Miami-Dade County

Miami-Dade’s ‘historic’ rain swamps county transit as flooding, debris disrupt routes

Miami-Dade County’s transit system struggled to have a normal morning on Thursday as the overnight deluge left the Metromover system disabled, Metrorail trains slowed by debris and buses dodging flooded streets.

“Due to historic rain fall in Miami-Dade County, all modes of transportation including Metrobus, Metromover, Metrorail and STS are experiencing delays,” the transit system said in an 8:17 a.m. social media post. STS is the name for automobiles used to pick up people with disabilities that prevent them from using county transit. “Please allow for extra travel time. More information to follow.”

READ MORE: Free transit fares in Miami-Dade start Monday. And so do new bus routes. What to know

Before dawn, the Department of Transportation and Public Works announced the entire Metromover system was offline. The 4:55 a.m. announcement said bus shuttles would be running between stations that are popular commuting hubs in downtown Miami and the Brickell Avenue district.

A man walks through a flooded street at the Strawberry Village Trailer Park located at West 29 Street and 16th Avenue in Hialeah on Wednesday, Nov. 15, 2023. South Florida got drenched Wednesday night as torrential downpours inundate the region due to a disturbance off Florida’s coast. The rains swamped Miami-Dade County’s transit system, too.
A man walks through a flooded street at the Strawberry Village Trailer Park located at West 29 Street and 16th Avenue in Hialeah on Wednesday, Nov. 15, 2023. South Florida got drenched Wednesday night as torrential downpours inundate the region due to a disturbance off Florida’s coast. The rains swamped Miami-Dade County’s transit system, too. Pedro Portal pportal@miamiherald.com

Metromover down after power issues

A transit spokesperson said before 9 a.m. that Metromover was down due electrical outages at the automated train system. The county’s transit app said debris on the elevated tracks was an issue as well. The outage lasted for hours, with the transit system announcing shortly before 1 p.m. that the stations were ready for passengers again. “The Metromover system has resumed operations following the resolution of a power-related technical issue by our team,” the announcement read.

With early estimates of more than eight inches of rain overnight, the county’s bus fleet faced flooded streets and parking lots even after the downpours had halted in the morning. The county said all bus routes were experiencing some delays. Buses were diverted entirely from the Palmetto Metrorail station due to flooding.

Metrorail, bus delays after Miami rain

Metrorail faced delays, too, in some sections of the 25-mile system. With debris on some tracks, Metrorail had to limit trains to one set of tracks while workers cleared the other in the dual-track system. But those problems appeared to be short-lived. After 9 a.m., the county said Metrorail service had resumed normal operations with some remaining delays.

This story was originally published November 16, 2023 at 9:40 AM.

DH
Douglas Hanks
Miami Herald
Doug Hanks covers Miami-Dade government for the Herald. He’s worked at the paper for more than 20 years, covering real estate, tourism and the economy before joining the Metro desk in 2014. Support my work with a digital subscription
Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER