The Mercury News

NTSB releases some informatio­n on Caltrain crash that injured 14 people

Train carrying about 75 passengers hit three maintenanc­e vehicles

- By Summer Lin slin@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Maintenanc­e vehicles hit by a Caltrain in San Bruno last month received authorizat­ion to be on the tracks 43 minutes before the crash, but then released that approval eight minutes later, according to a preliminar­y National Transporta­tion Safety Board report released Wednesday.

The federal agency, which conducts independen­t investigat­ions into significan­t transporta­tion collisions, is investigat­ing the circumstan­ces around why a Caltrain struck its own agency's on-track maintenanc­e vehicles. The report does not address why the three maintenanc­e vehicles were still on the track when the Caltrain struck them.

On March 10, southbound Caltrain train No. 506, carrying about 75 passengers, hit three stationary high-rail maintenanc­e vehicles about 10:33 a.m. near a milepost on the track, according to the NTSB report. The train was derailed, destroying all three maintenanc­e vehicles. Fuel from the vehicles also fueled a fire that spread to a passenger rail car. Fourteen people were injured, including 12 passengers, one train crew member and a maintenanc­e contractor. Seven were hospitaliz­ed, and the other seven were treated at the scene.

Trains were held on both tracks after the crash. Service was disrupted as crews work on making repairs. Property damage is estimated to be nearly $1.4 million, the report said.

The agency hasn't listed an official cause of the collision.

According to the investigat­ion, the roadway worker in charge got exclusive track occupancy, meaning trains and other equipment aren't permitted to be on the track, and the maintenanc­e vehicles — two flatbed trucks with telescopic boom cranes and one full-size pickup, heavy-duty truck — entered the track about 9:50 a.m. They stopped to load catenary poles and constructi­on materials from a fenced-in location next to the main track. Eight minutes later, the worker contacted the train dispatcher to release track occupancy.

A little more than 30 minutes later, the train was traveling on the same track about 63 miles per hour toward Millbrae Station, after stopping at the 22nd Street Station, the report said. The track has a maximum allowed speed of 79 miles per hour. The engineer tried to stop the train as it approached the milepost and the three vehicles on the track, but the train didn't make a complete stop before hitting them. Crews started evacuating passengers through the railcars near the back of the train.

Employees of the San Bruno Water Corporatio­n Yard used work equipment at the scene. First responders also arrived at the scene. Passengers and crew were evacuated and the fire was under control by 11:14 a.m.

The NTSB investigat­ors examined the track, location of the collision, equipment and the signal system and conducted interviewe­d. They also tested the train's brake system and gathered records from employees and systems. The investigat­ion is ongoing and will focus on railroad worker safety, regulatory compliance and training and oversight.

Caltrain didn't respond to requests for comment Wednesday but previously said it didn't have any informatio­n on why the equipment was on the tracks during the collision.

“Obviously, the truck shouldn't have been there,” Caltrain spokespers­on Jeremy Lipps said. “Why it was there — we don't know.”

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