Power Restored After Amtrak Disruption
Thousands Stranded As DC-NYC Traffic Halted During Rush Hour
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Play CBS Video Video Train Disruption In Northeast Trains are back on track in the northeast after a massive power outage brought the morning commute to a standstill. Drew Levinson reports that thousands of commuters were stranded.
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Video Amtrak Service Resumes Amtrak train service has returned to normal following a morning power outage that affected the entire Northeast corridor and left many commuters stranded. Drew Levinson reports.
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People look at an Amtrak schedule showing departure delays at Pennsylvania Station in New York on Thursday, May 25, 2006. A major power outage stranded thousands of rush-hour travellers between New York and Washington. (AP)
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Passengers stranded, as a power outage halts commuter rail service, May 25, 2006. (CBS)
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Passengers wait for their train after a power outage halts service, May 25, 2006. (CBS)
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Interactive Danger on the Tracks Notable U.S. train wrecks of the past 150 years and statistics about recent track-caused train accidents.
Power was restored throughout the heavily traveled corridor at about 10:30 a.m., more than two hours after outage, Amtrak said. CBS News reports that it will likely take hours for trains to be up and running.
The outage stranded five trains in tunnels — one in Baltimore and four under the Hudson River heading into New York. The last one lurched back to life at 11:15 a.m. after stranding passengers for more than three hours in the heat and darkness.
"We no sooner entered the tunnel than even us non-engineers noticed we were coasting, the air conditioning had gone off and something was very wrong," said Jeff Oppenheim, who was headed from New York to Washington D.C.
Joe Piasecki of Washington Crossing, Pa. was among 100 passengers who climbed down out of a stalled train near Elizabeth, N.J., to walk nearly a mile to the nearest station.
"It's a kind of eerie, end-of-the-world feel," said Piasecki, who boarded the train in Trenton. "You have these two trains sitting here dead, not moving. You can't see any cars or anything else moving."
Enter Washinton's Union Station, the first thing you see is an overhead electronic board showing train departures: regional to New York, delayed; express to Boston, delayed; Palmetto to Savannah, delayed, CBS Radio News correspondent Barry Bagnato reports. Amtrak says it could take a long time to untangle the mess caused by the power outage.
At New York's Penn Station, Jan Brayan waited for more than two hours to catch a train.
"There are things you can control and things that you can't," said Brayan, who lives in Ann Arbor, Mich. "I just try to keep in touch with my patient side."
Commuters complained that bathrooms on board the stalled trains backed up and some sat on the floor of the sweltering cars.See passengers' reactions on RAW video.
Krista Barry spent the morning of her 23rd birthday reading a book for more than 90 minutes.
"Everyone is calling me on my cell and saying, 'Uh, happy birthday; too bad you're stuck,"' said Barry, who boarded the train in Trenton bound for her job as an office temp in Manhattan. "At least I get to relax and not go to work."
In Baltimore, Larry Willis, 63, of Upper Marlboro, Md., said he and other passengers were stuck in the dark for about 45 minutes in a tunnel.
Passengers remained quiet during the outage but there was "a lot of frustration," said Willis, who had been traveling to Newark, N.J., to catch a flight to Tel Aviv, Israel.
Another Amtrak train made it through the tunnel but lost power within a mile of New York's Penn Station, passengers said. Terence Hanrahan, 41, of San Francisco, was heading from Washington to New York for a wedding with his wife and two children, ages 3 and 18 months.
"We almost made it. Then they said, 'Wait patiently,"' Hanrahan said. "With two screaming kids."
Hanrahan's wife, Wendy, said passengers the were herded onto an overcrowded commuter train with little explanation.
Despite the inconvenience, some stranded passengers weren't entirely soured on train travel.
"It beats flying," Terence Hanrahan said in Baltimore. "I'll take the train over flying any day."
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
See passengers' reactions on RAW video.
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