HJRES-76-115
Became Public Law No: 115-54.
Sponsored by Steny Hoyer (D-MD)
What it does
This joint resolution grants Congress's required consent for Virginia, Maryland, and the District of Columbia to form an interstate compact creating the Washington Metrorail Safety Commission (MSC). The MSC would oversee safety on the Metrorail system by enforcing safety plans, conducting audits every three years, issuing corrective action plans, and publishing annual safety and operations reports. Any of the three signatories may withdraw from the compact, which would dissolve it entirely.
Who benefits
Metrorail riders in Virginia, Maryland, and the District of Columbia — approximately 700,000 daily passengers — who would gain an independent safety oversight body. Federal workers and contractors who rely on Metrorail for commuting. Residents of the Washington metro area who benefit from reduced risk of transit accidents. State and local governments that gain a formal, structured mechanism for coordinating rail safety across jurisdictional lines.
Who is hurt
The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA), which would face new mandatory compliance requirements, audits, and corrective action enforcement that could increase its administrative and operational costs. Metrorail riders could face service disruptions or fare increases if WMATA must divert resources to meet new safety mandates. Taxpayers in Virginia, Maryland, and D.C. could bear costs associated with funding and operating the new commission.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Metrorail's history of safety incidents — including fatal crashes and fires — demonstrated that WMATA lacked adequate independent oversight, creating unacceptable risks for hundreds of thousands of daily riders. They contend that a tri-jurisdictional safety commission with real enforcement authority, mandatory audits, and public reporting would create accountability that no single jurisdiction could achieve alone. Because Metrorail crosses state lines, only a congressionally approved interstate compact can give the oversight body the legal standing to enforce safety standards uniformly across all three jurisdictions. Supporters also note that the Federal Transit Administration had previously flagged WMATA's safety culture as deficient, making independent oversight a federal as well as regional priority.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a new multi-jurisdictional commission adds a layer of bureaucracy that may slow decision-making and duplicate oversight already provided by the Federal Transit Administration and each jurisdiction's own transportation agencies. They contend that the compact's withdrawal clause — allowing any signatory to dissolve the entire agreement — creates structural instability that could undermine long-term safety planning. Critics also raise concerns that the commission's costs would ultimately fall on already-strained transit budgets or regional taxpayers, and that enforcement authority spread across three governments with differing political priorities could produce inconsistent or gridlocked outcomes rather than the unified safety culture the compact intends to create.