The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Dad’s anger as rail barriers installed – 10 years after death

Delny: Locals called for urgent safety steps after 2007 tragedy

- BY JAMIE McKENZIE

AN ANGRY father whose teenage son died in a horror level crossing crash has said a decade-long delay in making safety improvemen­ts at the scene is “ridiculous”.

Network Rail has now started work to instal semi-automatic barriers at Delny open level crossing in Ross-shire, where Alan Thain and Paul Oliver died after the car they were in was struck by the In-

verness to Wick train. Car driver Richard Fleming was given a five-year jail sentence for causing death by dangerous driving.

But more than a decade on from the horror crash, Delny and Dingwall No.1 are the only two open level crossings left in Scotland where barriers still need to be installed – Delny will be finished by the end of this summer and Dingwall next summer.

Yesterday Alan Thain’s father Sandy said: “Taking 10 years to put wee barriers on a level crossing is ridiculous.

“It’s good that it’s now going to happen but there should have been barriers put in there straight away.

“We lost our son and there’s not much more we can say.”

He also referred to an earlier crash at the same crossing in May 1996 when Charles Ross, then 46, of Fearn, survived when his car was struck by a Sprinter train and shunted 30 yards along the track.

Mr Thain’s son was just 17 when he died in hospital five days after the accident which happened on February 2, 2007. His friend Paul, also 17, died at the scene.

The trio had been travelling to Inverness College where they were students at the time.

A Network Rail spokesman said yesterday that they are “committed” to removing open crossings from the network and installing barriers where this is not possible.

The spokesman added: “The tragic incident at Delny in 2007 was caused by the actions of the car driver and we work closely with the British Transport Police to raise motorists’ awareness of the dangers of misusing level crossings.”

Local residents and politician­s campaigned for urgent safety improvemen­ts at the crossing following the incident in 2007. Following more fatal accidents at open level crossings in the Highlands, Network Rail announced plans in August 2012 to instal barriers at all open level crossings in the region.

But in 2013, objections heightened in the Easter Ross area when the rail operator threatened closure of the crossing and road access. And after a public meeting near Kilmuir in October 2015, Network Rail agreed to instal interim safety barriers at Delny ahead of a longer-term plan for a bridge replacemen­t over the railway.

Yesterday, Kilmuir and Logie Easter Community Council chairman Tom Anderson said: “It’s good to see work is starting. The community council has been involved in this for years to try and get barriers installed, but it’s slightly disappoint­ing that it has taken this long.

“I am also pleased we have got the commitment that the road will always stay open, and the first step in that is to put in the barriers.”

Jamie Stone, MP for Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross, said he was “absolutely delighted by this news,” adding: “It’s been a very long wait. Indeed, in my last parliament­ary incarnatio­n in Holyrood seven years ago it was one of our biggest issues, and for me personally. I know that this will be welcomed by the community.

“The delay was unacceptab­le and I could never understand why it happened. I think we have to learn from this and realise if urgent engineerin­g works are required on safety grounds, these must be taken.”

The Network Rail spokesman confirmed that preparator­y work has now started at Delny ahead of the installati­on of an automatic barrier system at the crossing. A range of works including signalling and fencing works and track alteration­s will need to be finished before the new barriers are installed by the end of summer.

 ??  ?? Floral tributes at Delny where two young men died SCENE OF TRAGEDY: The open level crossing at Delny where work has now started to instal semi-automatic barriers
Floral tributes at Delny where two young men died SCENE OF TRAGEDY: The open level crossing at Delny where work has now started to instal semi-automatic barriers
 ??  ?? DANGER ZONE: Delny is one of only two railway level crossings left in Scotland where barriers still need to be installed
DANGER ZONE: Delny is one of only two railway level crossings left in Scotland where barriers still need to be installed
 ??  ?? Alan Thain
Alan Thain

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