Las Posas Road, Camarillo, CA - An Ongoing Rail Crossing Deathtrap
On February 23, 2015, a Metrolink passenger train struck a Ford F-450 work truck and trailer at the intersection of Fifth St. and Rice Ave. near Oxnard, California. Scores of passengers were injured and one week later, Senior Engineer Glenn Steele
succumbed to his injuries. Dismayed by the number of recent rail
collisions at that site, I researched and wrote about that grade
crossing and its many safety deficiencies. Later, I created a website
that featured both problems and solutions for that troubled location at
www.5thandrice.com.
U.S. Representative Julia Brownley (D-Agoura Hills) has taken a special interest in the 5th & Rice Grade crossing. Recently, through her staff, she contacted Mr. Marc Gerstel,
a person injured in the February 2015 collision. Brownley’s office
told Gerstel that the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC)
would soon visit the site and conduct a safety evaluation at the Fifth
and Rice grade crossing. If so, that would be the first substantive
action taken by any public agency or corporation involved with the
operation and safety of that deadly grade crossing.
The Fifth and Rice grade crossing in Oxnard is both the busiest and the
most hazardous commercial rail crossing in Ventura County. In the past
decade, it has produced more rail related deaths and injuries than any
other crossing in the county. Even so, two grade crossings in nearby
Camarillo now vie for the title of “deadliest rail crossing in Ventura
County”.
At
5:50 AM on August 24, 2012, between Pleasant Valley Road and Las Posas
Road, a Metrolink passenger train bound for Los Angeles struck a
semi-truck and trailer that had slowed to make a turn into a nearby
farm field. In that collision, both the truck driver and his passenger sustained non-fatal injuries.
On December 30, 2013 at 10:49 AM, as an Amtrak train was passing by, a
car entered the grade crossing at Fifth Street and Las Posas Road. The
resulting collision sent the car into the side of a railroad service
truck, which was standing nearby. The driver of the first vehicle died
at the scene and the railroad service worker received injuries
resulting from the accident.
On
January 24, 2014 at 10:30 AM, crews responded to a train collision at
Fifth Street and Las Posas Road in Camarillo. At that grade crossing, a
seventy-seven year old woman drove her minivan into the side of a
passing Amtrak train. The driver, identified as Misty Jill Wood
succumbed to her injuries at the scene. A Union Pacific Railroad worker
in a nearby truck received moderate injuries. There were no injuries
among the passengers on the northbound Amtrak Pacific Surfliner train.
On the evening of March 1, 2015, less than two weeks after the Oxnard
Metrolink collision, a passenger vehicle stopped on the tracks at Fifth
Street and Pleasant Valley Road in Camarillo. Moments after the two
occupants of the passenger car exited the vehicle; an Amtrak passenger
train heading for Los Angeles struck and sent the mangled vehicle into a nearby ditch. No injuries resulted from the collision.
At 8:25 AM on April 23, 2015, less than two months after the Oxnard Metrolink collision, a Union Pacific freight train collided with a white Ford Explorer
at the intersection of Fifth Street and Las Posas Road in Camarillo.
Driver Timothy Newhouse, a fifty-seven year old man from Rialto,
California drove through the crossing gate arm and into the side of the
freight train. According to officers called to the scene, the vehicle
rolled three or four times before coming to a rest in a nearby ditch.
The driver succumbed to his injuries at the scene. There were no other
injuries.
At 2:05 PM on September 21, 2015, a pedestrian stepped on to the tracks
near Fifth Street and Pleasant Valley Road in Camarillo. Moments later,
a moving Amtrak train struck and killed that pedestrian. The incident
appeared to be a suicide, but detectives responded to investigate.
There was little else reported about that deadly incident.
At
10:30 AM on November 21, 2015, the latest in a string of deadly train
collisions occurred at the Fifth Street and Las Posas Road grade
crossing in Camarillo. According to the California Highway Patrol, at
the time of the collision, the crossing gate arm was down and the
safety lights were flashing. For unknown reasons, Mr. Brian Kuczynski,
twenty-three, of Camarillo drove his car through the crossing gate and
into the side of a moving Amtrak train. After Kuczynski's car hit the crossing arm and moving train,
it travelled 171 feet and into a nearby ditch. Flown by helicopter to
Los Robles Hospital & Medical Center in Thousand Oaks with major
injuries Kuczynski later died. There were no other injuries.
The infamous Fifth Street and Rice Avenue grade crossing in Oxnard still
holds the record in Ventura County. In that regard, it is the worst of the worst
throughout the Oxnard Plain. Still, in little more than the past three
years, seven train collisions at either Pleasant Valley Road or Las
Posas Road grade crossings resulted in five deaths and four injuries.
If this pace continues, we can expect an average of two additional
fatalities at the Las Posas and Pleasant Valley rail crossings each
year.
Assuming that only the pedestrian fatality
at Pleasant Valley Road was a suicide, why have so many motorists
collided with moving trains at those two crossings? It is easy enough
to pass off these collisions to inattentive or distracted drivers.
