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Metro to announce 24/7 work zone changes

UPDATE 9/14/16 3:15 p.m.: Metro announced the track work changes Wednesday afternoon. Click here to read more about the schedule changes.

WASHINGTON — Metro is set to announce changes no later than Thursday for its upcoming round-the-clock work zones that will include extensions of the “surges” announced earlier this year, sources said.

Several sources told WTOP they expect an announcement Wednesday afternoon.

Rep. Barbara Comstock, R-Va., and Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., each put out statements late Wednesday morning referencing “the announcement that SafeTrack construction will occur longer than originally planned.”

After WTOP contacted Metro about the pending announcement, the agency tweeted that new dates for 2016 surges would be released by Thursday. There are additional surges scheduled next year.

Metro is extending specific surges to address safety issues tied to the interlockings where trains cross from one track to another, such as the location where a train derailed in July. Metro is not ready to say exactly when the last of the original 15 surges will be completed.

Last month, Metro announced that the surge schedule was in flux after concerning findings about track safety and a lack of inspections.

The next scheduled surge after the work that begins Thursday on the Orange Line was a shutdown of the Red Line through Brookland and Rhode Island Ave. That work is now expected to include concrete repairs for a bridge holding up the outbound tracks.

Metro fare evasion crackdown sparks police confrontation concerns

WASHINGTON — Amid complaints that Metro’s fare evasion crackdown is leading to people being pinned to the ground or pepper-sprayed unnecessarily by police, Metro’s general manager said Thursday that the crackdown is necessary to ensure that other rules are followed and that Metro gets all of the funding it is entitled to. “The way WMATA treats its riders, particularly people of color, is unacceptable,” Brianna Musselman told the Metro Board Thursday. She recorded video of a man being pinned to the ground and pepper-sprayed by Metro police at the Gallery Place station in June, during an encounter that began when officers said the man tried to enter the rail system without paying.
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