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Buses piling up like cordwood on South Huntington

Stuck buses on South Huntington Avenue

Two stuck buses. Photo by Gordon Hallett.

As of 2:45, there were three 39 buses dead on South Huntington Avenue by the VA Hospital - two due to a bit of crashiness. Police asked the dispatcher on that route to stop sending buses down South Huntington.

And with nowhere for them to turn around, E Line trolleys that normally would head that way are instead terminating at Brigham Circle.

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Comments

So where's Mark from Arlington and all the people from 'better transit without trolleys' to cheer lead cars and buses over the green line now?

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How do street-running trolleys fare in snow storms?

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Just keep hitting that sander button and they'd take it like champs.

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MBTA Transit Police requested the MBTA stop sending buses entirely, or at least reroute the buses. MBTA refused the TPD's request.

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I mean, the response to that is to put the dispatcher in jail, right? If that doesn't happen, then why should I respect the MBTA police?

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It has happened before, but I can't remember specifics. MBTA PD made a request and a dispatcher denied it.

Today, PD asked an inspector at Forest Hills to reroute the buses. They claimed they didn't have the manpower to divert buses. Meanwhile, PD dispatch asked the bus dispatcher to completely stop running the 39 buses, and that request was also denied.

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when they make a lawful order. Did they have the authority to order the dispatcher not to send buses?

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I don't think the police have the authority to force the MBTA to stop running a bus route. They can request it but the MBTA has no obligation to comply. The MBTA is not breaking any laws by running the buses so the police can't just waltz in and arrest the dispatcher legally. The cops would need some kind of court order from a judge or something like that to legally be able to shut down a bus line.

I may be wrong but I think it'd have to go something like that.

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Per MBTA PD.

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My daughter reports her T bus from BLS went on some crazy route she didn't recognize and then rejoined somewhere near the Curley.

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Maybe went through Brookline and down Perkins street , beat the hills....

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My daughter was on a BLS Huntington Ave bus that was rerouted to Forest Hills via Columbus and Washington. I'd guess they all did that, but who knows when it comes to the 'T.

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Walked to Ruggles expecting to take commuter rail to Roslindale where I'd be picking her up, only when she called, I told her I can't get there because they've yet to plow our street - which is up a hill. So now she's traveling to Needham Heights, where she will then stay on the train as it goes back the other way and hopefully I'll be able to pick her up then (the walk from Ruggles exhausted her too much for her to be able to get up the stairs to the Orange Line to go someplace warm, like, say, North Station). I'd be upset except, well, that's exactly the sort of thing I would have done - must be genetic.

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Why doesnt she get off at Rossie square and walk to the library,passing by Diane's bake shop mmmm if it is still there ?

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Or taking the train to West Roxbury and walking to that library, but she. just. couldn't. walk. another. step. I think it wasn't just the trudging but the trudging through wet snow getting her feet all wet.

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Yes wet feet are definitely a bummer , thats why I baited the hook with Diane's bake shop. But where are all the adults with the plows and sanders during this Suffolk county snowageddon ? Alas where I am it is raining and 38 * ,wood fire burning , and I am off to the wood shed to split some more wood ,exactly , with my new store bought log splitter, as the old armstrong model is out of tendons and such............. Hope the poor child gets home and dry safely and soon, Sumus Primi , right !

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Hope she gets home soon. I remember a flock of young BLSers arriving at my house back during that crazy storm a few years ago--seven or eight maybe?-- when everyone got trapped. They had walked the mile and a half home since the buses and trains were all stuck. Mostly I remember how many of them were wearing Converse sneakers or soaking wet Uggs.

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Who sends their kids to school in the snow in canvas shoes?

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Do you remember that day? It was the "surprise" storm--and certainly no one was expecting to have to walk home. And clearly you've never parented an eighth grade girl--you do NOT have much control over their choice of footwear.

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To quote Michael Jackson: "If you can't feed your baby, then don't have a baby."

Breeding is for the wealthy in a world of 7 billion.

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in some households a choice has to be made: heat and groceries or some of the finer things in life. And yes, boots can fall into that category.

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They're necessities. If parents can't be resourceful enough to get some kind of decent foot wear on their kids they shouldn't be having them.

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How many kids do you have, again?

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They've all always had boots and winter coats. And mittens and hats for that matter. they didn't always want to wear that stuff but they damn well had it, and wore it or didn't go out when weather conditions demanded it.

