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658

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[–] 2 pts (edited )

You are correct. An employee reported a problem and nothing was done. (abc6onyourside.com)

here’s the part the report didn’t address: Leaders of Ohio railroad unions say even if the rail-side sensors do say “stop,” sometimes that alarm is ignored.

railroads began a new scheduling system to save money

Norfolk Southern disregarded a similar mechanical problem on another train that months earlier jumped the tracks in Ohio

I guess it's cheaper to derail cars rather than stop and check anything.

even if a defect is detected there’s no regulation that says you must stop and inspect that car.