THE METRO-NORTH TRAIN/SUV FIERY AND DEADLY COLLISION HAPPENED AFTER DARK IN BACKED-UP TRAFFIC IN AN AREA WHERE THE TRACKS ARE STRAIGHT BUT DRIVING CAN BE TRICKY. MOTORISTS EXITING OR ENTERING THE ADJACENT TACONIC PARKWAY HAVE TO TURN AND CROSS THE TRACKS NEAR A WOODED AREA AND A CEMETERY.
February 4,
2015
VALHALLA,
N.Y. — The baffling behavior of a woman whose SUV stopped between the crossing
gates on a railroad track came under scrutiny Wednesday as investigators sought
clues to a fiery commuter train crash that killed six people.
National
Transportation Safety Board officials were looking at the Metro-North train's
black-box-style recorders, seeking to learn its speed, whether brakes were
applied and whether its horn sounded as it approached the suburban New York
crossing where it slammed into the SUV, NTSB vice chairman Robert Sumwalt said.
"We
intend to find out not only what happened, but we want to find out why it
happened," he said at the site of Tuesday evening's rush-hour collision in
Valhalla, about 20 miles north of New York City.
Later
Wednesday, Sen. Charles Schumer said early indications are that the train was
going 58 mph, or within the 60-to-70-mph speed limit in that area.
Investigators
also planned to look at the track signals' recording devices, interview the
train's operators, peer into the wreckage with laser-scanning devices and seek
aerial footage, he said.
Meanwhile,
officials were using dental records to identify the badly burned victims — five
men on the train and the SUV driver, officials said. Several others remained
hospitalized, at least two with critical or serious injuries.
It was the
deadliest accident in the 22-year history of one of the nation's busiest
commuter railroads — one that has come under a harsh spotlight over a series of
accidents in recent years.
"It's
really inexplicable, based on the facts we have now," Gov. Andrew Cuomo
said on WCBS-AM radio.
The wreck
happened after dark in backed-up traffic in an area where the tracks are
straight but driving can be tricky. Motorists exiting or entering the adjacent
Taconic Parkway have to turn and cross the tracks near a wooded area and a
cemetery.
The driver
had calmly gotten out of her Mercedes SUV momentarily after the crossing's
safety gates came down around her and hit her car, according to the motorist
behind her, Rick Hope.
"She
wasn't in a hurry at all, but she had to have known that a train was
coming," Hope told the Journal News. He said he motioned to her to come
back and gave her room to reverse. But instead, she got back in her car and
went forward on the tracks, he said.
"It
looks like she stopped where she stopped because she didn't want to go on the
tracks," Hope he told WNYW-TV. "It was dark, so maybe she didn't know
she was in front of the gate."
Traffic was
moving slowly at the time, choked with drivers seeking to avoid the Taconic
Parkway because of an accident, he noted.
Railroad
grade crossings typically have gate arms designed to lift automatically if they
hit a car or other object on the way down, railroad safety consultant Grady
Cothen said. The wooden arms are designed to be easily broken if a car trapped
between them moves forward or backward, he said.
As of
Wednesday morning, transit officials hadn't found any problems with the tracks
or signal, Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino said.
It was not
the first deadly crash at the site: A Metro-North train hit a truck, killing
its driver, at the same Commerce Street crossing in 1984, according to Federal
Railroad Administration records.
Rep.
Patrick Maloney, D-N.Y., said Tuesday's accident underscores the need for
positive train control, a technology that uses WiFi and GPS to monitor trains'
exact position and automatically applies the brakes to prevent collisions or
lessen their severity. While not specifically designed to address
grade-crossing accidents, the technology can be expanded for such purposes, he
said.
Congress
passed a 2008 law that requires all railroads to install positive train control
by the end of 2015, but it's clear most of them will not meet the deadline.
The crash
was so powerful that the electrified third rail came up and pierced the train,
and the SUV was pushed about 400 feet. Cuomo said the SUV's gas tank apparently
exploded, starting a fire that consumed the SUV and the train's first car,
which was left blackened and mangled.
Elizabeth
Bordiga was commuting home from her New York City nursing job when she suddenly
felt the train jerk a few times. She and other passengers in the middle part of
the train started calmly walking to the back. But then they started smelling
gasoline, "and somebody said, "There's a fire," she recalled.
But they
couldn't open the emergency window or figure out how to escape until a
firefighter in the train got a door open, she said. Commuters lifted each other
down from the train to the ground about 7 feet below, said Bordiga, who uses a
cane.
"When
I was on the ground, I looked to the right and saw flames. I couldn't believe
it," she said.
In the
first car, a man whose own hands were burned elbowed open the emergency exit
latch, allowing some of the train's roughly 700 passengers to escape, passenger
Christopher Gross said on ABC's "Good Morning America."
The train's
engineer tried to rescue people until the smoke and flames got so severe that
he had to escape, Astorino said.
While
officials did not immediately release any victims' names, financial services
firm Mesirow Financial said that one of those killed was Eric Vandercar, 53, a
senior managing director in its institutional sales and trading office.
Every day,
trains travel across more than 212,000 highway-grade rail crossings in the U.S.
There are an average of 230 to 250 deaths a year at such crossings, down over
50 percent from two decades ago, FRA figures show.
Risky
driver behavior or poor judgment accounts for 94 percent of grade crossing
accidents, according to a 2004 government report.
Metro-North
is the nation's second-busiest commuter railroad, after the Long Island Rail
Road, serving about 280,000 riders a day.
Late last
year, the NTSB issued rulings on five Metro-North accidents in New York and
Connecticut in 2013 and 2014, repeatedly finding fault with the railroad.
Among the
accidents was a 2013 derailment in the Bronx that killed four people, the railroad's
first passenger fatalities, The NTSB said the engineer had fallen asleep at the
controls because of a severe, undiagnosed case of sleep apnea.