NTSB investigates Feb. SEPTA train fire
· 12h · on MSN
SEPTA train had "strong burning smell" before fire in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, NTSB says
· 21h · on MSN
Problems were reported just hours before SEPTA train fire that caused $10 million in damages, NTSB says
NTSB investigates February SEPTA train fire
A preliminary report in the investigation was released on Wednesday by the National Transportation Safety Board on the SEPTA train fire on February 6. The report states
With the biggest celebration of American independence in decades set for 2026, Philadelphia leadership is setting aside tens of millions of dollars to make sure the Semiquincentennial is properly funded in hopes of making even more money on all the tourists that come to the place where America was founded.
Philadelphia police are looking for five people they say assaulted a woman on a SEPTA bus in the city late last year.
SEPTA is implementing the 12-month pilot program at 20 intersections in Philadelphia. Golden tells Philly Mag that SEPTA is focusing on SEPTA’s 47 bus route, which runs north-south from Whitman, through Center City, and up to East Oak Lane. The pilot program will focus on the Center City-adjacent chunk of the route.
The fire, spotted on railroad tracks near the station, was reported to the Philadelphia Fire Department around 10:45 a.m. on March 5.
When a bus approaches an intersection, it will be given priority by either getting a longer green light or a shorter red light.
SEPTA services were temporarily suspended on the Paoli-Thorndale Line Monday morning after a person was struck and killed by a train but have since resumed.
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