Thanks for asking.

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Adam--do we have a special prize for the most psychotic, right-wing, get-off-my-lawn freaky thread hijack EVAH??

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I'm a life-long liberal Democrat. I wouldn't vote for a Republican for dog catcher.

Some things aren't political. Hate to break it to you.

I'm not especially old or curmudgeonly either but don't let that stop you from pulling out the old lawn banality. Home town crowd seems to love it.

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and come to terms with the fact that a. someone who says things like "if parents can't afford to buy boots for their children, they shouldn't be having them." is NOT a liberal. Liberals don't generally presume that only rich people are allowed to procreate. And b. your comment was not only totally unnecessary, it made NO sense whatsoever. As I've already reminded your new buddy in crankpot idiocy, Will, that storm took everyone by surprise. Kids were stuck on buses for eight or nine hours; the commute lasted until ten at night. The kids I referred to made their footwear choice based on preteen fashion choices and the forecast, not because of economics. Get it now? You were the one who decided to insert the weirdo judgmental comments, ok?

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Kids getting caught w/o gear occasionally isn't bad parenting. Not being able to somehow, someway, find appropriate clothing for your kids is a problem.

I said nothing about wealth. there are other resources out there. Personally I'd go to every shoe store in boston and offer to labor for shoes for my kids. Or go to every church and other charity.

Kids need boots. Find them. end of discussion. The fact that you think I'm a right wing wack job for thinking this actually makes me think you're a damn kook.

Have a nice day.

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Nope, it never happens that a kid will outgrow their boots by a size, sometimes two, in a three week period. It also never happens that there are no longer any boots to be had at the end of the winter season.

Will knows this because he knows everything there is to know about how kids grow and what being a parent means.

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I used to hide a pair of sneakers in the garage to change into out of my galoshes that my mother made me wear to walk the mile to school when it was snowing. Old man galoshes with buckles! Fuck that noise, or, in the parlance of that era, gosh no!

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The puddles in the street outside the West Roxbury CR stop were DEEP. Kidlet made a good decision. :)

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I was mentally exhausted after half a block of trying not to slip on the ice, even though I was wearing waterproof hiking boots. Then I put on my Microspikes, and crunched my way home without thinking about it.

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We had a pack of teens who didn't have buses show up in a timely manner, had to leave the high school building so staff could leave, and had parents stuck at work.

So much for two large bags of corn chips and half a case of soda.

They made cookies and a big vat of fried rice, and cleaned up after, though. They made dinner for everybody, so I can't complain.

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There was a bus stuck on the way out of ruggles station that caused a back up of buses at the station. buses had to re-route because of this.

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It's VERY slick out there.

I had just taken my lunch when my work (Cambridge) closed so I just left. This was about 1:15. Going home on the bus then the green line wasn't too bad except for it being mad snowy and a (usual) crowded 111 bus.

However once we got into Chelsea, the side streets were awful. That nice snow we got this morning, then it rained some, then back to snow.. well compacted now its just a sheet of ice. I helped push cars up a slight incline at a stop sign near my house because it was causing traffic to back up. We (the group of us) could barely get any traction to push the car. Just about any car stopping at that stop sign just could not get the momentum again to pull out. It's like no one salted or sanded from earlier at all.

I'm sure its like this every area that was on the rain/snow line all day. Just one compacted sheet of ice...

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I'm getting reports that another bus (57?) slipped out of control and into 5-6 parked cars, around 900 Commonwealth.

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Comm & Buick

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...I guess this means we maybe ought to stop laughing at Seattle and Atlanta and all those places who get a little snow and go sliding all over the road. I mean, they're still laughable, but we're looking pretty funny too.

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Actually, buses in Seattle, Portland, and Vancouver can handle this sort of crap because low accumulation ice/slush storm is their dominant winter crap. They just put tire chains on all the buses (and ban the cars that don't have them). Then they put the routes on Winter Emergency schedules because they can't top 25 or 30 mph (and some steep routes are modified).

whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph whumph

School buses, too. Ain't a fun ride ... but you get there.

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A quick Google image search for"Seattle, articulated buses, snow" suggests they don't do as well as you think:
https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&biw=1920&bih=1085&site=imghp&tbm=isc...

