. I'm not sure about slower trains.

      The shinkansen network is the gold standard. Never had a fatal accident or serious injury, despite operating the fastest trains in the world since 1964. Billions of passengers have used the system in that time. It is possible to be safe, fast and highly profitable if the will is there.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    32. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you know that unions actively prevent any sort of automation, including things like automatic preventatives, because they fear automation will take away their jobs? This isn't a boogeyman, I work in an industry where it is happening. US ports are very far behind globally solely for this reason.

    33. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      Did you know that this line has the preventative measures in place in many sections? Did you know this particular section was deemed to not need it? Did you know that the installation of the preventative measures is almost done?

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    34. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However they feel its AOK to borrow, beg and steal to bomb other countries at our expense.

    35. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by operagost · · Score: 1

      Can we have a discussion on here EVER, without some partisan inundating us with irrelevant linkspam nonsense?

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    36. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by cyberchondriac · · Score: 1

      That in no way absolves the driver if he's actually at fault, though no one really knows just yet (though an examination of the signals systems has revealed no anomalies or malfunctions). He is paid to drive the train safely and responsibly, and being that he's unionized, he's likely paid fairly for that. Workers can do damage no system can bypass, consider the pilot that crashed the Germanwings airlines flight into the French Alps some months back.

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    37. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      Can we have a discussion on here EVER, without some partisan inundating us with irrelevant linkspam nonsense?

      I'm not sure that commenting about how conservatives/republicans claim to be financially independent and responsible ("we're not freeloading moochers") while simultaneously sucking down the most welfare is irrelevant when someone brings up the former.

      The problem isn't really partisan bickering, but personal and political hypocrisy.

      The links provided are informative and relevant to that discussion and are from reputable sources. Perhaps you don't agree with the analysis provided by those links, but that doesn't make them untrue.

      Other than that, I agree with your sentiment.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    38. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1

      Why does the left think the answer to every problem is "more of other people's money"?

      Why does the right want stuff, but not want to pay for it?

      I'm not on "the right", but I've yet to see this out of any conservatives that I know. Perhaps you can provide an example?

    39. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by PrimaryConsult · · Score: 1

      They do. The northeast corridor (where the accident happened) *does* operate in the black (as does the Empire Corridor in NYS and I believe the pacific coast trains). However, the routes connecting all of these regions lose a lot of money, and have more senators along the way.

      There are two reasons we have Amtrak: One is the intentional destruction of local transportation infrastructure caused by the likes of GM, Greyhound and Standard Oil, from the 30s-50s. The other is that the government in the 60s was heavily taxing railway tickets and infrastructure and directly funneling the funds into airports and interstates, the very competition of the railroads. They were taking rail stations, moving them out of downtowns onto freight bypass routes on the outskirts of towns, and putting highways over the old ROWs. Passenger rail became unprofitable, but the companies were being forced to continue running the unprofitable passenger services by regulations. The result was they started going bankrupt. By the time the government realized the national rail infrastructure was about to disappear like a fart in the wind, they hacked together Amtrak as a way to "bail out" the railroads from a problem largely caused by the decades of meddling.

      Tl;dr: unfair practices by both the private and public sector killed profitable passenger rail half a century ago, and no one knows how to fix it. Amtrak is the band-aid.

    40. Re:And what about the infrastructure issues? by RubberDogBone · · Score: 1

      This is why excursion trains with old equipment should always have a modern locomotive attached to act as the hub for ATC or signalling. And also for pulling the old engine off the line when it breaks down.

      Does it ruin things to have a diesel in the consist? No. It's still a train.

      --
      Sig for hire.
  4. The death of privacy by timholman · · Score: 1

    More than a century of research establishes that monitoring workers actually reduces the ability to perform complex tasks, such as operating a train, because of the distractive effect.

    Of course, the same observation could be made about monitoring police officers, day care workers, teachers, etc., but that hasn't stopped the demands to put them under video surveillance, has it?

    Train engineers are federal employees, and the lives of hundreds are in their hands. Now it's their turn to be watched.

    1. Re:The death of privacy by TheCastro1689 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Most train engineers are not federal employees.

    2. Re:The death of privacy by BitterOak · · Score: 1

      Train engineers are federal employees, and the lives of hundreds are in their hands. Now it's their turn to be watched.

      Federal employees? I thought they worked for Amtrack.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    3. Re:The death of privacy by funwithBSD · · Score: 3, Informative

      It is a publicly funded private corporation.

      Kinda like the post office, or maybe Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac would be a better analogy.

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
    4. Re:The death of privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what country are you in? most train companies are PRIVATE, and the workers are working for and employed by the PRIVATE company. what makes them "federal" employees? but you're probably one of those people who think the USPS is a government entity too...

    5. Re:The death of privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly, how is this any different than black boxes on airplanes? It isn't.

      Except that it's video, instead of audio. I'll take your TV away and give you a radio. You can tell me after if you notice a difference.

    6. Re:The death of privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope you see some hard times to teach you some humility. That huge ego has to be quite a burden to those around you.

    7. Re:The death of privacy by pr0fessor · · Score: 1

      I used to work at a convenience store when I was in college. People would walk in and shop lift right on camera and never notice even though there was a sign on the door and the camera was in plain site with a monitor hanging from the ceiling that showed what it was recording. I doubt a camera will cause them to be distracted.

    8. Re:The death of privacy by gnupun · · Score: 1

      Exactly, how is this any different than black boxes on airplanes? It isn't.

      It's more invasive and personal than a blackbox. The NTSB wants cameras in cockpits of planes, but the pilots don't want them.

    9. Re:The death of privacy by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      ...prolly why TFA only mentioned Amtrak employees ;)

      But yes, I understand your point as well.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    10. Re:The death of privacy by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      The USPS *is* a government entity. It's wholly owned by the US Government, therefore it's a government entity. It's largely run like a private company, but not entirely; Congress actually has a lot of say in its operations. The USPS isn't allowed to change the days they deliver mail, for instance, without Congressional approval. (They tried to eliminate delivery for one day a week not long ago and Congress refused.)

    11. Re: The death of privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The correct term for Amtrak is quasi-governmental entity.

    12. Re:The death of privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amtrak employees aren't federal employees either. They work for the National Railroad Passenger Corporation.

    13. Re:The death of privacy by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Most people consider USPS workers to be "federal employees". So why not Amtrack?

    14. Re:The death of privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because most train engineers do NOT work for Amtrack, they work for companies like Union Pacific and CSX and are NOT federal employees. Just as most delivery drivers work for various companies, not USPS.

    15. Re:The death of privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Post office isn't publically funded so yeah, Fannie/Freddie would be a closer example.

      USPS gets all of it's money from postage.

    16. Re:The death of privacy by kwbauer · · Score: 1

      But most delivery drivers do not have special sections of the tax code devoted to their retirement benefits either. The line between federal employee and private employee is quite blurred at times with railroad employees.

    17. Re:The death of privacy by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      Most train engineers are not federal employees.

      Yeah, only federal employed people should be kept from killing hundreds of people whose safety lies solely in their hands.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  5. wtf? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WTF? It's not about whether monitoring them is going to affect their performance - hopefully NOBODY WILL WATCH THE VIDEOS in the first place. It's not a "distractive effect". The reason we need things like this are for liability purposes. What if the driver nods off? Has a stroke? Lets his crack buddies into the cabin with him?

    1. Re:wtf? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not a "distractive effect". The reason we need things like this are for liability purposes.

      Slippery slope argument... If trains are fair game, why shouldn't the inside of passenger automobiles have cams too, watching the driver and the road for liability purposes?

    2. Re:wtf? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

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    3. Re:wtf? by jeffmflanagan · · Score: 1

      They should if the vehicle is public transportation, like a cab or Uber driver. There is no slope here, slippery or otherwise. It's about keeping an eye on people who are responsible for the safety of others.

    4. Re:wtf? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, I think you meant to post this at Infowars or something though. For F*'s sake, reductio ad hitlerum has been replaced with some kind of neo-McCarthyism, I swear. The worst part is how many military veterans are coming out infected with it.

      Also, I find it extremely ironic and hilarious that the post above commited the "slippery slope fallacy" while simultaneously using the term "slippery slope" to refer to the argument it was trying to refute.

      Cheers all around. You fellows are a supremely sharp and logical bunch.

      *rolleyes*

  6. 30 years ago.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    30 years ago an idea like this would be completely rejected. It just seems in-human to watch another human for every minute of their life or even just at work.

    I still don't see why the speed of the train can't be controlled automatically even just using GPS and some simple software.

    now get off my lawn......

    1. Re:30 years ago.... by afidel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You are aware that plenty of people are monitored for their entire shift in much less safety critical jobs, like bank tellers, grocery or retail store cashiers, dock workers, etc, yes? As to the speed being controlled by computer, they've been working on that for some time, but apparently the radio network to convey all the necessary information to the control box is massively behind schedule.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    2. Re:30 years ago.... by grimmjeeper · · Score: 5, Informative

      Speaking as someone who spent three and a half years working on Positive Train Control software, it's not as simple as throwing a GPS on the train.

      There are a huge number of operating rules that must be enforced besides just a base speed limit. Not only does every mile of track have a speed limit that can vary widely, every type of train has a maximum safe operating speed that must also be considered. Then there are all the temporary speed limits that the computer has to know about. If there's a work crew out on the tracks, they drop the speed limit. If there's damage to the track, they drop the speed limit. etc. Then there are all the signals along the route. There's half a dozen different types across the country depending on what has been upgraded and what hasn't and they all govern how fast you are allowed to go at that location at that time. Then you have to throw in all of the other things along the track like grade crossings and switches. There's a bunch of different types of each and they all have different rules on what you have to do when you approach them. To top it off, you can't go anywhere until a dispatcher grants you authority to run on the track. And that's done in any of a dozen different ways depending on who owns the track and where it is.

      Did I mention that the operating rules are different for each railroad? They are and you have to make sure you follow the right rules.

      Then you can have the added complexity of interoperability. Every railroad, by contract, is allowed to operate on each others track. They even contract out engineers between each other. So you can have a BNSF engineer operating a CSX locomotive on UP track. And you have to have to figure out which rules apply in that case because they're different than an Amtrak engineer operating the same CSX locomotive on the same UP track. Or a BNSF engineer operating a KCS locomotive on UP track.

      Then when you think you have that all figured out, throw in the fact that we have agreements with Canada that let our trains run back and forth between two countries.

      Once you have all of that complexity, you have to be able to predict how long it takes to slow a train down so you know how far back you have to get off the throttle and/or hit the brakes. That calculation is impacted by the number of cars in the train, the weight of the cars, the grade of the track, the curves you're riding on, and even how long it takes for the air pressure to be let out of the brake line (a long time in a mile long train). There's a ton of calculus being done by the computer several times a second to keep an accurate estimation of your braking curve. Beyond that, the computer has to give the engineer a warning before cutting in and doing his job for him. So you have to predict the stopping distance with the added distance you'd travel if you wait a specified time after warning but before you enforce the stop.

