A little background before you read below. A BNSF train ( I think) hit a truck with a grain trailer not sure if it was loaded or empty, (loaded I believe) in Fruita on the 14th. The truck driver didn't make it.
Tom Holley is a BNSF engineer working out of Grand Jct. Co. This is his point of veiw.
Keith Goodrich, rdmstr From: tom holley
Date: Wed Nov 15, 2000 9:57pm
Subject: Re: Truck Loses in Fruita
Hello Fellow Listers,
I wish I could relate to you what it's like going down a track at 50 mph and hitting a semi. I wasn't on the BNSF train that was involved in the
Fruita tragedy. But I was on one a few weeks earlier when the train I was on hit a semi loaded with salt at 50 mph. The reaction time was long enough to think about some of the possibilities like, God I hope that thing isn't loaded with car batteries, or coleman fuel, bricks, propane bottles ect,ect.
I saw him run a flashing red light, run a stop sign and pull onto the main track ahead of us, thank the Lord his tractor made it over and we hit his trailer just ahead of the wheels. Like I said we had a little time to react, we placed the train in emergency, bailed off the drivers jumped to the floor covered up our eyes and heads with what we could and asked, why did that SOB run the stop signs?? After the impact I expected to be on the ground at 45-50 mph plowing through the dirt, asphalt and feeling the 6000 tons of train behind us with LPG, Sodium Hydosulfied, Sulfuric Acid, Fuel oils, gasoline, Anhydrous Ammonia and all the other stuff we had following us at 50 mph too. And all because this guy didn't think he had 45 seconds to let our train go by. After we hit this guy I remember feeling the wheels still turning and Holy sh*t, we were still on the rails!! I don't believe it, we weren't on fire and we were still together... We had a big majority of this guys trailer wrapped around the front of our SD 75 the impact broke the glass in front but it didn't shatter out, all the handrails on the front were bent back into the door so we couldn't get out that way. Luckily we could get out the back door. We secured the train and then the hard part, go back and see what heppened to the so called "victims of the accident" Well this truck driver had his 2 yr. old son and no kidding his wife, 7 mo. pregnant in the tractor with him. He was mad and said "you guys came out of nowhere". Hard for me to believe, but he was mad at us. I will go to my grave wondering why we didn't go on the ground, and no body got as much as a scratch on them.
This guy in Fruita was 25 yr. old and I'm guessing in a hurry too, and to beat all went down the wrong road, turned around and didn't see a witnesses attempt to stop him and got hit by a C44-9 at 50 MPH right on the tractor. I have talked to the crew, their ordeal won't be going away anytime soon. They saw him and had little time to do nothing but "plug it" and hit him. Then there was a fuel fire all over the front of the unit, they were trapped by the metal on the front and surrounded by fire, so they couldn't get out without burning, What do you do in the moment, break out a window and try to get out that way? I think unless it was already broke you would have a hell-u-va time breaking bullet proof glass. Or do you brave the fire and try to get out through the back door? Or do you just wait and either die on fire or let it hopefully burn out. Thank God the latter took place and they got smoke inhalation and a rather nasty case of Why(s). Why did this happen to us? Why was this guy here at the exact same time I was? Why am I not dead? Maybe, If I had just taken more time before we left he wouldn't have been there when we were. Why didn't he hear that Horn? Wh didn't he stop when he saw those flashing red lights? Why was he in such a hurry? How long am I going to feel like this? Will I ever be able to go over a crossing at grade without seeing this again? Why is it the news always says we hit them? They are the only ones with a steering wheel and enough brakes to stop in time. In some cruel way the "victims" are the only ones with closure to any of this, we unfortunate few who hit the folks have to live with it the rest of our lives.
Don't get me wrong this job is great when your blowing the horn waving at little kids, seeing whats in the hot tub in Glenwood Canyon. I like this job, but there are parts of it I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy. I see in the news now where there are big support efforts underway for the "victims" again and absolutely nothing being done to offer support for the crew in the public arena. I guess we will always be seen as the folks that perpetrate these incidents. And we should somehow feel bad that we aren't dead too.
Tom Holley
GJ