(The following story by Erik N. Nelson appeared on the San Jose Mercury News website on January 29.)
SAN JOSE, Calif. — Freight railroad Union Pacific is installing cameras on its locomotives with the objective of recording accidents involving their trains colliding with vehicles and pedestrians.
The railroad, which owns and controls many of the rail corridors in Northern California, including one connecting San Jose, Oakland and Sacramento, is installing the digital video units to provide better accident information and clues to improving safety at marked crossings and other locations, said Mark Davis, spokesman for the Omaha, Neb.-based railroad.
“We have already found that the track image recorders have really helped us,” Davis said.
Besides assisting in the investigation of accidents, “it helps analyze what occurred, to be able to determine with local and state officials if anything else could (improve) the safety of the crossing.”
The announcement came Monday, as Caltrain recorded its first pedestrian death of the year, in San Mateo.
Passenger railroads in Northern California, including Amtrak’s intercity service, have indicated an interest in the cameras but had yet to install them in anything other than pilot programs.
Unlike the slower-moving freight railroads, passenger lines such as Caltrain between Gilroy and San Francisco, the Capitol Corridor between Auburn and San Jose and the state-owned San Joaquins that connect Oakland with Stockton and Bakersfield, travel as fast as 79 mph and strike pedestrians and vehicles with regularity.
In the first 10 months of 2007, there were 111 railway deaths in California — 33 in the Bay Area — and nearly all were accidents in which trains hit people.
State transportation officials are looking at the possibility of funding cameras on the front of passenger trains — on locomotives and the trains’ leading cars for those that make return trips in reverse — to better monitor safety conditions on the tracks, said Bill Bronte, chief of the Rail Division of Caltrans.
“They could see what was the driver’s behavior that may have contributed to the accident, or what was the behavior of somebody off to the side,” Bronte said. “Now, you don’t have any evidence of what really happened,” beyond the train’s speed, braking and whether its horn sounded, records that are kept by an onboard device.
Caltrain officials are interested in the cameras but have not found a source for the $500,000 the cameras are estimated to cost. Capitol Corridor officials are preparing to request bids for such a camera system and expect to have it installed by next year, said railroad spokeswoman Luna Salaver.