Current:Home > StocksMissouri budgets $50M for railroad crossings in response to fatal 2022 Amtrak derailment-LoTradeCoin
Missouri budgets $50M for railroad crossings in response to fatal 2022 Amtrak derailment
View Date:2024-12-23 23:48:38
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri Gov. Mike Parson and state transportation officials on Thursday outlined options for spending the first chunk of $50 million budgeted for railroad crossing improvements in an effort to prevent tragedies like last year’s fatal Amtrak derailment.
The National Transportation Safety Board said Wednesday that poor design contributed to the derailment in the north-central Missouri town of Mendon , which killed four people and injured 146 others.
Recommendations from a $750,000 study unveiled Thursday suggest changes at 47 public rail crossings on three tracks that carry passenger trains throughout Missouri for a total cost of about $18.5 million. Total closure is recommended at 17 crossings, including the Mendon site where the crash occurred.
The rest of the $50 million is planned for improvements at freight train crossings.
The 27 crossings slated for improvements do not have lights, barriers or other alerts to warn drivers when a train is approaching. There are more than 1,400 such crossings throughout Missouri, according to the state Transportation Department.
Spokeswoman Linda Horn said the cost for fixing all passive crossings is estimated at $700 million.
The Mendon crossing, which was shuttered immediately after last year’s crash, also had no lights or signals to warn that a train was approaching.
Before the crash, area residents had expressed concerns for nearly three years about the safety of the crossing because of the lack of visibility.
“Just setting eyes on it, you realize how dangerous it was,” NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy said.
The state Transportation Department had put the $400,000 project to add lights and gates at the crossing on a priority list, but it hadn’t received funding before the derailment.
“Mendon was a wake-up call,” Missouri Department of Transportation Director Patrick McKenna told reporters Thursday.
Roughly half of all rail crossings nationwide — some 130,000 of them — are considered passive without any lights or arms that automatically come down when a train is approaching.
For years, the NTSB has recommended closing passive crossings or adding gates, bells and other safety measures whenever possible. The U.S. Transportation Department recently announced $570 million in grants to help eliminate railroad crossings in 32 states but that funding will only eliminate a few dozen crossings.
Federal statistics show that roughly 2,000 collisions occur every year at rail crossings nationwide, and last year nearly 250 deaths were recorded in car-train crashes.
Those killed in the Amtrak derailment included the dump truck driver, 54-year-old Billy Barton II, of Brookfield, Missouri, and three passengers: Rochelle Cook, 58, and Kim Holsapple, 56, both of DeSoto, Kansas, and 82-year-old Binh Phan, of Kansas City, Missouri.
The Missouri State Highway Patrol said up to 150 people also were injured.
The Southwest Chief was traveling from Los Angeles to Chicago when it hit the rear right side of the truck near Mendon. Two locomotives and eight cars derailed. The train had 12 crewmembers and 271 aboard.
Following the derailment, several lawsuits were filed against BNSF, a Fort Worth, Texas-based freight railroad that owns and maintains the tracks involved.
Homendy on Thursday said there’s shared responsibility between the county, which owns the road, and BNSF.
“But ultimately, it’s BNSF’s railroad,” she said. “It’s their rail line, and they have to make sure everybody is safe on that line.”
She said the railroad repaired the track within hours of the accident.
“If you can make those improvements to get critical shipments of freight on your rail line, you can also make safety improvements in a quick amount of time,” she said.
An email by The Associated Press seeking comment from BNSF was not immediately returned Thursday. But a BNSF spokesperson previously said the railroad will review the NTSB report closely for suggestions to improve rail crossing safety.
“We continue to invest in grade crossing safety by maintaining crossings, working to help develop public service campaigns and educational resources and investing in new technologies,” the railroad said in a Wednesday statement.
veryGood! (31546)
Related
- Democrat Ruben Gallego wins Arizona US Senate race against Republican Kari Lake
- Biden administration urges colleges to pursue racial diversity without affirmative action
- Family, preservationists work to rescue endangered safe haven along Route 66
- 'Like it or not, we live in Oppenheimer's world,' says director Christopher Nolan
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Good Try (Freestyle)
- Argentine peso plunges after rightist who admires Trump comes first in primary vote
- Maryland man leads Virginia police on wild chase in stolen truck and ambulance before DC arrest
- Morgan Freeman on rescuing a Black WWII tank battalion from obscurity
- New Jersey will issue a drought warning after driest October ever and as wildfires rage
- Get Head-to-Toe Hydration With a $59 Deal on $132 Worth of Josie Maran Products
Ranking
- John Krasinski is People's Sexiest Man Alive. What that says about us.
- Social Security checks face $17,400 cut if program isn't shored up, study says
- Earth sees warmest July 'by a long shot' in 174 years. What it means for the rest of 2023.
- Woman goes missing after a car crash, dog finds her two days later in a Michigan cornfield
- Steelers shoot for the moon ball, but will offense hold up or wilt in brutal final stretch?
- Horoscopes Today, August 13, 2023
- 2nd swimmer in a month abandons attempt to cross Lake Michigan, blames support boat problems
- How — and when — is best to donate to those affected by the Maui wildfires?
Recommendation
-
Kraft Heinz stops serving school-designed Lunchables because of low demand
-
Chicago mayor to introduce the police department’s counterterrorism head as new superintendent
-
5 sought after shooting at Philadelphia playground kills 2, critically wounds 2
-
Trump assails judge in 2020 election case after she warned him not to make inflammatory remarks
-
'Climate change is real': New York parks employee killed as historic drought fuels blazes
-
Jason Cantrell, husband of New Orleans mayor, dead at 55, city announces
-
Best Buy's 3-Day Anniversary sale has early Labor Day deals on Apple, Dyson and Samsung
-
Just how hot was July? Hotter than anything on record