A train derailed and crashed into a station in Hoboken, New Jersey during rush hour this morning, reportedly leaving at least one person dead and more than 100 others injured.
After everyone was rescued from the train, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie called into CNN and expressed concern and confusion about the accident, asking "How could this happen?"
He really wants to know specifics, like whether the engineer is to blame, and what specifically caused the train to derail and crash into the station.
Over time we'll get many of these answers, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) and the Federal Railroad Administration will investigate the extent of the damages and try their best to pinpoint a culprit.
But right now it looks pretty straight forward, like the crash could have been avoided if the train had Positive Train Control technology.
Positive Train Control technology automatically slows down a train if it goes over the speed limit on a stretch of track, and the NTSB blamed its absence for the train crash that killed 8 passengers outside of Philadelphia in May of 2015.
Trains all across the country are equipped with outdated technology, and it's because ever since Reagan's aggressive eight-year effort to do away with federal transportation funding to the states, attacking transportation funding has been a trademark of Republican policies.
Republican governors, including Chris Christie, still to this day insist on suffocating transportation budgets, paying for only the bare minimum infrastructure upkeep and updates, and then acting shocked when accidents like this happen and people die as a result.
Ryan R. Hall with the
Tri-State Transportation Report issued a report earlier this year pointing out that capital investment in rail projects in New Jersey fell by 34% between 2002 and 2016, even though ridership went up by more than 20% over the same period!
The report also shows how they made up for the cuts by simply raising fares, raiding other state funds, and spending money that had been set aside for major projects like outfitting trains with Positive Train Control technology.
Chris Christie has cancelled or shelved a number of major projects since he's been governor, and over the last 15 years the state has taken more than $5 billion earmarked for major projects and instead paid for standard operating expenses, like paying workers' wages and keeping the office lights on.
And as a result, the Department of Transportation
reports that New Jersey Transit trains had 213 major breakdowns in 2014 alone, more than two-and-a-half times more than the neighboring Long Island Rail Road, and four times the U.S. average!