      Now, you have all of that. Then you have to factor in that your GPS isn't always accurate so you can't always count on the fact that it will tell you precisely where you are. Running through a tunnel cuts off your GPS feed. As you get towards the mouth of the tunnel, you get a lot of multipath errors that make your GPS location jump around pretty damn fast so you have to program the computer to account for it. The backup is the wheel tachometer that lets the computer know how fast the train is going and you can assume that a train isn't going to be jumping off the tracks 500 feet into a field to the left so that does make the job a little easier. But just when you think you've solved the problem, you have to deal with the fact that the diameter of the wheel isn't 100% constant. Sure, it's a steel wheel and it doesn't change rapidly. But it does wear down as the train is driven. So you have to keep calibrating the wheel diameter over the miles because even a small variation can lead to a significant position error over a long trip. A 0.1% error over a 1,000 mile trip will have you a mile off from where you really are. And 1,000 mile trips are a daily occurrence with trains.

      So yeah, it's not as easy as just throwing a GPS on your locomotive and calling it good.

    3. Re:30 years ago.... by bobbied · · Score: 1

      But, but... Google can drive a car you know.....

      Interesting but you forgot some stuff... Often trains travel without being able to stop within the distance the engineer can see, so putting all the above in some kind of complex system still doesn't prevent the most common accidents. There is no way you can keep some nutty driver from parking a bus full of people on the tracks or some crazy gravel truck trying to beat the train across the crossing.

      People are acting like the automatic enforcement of speed limits is going to fix the main source of train accidents, and it's simply not. Yea, it might keep trains from coming off the tracks in a turn once and awhile, but this is a tiny fraction of accidents.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    4. Re:30 years ago.... by grimmjeeper · · Score: 2

      Last time I read about it, it's estimated that PTC will only stop about 40% of the accidents.

      Thing is, as complicated as PTC really is, it's still the low hanging fruit that's the easier problem to solve than most of the rest. And considering that it will save lives, it's worth it in the long term.

      Track and equipment maintenance standards being beefed up will account for another chunk. But you're right. It's really difficult to plan for that dipshit who stops on the tracks around a blind corner.

    5. Re:30 years ago.... by doomday · · Score: 1

      Having worked on fully autonomous wheeled systems the requirements of the train system you describe sounds like a pleasure to work with because it is pretty well constrained. For the position problem you describe I recommend a properly tuned Extended Kalman Filter to automatically "calibrate the wheel diameter over the miles". It can even incorporate the intermittent GPS data to boot! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... There are alternative methods to this that may be worth consideration as well but this would be a good start. For more consult your friendly neighborhood robotics motion planning and simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM) textbooks, and research papers if you want the latest. I'm sure considering train requirements more proven technology that has been rigorous enough to make it into textbooks would be preferred.

    6. Re:30 years ago.... by grimmjeeper · · Score: 1

      Yeah. We had that problem solved a while back. I was just bringing up the fact that a GPS is nice but it's not 100% reliable, especially in canyons and tunnels. And the backup system wasn't as simple as plugging in another sensor. It requires more work than that.

      The point being made is that "GPS and some simple software" isn't going to cut it. It's a difficult problem to solve. A lot more difficult than you might think if you didn't have the background to really know what is involved.

    7. Re:30 years ago.... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      you can assume that a train isn't going to be jumping off the tracks 500 feet into a field to the left so that does make the job a little easier.

      Too bad Google Maps doesn't make that kind of assumption.

    8. Re:30 years ago.... by craighansen · · Score: 1

      Yes, all that may be true, but enforcing permanent speed limits via a self-contained system would have prevented several major accidents and could have been implemented in minimum time and money so it could actually have been deployed. All that fancy-ass consideration has driven up the price and delayed the implementation of anything at all except the sharp wits of a tired old train engineer, who probably doesn't know how worn the wheels are and only remembers a few of the thousands of regulations that some desk jockey put in place without knowing how it was going to affect train operations.

      Here's prime example of the perfect being the enemy of the good, and you're failing to see it in front your face. Trains are crashing, dude.

    9. Re:30 years ago.... by grimmjeeper · · Score: 1

      A lot of the preventable accidents aren't caused by engineers blowing the baseline speed limits. They're caused by blowing temporary speed limits, signals, and authority limits. And if you're going to the trouble of adding all of the equipment to stop a train blowing a speed limit, the incremental cost to add the rest of it isn't all that high. Given that the whole system will prevent orders of magnitude more accidents makes the added cost worth it.

    10. Re:30 years ago.... by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      So yeah, it's not as easy as just throwing a GPS on your locomotive and calling it good.

      Still, even a partial solution (e.g. one that matches the train's GPS location, if known, against a table of specified maximum-safe-under-any-circumstances speed limits for that location) would prevent a train wreck in certain cases (such as the recent one that prompted this article). I'm all for full PTC, but I don't think the perfect needs to be made the enemy of the good here.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    11. Re:30 years ago.... by grimmjeeper · · Score: 1

      PTC will only get about 40% of the accidents. A GPS and baseline speed limit enforcer would be a very small fraction of that because most of that 40% of accidents has nothing to do with the baseline speed limit. It's mostly temporary speed zones, signals, and authority violations.

    12. Re:30 years ago.... by vettemph · · Score: 1

      radio?? well there is your problem.
      Just paint the railroad ties a different color for each max allowed speed, then install a color sensor under the car. ... red means slow, etc...

      --
      The government which is strong enough to protect you from everything is strong enough to take everything from you.
    13. Re:30 years ago.... by unrtst · · Score: 1

      PTC will only get about 40% of the accidents.

      ONLY!?!? If there were only two accidents a year (note, correct use of "only"), that would totally be worth it. How high is the bar before this is justified? What's the drawback? After implementing PTC (assuing a 40% reduction in accidents), it'd be damn near impossible to have such a significant impact on the number of accidents with any other solution**.

      ** I know there's another 60% left, but those are going to be the more difficult cases by their very nature. The other solution would have to further reduce accidents by another 66% (4/6ths) to match the same level of added safety.

      I doubt you meant to imply they should not implement it, but 40% is quite significant.

    14. Re:30 years ago.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you know how fast the paint will strip or melt off those rails? And that camera will need to see through thick dust, fog, dirt, leaves, snow, no light, and minor flooding.

    15. Re:30 years ago.... by grimmjeeper · · Score: 1

      I doubt you meant to imply they should not implement it, but 40% is quite significant.

      I covered that in some of my other posts.

    16. Re:30 years ago.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But a GPS speed limit thing does NOT need to deal with those issues, it can simply place a cap on everything, and leave holes for the exceptions, it's suppose to be an extra safety measure and doesn't have to cover every possible situation. Program each train with a cap, and a GPS based location cap, the engineer may be instructed to go slower, but they still get their hard cap from the GPS. And you don't need to worry about things like speeding up or speeding down, just issue the commands when the rules are broken.

      As for the wheels/GPS getting accurate speed/location, that problem has been solved long ago with nav systems, every commercial airplane has GPS aided inertial nav, they fly off the inertial nav, and GPS constantly updates it, if GPS is broken or jumps their system can detect that and just ignores GPS, only gradual drifting errors will feed through GPS into the nav results. It's also great for the constant offsets, GPS picks up those errors real quick (as a constant drift) and the system corrects for them automatically.

    17. Re:30 years ago.... by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      You are aware that plenty of people are monitored for their entire shift in much less safety critical jobs, like bank tellers, grocery or retail store cashiers, dock workers, etc, yes?

      You are aware that's because of the risk of theft, yes? What is a train operator going to steal?

    18. Re: 30 years ago.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, that's what's so odd about this. No one qualified on a territory accelerates in a permanent like that. It's always missing something, a signal, a work gang, a slow order etc.

    19. Re:30 years ago.... by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      You're aware the cabin cameras are to prevent mass death, yes? Who is a store clerk going to kill?

    20. Re:30 years ago.... by Richard+Elmore · · Score: 1

      A couple quick searches tell me that there are about 250,000 miles of railroad in the US and about 3,000,000 miles of paved road. Waze running on my smartphone seems to be able to warn me when I'm going 10 MPH over the limit pretty reliably. Given that the railroad network is less dense than auto roads it seems clear that it should be doable to create a similar device for trains that, at a minimum, warns the engineer when they are exceeding the speed limit for a given stretch of track. Throw in mobile data based updates of track conditions to handle track damage or construction work and it seems like something like this should improve the situation.

      Building a perfect automated speed control system is not the only way to improved safety, we can move the needle a lot by providing by human operators with better data and warnings. Don't let the quest for the perfect solution block comparatively easy incremental progress.

    21. Re:30 years ago.... by aralin · · Score: 1

      You just described two days of work. Maybe a week. What else?

      --
      If programs would be read like poetry, most programmers would be Vogons.
    22. Re:30 years ago.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Track and equipment maintenance standards being beefed up will account for another chunk. But you're right. It's really difficult to plan for that dipshit who stops on the tracks around a blind corner.

      Why don't long distance trains have the high tech equivalent of a cow catcher? Maybe something powered that could push sideways, punch through or destroy an obstacle with explosives? Perhaps armed by the driver when they see the obstacle. Protecting the 100's of people on a passenger train would seem to outweigh the costs of giving somebody on the track a Darwin award.

    23. Re:30 years ago.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      radio?? well there is your problem.
      Just paint the railroad ties a different color for each max allowed speed, then install a color sensor under the car. ... red means slow, etc...

      You thought this was just to control a static max speed? well there is your problem
      What happens when a condition ahead requires slowing below the ordinary speed limit? Are you going to get someone out there to repaint the tracks immediately? Like many people, you seem focused on solving the one immediate problem that just happened, but the system they are building is designed to be much more robust.

    24. Re:30 years ago.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the rules are this complex, how does an "engineer" half asleep, enforce them?

    25. Re:30 years ago.... by rastos1 · · Score: 1

      I have zero credentials compared to you but ... what I got from your post is that "there is a complex environment that is changing in time and lot of rules that must be followed" - well, I thought that this exactly the domain where computers are much superior to human.

    26. Re:30 years ago.... by grimmjeeper · · Score: 1

      Yep. Tons of details to keep track of. Lots of opportunity to miss something and have a mishap. A computer that is programmed right is a much better tool for keeping track of everything all at once. And the way it's being designed, it just sits there silently until the operator starts doing something that can cause a problem. It gives the operator a reminder while (if) there's still time before taking over and stopping the train. But it also provides useful information on the screen about what's coming up on the route, much like a GPS in your car, so it unobtrusively helps remind the operator of things they might be forgetting.

      Once they get it installed and work out a good deal of the bugs, it will be a pretty good system.

    27. Re:30 years ago.... by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      You're aware you're still comparing apples to batshit irrelevant oranges, yes? Cameras in banks and stores are to prevent malefactors from walking off with money or goods. There aren't going to be malefactors running trains, unless you have an operator like that suicidal co-pilot who crashed that Germanwings flight. Who DGAF that his actions were being recorded, because he was suicidal.

  7. Re: US rail system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only for passengers. US Freight is still number one.

  8. Two words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "Google Train"

    1. Re:Two words by CityZen · · Score: 1

      That's what I was thinking. If Google can make an app that tells you how to drive a car from point A to point B, then making an app that tells you how to drive a train should be relatively easy.

      The app doesn't even have to tell you anything if you're already doing your job right. All it has to do is pipe up when it notices you failing to slow down or doing something else unsafe.

      Having something like this in the driver's cab would be much better, in my opinion, than putting a second person there.

      (Now, I suppose you may have intended more than this: such as the app actually driving the train, or Google taking over the train system. Those might also be solutions, but ones with less chance of happening soon.)

  9. Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by DutchUncle · · Score: 4, Informative

    I can understand the engineer's union attitude towards this. Would YOU want a camera on you all day? Do we really need to know whether the engineer picks his nose? OTOH it really should deter people from, e.g., talking on the phone while they're supposed to be driving. To balance the preventive threat and the privacy issue, the video should be under seal somehow, and wiped after a few days - unwatched! - if nothing interesting happened that day. Maybe an hour of each person gets viewed once a week or so, which hour and which day chosen at random, just like drivers never knowing when there's a police car sitting on the shoulder around a bend.

    1. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Pilots get to have cockpit voice recorders on them all day, plus all the instrument and control surface data fed into the black box. This works (instead of a camera) because there are two pilots up there, and they're talking to each other (and to air traffic control via the radio) (and the control inputs are recorded).

      And yes, that stuff is only reviewed if there's an incident. Trains should have something similar. (For that matter, buses should have at least dash-cams.)

      As for cameras on me all day, I've worked places where the security cams cover my cubicle, and more where they cover places I spend a fair bit of time (such as the server racks in the machine room). No big deal, it's not like I'm jerking off watching porn. Pretty much anyone who works a cash register these days is on camera. The footage has to be too boring to watch unless there's something specific to look for.

    2. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I can understand the engineer's union attitude towards this. Would YOU want a camera on you all day?

      Back when I worked in a shop I DID have a camera on me all day and that was just for something as trivial as shoplifting, never mind having responsibility for a few hundred tons of freight/passengers barrelling down the lines upwards of 60 mph. If I can put up with it for less pay then perhaps the drivers should just suck it up and deal with it like the rest of us do.

      When lives are at stake and drivers resist this sort of thing, which is there to understand why accidents happen not for some voyeur to watch them pick their noses, kvetching just makes one think the stereotypes surrounding the big, old unions have more than a grain of truth to them.

    3. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by William+Baric · · Score: 2

      There's worse than being monitored by a camera : being monitored by your colleagues in an open space office.

    4. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by Solandri · · Score: 1

      I am for having a camera on the train engineer. But the engineers' union stance is a bit more nuanced than just privacy concerns. I don't think they give a damn whether the engineer picks his nose. Their concern is more to do with how people react under stressful situations when snap decisions are required. Knowing that your every move is being recorded and will be intensely scrutinized after the fact can alter those decisions.

      The best recent example is probably the Fukushima nuclear plant. The manager had it within his power to dump seawater into the reactor early on, and avert what would eventually become only the second INES level 7 emergency in history. But dumping in seawater would've destroyed the billion dollar reactor - an act which was sure to invite intense scrutiny into his decision from company and regulatory officials. He was so afraid of making a bad decision, that he ended up making no decision. He instead chose to believe the signs that the reactor fuel rods were not melting down, thus requiring him not to make that fateful decision. Until it was obvious they had melted, and it was too late for the seawater option.

      I often what would've happened if he had decided to dump in seawater in time. It's doubtful he would've been hailed as a hero as we know in hindslight. There would have been no melted fuel rods, no radiation released. Instead the spectre of a catastrophe would've only been a probability-based best guess. Contrast that with the certainty that he'd destroyed a billion dollar reactor. In all likelihood he would he have been disciplined or fired by TEPCO for making a "rash" decision which cost the company a billion dollars.

    5. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Maybe an hour of each person gets viewed once a week or so

      Why would it ever be viewed at all, unless something happened? Who wants to waste their time watching drivers pick their noses?

    6. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      never mind having responsibility for a few hundred tons of freight/passengers barrelling down the lines upwards of 60 mph.

      Not disagreeing, but the Amtrak train that wrecked goes up to 125mph on the DC-NYC route. I've been on it myself and clocked it with a GPS speedometer app. And that's the regular train; Amtrak's Acela Express goes faster than that (I think up to 150, I'm not sure). And trains don't surround you with airbags and lock you in your seat with seat belts the way cars do, and cars only go up to 75-80mph on normal highways.

    7. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      It's not like not knowing if a police car is around the bend. It's more like knowing that there's a red light camera up ahead.

    8. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by penguinoid · · Score: 1

      Back when I worked in a shop I DID have a camera on me all day and that was just for something as trivial as shoplifting, never mind having responsibility for a few hundred tons of freight/passengers barrelling down the lines upwards of 60 mph.

      Sure, with bad drivers people could get killed, but shoplifters cost money.

      --
      Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
    9. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Audit. You review safety critical operators at random to see that they do things by policy and aren't cutting corners. If they cut a corner in the audited work which is a small fraction of everything they did, they probably cut a lot of corners, they must be formally cautioned and sent for retraining. If it happens repeatedly, they must be fired as non-compliant.

      Example: Somebody talked earlier about how "dispatch" might put pressure on drivers to violate safety rules. You don't want to find that out in a crash investigation. If you audit an hour a month per employee at random, you will find those dispatchers breaking the rules pretty quickly and get them retrained or fired before somebody dies.

    10. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I can understand the engineer's union attitude towards this. Would YOU want a camera on you all day? Do we really need to know whether the engineer picks his nose?

      I've worked in a casino. I still picked my nose.

      Obviously I wasn't handling chips or money

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    11. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are worried about that, then you should really be worried about flying.

    12. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by Higaran · · Score: 1

      No one should expect privacy of any kind at work while they are doing their jobs. It doesn't matter if you want a camera on you or not, if your are at work and doing your job, the camera should not matter. If your are on your lunch break, that is the only time you should expect some privacy, but during the rest of the day it shouldn't matter. You are being paid to do a job, and if your employer wants to put up one of even a hundred cameras to make sure your doing it, then that is their prerogative. The cameras shouldn't matter unless they physically get in the way of what your doing, anyone that cares about the more about the cameras than making sure the job gets done right, you probably don't want to have as an employee anyway.

    13. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by I4ko · · Score: 1

      That is just plain ridiculous! Open space offices increase productivity and cooperation. I prefer to work in open space offices, much like most of Europe. I'm not talking hangar like open space, I'm talking a room with 3 to 4 work desks in it, in some rare cases up to 6 people. You will often see people in cubicle farms squatting upon a meeting room, to do just that because it is actually better for productivity, for mood and for you psychological condition.

    14. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by jbwolfe · · Score: 1

      Would YOU want a camera on you all day?

      No. But in fair disclosure, I'm an airline pilot. I already have enough of my actions recorded to determine the cause of any potential mishap. FDR data is now used to monitor compliance, albeit without the ability to render punishment- only to improve safety by analyzing trends on a system wide basis.

      To balance the preventive threat and the privacy issue

      I think the point of video in the cockpit (trains and planes) is to improve safety, not to audit compliance in an effort to terminate misbehaving employees. Even if compliance were not the objective, I would not support its use as its suggested benefits are vastly overrated and the potential for misuse is significant. I suspect train "FDR" data is already monitored in a fashion similar to airline FDRs though I don't know if that data is used to improve safety.

      --
      Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
    15. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree, this is only useful as a forensic tool to help the crash investigators understand what may have gone wrong. Unless you plan to have another person monitor the operator from a far, making sure they do their job correctly. Of course you will need someone to watch the watchers, so you will need cameras on those people too, then it's just turtles all the way down. Put a camera like this on a 15 minute loop and save it to the blackbox.

    16. Re:Would YOU want a camera on you all day? by RubberDogBone · · Score: 1

      I work in a white collar office with 11 cameras installed, last time I counted. I work under them every day. They watch everything I do, along with all my coworkers. And the video is uploaded out of the country so it cannot be tampered with locally.

      Who installed this 11-eyed monster? Me.

      It's not for me. It's because we have an office full of expensive computers full of sensitive data. The cameras aren't the only thing we do but they are a visible deterrent. We have cleaning crews and other vendors in the office. And we have an honest system snack area with an unsecured open cup of money for people to pay or make change. Guess what's NEVER been pilfered? Yep, the money cup, in part because THAT spot is cross-covered by four cameras.

      But mostly the cameras watch us working, or not working. They have been mainly inconvenient for the people who want to sneak off for a nap. I made sure there are no blind spots left.

      My house is the same way, covered by a "number" of cameras. I get more emails with images and video from my cameras every day than I get from anyone else. There's a dashcam in my car too. It caught a truck accident 2 weeks ago today. Good stuff, great time to have a camera rolling.

      So I live, work, and drive with cameras on ALL the time. My life is fine.

      --
      Sig for hire.
  10. The only way it would really be distracting.... by mark-t · · Score: 1

    ... is if the camera is placed in an obtrusive location.

    You can know you are being monitored, but still have to explicitly go out of your way to find the camera... and if that's what's really distracting them from doing their job, then that's a conscious choice on their part to stop doing their job in the first place, and look for the camera (and if they already know exactly where it is, then it's a still a deliberate choice to think about the camera's location instead of concentrating on their job). Either way, the camera or its location are not to blame for the distraction.

    Lots of people work at jobs where they are continuously monitored via cctv, and in general being monitored by a camera that is out of the way of where one needs to work does not really interfere with one's productivity or effectiveness at all. The union's president is being a whiner.

    1. Re:The only way it would really be distracting.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need them to know (officially) where the camera is so that work rules around its location can be clearly established. Things such as, no, you cannot hang your hat on it to block the view. If it is hidden (officially), then they will find it (unofficially) and it will end up being blocked since no work rules can easily be written about a hidden item.

    2. Re:The only way it would really be distracting.... by mark-t · · Score: 1

      It doesn't have to necessarily be hidden, employees and for that matter anyone who bothers to look directly at it may be able to know exactly where it is, but the camera can still be discreetly placed, so that in general you will only ever notice it if you bother to consciously think about it or its location in the first place. The ideal location for such purposes is typically in a corner, and mounted either on or else very near to the ceiling. In practice, it just becomes part of the background environment of where you work and you don't even generally notice it unless, as I said, you spend any time actively thinking about it.

    3. Re:The only way it would really be distracting.... by I4ko · · Score: 1

      Cameras near the ceiling are not very effective to use for face recognition. Eye level cameras work best.

