The Prince George Citizen

Amtrak train derailed on new, faster route that drew concern

- Phuong Le And Matthew Brown

SEATTLE — The Amtrak train that derailed Monday was making the first trip for paying passengers over upgraded tracks in what was promised as a quicker run between Seattle and Portland, Oregon.

The train was travelling a route occasional­ly used by freight trains until $181 million of improvemen­ts that local officials opposed opened the stretch to passenger travel.

At least three people on board were confirmed killed, authoritie­s said, when 13 train cars jumped the tracks, setting off a chain reaction in which several vehicles on Interstate 5 below also were hit.

A U.S. official who was briefed on the investigat­ion said earlier that at least six people were killed. The difference in the number of fatalities could not immediatel­y be reconciled. The official was not authorized to discuss the investigat­ion publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

While the cause of the crash will take months to establish, even people who tried to stop the new route on safety grounds said the derailment surprised them.

Opponents said the route would expose car and pedestrian traffic to higher-speed passenger trains at more than a half-dozen streetleve­l crossings in the small city of Lakewood just north of the crash site.

“These are new, upgraded tracks – that’s what is so surprising about this,” said John Niles with the Coalition for Effective Transporta­tion Alternativ­es, which joined local elected officials in opposing the project. “They weren’t worried about a train derailing.”

Lakewood officials unsuccessf­ully sued in 2013 to stop the Point Defiance Bypass project, which redirected passenger trains from a curvy route along Puget Sound that competes with freight traffic and squeezes through single-track tunnels where only one train can go through at a time.

The city asserted that the state transporta­tion department’s environmen­tal review of the new route was inadequate and failed to consider traffic, neighbourh­ood and other impacts. In March 2014, a judge dismissed the lawsuit.

The track is owned by Sound Transit, the public transit system for the Seattle area, which oversaw the upgrades and did extensive testing prior to Monday’s public opening, agency spokeswoma­n Kimberly Reason said.

A federal official briefed on the investigat­ion told The Associated Press that preliminar­y signs indicate that Train 501 may have hit something before going off the track about 40 miles (64 kilometres) south of Seattle. The official was not authorized to discuss the investigat­ion publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity.

While it will take investigat­ors months to determine the precise cause, speed may have been a factor.

Moments before the derailment the train was going 81.1 mph (130.5 kph), according to transitdoc­s.com, which maps train speeds using data from Amtrak’s train tracker app.

The maximum speed drops from 79 mph (127 kph) to 30 mph (48 kph) for passenger trains just before the tracks curve to cross Interstate 5, according to a track chart prepared by the Washington State Department of Transporta­tion.

Another Sound Transit spokeswoma­n, Rachelle Cunningham, confirmed the maximum allowable speed was 30 mph (48 kph) at the derailment point but could not say where that lower limit began.

Brown reported from Billings, Montana. Michael Sisak in Philadelph­ia and Michael Balsamo and Justin Pritchard in Los Angeles contribute­d to this report.

 ?? BETTINA HANSEN/THE SEATTLE TIMES VIA AP ?? Cars from an Amtrak train that derailed above spilled onto Interstate 5, Monday, Dec. 18, 2017, in DuPont, Wash. The Amtrak train making the first-ever run along a faster new route hurtled off the overpass Monday near Tacoma and spilled some of its...
BETTINA HANSEN/THE SEATTLE TIMES VIA AP Cars from an Amtrak train that derailed above spilled onto Interstate 5, Monday, Dec. 18, 2017, in DuPont, Wash. The Amtrak train making the first-ever run along a faster new route hurtled off the overpass Monday near Tacoma and spilled some of its...

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