I figured this deserved its own post.
If this new Orlando Sentinel article is to be believed (and I think it is), it was the maintenance shop worker who screwed up by telling the manager that the track switch had been flipped, when in fact it had not.
Also, when the central coordinator suddenly had to go home sick, the manager WAS ALREADY AT PERKINS, which was allowed during his scheduled dinner break.
While waiting for the replacement for that sick coordinator to arrive, the manager did radio some instructions from Perkins (again, that doesn't sound like it was against any rule, especially considering the "emergency" nature of an employee suddenly going home sick at that very moment)
Here's the article:
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/orl-d...tory?track=rss
So, let's see. People on these boards first blamed Austin for being young and causing the crash. Then they blamed Pink's driver. Then they blamed this manager for "negligently" going off-property on an unauthorized dinner break. None of which appears to be true.
The new person I feel sorry for is the coordinator who had to go home sick. Sounds like it must have been urgent. You know that person has to be feeling guilty for leaving, even though the illness may have been totally legitimate.