.....Advertisement.....
.....Advertisement.....
Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Dump truck driver dies after crash with train

Photo ERIC BRADY   -   Taken 11/18/08 
A Roanoke County Police officer investigates the scene of a collision between an East bound train and a dump truck at Garman Road in Glenvar area of Roanoke County Tuesday.

Eric Brady | The Roanoke Times

A collision between a train and a dump truck left the truck driver dead Tuesday afternoon in the Glenvar area of Roanoke County, officials said.

The wreck happened about 1:15 p.m. on Garman Road in the Glenvar area, according to Roanoke County police.

Robin Chapman, a spokesman for Norfolk Southern Corp., said an eastbound coal train hit the truck at a private crossing that has no gate or signals.

The train struck the right side of the truck, ejecting the driver, police said. The truck, which was hauling concrete, came to rest about 60 feet from the tracks and caught fire.

Roanoke County Fire and Rescue responded and extinguished the fire. Concrete from the truck’s payload was scattered around the crash scene Tuesday afternoon.

Police said they are not releasing the driver’s name or employer until family has been notified.

Officer B.T. Smith, with Roanoke County police, said the dump truck was southbound at the time of the incident.

“The engineer saw the truck coming across the tracks and was blowing his horn,” Smith said. He said it appeared that the engineer was attempting to stop the train at the time of the collision.

Chapman said the train, which consists of 97 cars and two locomotives, was hauling coal from Elmore, W.Va., to Durham, N.C. He said there were no injuries to the train’s crew and said he was not aware of any damage to the train or to the railroad tracks.

Neither Chapman nor Smith knew how fast the train was going at the time of the crash, but Chapman said the speed limit in that area is 40 mph.

The wreck occurred on a privately owned road, Chapman said, and the crossing is marked with an X-shaped crossing sign and a stop sign . He said that with railroad crossings on private streets, the installation of a gate or a signal light is up to the landowner. State departments of transportation determine crossing warnings on public roads.

It was not clear Tuesday night who owns the road.

Smith said the incident is still being investigated.

.....Advertisement.....