Metro Sends Out Press Releases From 2003

Folks subscribed to WMATA's emailed press release service were treated to dozens of news alerts today - except they were from 2003, and full of very, very old news. The errant emails were the result of "technical difficulties," according to Metro spokesperson Angela Gates, and the transit agency's IT department was working to discover the source of the problem. We luckily noticed the 30 or so press releases we got from Metro today seemed funny right away, but the Washington Post's Get There blog wasn't so lucky: they quickly posted a story about how SmarTrip cards weren't going to be available for a couple of months, only to have to pull it down and replace it with an explanation about the press release having been from 2003. Chief Metro spokesperson Lisa Farbstein was able to joke about the snafu later in the afternoon, after the bad alerts had finally stopped. "Well, at first we were feeling nostalgic," Farbstein quipped in an email.

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Comments (5) [rss]

Well, now I *really* believe Catoe. There's no way there's anything wrong with those circuits...

Metro FAIL is the new Nats FAIL

Even the IT infrastructure at Metro is falling apart...

Well, this is the same IT infrastructure that can't even manage to send out service alerts reliably. They repeatedly blame the same problem on "temporary problems."

"Too late" seems to be a common theme with Metro stories recently.

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