    4. Re:The only way it would really be distracting.... by mark-t · · Score: 1

      For employee monitoring, you don't require face recognition... presumably, the company knows who its own employees are. The purpose of the monitoring is not to catch people they don't know, it would be to be able to ensure that people that they *DO* know are doing their jobs properly.

  11. bullshit claim about monitoring by iggymanz · · Score: 1

    Pretty sure no cameras, other than for making movies for entertainment, were put in engine cabs for most of the last century. If they're trying to equate some meddlesome stuffed suit bothering workers as opposed a camera, that is a stretch.

    1. Re: bullshit claim about monitoring by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After Chatsworth CA, metrolink has had inward cameras for years. Also, we have had forward facing cameras for years and external microphones that show the horn and bell were being used. Mainly used for road crossing at grade accident evidence.

    2. Re: bullshit claim about monitoring by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      chatsworth 2008? er, that's sure not the century I was discussing. you're funny

  12. How about speed arrestors, instead? by derpaderpaderp · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Maybe install the friggin speed arrestors that should have been in that particular train back in 2012. I'd rather KNOW that the passengers are safe, instead of being able to watch the engineer fall asleep at the switch after the fact.

    1. Re:How about speed arrestors, instead? by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

      Those cost more. This is lets throw something that you can buy on ebay for 50 bucks have it cost 5000 and break all the time. Dont forget were effectively paying for it though the massive subsidies so that long distance rail does not die.

      Don't get me wrong putting in 300-600kph trains could do a ton of good for the US.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    2. Re:How about speed arrestors, instead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a more expensive option.

    3. Re:How about speed arrestors, instead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe they don't care about passenger safety. They just want excuses to invade your privacy more and more and more whether it's Firefox, your smartphone or something else. How is a camera going to prevent a train from derailing while taking a curve at 100 mph and killing a dozen people?

    4. Re:How about speed arrestors, instead? by bobbied · · Score: 1

      This isn't about passenger safety, it's about doing *something* that can get you political points. "See! Look, I supported the placemen of video cameras in ALL trains for the safety of all involved!" Never mind that video cameras don't really add all that much information about what the engineer actually did or why they did it, and in the vast majority of fatal accidents in which trains are involved would provide exactly ZERO help to investigators into the cause of an accident.

      It would be better to have a video camera that recorded what the engineer sees than one that records what they do if you ask me. But I can tell you what the video will show in about 99% of fatal accidents... Vehicle is on the tracks and the train cannot stop in time to keep from hitting it. If you where looking at the engineer's actions it would be put the breaks full on an retard the throttle, and possibly turning on the sander, brace for impact.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    5. Re:How about speed arrestors, instead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The driver can disable the safety system.

      And you're probably thinking "Well, maybe but why would they do that?". So let me give you two documented examples from the last couple of years in the UK

      First, a tube driver. Trains on his line have been upgraded with a very sensitive "last millimetre" sensor strip to detect fingers trapped in the train door. Something is stuck in a door, maybe a strap from a bag, or a coat sleeve, probably nothing big. The procedures say the driver should ask passengers to check. Passengers of course don't do a damn thing. They're just annoyed the train isn't leaving. Next procedure says get out of the train, walk along, check all the doors. In rush hour? The driver knows that'll be 5-10 minutes wasted to find some idiot had a handbag strap in the door, delay all morning because of one idiot. Ugh. So he tries to turn off the safety check for the door seal. But he can't get it to work. So in the end he manually disables absolutely all safety systems. Now the train will let him leave, passengers are annoyed enough, let's go. Next station, doors open, driver knows he's got time to make up. He sees passengers are aboard, presses go button. Safety systems are all disabled. Train leaves. Doors are all still open. After a few seconds, with the train already making its way into a tunnel the doors, which are independently smart about this, all go "Fuck, we are moving but I am not closed, I should always be locked shut whenever the train is moving. Something is terribly wrong, I will run my door close motors flat out and hope that can fix it" but by then every passenger on the train is screaming and the driver has realised he made a mistake. Needless to say the resulting delay is a bit more than 5-10 minutes.

      Second, a mainline train driver. The train has been left in a slightly awkward place when he arrives and switches it on. The version 1.0 "How fast is it safe to go?" sensor in his train isn't smart enough to set itself up properly if it wakes up with a "Stop! This is a terminus" marker underneath it - and his train has been parked on the marker. It flashes an error "I am a safety critical piece of equipment you must not put this train into service if I'm illuminated" light. What he's supposed to do when this happens is move the train forward a metre or two, turn it off, turn it on again, and now the sensor can't see a "Stop!" marker and will set up normally. If it still doesn't work, the train is broken, call maintenance. His bosses could buy the version 1.1 sensor which doesn't need such a workaround, but they feel training him to move it forwards a meter and start over is cheaper. Unfortunately he apparently wasn't paying 100% attention in the training. So he decides the flashing error light means "Yeah, I'm basically fine, don't worry about it" and leaves the sensor disabled. A few hours later, for no readily apparent reason he ignores a red "Danger" signal and nearly crashes the train. He is surprised, because the sensor should have prevented this, but of course the sensor wasn't working, that's why there was a flashing yellow light the whole time...

    6. Re:How about speed arrestors, instead? by craighansen · · Score: 2

      So, yes, it's important that safety overrides be designed with a lick or two of sense - such as a override that automatically resets after a limited time, and/or only permits very low-speed operations, and an override that permits operation only if the doors are open less than a few millimeters, and only operates until the next stop. Was that too hard?

    7. Re:How about speed arrestors, instead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Has it occurred to you that people in the train business might actually want to avoid expensive accidents, or is your paranoia so entrenched that you can't grasp someone might have anything but petty political motivations? Not that I expect it to help you, but in actuality most of these sort of decisions are made by people well below the CxO level.

    8. Re:How about speed arrestors, instead? by unrtst · · Score: 1

      In both those cases, the problem also would have presented if there was no safety system in place. In addition, both examples are of someone knowingly ignoring the policy and actively doing something to turn off the safety and continue to ignore all the warnings it's giving. Those folks are doomed.

    9. Re:How about speed arrestors, instead? by schleprock63 · · Score: 1

      exactly my thought. so the webcam is going to slow the train down????? no, but we can watch the train run off the tracks and if we're REALLY lucky, the lead car will be thrown 180 degrees around and we can watch all the passengers be ripped apart as the rest of the cars are thrown from the track.. as long as they get those youtube hits.... schleprock

  13. Re:US rail system by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ah, there it is. The obligatory US bash. Got it in early, too.

  14. How about driverless engines anyway? by ziani · · Score: 1

    If driverless automobiles are plausible (with generally two degrees/ranges of motion), why do we need a human to "drive" something that can generally only go in one direction?

    1. Re:How about driverless engines anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the "if" part of your question isn't true?

    2. Re:How about driverless engines anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably because of the above-mentioned engineers' union.

      On a related note, expect the Teamsters to have something to say about driverless trucks.

    3. Re:How about driverless engines anyway? by jeffmflanagan · · Score: 1

      We don't. I guess driverless trains just aren't exciting to the people trying to automate driving. It's obviously a much simpler problem than cars, though a single serious accident would be a far greater tragedy than a car crash, so there may be more business risk than anyone wants to get involved with.

    4. Re:How about driverless engines anyway? by Deathlizard · · Score: 1

      Trains are complex machines. Most of the time, they work flawlessly, but things can go wrong fast. Broken knuckles between Cars. Car Derailments, Cars, (Ignoring the warning signals, Crossing the tracks, getting hit) Tornado, ETC. Youtube them if you don't believe me.

      A human in the cockpit is going to assess those situations much faster than an automated system can in many of these situations.

      You want to stop trains from speeding? screw the cameras, Put GPS in the engine (if they don't have them already), map the speeds of the rails to the GPS and don't let the train go over the speed limit the GPS (or Dead Reckoning if it's in a tunnel) says you should be going. Its been in Semis for years and it would take next to nothing to modify that system for Train engines with no change to the rail infrastructure.

    5. Re:How about driverless engines anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And cars aren't complex machines? They encounter many of the same issues you pointed out for trains. Personally I agree - I think we're many decades away from autonomous cars.

    6. Re:How about driverless engines anyway? by ziani · · Score: 1

      Good point. The magnitude of the risk is not something I had considered in the comparison.
      Thank you!

    7. Re:How about driverless engines anyway? by Harlequin80 · · Score: 1

      Automated trains are very common around the world. Lots and lots of subways are automated, sections of Japans Metro are for example. At a larger scale RioTinto's iron ore operations use driverless trains for bulk carrying of ore from the mines to the ports in North West Australia.

    8. Re:How about driverless engines anyway? by bobbied · · Score: 1

      Because the engineer's salary is a pittance compared to the automation costs and the liability risks of turning hundreds of tones of vehicle loos on the public roadways. Railroads have already gone to great lengths to reduce their labor costs already. They are already down to TWO persons on a freight train running from Point to Point, and I don't see them really gaining from removing another one.... Passenger trains will ALWAYS have at least some employees on them....

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  15. Cheap fix by fred911 · · Score: 1

    Compared to automating or more frequent inspection of tracks prone to fatigue do to shared freight use.

    --
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B - D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
  16. Computerize them. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't understand why drivers are even needed any more. They could all be driven by remote, with only security and service personnel on the train.
    I'm Canadian so here's a Canadian example.
    In Edmonton, the light rail has drivers. It's such a mindless medial job, that there have been endless problems with drivers being drunk on the job.
    In Vancouver, the trains are driverless. System issues happen, but are typically mechanical/electrical failures on the track system. There's pretty much no chance of error by the computer drivers.

    1. Re:Computerize them. by DaHat · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why drivers are even needed any more.

      For the same reason you still have plenty of humans working to build cars... the auto & rail labor unions are rather strong.

    2. Re:Computerize them. by bobbied · · Score: 1

      A light rail system is a whole different ball game from the common rail system. Sure, if you could build a whole new system that only had automated trains on it, automation would be easy because you could purpose build the automation systems into your infrastructure.

      However, in this case, the problem is pretty complex and where I think it *could* be automated with sufficient effort and cost, I seriously doubt it's going to be cost effective. Railroads run on razor thin margins as it is, with huge equipment and infrastructure maintenance costs, so I don't think they want to fund this. Paying some guy to "drive" is not a huge cost overall, and if it lets them keep their existing infrastructure and limp along for now, that's what they will do.

      SO.. Unless they mandate this by regulation, the railroads won't step up and do it on their own. It's not like the transition from steam to diesel where there was a huge gain in operating costs and efficiency and a huge drop in manpower needed. When it was real profit, they couldn't build locomotives fast enough.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    3. Re:Computerize them. by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why drivers are even needed any more.

      For the same reason you still have plenty of humans working to build cars... the auto & rail labor unions are rather strong.

      For now. But that won't last, automation is going to take over this stuff, and very soon. Especially when people see it's safer to have computers operating these things than humans. Unions have pull now, but they will lose eventually, they always lose to automation. Always will.

