Va. Gets Battery-Powered Rail Cart

March 25, 2010
ALEXANDRIA, Va. -- Firefighters from across our region are showing off a new battery-powered rail cart that could make all the difference if there's another Metro crash.

ALEXANDRIA, Va. -- Firefighters from across our region are showing off a new battery-powered rail cart that could make all the difference if there's another Metro crash.

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The $20,000 carts were designed in Britain to speed firefighters to emergency scenes deep inside the London Tube. The DC region is the first in the U.S. to get them.

Firefighters say there have been many incidents when they could have used the carts in Metro.

"We can't breath!" a desperate passenger pleaded to rescue workers 10 years ago, while hundreds of passengers were stuck in a stopped train in smoky Metro tunnel. "It took about an hour for the firemen to get there," Susan Little told 9NEWS NOW.

Firefighters say the 26 "Mobile Emergency Response Vehicles" will help them speed into crises far faster.

"The other day, they put it together and had it going down the tracks in one minute and four seconds," said one Arlington firefighter, as he watched the cart zip down a rail line at a Metro Yard in Alexandria.

Firefighters have carts now, but you have to push them. Loaded down in turnout gear, it can take them an hour to get to a scene. With the cart, they can go twelve miles an hour and get to a scene in minutes.

After the Sarin gas attacks 15 years ago in the Tokyo subway, British security officials asked rescue workers to invent a vehicle to get passengers out from deep under London in the tube. The carts were used extensively after the terrorist attacks on the London subway in 2005.

Arlington Fire officials say they sure could have used one in a drill that had a train stuck under the Potomac between Rosslyn and Foggy Bottom.

"In that one, it took 45 minutes to an hour to get to the victims," says Arlington Battalion Chief James Daugherty, who's been leading the project. "With a cart like this, five to ten minutes at most."

In London, firefighters are actually drilled on driving the subway trains, so that if the operator is incapacitated in a poison gas attack, the rescuers can pull up in the cart and drive the train passengers to safety.

The carts were paid for with a $860,000 grant from the Department of Homeland Security.

Republished with permission of WUSA-TV.

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