[*BCM*] cyclist killed at train crossing
Anne Wolfe
goannego at yahoo.com
Thu Oct 14 09:59:38 EDT 2004
While without question I totally feel for the family in this circumstance, I'm not sure
how train whistles would have save this kid. The gates go down for a reason. People die
frequently when they ride around the dropped arms and ignore the blinking lights, whether
it is in a car, a bike, or even if they walk.
Anne
--- Dan Barrett <dbx at sack.dreamhost.com> wrote:
> /*
> Note the key part: Beverly's ban on train whistles cannot be reviewed,
> because the accident did involve a car
> */
>
>
> Bicyclist, 14, killed near train crossing
> Officials say boy rode around gate
>
> By Steven Rosenberg and Mac Daniel, Globe Staff | October 14, 2004
>
> BEVERLY -- Darting away from his mother and younger sister yesterday while
> riding his mountain bike to school, 14-year-old David Siljeholm rode
> around the dropped arms and blinking lights of a railroad crossing gate
> and was struck by an inbound MBTA commuter train, dying instantly,
> authorities said.
>
>
>
> Siljeholm, whose family recently moved from Melrose to
> Manchester-by-the-Sea, died about 50 yards from the crossing at Hale and
> West streets in Beverly Farms at about 7:45 a.m., with his mother and
> sister arriving at the scene seconds later, unaware of what had happened,
> officials said.
>
>
>
> Beverly is one of the communities in Massachusetts that have been granted
> state permission to enact whistle bans and opt out of regulations that
> require trains to sound their whistles for at least three blasts before
> every street-level railroad crossing. That means that no whistle was
> sounded as the commuter train approached Siljeholm, according to
> preliminary reports on the accident by the Federal Railroad Administration
> and the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority.
>
>
>
> Joe Santoro, who was working on a road construction project near the
> crossing, said he heard the accident and immediately rushed toward the
> train.
>
>
>
> "I heard a loud crack, and I said to my truck driver, 'The train just hit
> something,' " he said. "Then we saw papers floating down, and we ran over
> and saw the bicycle and the kid on the tracks."
>
>
>
> Seconds later, he said, he watched the boy's mother and sister cross the
> tracks on their bicycles. "She came up and said, 'What happened?' "
> Santoro said. "I told her some kid just got hit by a train, and she said,
> 'Oh my God, that's my son.' "
>
>
>
> Steve O'Connell, spokesman for Essex District Attorney Jonathan W.
> Blodgett, said yesterday that the accident remains under investigation.
>
>
>
> "He had sprinted ahead of us," said the boy's mother, Anita Siljeholm, who
> was accompanying her son and daughter, Marian, to school when the accident
> occurred.
>
>
>
> According to O'Connell and officials of the MBTA and the railroad
> administration, the gates at the crossing were down, and warning lights
> were flashing at the time of the accident. The MBTA and the federal agency
> also said bells were ringing.
>
>
>
> The accident occurred less than a mile from the Cape Ann Waldorf School in
> Beverly Farms, a private elementary and middle school where Siljeholm was
> in the eighth grade. School officials said that parents, students, and
> faculty were reeling from the news.
>
>
>
> "He was the kind of son every mother would want to have," Anita Siljeholm
> said in a brief interview in front of the school. "He was a wonderful,
> warm, kind, intelligent, loving child. We will always, always remember
> that and honor him; honor his kindness and his humor and his wisdom. He
> was a wise child."
>
>
>
> In addition to his mother and sister, the teenager leaves his father, Jorn
> Siljeholm, a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who
> worked in Iraq as a United Nations weapons inspector prior to the US
> invasion; and a brother, Eivind.
>
>
>
> By midmorning, parents had flocked to the Waldorf School, where stunned
> students hugged one another and grief counselors mingled in classrooms and
> hallways. Federal Railroad Administration spokesman Warren Flatau said
> yesterday that the fatal accident at Hale Street probably will have no
> impact the community's ban on train whistles, because it involved a
> bicycle and not a motor vehicle.
>
>
>
> If the accident had involved a motor vehicle, Flatau said, the ban could
> have been reviewed.
>
>
>
> Peter Johnson -- who with his wife, Joan, established a website,
> www.beverly-blast.org, which opposes federal efforts to eliminate whistle
> bans -- lives about three-quarters of a mile from where the accident
> occurred.
>
>
>
> He said he was disturbed by news of Siljeholm's death. "It causes me
> pause," he said. "I'm really distraught for the parents."
>
>
>
> He added, however, that he still supports banning whistles and pointed out
> that opponents are not arguing against them on safety grounds. If the
> whistle ban was not in place, Johnson said, there would be 2,040 whistle
> blasts per day in Beverly. One alternative for safety at the crossings, he
> said, would be to install four-way crossing gates at all 17 crossings in
> Beverly, at an estimated cost of $225,000 each.
>
>
>
> Beverly has 17 at-grade crossings, the largest number in the state,
> Johnson said. Whistles are banned at all of the intersections. According
> to Federal Railroad Administration records, Beverly has had no accidents
> the agency classified as relevant in the five years before December 2003.
> Since 1975, the earliest year of data in the railroad administration's
> federal accident database, there have been no fatal accidents at the
> crossing where Siljeholm died, Flatau said.
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=====
"I wish in the city of your heartyou would let me be the streetwhere you walk when you are mostyourself." - Robley Wilson
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