    4. Re:Computerize them. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Is there an problem not caused b labor unions? We should outlaw the right to free speech and the freedom to assemble to prevent these abuses.

  17. They already have the technology by hypergreatthing · · Score: 1

    It's called positive train control.
    All that stuff you see with automation? Yeah, there are lots of systems out there that are tried and true.
    Why doesn't amtrak have it? I'm sure it has to do a lot about $$ and the unions pushing to not have it. It's the first step towards train automation.
    There are many more simplistic systems which have it and it's working fine. Many trams are all automated for years and the concepts are the same. They usually have the ability to keep the driver/operator/engineer (PR terms for train drivers is very odd) optional for the system to override it if necessary.
    Sounds like everything is still very manual and very little progress has been made in the past 30 years to bring them up to the 21st century.

    1. Re:They already have the technology by grimmjeeper · · Score: 3, Informative

      You say that as if PTC has been installed and fully vetted. I can tell you from personal experience that the technology is still years away from being a reliable safety system. I used to work for the leading company that's building it for Amtrak and all the other major railroads.

    2. Re:They already have the technology by hypergreatthing · · Score: 1

      I'm saying that the technology has been around for years and that other systems have it fully automated. Even if it's not fully automated in other areas, they have speed control in place which would have prevented the Amtrak problem and others having to do with questionable speeds.

  18. Automate the trains and install a dog and engineer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The engineer's job is to feed the dog.
    The dog's job is to bit the engineer if he screws with the controls.

  19. Time to find better engineers by dave562 · · Score: 1

    If the engineers' concentration is so fragile that they are going to be distracted by a camera, they are obviously not the right people to be operating complex machinery.

    Maybe we should just replace them with automation and run the trains remotely. They could keep one engineer per train to engage the manual override in the event that someone hacks the control infrastructure and tries to do Bad Things(tm) to the trains.

    1. Re:Time to find better engineers by Jeremi · · Score: 2

      If the engineers' concentration is so fragile that they are going to be distracted by a camera, they are obviously not the right people to be operating complex machinery.

      They suffer from a condition called "being human". It causes occasional failures in an otherwise operational controller-human, some very small percentage of the time. Even the highest-quality controller-humans have a non-zero failure rate.

      Maybe we should just replace them with automation and run the trains remotely. They could keep one engineer per train to engage the manual override in the event that someone hacks the control infrastructure and tries to do Bad Things(tm) to the trains.

      That is actually a pretty good idea, and it's more or less what PTC is intended to do, at least as far as the "avoid accidents" part of the job is concerned. Automating things further than that is also possible, although probably not really necessary.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    2. Re:Time to find better engineers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Problem is then you get "automation paralysis" where in the event of an impending accident the train driver doesn't know what to do because his daily routine consists of sitting on a train that's driving itself.

      Frankly just get rid of the drivers, go fully automated is the only reasonable way forward.

    3. Re:Time to find better engineers by dave562 · · Score: 1

      They suffer from a condition called "being human". It causes occasional failures in an otherwise operational controller-human, some very small percentage of the time. Even the highest-quality controller-humans have a non-zero failure rate.

      I am certain that every logical person understands and accepts the risk as you explained it.

      The fallacy in the argument is that the presence of a camera is going to increase the incidences of failures.

      At the core, if being held accountable makes someone perform poorly, they are in the wrong profession and should find another way to earn a living. There are plenty of jobs out there that do not involve a person's actions (or lack of actions) having the potential to detrimentally affect the lives of others.

      As an example from the work place, an effective technique for encouraging someone to complete their tasks on time is to setup a regular meeting with them and their peers. Often times I have found that people who seem to always have excuses for why they need just a little bit more time to get something done, all of a sudden, as if by magic, become able to get things done on time if the only alternative is for them to admit to their peers, again, for the umpteenth time, that no... they still aren't done.

      While a weekly meeting is not a direct parallel to always on video monitoring, the underlying purpose of providing accountability is the same.

      While I have not worked on the rail roads, I do know someone who works for BNSF and he assures me that those engineers have an SOP for everything. Amtrak might not be quite as organized, but they probably have similar training materials. In situations like that, either the engineer is doing things by the book or they are not.

  20. Re:US rail system by JackieBrown · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why do you care?

    It's sad that the rest of the world still feels the need to match us while acting like we are crap.

  21. Re:US rail system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It's sad that the rest of the world still feels the need to match us while acting like we are crap.

    I'm sorry, what? We're too busy laughing at the USA! USA! stuff we see on TV.

  22. About time! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Several years back on Amtrak Pacific line, I kept seeing the engineer leaving the engine for extended periods of time. Out of pure curiosity, I let the car, went through the inside of the engine, made it into the cockpit, and NOONE was there!! I've asked freight engineers how this was possible and they thought it wasn't since they have a deadman's switch to deal with. Frankly, I don't know how Amtrak has gotten away with this all these years.

    1. Re: About time! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Bullcrap. I'm actually an Amtrak engineer, 18 years. Not, not possible, no way, there is an alerter that cycles every thirty seconds, it resets with control input or a reset button. 30 seconds and no input gets a penalty brake application. Disabling any safety device requires breaking a numbered metal seal and is a federal offense. You will lose your federal locomotive license and go to jail and a personal fine. If you are not lying, there is a logical explanation as well. Many of our trains have more than 1 locomotive, sometimes off duty employees will deadhead on the trailing unit. The last one is the only one accessible from the train as there is no door on the front. All the locomotives in the consist be it 2 or however many are controlled by the lead engine, only way that could happen. Even if it was push pull service where there is locomotive on each end or a cab car someone is controlling the engine from the other end. I've read most of these posts and only the PTC guy has any clue. I carry 40lbs of rule books and operating manuals, way more complex than you can imagine out where we mingle with locals and grain trains than the NEC. As far a privacy, I say bring on the cameras, the people that object are the guys that pee in bags and bottles so they don't have to stop. Really

    2. Re: About time! by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up. I also can vouch for the 30 second reset button. There is no way the engine could be operating without an engineer unless it was being remotely operated from the rear. I can also confirm that many Amtrak consists have a locomotive in the back and one in the front. They often do this on commuter routes to avoid having to shuffle engines around from one end to the other. Metra in Chicago actually has locomotive controls and a tiny control room in the second floor of some of their double decker passenger cars, but I am not aware of Amtrak having anything similar.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    3. Re: About time! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Chicago, we use what's called a npcu(non powered control units). They're the old f40 engines from the 70's with the prime mover stripped out instead of the little cabin like Metra has in the passenger car itself. They all start with the numbers 90, then their original engine numbers when they were still powered, like 90345. They also have like garage roll up doors on the side as baggage can be put where the engine used to be.

  23. "Distracting effect"? Citation please by sjbe · · Score: 5, Informative

    More than a century of research establishes that monitoring workers actually reduces the ability to perform complex tasks, such as operating a train, because of the distractive effect.

    Citation please? I'm an industrial engineer professionally and monitoring of workers is a pretty big part of my professional life. I'm not aware of any credible evidence that as a general principle that monitoring workers reduces ability to perform tasks. Perhaps a clumsy system in specific circumstances but claims of any "distracting effect" sound like union representative talking points rather than actual scientific facts. In fact in my experience the opposite is typically true. I find that people tend to be more vigilant when they are aware they are being monitored as a general rule. Some people dislike it but as long as they aren't interrupted the monitoring is rarely actually distracting. Pilots in aircraft have everything they say monitored and yet somehow they manage to operate a vehicle that is even more complex than a train quite competently.

  24. Let me get this straight... by prince+hal · · Score: 0

    Various members of the tech sector are busting a collective gut to provide us with self-driving cars, which given the enormous number of variables involved with navigation, collision avoidance, etc. one can't help wondering if it's practical, or even possible. But at the same time the relatively simple systems required to make rail transport the safest mode of transportation on the planet (ignoring plain old walking, of course), are so expensive and/or troublesome to implement that we think that a bunch friggin' cameras are a more effective and/or reliable solution to the problem?

    1. Re:Let me get this straight... by bobbied · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't here many saying it's not *possible* only that it is not practical and cost effective.

      Sure, you want automated trains, we can do that, but remember that our rail road system is a patch work of private and public companies which runs on a regulation scheme that was largely fleshed out before the turn of the 20th century (over 100 years ago). Plus, the incentive for automation by the rail roads would be largely cost, unless the regulations are forcing them into it. The salaries of the engineer and conductor on a train are a pittance compared to the total operating costs of the train, so there is little incentive to automate. Just keep the human in the loop, it's cheaper in the short term. Rail Roads run on razor thin margins... So profit today is very important.

      The reason we are having this "camera" discussion is more about political points than actually trying to help the system get safer. Cameras won't help anything, except the political fortunes of those suggesting them. The vast majority of fatal accidents involving trains will never be prevented by cameras OR automation because they have to do with vehicles being on the tracks at crossings when the train arrives. You might have great video of the accident, or get the breaks applied a few milliseconds sooner with automation, but neither will prevent people getting killed..

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    2. Re:Let me get this straight... by craighansen · · Score: 1

      Plain old walking isn't very safe (>6000 deaths per year average [includes bicyclists]), and much less safe than passengers on a train (7 deaths per year average).
      Of course, it's because of those other forms of transportation that walking isn't safe.

      http://journalistsresource.org...

    3. Re:Let me get this straight... by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Wow! A whole 100 years. Incredible. That's sooo long!

  25. Re:US rail system by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

    Even Mussolini made it illegal to report that the trains didn't run on time.

    Wait, hang on.

    --
    sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
  26. Re:US rail system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sad? Because US goes around telling everyone US are best and epithet of this and that, and tells everyone else what to do. If you compare yourself to others, don't be surprised if they challenge your self-delusional results. We are quite tired of US domestic propaganda sipping out and interfering with us.

    We see your how you live, your politics and how we live and our politics, you guys live in a constant self-delusional state because of all the domestic propaganda your a being feed that you continuously spread further as if it was the truth. Just because it's illegal to target propaganda against US public, doesn't mean it isn't happening one way or another.

  27. Controlling speed and reacting to problems by sjbe · · Score: 1

    A human in the cockpit is going to assess those situations much faster than an automated system can in many of these situations.

    Depends on the human and depends on the automation and depends on the circumstances. Your assertion is far to broad to be correct as a general proposition.

    You want to stop trains from speeding? screw the cameras, Put GPS in the engine

    Already being worked on but controlling train speed isn't quite that simple. GPS has trouble in some locations on the ground so a reliable speed limiting system would necessitate something a bit more complicated. However I agree that there really isn't any good reason not to have it be a part of the technology package on trains.

  28. Re:"Distracting effect"? Citation please by grimmjeeper · · Score: 1

    I bet the only time it's a distraction is when you have a helicopter boss who is constantly nagging you if you aren't always 100% focused on your task. If it's a passive recording system for after-the-fact investigation and that's it, it's much less of a distraction.

