18 Feb 2008 04:33:49 | Anna Henningsgaard
Massive train crashes seem the dramatic stuff of movies and
novels, billowing steam engines destined for disaster, fixed
irreversibly on track to collide. Indeed, in the 19th century
train companies used head-on train collisions as a publicity
stunt. The Crush Crash in Waco, Texas drew so many observers
that Waco became, for one night, the second largest city in the
state. Even this staged event ended in disaster, however, when a
boiler burst and the flying debris killed two in the crowd.
Unfortunately, this less-than-dramatic conclusion represents the
reality of train wrecks, and these days that reality is
represented in lawsuits as soon as the smoke clears.
Perhaps modern day railroads do not encounter anything so
catastrophic as the rerouted steam locomotive that caused a
mountain to collapse in Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged, but train
crashes are still a major problem in the United States. Train
crashes injure more than 500 people every year, though deaths
remain relatively rare. Aside from catastrophic collisions,
railroad deaths usually occur at crossings, where the train’s
course crosses the path of car traffic. The chances of dying in
a car-train crash are ten times more likely than dying in a
regular car collision.
Settlements with railroad companies for crashes can amount in
the millions of dollars, but this just reflects the severity of
injuries incurred in such accidents. Trains are currently set up
in compartments to reduce the distance people would fly in the
event of a major collision. However, safety experts with the
Federal Railroad Association have conducted full-scale crashes
and found that the dummies in such seats were flung up and over
the backs of the seat compartments, some striking luggage racks.
Seatbelts would prevent this sort of injury, but they are not a
standard installment of most trains.
At least half of all the railroad tank cars on the tracks today
were built before 1989 when new regulations required them to be
reinforced with steel. About 30,000 of these tankers have not
been rebuilt at all, and no government agency forces the
companies that own these tank cars to spend money to bring them
up to safety standards. This results in another great railroad
danger, as many of these tankers carry dangerous chemicals. Just
this past January, nine people died and an entire geographic
region had to be evacuated from homes, businesses, and schools
in South Carolina when a train collision caused a tanker to leak
chlorine gas.
Train wrecks are clearly not an entertaining matter. Because of
the structure of the tracks and signals, train collisions are
nearly always due to negligence, either human error or faulty
equipment. As such, any injuries incurred on a railroad are
entitled to compensation and should be discussed with a lawyer
right away. GA
If you have more questions, contact a railroad
collisions at http://www.hugesettlements.com
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