Make Charlie Baker ONE & DONE!

YOU OWN THIS CHARLIE! 

THIS ISN'T LEADERSHIP! 

DON'T BLAME OTHERS FOR THE OVERPAID INCOMPETENTS YOU PUT IN THOSE POSITIONS!

FUNDING FOR THE MIDDLEBORO ROTARY WAS APPROVED....CHARLIE STOPPED IT! 

CHARLIE CAME UP WITH HIS GROSSLY FLAWED & EXPENSIVE SOUTH COAST RAIL FOLLY - NO FACTS! NO RIDERSHIP PROJECTIONS! NO CONSULTATION WITH MIDDLEBORO & LAKEVILLE!  

MASSDOT HAS ALREADY SCREWED UP TRAFFIC IN THE AREA....AND THIS WILL MAKE IT FAR WORSE. 

LAKEVILLE/MIDDLEBORO RESIDENTS DETERMINE THEIR ROUTES OF TRAVEL BECAUSE OF MASSDOT FAILURES. 

CHARLIE FORMED A TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION....HE'S UP FOR RE-ELECTION....EXCLUDED THE SOUTH COAST. 

THE MBTA HAS A BUDGET SHORTFALL...SO RAISE FARES AGAIN? 

MASSACHUSETTS VOTERS SEEM TO LOVE CHARLIE'S WHITE TEETH AND IGNORE CHARLIE'S FAILURES. 




Charlie Baker insists T do its homework

Wants answers on derailments



Matt Stout Friday, February 23, 2018


CLOSE CHECK: The Red Line train involved in a derailment Wednesday undergoes inspection.

Credit: Courtesy

Gov. Charlie Baker said the MBTA needs to do its “homework” and find out whether the cause of this week’s Red Line derailment could be hiding elsewhere in the T’s heavy rail system, which has been plagued by nearly 30 derailments in three-plus years.

T officials say they were still investigating the “root cause” of Wednesday’s mishap, when a six-car Red Line train momentarily jumped the tracks during the morning commute, spraying passengers with shattered glass and spewing smoke as it entered South Boston’s Andrew Station.

Yesterday, Baker called the incident “unacceptable.”

“They (T officials) need to do some homework on why this happened and figure out if there is some issue that needs to be considered along the rest of the lines and rest of the tracks to make sure we don’t have some terrible situation like this lurking somewhere else,” said Baker, whose re-election campaign this fall could ride, in part, on the T’s performance.
decades people neglected making the investments that should have been made in the core system,” Baker later said, adding: “I get the fact what riders had to put up with yesterday was unacceptable." 


No one was injured in the incident, and a T spokesman said it was the first derailment involving passengers on a heavy rail car — which run on the Red, Orange and Blue lines — since December 2009.

But overall, it marked the 28th derailment since the start of 2015, the Herald reported yesterday. There were 10 in both 2017 and 2016, all of which involved maintenance vehicles or out-of-service cars in train yards, according to T data.

The count far exceeds data reported to the Federal Transit Administration, which T officials said only recently expanded its reporting requirements to include incidents involving maintenance vehicles.




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