  29. Re:US rail system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We see your how you live

    No, you don't. You see what we choose to show you, and you react in precisely the way we want and expect you to react. And you help us by telling yourself that it's your idea.

  30. Re:US rail system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    And there it is the obligatory jingoist retard who can't deal with the fact that the US isn't number one, but more like number eleven. American patriots probably just assumed the second one is a typo for an exclamation point, probably a consequence of their red state public schooling.

    Or perhaps the obligatory jingoist retard was trying to be factual.
    It was a reasonable thing for the poster to say.
    USA's freight rail network has long been acknowledged as the best in the world, but I had to wonder what the status is now.

    Question for you regarding freight rail service.
    Where did you get that the USA is "more like number eleven"?

    So, I looked it up.

    A search gave me many USA #1 articles like this:
    https://www.aar.org/Background...

    And I found that by number of kilometres of rail, the USA (225,000) is double #2, China (112,000)

    But then again, there's the amount of freight carried.
    Here's a couple of links for rail tonnage-miles:
    The trend is clearly for China holding the lead in recent years by about 15%
    http://www.statista.com/statis...
    http://www.statista.com/statis...

    What I could not find was stats for delivery performance (how long to load/unload and travel), or on-time performance.

    Question for you regarding freight rail service.
    Where did you get that the USA is "more like number eleven"?

  31. More crew would increase safety by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The company is just trying to duck the union request to have two crew in each cab. Evidently having a camera record a disaster is cheaper than preventing it with better technology and more appropriate staffing.

  32. Monitoring != micromanaging by sjbe · · Score: 1

    I bet the only time it's a distraction is when you have a helicopter boss who is constantly nagging you if you aren't always 100% focused on your task.

    More or less yes. Monitoring is not the same as micromanaging. When part of your job is public safety (pilots, engineers, cops, etc) then a bit of passive monitoring is very much in the public interest and generally will outweigh the worker's right to privacy while performing their job.

    1. Re:Monitoring != micromanaging by grimmjeeper · · Score: 0

      Agreed.

    2. Re:Monitoring != micromanaging by koan · · Score: 1

      It's a train he has no right to privacy.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  33. Cheaper than fixing real problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Americans are stupid enough to believe it'll make them safer when a positive control would've avoided the deaths entirely. Yay dumb!

  34. Re:US rail system by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

    He's obviously not talking about freight, he's talking about passenger transportation. Since the US spans a continent, and has large ports on both coasts, and also because it produces a lot of raw materials for export (such as coal), it's no surprise it does a lot of freight hauling on railroads. But that doesn't help people who need to get somewhere. The days of hobos are long past.

  35. Would it have prevented the accident? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would having engineer facing cameras prevented this crash? No. All a camera does is help you determine what happened. It doesn't keep it from happening. While I am not opposed to these cameras, the union is correct - it gives a false sense of security. The funds spent on this would be better used to accelerate the adoption of PTC or even track maintenance.

  36. Re:US rail system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody in the US actually does that. If someone were to do it they would be looked upon as weird and out of touch. We don't even use the term USA. Note my first sentence.

  37. Relevancy? by jklovanc · · Score: 1

    More than a century of research establishes that monitoring workers actually reduces the ability to perform complex tasks, such as operating a train, because of the distractive effect.

    Considering that CCTV have only been readily available for the last 40 years is the other 60 years of study even relevant? I would consider a camera sitting unobtrusively in a corner as being very different than a person staring at me every second. In the latter case I would be concerned that the person would jump in and chastise/correct me if I didn't do what he thought I should be doing. That would make me second guess myself and would be as distraction. A camera could not do that and would not be an issue.

    1. Re:Relevancy? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Yeah, like the genius who stole from a purse in the breakroom the da after the cameras were installed. Caught on tape red handed. Didn't even think about the camera when he stole it.

  38. Don't forget the union by tomhath · · Score: 1

    they are only looking to put the blame on the weakest side, which is obviously the workers

    The engineers (a.k.a. "the workers") are backed by one of the most powerful unions in the country. They are are not weak by any definition.

    The point of the camera is to help establish what happened. If the engineer screwed up then he should face the consequences; if he did nothing wrong then the camera would verify that he did everything right.

    1. Re:Don't forget the union by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And this sort of thing really works! We see this in other safety critical industries.

      Once workers get comfortable with the idea that the investigators actually want to find out what went wrong, and the video will show whatever actually happened, you see a big improvement in the quality of post-accident interviews.

      Gone are the bogus claims of the impossible, because you're going to watch the CCTV video and tear it to shreds. But when something totally crazy happens, the driver knows the video will back them, "A fucking pigeon was inside the cab. I swear to god" sure enough, video of a pigeon. "The light was green, then it just went red, right in front of me!" Weird, but yep, that's on the video, wow, that's dangerous we need to get that fault fixed pronto. But also, really, really often, "I don't know man, maybe I just didn't see it". And it's nice to not have to bullshit back and forth if that's the truth. There are still things we can do - fatigue can be an issue, sight lines, ergonomics...

  39. BS by koan · · Score: 1

    More than a century of research establishes that monitoring workers actually reduces the ability to perform complex tasks, such as operating a train, because of the distractive effect.

    Don't but that at all, my personal experience has been the cameras become just another thing you don't notice, the implication of the above is the employee is constantly aware of the camera.
    This just isn't how people function, the get used to and ignore everyday things.

    Additionally I suspected this engineer was on his phone, but I read 2 different versions, one where his phone was locked into a box in the cab, the other where he "pulled his phone from his bag" immediately after the wreck, implying it was out of "the box".

    The manually controlled train should have been slowing to approach the curve with a reduced speed limit of 80 mph (130 km/h) in its approach, and 50 mph (80 km/h) within it.[2][11][13][14] But instead, the train had accelerated into the curve and was traveling at 106 mph (171 km/h) when its engineer[6] applied the emergency brake, and 102 mph (164 km/h) when it derailed, according to Robert L. Sumwalt, the National Transportation Safety Board's lead investigator, who cited the train's onboard event recorder recovered from the wreckage

    If it is manually controlled, and he entered that turn at that speed, how could it be anything but engineer error?
    He was on his fucking cell phone, and that's why they are dragging their feet releasing details and trying to get the media to focus on an impact mark on the wind shield.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  40. Re:"Distracting effect"? Citation please by koan · · Score: 1

    Exactly, that comment in the article is disingenuous at best.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  41. Protection from blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Suppose I was driving a train full of passengers, some @#$% threw a rock through the window and knocked me unconscious, and then since I wasn't driving the train, the train had an accident. During the accident investigation, I would be asked what happened just before the accident. I would want a video that showed me getting hit by the rock. "That's why I wasn't driving the train - I was knocked unconscious by that rock."

  42. The public wants that false sense of security by craighansen · · Score: 1

    That false sense of security is just what the public wants. The TSA is doing exactly that for airplanes.

    Seriously, consider the recent derailment that has triggered this announcement. They already know the train was accelerating into the curve, and travelling faster than any permanent speed limit would allow. A GPS-based system (including accelerometers to assist the GPS when going through tunnels) would have been able to advise the engineer that the train was travelling at nearly twice the permanent posted speed, perhaps with a loud, audible warning that could alert an engineer that may have been distracted by idiots throwing rocks at the train, (with a time-limited shut-off to handle the case when the GPS is showing the wrong speed or location). It could even, be allowed to stop acceleration and apply brakes if not overridden within a few seconds of its warning by an alert engineer. It could even have a little video camera in it, and store the last 30 minutes of movement. It could even be made as an Android or iPhone app with no hardware development (save the USB-connection to slow the train), so it could be deployed in a matter of months instead of decades, at a cost that wouldn't need an Act of Congress to fund.

    But sure, go ahead and give the public what it wants.

  43. But then it will be harder to blame the engineer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they actually installed systems that could prove what an engineer did or didn't do then how will they continue to always blame the engineer for every derailment? Just like they always blame the pilot lately every time a plane falls out of the sky. Oh, the pilot was kinda sad recently, so he decided to fly 300 people into the broad side of a mountain. Oh, the train engineer was kinda fruity so he decided to go over twice the speed limit. Planes will continue to fall out of the sky more and more lately, as will trains continue to increasingly have accidents. And they will continue to use the pilots and engineers as scapegoats.

  44. Where companies can record by sjbe · · Score: 1

    It's a train he has no right to privacy.

    Not strictly true at least with regard to being monitored by an employer. There are Federal and often State laws regarding whether recording is permitted in some circumstances. While employers usually have wide latitude they cannot legally record anywhere without limitation. Furthermore when a union gets involved then the right of the company to record may be subject to a collective bargaining agreement.

    1. Re:Where companies can record by koan · · Score: 1

      Whether or not it's "law" he has no right to privacy when my life is on the line.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    2. Re:Where companies can record by penguinoid · · Score: 1

      Whether or not it's "law" he has no right to privacy when my life is on the line.

      I guess doctors, policemen, soldiers, researchers, engineers, have no right to privacy. And also you -- after all, if anything happens to you it's a good chance you were involved so you have no right to privacy either.

      --
      Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
    3. Re:Where companies can record by koan · · Score: 1

      When people are on the job I see no reason they can't be monitored, that's why cops wear body cameras, their cars have dash cams, that's why trains should have cameras, and so should pilots, because if you knew what pilots were doing you probably wouldn't fly.

      You make your statements as though I am suggesting they be watched off the job, which is not the case.
      There's no good reason NOT to have a camera in a train cab, cockpit, body cam, dash cam, etc, if it's ON THE JOB.

      Video of the train engineer would answer a whole lot of question.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  45. Just a different group doing the taking by sjbe · · Score: 2

    The right doesn't "want stuff" taken from other people. They want to earn it.

    They don't want stuff taken from other people? Bullshit. They just want the private sector to do the taking instead of the public sector. The right is all about removing restrictions from banks, deregulating industries, allowing companies to dump whatever they want into our streams, lakes and air, etc. They very much want to take things and they don't want to pay taxes so they don't have to give anything back. They are very happy to take away your rights if they don't like what you do. They want to take away women's reproductive rights. If you are an atheist they're very eager to take away your freedom to avoid organized religion. If you are gay they want to take away your right to love whomever you want. They're very eager to spend an absurd amount of money on defense and instead of taxing an appropriate amount they instead borrow the money burdening future generations.

    The right doesn't take stuff? Give me a break...

    1. Re:Just a different group doing the taking by operagost · · Score: 1

      If you believe all that, you have a lot of growing up to do.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  46. AI to watch over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Next step: put a learning system to watch for signs of dozing off and unusual behaviour such as medical conditions. Automatically call the on-duty supervisor at the control center and let they call the engineer or take action like remotely stopping the train.

  47. Lots of people are taped all day long by sjbe · · Score: 1

    I can understand the engineer's union attitude towards this. Would YOU want a camera on you all day? Do we really need to know whether the engineer picks his nose?

    Pretty much everyone in retail has a camera on them all day. Anyone working at an airport too. And a bank. Airline pilots don't have a camera but they do have everything they say recorded. Stock traders have every piece of electronic and phone correspondence tracking in some manner.

    Fact is that having a camera on you is not that big a deal as long as it is done above board and with reasonable privacy accommodations. They're really only going to review the tape if they think there is a problem. And if you are worried about whether you'll be seen picking your nose, then don't pick your nose.

  48. No, it doesnt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Re:It only increases accountability

    It only fixes the problem after the crash when it is too late, and do *you* do better quality work if your boss has a camera on you at all times? Instead, confronted with an emergency they encourage train driver to hesitate, which is *not* what you want them to do.

    Far better idea is to install the speed-limiting devices. These are located on the track and powered passively by a transceiver on the train. As the train passes overhead, communicates speed restrictions to cabin computer. Cabin computer warns driver to reduce speed. If they don't for what ever reason in 5 seconds, computer automatically brakes train. Important principle of rail safety is that even a driver who is incompetent or suicidal or having a heart attack or stroke cannot cause an accident.

    Many railway systems have these devices, though wait until after a derailment to install them - or as in the case of Spain, install them but turn them off - which caused their recent derailment.

  49. Cop out argument by sjbe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Their concern is more to do with how people react under stressful situations when snap decisions are required. Knowing that your every move is being recorded and will be intensely scrutinized after the fact can alter those decisions.

    That's a cop-out if I've ever heard one. Airline pilots have everything they say and every interaction with the controls recorded on every flight and somehow they manage to execute their duties quite well even in crash situations. If a train engineer is doing something they aren't supposed to be doing then they should damn well expect to get a spanking for it. Any equivocation on this point is simply trying to weasel out of being responsible for their actions.

    1. Re:Cop out argument by houghi · · Score: 1

      So the question stands: would YOU want a camera pointed at you all day? I am sure somebody will come up with an excuse why it would be needed.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    2. Re:Cop out argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Our office is under constant video surveillance, frankly I don't give a shit. If the security guard wants to stare at me type then that's fine by me. I'd rather have a camera pointed at me than a boss sat at my desk "helping" any day.

      Train drivers should man up and quit all the belly-aching over nothing

    3. Re:Cop out argument by jbwolfe · · Score: 1

      If a train engineer is doing something they aren't supposed to be doing then they should damn well expect to get a spanking for it. Any equivocation on this point is simply trying to weasel out of being responsible for their actions.

      So are you suggesting that video be used as a disciplinary tool, or as an effort to improve safety? I don't see the benefit and, in fact, see a potential for abuse. Airline CVR data has been misused numerous times: http://scholarship.law.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1275&context=commlaw/

      Airline pilots have everything they say and every interaction with the controls recorded on every flight and somehow they manage to execute their duties quite well even in crash situations.

      True, but I cannot think of an accident investigation where the conclusions would have been different had there been video of operator actions. As a commercial pilot, I have valid concerns about misuse of video.

      --
      Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
  50. Union what. by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

    I think the union just acknowledged that nobody is safe with their drivers, no matter what. Shameful that they are pressing the attack in light of the fact that one of their drivers is responsible.

    No I am using the term "drivers" divisively. If they truly were engineers, they would be demanding safety protocols to be implemented and equipment to be installed.

    --
    I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
  51. Managment is not interested in safety by jodido · · Score: 1

    If Amtrak management were really interested in safety, they'd put a second person in the cab. Like airplanes. Why not switch to a single pilot and a camera? How safe would that make you feel?

  52. Re:"Distracting effect"? Citation please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't have any scientific studies, but all you need to do is look at the red light cameras to see how monitoring can sometimes make things more dangerous. People were breaking extra hard at lights with cameras out of fear of getting a ticket. This cased crash rates at many (most?) monitored traffic lights to go up instead of down. The same thing can happen in other areas. Some people won't react properly out of fear of being judged badly after the fact. I can't say if those people outweigh the other people who stop goofing off because of the cameras. It probably depends on each situation.

  53. Oy! by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

    We are becoming so reactionary that soon every passenger on the trains will have personal came focused on them - you know, just to see who to blame if there is an accident.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  54. Methinks your mountains and molehillls are swapped by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    There's worse than being monitored by a camera : being monitored by your colleagues in an open space office.

    Do you remember what your colleagues were wearing last Friday, before the start of a three day weekend? Most likely not. Unless you do something memorable, whatever it is you are currently doing is going to be out of your colleagues short-term memory in a matter of seconds, and any testimony is hearsay. Whereas video is not hearsay, and lasts as long as it is stored.

  55. Re:US rail system by Uberbah · · Score: 2

    Ah, there it is.

    Yes, the American Exceptionalist Butthurt. Even when your best is half what other countries with far less money can do....'Murica! Fuck yeah!

  56. Re: US rail system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In America, they do, and you're lying to yourself if you think they only exist as parodies on Comedy Central.

    Just look for your nearest Liberty Militia. NASCAR race. Tea Party group. Baptist Church. AM Talk Radio. Or put up a Canadian flag. Watch for fireworks.

  57. Re: US rail system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It is sad how other countries know so little about the U.S. That they take the behavior of a small minority of people in a couple of states and try to define the entire nation by it.

    You do realize there are 50 whole states in the union, right?

  58. Re: US rail system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, because we have airports now. Someone made these small metal tubes that launch into the air from one city with a bunch of smelly people squished inside them like sardines and land in another city, usually in one piece. They are much faster than trains, and sometimes come with a free colonoscopy.

    Who needs passenger trains?

  59. Re:US rail system by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 2

    Probably because we don't want to spend 7 days going from LA to NY with 19th century technology when we can do it in less than 0.5 days using 20th century technology.

    Or if it's only 300 miles away we still prefer a car because we can depart and return on whatever schedule we want, and when we get there we have our own self provided means of transportation that we can use on-demand instead of paying up the ass for a taxi or a rental car.

    It's called being practical, and that's why we don't give a shit about passenger rails.

  60. Re:US rail system by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, what? We're too busy laughing at the USA! USA! stuff we see on TV.

    Exactly, because where you come from, the proof for every answer to every question can be backed with "I saw it on TV" and everybody instantly knows its true, making your country the smartest in the world. And every time somebody mentions something that Americans do, you reply with "well in the rest of the world, we do it this way" as if your country itself is the rest of the world, and that combined with the knowledge that you're better than Americans in every way instantly makes you proud to be from wherever it is you're from.

  61. Automation by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 1

    Union is lucky honestly, trains are prime targets for automation. Would seem like it'd have been a lot smarter to just do away with drivers and tele-operate/automate all train engines. The days of having a human on board are very very numbered. I think the cameras is a waste of time and money. Just automate/centralize it already.

    Also calling them engineers is stupid. Train operators long ago diverged from what engineers are. They're operators.

    1. Re:Automation by PrimaryConsult · · Score: 1

      ... And what do you do if a train enters a dead zone where it will not accept other control input (either due to bad reception, natural damage or sabotage)? Continue on course, possibly into an obstruction / over a bridge that has collapsed? Or fail-safe, where it simply comes to a stop in the dead zone, potentially stranding hundreds of passengers for hours while someone drives out there to check on it?

  62. Everyone keeps saying GPS by Marrow · · Score: 1

    Trains don't really wander around randomly. So its not necessary to use the GPS system. Fixed point emitters over the tracks using simple technology would exactly position the train and insure reception no matter what the conditions. Even inside a tunnel.

    I understand that putting new hardware into the trains is hard, expensive and difficult to clear for safety. But putting new hardware into the operators hands is not. Put a friggin electronic helmet on his head with a siren that goes off if the train is too fast for its registered weight / vs the track he is on. Tell him he fired if the siren goes off.
    Heck, put a tens unit on it.

  63. Re: US rail system by kwbauer · · Score: 2

    Nascar Race? You mean because they "raise" the flag and sing the National Anthem before the race and usually launch fireworks after it? Nearly every sporting event in the US starts with raising the flag and singing the National Anthem. I've been told Toronto (Ontario, Canada) Blue Jays (Major League Baseball) games are preceded by two national anthems. I see a few Canadian flags here in Wisconsin along with some Swedish and Norwegian ones as well. Plenty of Mexican ones flying in early May. I haven't heard of anyone getting to upset by it.

  64. Other people's money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Why does the left think the answer to every problem is "more of other people's money"?

    It's not "other people's money" we are after. It's *YOUR* money, you fucking moron!

    1. Re:Other people's money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As I assume you don't know, it's a variation of a famous Margret Thatcher quote:

      "The problem with socialism is that it eventually runs out of other people's money"

      ( Apparently she didn't actually say it, but it is widely attributed to her )

  65. Cameras won't solve century-old rail tracks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I drove exactly the same train three years ago, at the very same time, from Philadelphia to Penn Station, Manhattan, and I thought it's going to derail any moment. Because such SHAKY tracks can truly exist only in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and equatorial Africa. Plus the train ticked costs 5x the bus ticket (Dragon Bus lines, goes to China Town, Manhattan. Very poor service for an exorbitant amount of money, if you ask me.

    1. Re:Cameras won't solve century-old rail tracks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I also blame the AMTRAK carriages, their chassis, as seen on the overturned train, are the simplest technology I have ever seen. Barely any shock absorbers. Their undercarriage resembled a Wonka toy train, not something seen in western EU.

  66. Re: US rail system by Smauler · · Score: 1

    Nascar Race? You mean because they "raise" the flag and sing the National Anthem before the race and usually launch fireworks after it? Nearly every sporting event in the US starts with raising the flag and singing the National Anthem.

    Yeah... that's the thing. Singing the anthem at each and every tiny sporting event looks really odd and jingoistic to most of the rest of the world. We don't do anything like that at our sporting events in England unless they're particularly noteworthy (FA cup final, etc), and even then it's sometimes booed, or mostly ignored.

  67. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  68. Re:"Distracting effect"? Citation please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nope, just the thought that such a helicopter boss (possibly further up the system) *might* decide to watch the tape can cause people to focus on looking like they're doing their job perfectly, rather than focusing on what's outside the window.

    Just like putting up speed cameras with a 1 MPH tolerance can make drivers spend more time looking at the speedo instead of focusing on traffic. Focus on traffic for a couple of seconds, and the next you see is a flash, because the car changed speed ever so slightly.

  69. Re:Methinks your mountains and molehillls are swap by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

    Testimony of something you have witnessed is not hearsay, at least not in the UK.

  70. Re: US rail system by bkr1_2k · · Score: 2

    There's a reason they play the National Anthem of the winners for the Olympics. You shouldn't be ashamed of your Anthem or boo it, ever. Maybe ignoring it makes sense (it can be a bit "over the top" sometimes) but booing should definitely be considered bad form.

    Just because England doesn't do it doesn't mean the rest of the world doesn't do it.

    Once again we all fall victim to bad generalities based upon our own perspectives, rather than actually speaking about things we know.

