 
Fifth Street at Las Posas Road Now the Deadliest Rail Crossing in Ventura County
April 21, 2016, the Fifth Street at Las Posas Road grade crossing in Camarillo, California  regained the title of “Deadliest  Rail Crossing
 in Ventura County”. Around 6 PM, Garrett Vongunten, 26, piloted his 
2015 Harley Davidson motorcycle south on  Las Posas Road toward Fifth 
Street. On the rear seat, Nadya Unger,  23, rode as his passenger. With 
the late afternoon sun in their eyes, they  approached the railroad 
crossing at an undetermined speed.
At
 4:33 p.m. that day, Metrolink Train No. 117 had departed Los Angeles 
Union Station, heading  toward its final destination at the East Ventura
 Station. Near 6:00 PM, the  train approached Las Posas Road from the 
east at normal speed, which can be as  high as seventy miles per hour.
If the traffic control system operated properly at the grade crossing, 
the  approaching train would activate warning bells, flashing lights and
 crossing  gates to warn vehicular traffic of an oncoming train. 
According to Federal  Railroad Administration (FRA)  guidelines, the 
rail crossing gates should be down at least twenty seconds prior  to a 
train crossing Las Posas Road.
For reasons that included 
impairment from unspecified drugs and possible  excessive speed, 
Vongunten may have seen the warning lights and gates too  late
  to stop safely. As a result, Vongunten’s motorcycle broke through the 
crossing  gate arm and struck the side of the Metrolink train. Passenger
 Nadya Unger died at the scene and Vongunten sustained critical 
injuries,  including partial loss of one leg. The motorcycle, missing 
its operator, its  passenger and its front wheel, came to rest upright, 
facing in the opposite  direction of original travel. "You could assume 
that the motorcycle wasn't in  the middle of the track per se because of
 the location that it ended up,"  California Highway Patrol officer 
Gregory Bowcock told the Ventura County Star  newspaper.
late
  to stop safely. As a result, Vongunten’s motorcycle broke through the 
crossing  gate arm and struck the side of the Metrolink train. Passenger
 Nadya Unger died at the scene and Vongunten sustained critical 
injuries,  including partial loss of one leg. The motorcycle, missing 
its operator, its  passenger and its front wheel, came to rest upright, 
facing in the opposite  direction of original travel. "You could assume 
that the motorcycle wasn't in  the middle of the track per se because of
 the location that it ended up,"  California Highway Patrol officer 
Gregory Bowcock told the Ventura County Star  newspaper.
With the collision unseen by the Metrolink engineer, Train No. 117 
proceeded to  the Oxnard  Transit Center, which was its next scheduled 
stop. Prior to arrival in  Oxnard, a passenger who had witnessed the 
collision notified the train’s  conductor of the event. Metrolink held 
the train in Oxnard until officials could  inspect it for signs of 
damage. A preliminary report indicated that there was  evidence of a 
side impact, including motorcycle parts embedded into a coach and  blood on the side of that coach.
 
In recent years, there have been multiple train collisions on the Oxnard Plain.  In February 2015, a train collision at the Fifth St. and Rice  Ave. grade crossing in Oxnard took the life of Metrolink Senior Engineer Glenn  Steele.
 By that time, Fifth & Rice had gained notoriety as the “deadliest  
rail crossing in Ventura County”. In recognition of the many deaths and 
injuries  at Fifth & Rice,  Congresswoman Julia Brownley (D-Westlake Village) secured $1.5 million in  federal funds for the design of a grade separation at that location.
With the recent death of Nadya Unger, the Las Posas Road and Fifth 
Street grade  crossing now takes the mantel as “deadliest rail crossing 
in Ventura County”.  Here is a chronology of four prior rail collisions 
at Fifth & Las Posas:
 -
 At 10:49 AM on December 30, 2013, as an Amtrak train passed by, a car 
entered  the grade crossing at Fifth St. and Las Posas Rd. The driver of
 the vehicle died  at the scene and a nearby railroad service worker 
received injuries resulting  from the accident.
-
 At 10:49 AM on December 30, 2013, as an Amtrak train passed by, a car 
entered  the grade crossing at Fifth St. and Las Posas Rd. The driver of
 the vehicle died  at the scene and a nearby railroad service worker 
received injuries resulting  from the accident.
- At 10:30 AM on January 24, 2014, crews responded to a train collision 
at Fifth  St. and Las Posas Rd. A seventy-seven year old woman who drove
 her minivan into  the side of a passing Amtrak train succumbed to her 
injuries at the scene.
- At 8:25 AM on April 23, 2015, a Union Pacific freight train collided 
with an  SUV at the intersection of Fifth St. and Las Posas Rd. The 
driver, a fifty-seven  year old man, drove through the crossing gate arm
 and into the side of the freight train. The driver succumbed to his 
injuries at the scene.
 
