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Driver crashes Metrobus, gets charged with driving bus without license

By: Kytja Weir
Examiner Staff Writer
July 31, 2009

A Metrobus operator was arrested Thursday after her bus crashed and police found her driver’s license had been suspended more than two months ago.

The wreck, which injured one person, occurred about 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Good Hope Road and 25th Street in Southeast D.C. when a Route 92 Metrobus traveling to Congress Heights and another vehicle crashed.

One person was taken to a hospital with injuries, though it was not immediately clear whether the person was in the vehicle or the bus.
Police charged the driver of the other vehicle with failing to yield, said Metro spokeswoman Angela Gates.

But as police were investigating the crash, they found the commercial driver’s license of the Metrobus driver was suspended.

Carletta S. Douglas was arrested and charged with driving with a suspended license, according to Metro.

Her license had been suspended May 27, Gates said, but it was not immediately clear why.

Like any drivers , Metrobus drivers are required to have valid licenses. They are supposed to alert their supervisors if they have any problems with their commercial driver’s licenses, Gates said. But she said Douglas told Metro officials Thursday she did not know the license had been suspended.

Douglas has been working for Metro since 2000 and driving buses full time since 2001. Gates could not say Thursday what penalty the driver could face from the agency.

Douglas could not be reached for comment. The union that represents her declined to discuss the case.

Her arrest came just a day after Metro said it was taking a comprehensive review of employee policies and disciplinary actions, looking for stiffer penalties after several high-profile cases this year have embarrassed the transit agency.

Staff Writer Bill Myers contributed to this report.


kweir@washingtonexaminer.com



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Ward6resident

Jul 31, 2009

It's unbelievable what some drivers will do. I see DC school bus drivers on cell phones all the time. As for Metro employees, it is a serious problem even with all of the publicity. On the past weekend, a Circulator bus driver left his main route, illegally stopped the bus in the middle of a residential intersection blocking traffic, left the bus door opened, so that he could go into a liquor store.

 


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