
Distracted rail crew missed warning before fiery B.C. train crash, TSB report says
CALGARY — The Transportation Safety Board says a fiery collision between two Canadian Pacific Kansas City freight trains in British Columbia last year highlights the need for “physical defences” to prevent crashes.
The board says the collision east of Revelstoke, B.C., on Feb. 16 last year occurred when a rail crew was distracted by a call from a controller and missed a warning known as a “clear to stop indication” to prepare to stop at the next signal.
The report says the crew hit the emergency brake when they finally saw the tail lights of the stationary train on the same tracks but they couldn’t stop in time.
The report released Monday says two crew in the moving train were injured, one seriously, when their train derailed, with one locomotive catching fire and spilling 17,500 litres of diesel fuel.