Riders sit in a Metro train in the Gallery Place-Chinatown Metro station Tuesday, March 15, 2016 in Washington. The rail system that serves the nation’s capital and its Virginia and Maryland suburbs will shut down for a full day Wednesday after a fire near one of the system’s tunnels, the system’s head announced. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
WASHINGTON — The man in charge of safety on Metro submitted his resignation Friday morning, just over a week after the system was shut down for emergency safety inspections.
Acting Chief Safety Officer Lou Brown had been filling the role since former chief safety officer Jim Dougherty resigned in September following a preventable train derailment.
Metro spokesman Dan Stessel says Brown will remain with Metro through late April.
The effort to permanently fill the chief safety officer position has gone through a number of false starts.
Metro has another round of interviews with other candidates for the job scheduled for next week.