dowlingm
Senior Member
Not a great read for VIA https://todaysnorthumberland.ca/202...-rescue-for-over-200-people-trapped-on-train/
So nobody called emergency services? Is that standard procedure? It would not have been pleasant but they could have had buses meet passengers there and take them to Cobourg....come on really?Not a great read for VIA https://todaysnorthumberland.ca/202...-rescue-for-over-200-people-trapped-on-train/
Something like this should be a legal requirementIn the Netherlands, ProRail (national railway owner/operator) has numerous response teams stationed across the country who respond to incidents on the railway. In most of their videos I've seen, they start by making an evacuation plan for the passengers on the train. Their vans have various methods for evacuating trains, including ladders, ramps, platforms.
Here's a video where they tour one of their vans, which has lights and sirens in order to arrive on scene quickly. They also have a larger truck which follows at normal speed to bring more supplies.
Unfortunately there is no English.
Note that these responders respond to incidents from all train operators (NS, DB, Arriva, Eurostar, Thalys, etc), not just NS.
Evacuation alone is pointless unless you have a place to evacuate them to, and the means to get them there, which comes back to buses being available. Responders also have to consider the ability of passengers to navigate rough ground and whether people are dressed for it.It would be interesting to know what VIA’s policies about evacuation are - the temperature conditions were severe, the incident at night. It is understandable that the crew did not want people out on the tracks where they may become injured or separated, creating a potential liability where remaining on the train did not.
But the seeming failure by VIA operations centre to engage with local emergency services is inexplicable. Those services - to the extent available given other challenges on the roads etc. - could have worked to ensure the track was secured and arranged lighting for safe passage to the nearest crossing or access. As one of the busiest rail corridors in the country one would think that a certain amount of training and planning is done by the response services along the line, for incidents even more severe.
Not a great read for VIA https://todaysnorthumberland.ca/202...-rescue-for-over-200-people-trapped-on-train/
Well they have to build the track past Havelock and do soil samples for the entire ROW. Then the design. You also need new trainsets.
That maybe true but that still won't come even remotely close to $12 billion.
It should be some standard procedure that a supervisor or someone from VIA rail should be on site to determine course of action. Not from their dispatch. Maybe you can't do this for remote services but you should be able to do it for the corridor.
This is something that someone from VIA management should have picked up the phone and called RTC and requested that the passengers on that train be given priority to be moved to the station. I'm sure they have to shuffle things around for that to happen but it's not an impossible task.
This is a ludicrous idea.
What makes you think that anyone coming from Toronto or Montreal - in the middle of a raging snowstorm that resulted in the 401 being entirely closed, let's remember - would manage to get to the site before it was cleaned up?
What makes you think that they didn't?
VIA"s own operations department has an open line to the RTCs. Needless to say, the RTCs had their hands full with what was happening on the ground, and I can only suspect that they didn't have the time for additional calls from VIA.
Dan
This is a ludicrous idea.
What makes you think that anyone coming from Toronto or Montreal - in the middle of a raging snowstorm that resulted in the 401 being entirely closed, let's remember - would manage to get to the site before it was cleaned up?
What makes you think that they didn't?
VIA"s own operations department has an open line to the RTCs. Needless to say, the RTCs had their hands full with what was happening on the ground, and I can only suspect that they didn't have the time for additional calls from VIA.
Dan
If I had been in that situation I probably would have walked off after a couple hours as well, given that there were lots of options within a short walk (restaurants, houses etc). It wouldn't be the first time I wandered around a city during a blizzard. However from what we now know, that may have been a bad decision given that Cobourg had a power failure at the time. So in some ways the people in the train were actually better off than the residents of Cobourg, since they still had heat and light. But those buildings still presumably had food, water and functioning toilets so when VIA realized that it would be many hours before a rescue train could arrive, then those options should have become very relevant.The passenger who bailed and started walking was not an idiot or a renegade. Apparently he knew exactly where he was, and his exit was not wandering around in the wilderness. He was using his own set of problem solving skills.