May 23, 2013
Written by Jim Cameron
Monday, 22 February 2010 15:24
Months before that, a well-dressed businessman slipped from a boarding bridge-plate platform and was killed by the approaching train. In his pocket was a pink slip. Was he a victim or a suicide?
For whatever reason, there has been a growing number of deaths along Metro-North tracks and precious little that can be done to stop them.
In Stamford station’s waiting room sits a large display for Operation Lifesaver, a national program to educate us of the dangers of walking on or driving over railroad tracks. The message isn’t getting through.
On average, trains kill one American every two hours, according to the Operation Lifesaver Web site. Two thirds of such victims are ages 18 to 34. And half of all car/train collisions occur at crossings with flashing lights or gates, the Web site stated.
Fortunately, Connecticut has very few places where cars and trains cross paths. On the main line, there are none. But on the New Canaan, Waterbury and Danbury branches, there are many such crossings. Local neighbors know it because they hear engineers lean on their horns, warning motorists, as if the flashing lights and gates are not enough.
In New Canaan, folks complained about the train horns and tried to get them silenced … a move about as stupid as those living near a firehouse complaining about the sirens.
But most recent deaths in Connecticut have not involved impatient motorists driving around gates; they’ve involved pedestrians on the tracks.
Part of the problem is with recent immigrants in whose homelands walking alongside railroad tracks is an accepted practice.
Lacking good roads, track walking is often the fastest way from point A to point B. There the trains are slow and noisy, affording plenty of time to get out of the way. But on Metro-North, our electric trains operate at 75 to 90 mph and are almost silent. These people never knew what hit them.
In another recent case, two people at a station realized they were on the wrong platform and jumped down to the tracks to get across, rather than use the pedestrian bridge. One of them made it but was unable to lift his girlfriend to safety before she was hit.
Once, waiting for a train in Darien, I saw a teen sitting on the platform, his legs dangling over the edge. He figured he had 10 minutes before his train would arrive, little realizing that in just seconds an Amtrak express would come barreling through at high speed. As the startled engineer leaned on his horn, the kid pulled his legs out of the way with seconds to spare.
My cynical side says this is Darwin in action: These idiots need to be taken out of the gene pool. But then I think of the other victims in these incidents … not just those who lose a limb or their life, but the railroad engineer who must watch it happen.
If you want to commit suicide, please do so by yourself and don’t inflict your pain on others. Suicide by rail is messy and not always quick.
Railroad engineers who see a person on the track can do almost nothing to avoid hitting them. A multi-ton train traveling at high speed has such momentum that it requires a mile to come to a full stop.
So imagine how the engineer must feel just before the impact of their train on an errant car or pedestrian. Imagine the trauma they experience … the mental anguish for months or years, reliving that crash in their dreams.
We have warning stripes on platforms, flashing lights and gates at crossings for a reason. And yes, New Canaan, engineers sound their horns at such grade crossings for reasons beyond just annoying you.
As they say in “Operation Lifesaver,” any time is train time. So please … stay off the tracks.
Jim Cameron has been a commuter out of Darien for 19 years. He is chairman of the CT Metro-North/Shore Line East Rail Commuter Council, and a member of the Coastal Corridor TIA and the Darien RTM. You can reach him at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or trainweb.org/ct . For a full collection of “Talking Transportation” columns, see talkingtransportation.blogspot.com.
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
Find out why generic viagra , and much more. Find out why cialis , and much more. Find out why viagra without prescription , and much more.