The Washington Metrorail Safety Commission voted unanimously to adopt three investigation reports presented in the meeting, covering incidents from February 2025.
Key findings from the adopted reports:
- Whiskey0411 (02/14/2025, West Falls Church yard): A rail vehicle operator moved the wrong cars and passed a red signal while conducting a yard move. Investigators cited lack of situational awareness, unfamiliarity with the yard, ineffective supervisory oversight, miscommunication among personnel, and delayed reporting (the event was reported to WMSC well outside the required two-hour window). The train operator, student interlocking operator, and supervising interlocking operator were removed from service for post-incident testing. Recommended corrective actions include refresher training and safety campaigns on signal compliance and communications.
- Whiskey0412 (02/23/2025, Grosvenor/Largo operations during track work): Train 155 departed Grosvenor without permission while operating under stop-and-proceed rules for temporary terminal operations; the operator had switched off the OPS1 radio believing communication was not required. Investigators cited failure to follow operating rules and procedures; the train was removed from service and the operator was relieved for post-event toxicology testing and inspection.
- Whiskey0413 (02/25/2025, Waterfront Station): A reported assault escalated to a shooting on the mezzanine leading to an evacuation and unified command with Metropolitan Police Department (MPD), Metro Transit Police Department (MTPD), and DC Fire/EMS. One customer sustained a non-life-threatening gunshot wound. Green Line service bypassed Waterfront Station until unified command ended at 11:10 p.m.
Commission action and votes: The commission moved and seconded adoption of Whiskey0411 through Whiskey0413; the roll-call vote was 6 yays and 0 nays.
Why this matters: The reports highlight both operational and public-safety risks: operator territory familiarization, radio/communication protocol adherence during temporary operations, and station-level violent incidents requiring coordinated emergency response.
Next steps: WMSC recommended corrective actions (refresher training, revised territory-familiarization approaches, and communication protocol improvements) and will monitor WMATA's implementation of related CAPs during upcoming audits and inspections.