EDMONTON - A 46-year-old man who was collecting bottles was struck and killed by a southbound freight train Wednesday morning near Whitemud Drive and Gateway Boulevard.

City police said the man, whose name has not yet been released, was trying to crawl under the crossing arm while pushing a grocery cart.

Kevin Hrysak, spokesperson with Canadian Pacific Railway, said the collision happened around 6:40 a.m. All bells, lights and gates at the crossing where working.

“Our crew noticed the individual and immediately started to sound their horn and blew their whistle and eventually put the train into an emergency brake situation,” Hrysak said.

He was not able to confirm how far back the train was when personnel noticed the man, but said it was moving at a slow speed, given the area.

Glass bottles and a jacket were strewn along the ditch near the train crossing over the Whitemud. A shopping cart with garbage bags attached was rammed up against the front end of the train, which had stopped about 200 metres down the track.

The Sawridge Inn on Gateway Boulevard backs onto the tracks. Amanda Purkiss, who works at the front desk, said the victim — who had reddish curly hair and always wore a tuque —came by each morning to collect bottles.

“He always either had a bag with him or his cart,” Purkiss said. Beginning about two weeks ago, he began passing by the hotel each morning around 7, but she had never spoken to him.

Hrysak said the engineer and conductor in the train’s cab have been temporarily relieved of their duties.

“We’ll follow up with critical incident stress counselling, if they choose to take it,” he said.

Morning rush-hour traffic on major south Edmonton arteries was rerouted around 51st Avenue east of Gateway Boulevard and the Whitemud overpass at Calgary Trail.

Canadian Pacific Police and the Edmonton Police Service are working together on the investigation.

 
http://www.mansfieldnewsjournal.com/article/20120625/NEWS01/206250309/Crestline-man-killed-trying-outrun-train?odyssey=mod|mostview
 
NJ Transit presented two rather blunt public service announcements Friday with a simple plea: "Stay off the tracks." The goal is to reduce railroad fatalities.

Titled "You Don't Win" and "You're Dead," the ads that will begin running this weekend on broadcast and cable networks in Philadelphia and New York give dramatic, firsthand accounts from police and transit workers involved in recent fatalities and from the families of people who were killed.

Three deaths last fall were apparently part of a widespread problem on railroads in the region — people trespassing on tracks who are accidentally killed and those who enter the danger zone to commit suicide. In the last two years, at least 91 people have been killed by trains on NJ Transit and SEPTA lines, officials have said.


The videos can be found here: http://www.njtransit.com/rg/rg_servlet.srv?hdnPageAction=SafetyTo

 
The woman killed Friday by a train has been identified.

According to the Caledonia police, Jocelyn M. Flashinski of Wauwatosa was killed after getting struck by a southbound Amtrak train Friday evening near 4 Mile Road and Highway H in Caledonia. Flashinski does have ties to the Racine area. She was 31.

Patch reached out to the Flashinski family, but relatives were too distraught to comment.

Police said Flashinski ran onto the tracks and that "the incident is not criminal in nature." The train was traveling from Milwaukee to Chicago.

Vince Patoka, a passenger on a northbound train from Chicago to Milwaukee that had to stop after the accident, told Patch that the conductor had been making announcements about every 20 minutes to apologize for the inconvenience.

Passengers were told there was an incident on the track ahead of their train that had no impact on passenger safety, Patoka said.

That train was able to pull into the Sturtevant station at approximately 8 p.m., and by 9 p.m. was going to be allowed to continue its journey north into Milwaukee.


 
From WLNS in Lansing MI 06 June, 2012
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) - Suburban Detroit authorities say a 45-year-old man may have been listening to a portable music player when a train struck and killed him as he walked toward it.

Police in Oakland County's Waterford Township say the accident happened about 3 p.m. Wednesday. The site is about 25 miles northwest of Detroit.

Police Chief Daniel McCaw says township resident Kevin Bickford was walking east on the tracks and apparently didn't notice the oncoming westbound train, which blew its horn.


 
 
http://www.ntsb.gov/doclib/reports/2012/RAR1201.pdf