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Control restored to traffic signals

MONTGOMERY SAYS CRISIS OVER
2-day computer breakdown made a mess of rush hours

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Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, November 6, 2009

As Montgomery County commuters suffered through their fourth nightmarish rush hour Thursday evening, county officials said computer experts had finally fixed the central computer failure that caused the traffic signal system to melt down.

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"Engineers have isolated the problem and have been successful in reestablishing the connection between the computer and the traffic signals, with the result that most of the intersection signals are now responding to our commands," said County Executive Isiah Leggett (D).

County traffic engineers and outside consultants had been vexed by the problem for 40 hours, unable to manage the county's more than 750 traffic signals, whose timing patterns normally are changed throughout the day to accommodate the ebb and flow of traffic. A few signals still were balking at commands from the revived central computer, but most were responding, Leggett said.

"We will continue to monitor it throughout the evening and overnight, but we anticipate that tomorrow morning's rush hour will be much smoother," he said.

He said the county's Ride On buses would continue to be free for riders Friday.

As county computer experts and outside consultants wrestled with the balky computer, Leggett said he planned to expedite a $35 million program to replace the computer system. Begun two years ago, the replacement was planned to take six years.

"We are going to replace it as quickly as possible," Legget said, acknowledging the county's budget crisis but asserting that "the question of budgeting concerns is not an issue."

The county's chief traffic engineer, Emil Wolanin, said replacing the 1970s-vintage system would not be easy.

"It's not just going to the store and buying a computer," Wolanin said. "We have to figure out how we can transition. It's a very complicated and complex situation."

The system was originally purchased from Eagle Traffic Control Systems, a company since bought by Siemens ITS. The system does have backup components, but the breakdown occurred at a vulnerable point that had none.

"I appreciate the patience of our residents and commuters," Leggett said. "I know it has been a rough couple of days in Montgomery County. I know because I've been stuck in traffic, too."

Leggett said he received a call from his wife on the morning the problem first arose. She was stuck in traffic and said, "I'm calling not as your wife but as a constituent" to complain about the problem. Leggett said he replied that he, too, was caught in a traffic backup at that moment.


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