Much has been written in praise of Brightline, the modern, stylish privately owned railroad serving Miami to West Palm Beach to Orlando with fast, comfortable trains.
But the railroad also has the highest death rate of any railroad in the US, having killed 108 people since it began operations in 2017… not its passengers but people crossing the railroad’s tracks.
Last week alone at one grade
crossing in Melbourne FL there were two accidents causing three
deaths in as many days. Those “accidents”
are under investigation by the NTSB, the National Transportation Safety
Board. But all indications are these
deaths, like the others, were caused by stupidity: people driving around the crossing gates that
lower before the train roars through.
Brightline has not been
faulted for these deaths, nor should it be when people foolishly let their
impatience exceed their common sense.
There is a solution, albeit it
expensive, protecting people from their own stupidity: quad gates.
At every grade crossing there would be two gates lowered on each side, blocking
both lanes. Of course, that doesn’t stop
pedestrians or people on bicycles. Sadly,
there are also suicides. But little can
be done to prevent those.Quad Gates - Idiot proof!
A more expensive solution
would be what’s called “grade separation”, in effect running the trains on an
elevated track so that road traffic can pass underneath. But that would be a multi-billion dollar
expense.
On Brightline’s newest tracks
to Orlando grade crossings are all but eliminated, allowing trains to speed
along safely at 125 mph. But along the
older, densely populated east coast tracks the trains are limited to 79
mph. Still, that’s way too fast to “outrun”
if you’re in a car or truck.
Public education campaigns don’t
seem to have helped, either. Signage at
crossings now warns people of the dangers in English, Spanish and Creole.
What does this mean for our
trains in Connecticut? Well, the main
line of Metro-North from NY to New Haven doesn’t have any level grade
crossings, though there are plenty of them on the New Canaan, Danbury and
Waterbury branch lines. Also on the
Hartford line running north from New Haven to Springfield MA.
Most grade crossings are
equipped with gates and flashing lights, but some lack both, equipped only with
“cross buck” signs in the shape of a large X.
They read “stop, look and listen”.
Forgotten in all this
discussion is the emotional effect on the railroad engineers involved in these
crashes. They see the inevitable coming but can’t stop their trains and must
know what’s about to happen. It takes a
long time for engineers to recover from the trauma.
So kudos to Brightline for
running such a popular new train service.
But let’s remember that faster trains are also more dangerous. And when it’s trains vs vehicles, the trains
always “win”.
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