Because Seattle has so many articulated buses in their fleet, their winter emergency plan is to run as much of the system as they can with just conventional, non-articulated, buses.
A 2010 Seattle news story:
http://www.king5.com/news/local/Upcoming-Snow-Storm-Fewer-Metro-Buses--1...

A quote from the Seattle story:
"Metro says its articulated buses and trolley buses get stuck in snow and therefore they’ll be pulled off the road if there is a big storm. That means fewer buses will be running. Metro also says it will be altering bus routes during those times.
When those route changes hit, riders could be left out in the cold."

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But the non-articulated ones do a lot better than MBTA buses because they have the tire chains.

So do private cars.

It also helps that they have a plan for this stuff, and understand the limitations of their equipment and the need for traction devices. With the changing climate, it would be good if the MBTA realized that this sort of weather doesn't just go away if you ignore its existence, but requires a special approach. It isn't snow, it isn't rain, and it is ice.

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The 40-foot non-articulated MBTA buses do reasonably well in the snow, it is the artics that have the big problem. The MBTA will shuffle 40-foot buses around between garages on short notice to replace the artics, but they waited too long yesterday to do that and the result was those route 39 buses stuck by the VA and the Route 28 bus blocking Ruggles. It doesn't make sense for the MBTA to increase the number of articulated buses in their future fleet beyond what they have now though, because they will not have enough 40-foot buses to cover the snow-day need in the rush-hour, they are really stretching things thin when they do it now on the 28/39/SL4/SL5

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The MBTA used to use chains in the winter:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ck4049/5214578723/in/set-72157624059977753

I'm not sure if Mass DPU lets them do it any more. It can cause damage to the roadway

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How could the T buy buses that don't do well in snow?

Didn't they even buy a few artics as prototypes before placing the full order? So they had no excuse that they didn't know.

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After waiting too long for a bus we ended up never leaving Boylston st station. After rocking and hearing that nice spinning sound from the wheel well the bus gave up and tossed us to the curb for the next bus. (nothing as cool as the huntington busses though). Actually kind of surprised either route still had articulated busses - the T usually transitions back to 40' busses when it snows like this.

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If I remember correctly, the Silver Line buses are diesel-electric AWD, while their counterparts on the #39 are RWD diesel.

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The engine and drive wheels are in the rear. How would you get the power to the front half wheels through the articulated section? I don't think a drive train is that flexible...

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The dual-mode buses have electric motors mounted on the second and third axles. The electric motors get power from a diesel engine and generator in the rear of the bus when in diesel mode, and get power from the overhead wire when in straight electric mode.

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The top of this sub-thread mentioned Boylston, i.e. the Washington Street Silver Line. So no dual-modes.

I'm sure it's been said before, but having two non-connecting lines with the same color is really stupid. Even if they're supposed to get connected by a billion dollar tunnel at some unspecified future date.

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Articulated buses, on a hill, in snow or ice = massive fail

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But they tend to use a different type with AWD and don't need to swap them out with 40' buses.

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They don't use a different type, same New Flyer and Nova artics as available in the US,
Another Google image search for "ottawa articulated buses snow"
https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&site=imghp&tbm=isch&source=hp&biw=19...

includes this gem
http://busdriverofdurham.blogspot.com/2008/03/articulated-buses-troubles...

The MBTA's dual-mode articulated buses for the SL1 and SL2 do fine in the snow because the second and third axles are both powered. But standard North American artics (like those on the 28, 39, SL4, and SL5) have only the rear axle powered. The buses are being pushed from the rear. Going uphill in snow or ice, they will start to jackknife. The engines automatically cut-out if the articulation starts to bend to the point that there will be major damage to the bearings and linkages if the bus continues to move. The hybrid artics do a little better than the CNG's, but not much.

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Theirs is not to reason why
Theirs is but to do and drive
into the valley of ice and sleet
Drove the valiant 39

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I'm pretty sure that as of 4:30ish, neither salt truck nor plow had traversed the section of Route 9 from Newton Highlands to Brigham Circle. The car in front of me, who seemed to be taking appropriate precautions, would have spun out had the snow bank along the guard rail not caught its rear fender and stopped the spin.

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Gotta be outta buses by now..... That dispatcher is the hardest working guy they got.....

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The T had enough buses the drivers all called in sick as far as the battle of the dispatchers goes the recorded tapes should be released for entertainment purposes only

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Two buses merge on a snowy avenue.

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