Waikato Times

Tanker, train in near miss

‘‘And potentiall­y a loss of life for somebody, given the size of the petrol tanker and the explosiven­ess of it.’’ Given the momentum of a train, it would likely have continued on after the collision, taking out the nearby panelbeate­r and ‘‘everything fro

- Jo Lines-MacKenzie and Phillipa Yalden

A fuel tanker driver’s decision to cross a railway line with barrier arms down seconds before a freight train barrelled through could have ended in mass fatalities, authoritie­s say.

And the driver that made the near-miss manoeuvre was sacked for it.

Footage of the Linfox fuel tanker weaving through downed barrier arms of a Nga¯ ruawa¯ hia railway crossing in August was posted on the Fuel Tankers Facebook page.

It shows the driver pass over the Ellery Street intersecti­on around the lowered barrier arms 10 seconds before a freight train comes roaring down the main trunk line.

The crossing is within 30m metres of an LPG tank on the grounds of a BP petrol station.

‘‘To see a flammable petrol tanker go in front of a train travelling at max speed is pretty horrifying,’’ rail safety charitable trust Tracksafe spokeswoma­n Megan Drayton said. ‘‘It’s probably the most unsafe thing I’ve seen.

‘‘It is highly dangerous behaviour to drive around a lowered barrier arm – you’re not only putting yourself at risk, but putting the train driver and other road users at risk.

‘‘This was potentiall­y catastroph­ic – you could have been looking at mass fatalities."

Linfox was alerted to the incident on August 19 – the day it happened – and the company launched an immediate investigat­ion, Linfox health and safety administra­tor Casey Tahau said.

The driver was no longer working for the company.

‘‘We have gone through and done an investigat­ion regarding this and contacted NZ police and spoken with our driver.’’

Disciplina­ry action was taken and subsequent­ly the driver was ‘‘no longer with the business’’.

She said it was shocking to witness such behaviour.

‘‘Our safety strategy is vision zero – which is basically no fatalities, no incidents, no injuries and everybody gets to go home safe every day.

Nga¯ ruawa¯ hia Fire Chief Karl Lapwood

‘‘It was one of the more alarming things I’ve seen. If it had all gone wrong, it would have been a disaster’’. Linfox health and safety administra­tor Casey Tahau

was shocked, too, by the video he’d seen circulatin­g on the Nga¯ruawa¯hia community social media pages.

Had the tanker and train collided, the fallout would have been catastroph­ic, he said.

‘‘It was one of the more alarming things I’ve seen. If it had all gone wrong, it would have been a disaster.

‘‘The potential risk of explosion and fire ... the location of where it was and the fallout into the river – it would have been a significan­t event for the town.

 ??  ?? The Ellery St Railway crossing in Nga¯ruawa¯hia.
The Ellery St Railway crossing in Nga¯ruawa¯hia.

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