Dave Cundiff
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Dave
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- Feb 28, 2024
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The most obvious reason for waiting until the bells and lights stop, and the arm comes to a stop all the way up, is that you can't see (and often can't hear) a train coming the opposite way from the train that just passed. This can happen at almost any multi-track crossing.
One of a railway engineer's nightmares is the pedestrian or vehicle that crosses just behind another train and proceeds straight into his/her train's path.
Since these encounters are usually fatal, and often gruesome, the human impact on the engineer and family is enormous -- to say nothing of the impact on those who are hit.
I wasn't there, and I can't judge -- but the railroad may not be liable even if the arm's descent was unexpected.
Glad you're safe, @Fmc! Very best wishes!
One of a railway engineer's nightmares is the pedestrian or vehicle that crosses just behind another train and proceeds straight into his/her train's path.
Since these encounters are usually fatal, and often gruesome, the human impact on the engineer and family is enormous -- to say nothing of the impact on those who are hit.
I wasn't there, and I can't judge -- but the railroad may not be liable even if the arm's descent was unexpected.
Glad you're safe, @Fmc! Very best wishes!
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