    --
    "Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional."
  71. Monitoring might not be the best solution by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Whether or not it's "law" he has no right to privacy when my life is on the line.

    That's a nonsense argument in such a general form because your life is constantly on the line. You ever drive a car? Do you insist that every other driver be monitored? Because you are at FAR higher statistical risk in your car than you are on any train or airplane and yet we don't insist on monitoring there.

    The question is whether monitoring is reasonably likely to have a significant safety benefit. Black boxes in airliners and trains have obvious value in determining causes of crashes after the fact. Video monitoring of retail establishments has a clear benefit in reducing theft. Video monitoring of train engineers? Maybe... but the case isn't obvious because there are other options worth considering. Might be that a better solution is automation of speed controls. Might be that a better solution is a second engineer. Financial resources are finite so we should take a little time to figure out what the best solution is rather than reflexively going to the first idea we think of.

    Now don't get me wrong, I agree that professionals responsible for public safety can and should expect reasonable monitoring while engaged in their professional duties. But note the word reasonable because it is important. There are legal, ethical and practical limits to what we can and should monitor. We don't have a right to view them on the toilet even if they are on duty.

    1. Re:Monitoring might not be the best solution by koan · · Score: 1

      No this...

      That's a nonsense argument in such a general form because your life is constantly on the line. You ever drive a car?

      Is nonsensical.
      As I am in control of my car and he/she is in control of the train, and we don't want them on their phone, or drunk, or sleeping.
      I didn't read past that, if that's your best argument forward you're not worth reading further.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  72. Decision to deploy cameras by sjbe · · Score: 1

    When people are on the job I see no reason they can't be monitored, that's why cops wear body cameras, their cars have dash cams, that's why trains should have cameras, and so should pilots, because if you knew what pilots were doing you probably wouldn't fly.

    In some cases monitoring is quite reasonable and appropriate. In others it is pointless, wasteful and/or intrusive. Reflexively saying they should all be monitored at all times shows that you don't grasp all the nuances involved. Like you I support cameras as a general proposition but there are times when they are either useless or wasteful. There is no one size fits all answer.

    Oh and I know very well what pilots do in the cockpit. I also know they have a rather spectacular safety record so I'm not especially worried about it.

    There's no good reason NOT to have a camera in a train cab, cockpit, body cam, dash cam, etc, if it's ON THE JOB.

    If the camera has minimal or no demonstrable safety benefit or if there are alternatives to the camera that would have a bigger bang for the buck in improving safety then there is a very good reason to not have the camera.

    There also are significant (though often solvable) practical logistical and technology and economic issues in deploying cameras and saving the results. Do not be so quick to dismiss these challenges because they are not trivial or unimportant. Camera deployment isn't simply a matter of walking over to best buy and buying a few GoPros.

  73. Re:"Distracting effect"? Citation please by Kongming · · Score: 1

    I'm not aware of any credible evidence that as a general principle that monitoring workers reduces ability to perform tasks.

    "Complex" is the key term. Generally speaking, there is an optimal level of psychological arousal for performing given tasks. For tasks that are simple, rote, and/or well-learned, that level is higher than it is for tasks that are difficult or novel. In the specific case of knowing that you are being observed, it tends to decrease performance on difficult tasks and have varying results on simple tasks. See Social facilitation.

    The question here is whether or not the job of train operator qualifies as simple and rote, or difficult. I could easily see it being the former, where the tasks are not difficult, and the challenge is to maintain attention or vigilance. If that is the case, then the awareness of being monitored could well improve performance in itself.

    --
    (no sig)
  74. Re: US rail system by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    Who needs passenger trains?

    People who want to travel in comfort, rather than like a sardine.

  75. Re:US rail system by Coren22 · · Score: 1

    Perhaps you should read this post, then refute anything in it:

    http://tech.slashdot.org/comme...

    You can try and slam us for our public transportation all you like, but until you live here, you have no idea of the challenges of public transport, or why we choose not to pay massive amounts of money for something no one uses except in the compact cities.

    --
    APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  76. Re: US rail system by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It is sad how other countries know so little about the U.S. That they take the behavior of a small minority of people in a couple of states and try to define the entire nation by it.

    Yeah, just like the small minority of Muslims who burn American Flags.

    --
    Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  77. Re: US rail system by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

    There's a reason they play the National Anthem of the winners for the Olympics.

    Sure, but what is the reason to play it a minor league game? Do Americans need a reminder of where they are?

    --
    Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  78. It's not a bash when it is true by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    I know it is popular to push the BS that the USA is special in every way, but the fact is that in quite a few categories, the US is only special in the small bus definition.

    1. Re:It's not a bash when it is true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know it is popular to push the BS that the USA is special in every way, but the fact is that in quite a few categories, the US is only special in the small bus definition.

      That is so true.
      But you don't have to be number one in every single category to be number one overall.
      For example, we have Bill Murray.

  79. Re: US rail system by MooseTick · · Score: 1

    "Singing the anthem at each and every tiny sporting "

    I'm no NASCAR fan, but their "tiny" events often average nearly 100k people (https://www.google.com/#safe=off&q=nascar+average+attendance) which is more than the FA cup finals has had in 25+ years (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_FA_Cup_finals)

  80. because the ony wy to get spoiled children to pay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for the society that they live in is to make them. Sorry son, you are not so special that you can continue to sponge off of everyone else forever.

  81. You do not support your cause by blatent lying by publiclurker · · Score: 2

    how about you pay for a few of your immoral wars instead of trying to blame your victims. then you can pretend you are equipped to talk about earning anything.

  82. and like most spoild children. by publiclurker · · Score: 2

    if you can't directly and personally benefit from something, you are going to whine about having to support it.

  83. Re: US rail system by bkr1_2k · · Score: 1

    Sure, but what is the reason to play it a minor league game? Do Americans need a reminder of where they are?

    Sometimes they do need a reminder. Sometimes we just do things out of tradition. Sometimes we do things simply because we like it. Sometimes, we do things to "prove" something. Even if it's just a "minor league game" it's important to someone who's there. Whether it's the players who'll never make it to the big leagues or the kids who only get to see their dad on occasions like that or whatever. Just because you think it's trivial doesn't make it trivial for everyone else.

    I find it all a bit ridiculous, personally, but to argue that the US is the only place this happens is also inaccurate. They do it at baseball games in Korea and Japan, if my memory serves properly.

    Not exactly a rarity for people to feel pride in their place of residence.

    --
    "Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional."
  84. Right, cameras are the answer... by whitroth · · Score: 1

    You wouldn't want to spend money to hire ANOTHER PERSON IN THE CAB, so that the whole train isn't depending on ONE ENGINEER, now, would you?

    The railroads have been working to get rid of anyone more than the engineer for decades. With the position labelled fireman gone, that's *one* person. How would you feel about, say, an commercial airliner with *one* person flying the plane?

    How many hours are they on, with no company, no one to keep them awake, and only one set of eyes on things?

    Stupid.

                    mark

  85. Re:US rail system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's obviously not talking about freight, he's talking about passenger transportation. Since the US spans a continent, and has large ports on both coasts, and also because it produces a lot of raw materials for export (such as coal), it's no surprise it does a lot of freight hauling on railroads. But that doesn't help people who need to get somewhere. The days of hobos are long past.

    I responded to:

    And there it is the obligatory jingoist retard who can't deal with the fact that the US isn't number one, but more like number eleven. American patriots probably just assumed the second one is a typo for an exclamation point, probably a consequence of their red state public schooling.

    Well, I'm a dope because it never occurred to me that he would be talking about "jingoist retards" claiming the USA's passenger service was world's best because in my entire long life I have never met anyone who thought that. I have never seen a newspaper or any media article that suggested American passenger rail service was even adequate.

    Furthermore, I cannot imagine anyone thinking the USA's passenger rail was even number eleven in the world, because it isn't even that good. As you said, it "doesn't help people who need to get somewhere". I know because I use Amtrak from time to time, but the catch is that I don't always want to go to places on the Washington DC- Boston corridor.

    Anyone who says that Americans can't get over their not being number one in passenger rail has never talked to an American about the topic.
    Anyone who says American freight is number 11 is wrong and not even close.
    Anyone who says American passenger rail is number 11 is wrong and not even close.

  86. Re:US rail system by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    nyone who says that Americans can't get over their not being number one in passenger rail has never talked to an American about the topic.

    I completely disagree. There's tons of jingoist retards out there who think America is #1 in everything. You're probably not going to find many on Slashdot, because people here tend to have a decent level of education, but go talk to drooling Fox News watchers who dropped out of high school and you'll find them. These people are completely clueless how things are in the rest of the world. And they make up a very large voting bloc, so you can't disregard them as irrelevant.

  87. Re: US rail system by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

    I find it all a bit ridiculous, personally, but to argue that the US is the only place this happens is also inaccurate. They do it at baseball games in Korea and Japan, if my memory serves properly.

    Not exactly a rarity for people to feel pride in their place of residence.

    Funny you should mention baseball - "The Star-Spangled Banner" was already commonly played at baseball games years before it became the national anthem. And it seems they didn't play the (de facto) anthem "My Country, 'Tis of Thee" back then. Maybe it's less patriotism, and more stubbornness to change any rituals, or even superstition.

    http://espn.go.com/espn/story/_/id/6957582/the-history-national-anthem-sports-espn-magazine

    --
    Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  88. Re:US rail system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nyone who says that Americans can't get over their not being number one in passenger rail has never talked to an American about the topic.

    I completely disagree. There's tons of jingoist retards out there who think America is #1 in everything. You're probably not going to find many on Slashdot, because people here tend to have a decent level of education, but go talk to drooling Fox News watchers who dropped out of high school and you'll find them. These people are completely clueless how things are in the rest of the world. And they make up a very large voting bloc, so you can't disregard them as irrelevant.

    Nonetheless, I personally don't know any.
    Do you personally know anyone who has claimed that America is #1 in everything?
    Including soccer?
    I don't mean what you project onto them, I mean did they say that.

    I'm well aware that there are huge numbers of people who chant USA! USA! Number One!
    I'm one of them. But I don't think we're number one in everything.
    And I don't believe that the hoi polloi think that the USA is number one in soccer. Or everything.

  89. Re:US rail system by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    Nonetheless, I personally don't know any.

    That's probably because you don't hang out with rednecks and other uneducated people much.

    However, you're probably right about soccer.

  90. Re:US rail system by clovis · · Score: 1

    Nonetheless, I personally don't know any.

    That's probably because you don't hang out with rednecks and other uneducated people much.

    However, you're probably right about soccer.

    I actually don't know what soccer is. I saw someone on FOX talking about it and guessed it didn't sound like something we would do.

  91. Ad hominem by mundlapati · · Score: 1
  92. Re:US rail system by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    Perhaps you should read this post, then refute anything in it:

    Perhaps you could explain why either of you is going on about freight when the subject is passenger service?

  93. DarinBob = "Run, Forrest: RUN!!!" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See subject "Forrest" & this -> http://tech.slashdot.org/comme...