With mobile telephones, voice activated apps, GPS navigation systems
and sound-deadening insulation in our vehicles; it is easy to become
self-absorbed and inattentive to unexpected safety threats. When driving
across the Oxnard Plain, verdant strawberry and vegetable fields,
light traffic and hazy morning sunshine can lull a motorist into a
false sense of security.
The Federal Railroad Administration (FAR) sets the minimum standards for railroad grade crossings. The minimum requirements include a “crossbuck”,
which is a large “X” shaped sign that reads “Railroad – Crossing”, at
least two flashing red lights adjacent to the crossbuck and appropriate
painted safety lines in the roadway. This configuration applies to
both directions of travel. At the Fifth and Rice crossing, there is an
additional red warning signal. It resides on a horizontal strut that
extends from the crossbuck mast over one lane of southbound Rice Ave.
traffic. Additionally, automatic gates descend to block the roadway
whenever a train approaches. As such, all three of the grade crossings
in question meet only the 1986 minimum federal standards for “active
traffic control devices” at multi-lane grade crossings.
Although
revised in 2007, the bulk of the Federal Highway Administration’s
“Railroad-Highway Grade Crossing Handbook” derives from the 1986 version
of that document. In essence, “active traffic control devices” have
changed little in the past thirty years. In the 1986 update, the
Federal Highway Administration responded to rapid urbanization and
concomitant increases in both vehicular and train traffic across the
country. Until that time, passive warning systems were the norm.
Beginning with the 1986 standards, there was an attempt to update
warning light systems beyond the legacy systems still utilized in many
rural and urban locations. Looking back at the history of warning
lights, the first active warning system consisted of a railroad worker swinging a red lantern
back and forth to warn motorists of an approaching train. Later
railroad safety engineers introduced the “wig wag”, which featured a
pendulum arm that contained a red warning light. As a train approached,
the lighted wig wag signal swung back and forth. In doing so, the wig
wag mimicked a railroad worker's lantern swinging at arm's length.
departs the station at Orange Empire Railroad Museum.
The major improvement in 1986 was to require two red warning lights that flashed in sequence. The timing of the flashes mimicked both a wig wag and the railroad lantern of old. Despite the advent of light emitting diodes (LEDs), most flashing light signals still utilize low wattage bulbs, varying from 16 to 36 watts. Even with reflectors behind the low wattage bulbs, a light within the dark red glass of the “roundel” can be difficult to see during daylight hours. Over eight percent of men experience color blindness in the red spectrum. That means that almost one man in twelve might see a flashing signal light, but not detect it as a red warning light.
The automated safety gates found at “active traffic control grade crossings” create another area of concern. Designed to activate not more than three seconds after the safety warning lights begin to flash, the motorized gates take time to arrive at their “down position”. So long as the gates are down prior to the arrival of a moving train, they meet legal requirements. Regardless of a gate length of up to thirty-eight feet, only three red lights are required to meet federal standards. The red light at the tip of the gate arm burns steadily, while the other two flash alternately.
If we were to recreate a mid-morning scene of a typical Las Posas Road train collision, here is what the errant driver might see. Approaching the tracks from the north, the morning sun would be coming in the driver’s side window, possibly dazzling his or her eyes. As the train approaches at full speed, it might appear as a dot on the horizon or not be visible at all. Whether distracted, speeding or fully attentive, the driver may or may not see the two low-wattage red warning lights flashing in their roundels. Likewise, the driver may not see the slender gate arm descend from vertical to its horizontal (closed) position. By the time the driver notices the flashing lights, the safety gate and the train, it may too late to avoid a catastrophic collision.
Much has changed since enactment of the 1986 grade crossing standards. Our driving experience now includes cup holders, mobile telephones, integrated information and entertainment systems, and texting while driving. The result is a quantum leap in potential distractions available to drivers today. The attitude of many who comment on relevant websites is “drivers beware”. If you drive into the side of a moving train, it is probably your fault, they write. Your own death or dismemberment, they say, proves their point. In reality, the FRA minimum standard developed for grade crossings in 1986 are often insufficient to warn motorists of impending collisions with moving trains.
With five of the recent train collisions at Las Posas Road and Fifth Street happening between 8:30 AM and 2:30 PM, further assessment of both natural light and traffic control signal lighting is in order. With Fifth Street creating a buffer for northbound vehicular traffic, almost all of the Las Posas Road train collisions involve southbound vehicular traffic. From morning until midafternoon, the sun may interfere with the driver’s ability to see the obsolete warning signals and other faded safety markings at Las Posas Rd., Pleasant Valley Rd. and Rice Ave. grade crossings.
Perhaps the pending CPUC investigation of the Rice Avenue grade crossing will give impetus Sealed Corridor traffic safety features at the three most deadly railroad grade crossings in Ventura County. In the interest of safety for all who travel the Oxnard Plain in motor vehicles and passenger trains, I hope so.
By James McGillis at 05:12 PM | Railroad Safety | Comments (0) | Link
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