A large tree that had fallen onto the tracks caused a Bay Area commuter train to derail Monday night, in an incident that sent nine passengers to the hospital — four of them with serious injuries.
The train, Altamont Corridor Express (ACE) No. 10, was traveling from San Jose to Stockton Calif., when it went off the tracks Monday night. The derailment came after hours of sustained rains.
Member station KALW’s Ben Trefney reports:
The front car tumbled into Alameda Creek, coming to rest half-submerged. None of the estimated 214 passengers died. Several agencies are investigating the derailment, which occurred after a day of heavy rainfall.
Rescue crews battled the creek’s currents to pull passengers from the partially submerged rail car.
“It was dark, wet, it was raining. It was very chaotic,” Sgt. Ray Kelly Kelly of the Alameda County Sheriff’s Department said. “This is an absolute miracle that no one was killed, no passengers or first responders.”
Commuters were evacuated from the rail cars and examined by paramedics. Initially, 14 people received treatment at the scene; nine of them were then taken to the hospital. The rail company dispatched buses to take the passengers to their destinations.
In a statement, ACE says “We are working with our partners to restore service as soon as possible pending a complete investigation and assurance that the tracks are safe.”
Service on the train line is suspended on Tuesday, according to the line’s Twitter feed.
“…..restore service as soon as possible pending a complete investigation and assurance that the tracks are safe.”
The tracks are obviously NOT safe anywhere, because another train derails every week.
The “complete investigation” will find that despite the damage and injuries, it was still cheaper to let the tracks fall into disrepair than properly maintain them, so they’ll continue with that policy.