 
- At 10:30 AM on November 21, 2015, a twenty-three year old man drove 
his car through the crossing gate and into the side of a moving Amtrak 
train at  Fifth St. and Las Posas Rd. At the time of the collision, the 
crossing gate arm  was down and the safety lights were flashing. The 
driver died days later at a  local medical center.
In less than three years, there have been five fatal train collisions at
 Fifth &  Las Posas. The common denominator of all five collisions 
was that the crossing  gates were down, warning lights were flashing and
 bells were ringing. Even so,  each ill-fated vehicle entered the 
railroad right of way and collided with a  moving train. There is no 
evidence that any one of the five most recent fatal  accidents at Fifth 
& Las Posas was a suicide.
 Unlike the Fifth & Rice grade crossing, the Fifth & Las Posas grade crossing has  only the  minimal safety features mandated by law. At the tracks, Rice Ave. is a  divided road, with  overhead safety lights, signage,
 and four crossing gates intended to seal  the rail corridor from errant
 vehicles. At the tracks, Las Posas Rd. is  undivided, with no overhead 
safety signage and only two crossing gates. Even if  the gates were 
down, a driver could cross over the double-yellow lines and drive  
around the crossing gates. To the unsuspecting driver, the Las Posas Rd.
  southbound approach to Fifth St. looks like a little-used rural grade 
crossing.
Unlike the Fifth & Rice grade crossing, the Fifth & Las Posas grade crossing has  only the  minimal safety features mandated by law. At the tracks, Rice Ave. is a  divided road, with  overhead safety lights, signage,
 and four crossing gates intended to seal  the rail corridor from errant
 vehicles. At the tracks, Las Posas Rd. is  undivided, with no overhead 
safety signage and only two crossing gates. Even if  the gates were 
down, a driver could cross over the double-yellow lines and drive  
around the crossing gates. To the unsuspecting driver, the Las Posas Rd.
  southbound approach to Fifth St. looks like a little-used rural grade 
crossing.
On Friday April 22, 2016, one day after the death of Nadya Unger and the
  critical injury to Garrett Vongunten, the Ventura County 
Transportation  Commission
  (VCTC) voted to support a half-cent transportation sales tax for 
Ventura County. Nineteen of the  fifty-eight counties in California have
 such a tax, including all the major  counties in Southern California. 
If it makes the November 2016 ballot, the  measure will still require 
approval by a two-thirds majority of county voters. If it passes that 
hurdle, the new  sales tax will provide $70 million annually, earmarked 
for transportation  improvement projects within Ventura County.
Commission
  (VCTC) voted to support a half-cent transportation sales tax for 
Ventura County. Nineteen of the  fifty-eight counties in California have
 such a tax, including all the major  counties in Southern California. 
If it makes the November 2016 ballot, the  measure will still require 
approval by a two-thirds majority of county voters. If it passes that 
hurdle, the new  sales tax will provide $70 million annually, earmarked 
for transportation  improvement projects within Ventura County.
Five fatal train collisions at Fifth St. and Las Posas Rd. should be 
enough to  place that grade crossing at the top of Ventura County 
transportation  improvement projects. Suggested improvements include 
realigning Las Posas Rd. to  make it a divided road as it crosses the 
tracks, installing overhead warning  signs and creating a four-gate 
system of vehicle barriers. Although foot traffic  is light at that 
location, the new safety plan should include sidewalks and  pedestrian 
gates there, as well. 
 Proposed
 upgrades to the rail crossing will not stop speeders from trying to  
beat a train to the crossing nor end inattentive driving, but they will 
increase  the chances that motorists will receive warning in time to 
stop safely at Fifth  & Las Posas for an oncoming train. I hope that
 public officials throughout Ventura County support a half-cent sales 
tax dedicated solely to transportation improvement projects.
Proposed
 upgrades to the rail crossing will not stop speeders from trying to  
beat a train to the crossing nor end inattentive driving, but they will 
increase  the chances that motorists will receive warning in time to 
stop safely at Fifth  & Las Posas for an oncoming train. I hope that
 public officials throughout Ventura County support a half-cent sales 
tax dedicated solely to transportation improvement projects. 
  
By James McGillis at 02:01 PM | Railroad Safety | Comments (1) | Link

 
 

