Coming Soon - Bakken Crude Tank Car Trains
This is 5thandrice.com.
Railroad vs. Motorist Collisions
- An Escalating Disaster in Southern California
Early in the
morning of February 24, 2015,
Jose Sanchez-Ramirez, 54, mistakenly turned his
Ford F-450 work truck and utility trailer onto the
Union Pacific Cost Line railroad tracks near the
intersection of Rice Ave. and Fifth St. in Oxnard,
California. Soon after Sanchez-Ramirez abandoned his
rig, Metrolink passenger train No. 102 struck his
disabled work truck at a place eighty feet west of
Rice Ave. A week later,
Senior Metrolink Engineer Glenn Steele succumbed
to injuries suffered in the collision. During the
derailment of the five-car Metrolink train,
twenty-nine other people onboard suffered moderate
to severe injuries.
After
firefighters extinguished the resulting fire, a work
crew soon removed the coaches and made emergency
repairs to the damaged railroad infrastructure.
Almost two weeks later, when I surveyed the scene,
all looked well at the Rice Ave. grade crossing. To
the casual observer, there were few signs that a
major rail collision had so recently occurred.
Looking closer, I soon found many deficiencies in
the
hasty cleanup and repairs that had so recently
concluded.
Along the northern border of the crash scene, the
tail end of
cab-control car No. 645 had whipped into a
cinder block and wrought iron wall. After the
cleanup, a gaping hole measuring almost one hundred
feet remained where that substantial fence once
stood. Immediately east of Rice Ave., a misalignment
of the north-side rail was obvious to the naked eye.
East of the grade crossing, where steel railroad
wheels had bent the north-side rail and sliced into
the roadbed, workers had reused damaged railroad
ties during repairs. Despite the addition of many
reinforcing clamps to that damaged rail, train
traffic in the interim had loosened many of the
railroad spikes intended to stabilize the roadbed.
Two weeks after the accident and the completion of
emergency repairs, the whole scene appeared to be
less safe than it was prior to the
wreck of Train No. 102.
In the Southern California press, many articles have
discussed the overall
safety of the Metrolink system and the Rice Ave.
grade crossing in particular. Transportation studies
have concluded that a
$30-35 million grade separation is the only way
to make the crossing safe. That would require a
complex roadway overpass spanning both Fifth St. and
the Union Pacific Coast Line. Like a freeway, the
overpass would require ramps to transition from
Fifth St. to the elevated portion of Rice Ave.
To
date, voters in nineteen of fifty-eight California
counties have approved additional,
transportation-focused sales taxes. In 2004, the
electorate in
Ventura County defeated a levy of one-half
percent. Despite the highway and rail carnage of the
past decade, the Ventura County Board of Supervisors
has steadfastly refused to allow or promote a new
popular vote on a sales tax dedicated to
transportation projects. Safety concerns at the
Oxnard Plains rail crossings alone should be enough
to engender a county ballot measure. I find myself
asking, “When we need leadership, where are our
leaders?”
As a result, there is
insufficient funding to complete the design of a
Rice Ave. grade separation, let alone building the
$30-35 million project itself. Neither state nor
federal transportation agencies tend to support
projects unless the affected county defrays at least
some of the cost. Unless voters approve an
additional county sales tax levy, it may be a decade
or more before construction can alleviate the menace
of the Rice Ave. grade crossing to both rail
passengers and vehicular traffic.
Rice
Avenue is not the only dangerous rail grade crossing
in Ventura County. Less than two weeks after
engineer Glenn Steele lost his life on the Coast
Line in Ventura County, there was a
non-fatal collision of an Amtrak train and a
passenger vehicle. This collision was on a rainy
night at the nearby Pleasant Valley Road and Fifth
St. grade crossing. Confused, the driver of a green
sedan somehow came to a stop upon the diagonally
crossing train track. Prior to the collision, which
destroyed the sedan, the driver and a passenger were
able to exit the vehicle without injury. Imagine
getting stuck on the tracks in the rain and
darkness. After a hurried departure from your
vehicle, you and your passenger watch as an Amtrak
locomotive crushes your vehicle into a mass of
twisted metal. That could be scary.
