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Beltway truck crash clears after 20-hour clean up

More than 20 hours after a tractor-trailer crashed on the Capital Beltway in Bethesda, Maryland, all lanes reopened on the Inner Loop after a time-consuming recovery operation Thursday. The tractor-trailer barreled off the Inner Loop into the woods between Old Georgetown Road and Route 355 late Wednesday around 9:15 p.m., sending debris flying. The truck felled several trees and damaged more than 100 feet of guardrail. According to Montgomery County Fire and Rescue spokesperson Pete Piringer, firefighters responded to a fuel spill and large debris field. The truck was reportedly hauling papayas, Piringer tweeted.

The truck remained in the woods and on the left shoulder overnight. The driver of the truck was taken to an area hospital with injuries not considered to be life-threatening. The recovery of the truck resumed later Thursday morning as crews used multiple heavy duty wreckers to winch the truck and trailer from the median. Several dumpsters were used to carry debris from the scene. All lanes finally reopened around 5:30 p.m. Thursday. For comparison, the infamous tanker truck crash on the American Legion Bridge last March took about 12 hours to clear. The impacts from Wednesday’s truck crash were far less severe.

Metro sidelines 6000-series fleet after 2nd car-separation incident

Metro said that it is temporarily sidelining its fleet of 6000-series railcars, after  cars on a Metro Red Line train got separated Tuesday afternoon in a tunnel near the Glenmont station. The move was recommended by the transit agency's chief safety officer and approved by General Manager Paul Wiedefeld. The order will remain in place indefinitely for an investigation.
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