On
April 23, 2015, exactly two months after the
collision of Train No. 102 at the Rice Ave.
crossing, yet another
fatal train/auto collision occurred on the
Oxnard Plain. That morning, an unnamed 35-year-old
male driver attempted to cross the tracks at
South Las Posas Rd. and Fifth St. Remarkably
similar in configuration to the Rice Ave. and Fifth
St. grade crossing, the SUV driver’s southbound
journey ended abruptly on the Coast Line tracks.
There, an eastbound Union Pacific freight train
struck the side of the SUV, rolling it multiple
times along the tracks and into a dirt ditch. After
using special equipment to remove the driver from
the crumpled vehicle, first-responders declared him
dead at the scene.
Remarkably, this latest deadly incident barely made
news in Los Angeles. Both the Ventura County Star
and the
Los Angeles Times published online accounts
that
day. The following day, the Star headlined the story
on its front page. Television coverage by Los
Angeles TV stations was limited to news crawlers at
the bottom of the screen. Was this latest deadly
accident a suicide? Alternatively, was it one more
distracted driver speeding south along the road that
morning? In either event, the dismal state of
rail-crossing safety in Ventura County requires an
immediate and comprehensive review.
Phillips 66, which operates an
oil refinery at Nipomo, in San Luis Obispo
County, California has plans to
build a railroad spur from the Union Pacific
Coast Line to their facility. If San Luis Obispo
County approves the Phillips 66 plan, “rolling
bomb” trains of eighty-cars each will begin
their journey by traversing the
Los Angeles basin five times each week.
After exiting a
train tunnel under
Santa Susana Pass, each northbound oil train
will encounter multiple grade crossings in the
suburbs and fields of Ventura County. In Simi Valley
alone, there are ten grade crossings. In Moorpark
and neighboring Somis, there are twelve more.
Between Camarillo and Oxnard, there are an
additional thirteen grade crossings. Each train will
carry 52,000 barrels of flammable, highly toxic
Bakken crude oil in single-wall tank cars of
dubious integrity and crashworthiness.
Explosions
of
Bakken crude oil trains have recently become an
ongoing hazard to anyone nearby. Even with a
new federal mandate to upgrade tank cars to
double-walled, insulated designs, it will be 2020
before all 43,000 obsolete tank cars are retired
from service. If nothing else, the February 24, 2015
Metrolink collision in Oxnard proved that if even
one obsolete or deficient car is included in a
train, it can compromise the integrity of the entire
train. As seen in numerous crashes and explosions of
oil trains in the past few years, derailment and
decoupling of the older tank cars can wreak havoc on
nearby towns.
There are thirty-five grade crossings between Simi
Valley and Oxnard. If the oil trains run, there will
be more than one hundred seventy-five opportunities
for an oil train collision in Ventura County each
week. Not counting the return trips made by empty
oil trains, the Phillips 66 plan will present a
minimum of 9,100 opportunities for an oil train
collision in Ventura County each year. Annually,
13,520,000 barrels of oil will move past the
makeshift memorial still standing at the Rice Ave.
and Fifth St. in Oxnard. That is as much oil as the
U.S. consumed on a daily basis within the past
twenty years.
Whether
any future train collision is the result of driver
inattention, excessive speed, domestic terrorism or
"suicide
by train" is immaterial. Despite slower speeds
now required of oil trains in populated areas,
eventually a “rolling bomb” oil train will collide
with a motor vehicle in Los Angeles, Ventura, Santa
Barbara or San Luis Obispo Counties. If that
happens, the
ensuing fire and explosions could raise the
casualty count exponentially.
After successfully negotiating the now decrepit and
dysfunctional grade crossing at Fifth St. and Rice
Ave., each proposed oil train will roll north,
through the cities of Ventura and Santa Barbara.
Only with incredibly good luck will all of those
trains reach the Phillips 66 refinery in Nipomo. If
only one more Ford F-450 high-centers on the tracks
at Rice Ave., a $30-35 million grade separation
there will look like a bargain. With both the county
supervisors and electorate in Ventura County
contemplating their own potential death in a flaming
train wreck, I wish good luck to all in the path of
this impending rail disaster.
This is Part 2 of a two-part article. To read Part
1,
Click Here.