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Rails With Trails, a Non-starter
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As the article below illustrates even being near the ROW can be dangerous. A key reason why the new darling of some local planners the so called "Rails with Trails are a dangerous idea and shouldn't be entertained. Again, note that this article is not about a track with a trail on the ROW. Still the man and dog involved were very lucky to have escaped with their lives... <br /> <br />LC <br /> <br />Derailment dumbfounds dog-walker just feet away <br />(The following story by Kirk Mitchell appeared on the Denver Post website on May 14.) <br /> <br />DENVER -- The gigantic object falling in front of Bob Small onto the bike trail was so large he thought a train bridge was crashing to the ground. <br /> <br />"All of a sudden, I'm almost underneath the trestle, and I heard a sound like an earthquake," said Small, a retired telephone company executive. "Debris was flying all over. You can't run. It's happening too fast." <br /> <br />But what Small mistook for a train trestle was the first of 15 freight cars to derail about 1 p.m. Thursday as the train crossed over the South Platte River at Fox Street near Coors Field. <br /> <br />Three of the cars plunged into the fast-moving river, Denver police spokeswoman Teresa Garcia said. No one was injured in the crash, she said. <br /> <br />After witnessing the first car fall, the 58-year-old Small saw a set of train wheels cra***o the ground not more than 10 feet in front of him. <br /> <br />Like dominoes, Small said, other empty cars from the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway Co. train dropped. <br /> <br />The concussions caused the earth to vibrate, he said. <br /> <br />"Large metal pieces landed and flew in all directions," Small said. "They would have gone right through me." <br /> <br />Small, who has been staying with his son at the Flour Mill Lofts, was taking his daily 3-mile walk along the bank of the river with his son's black Labrador, Brandy. <br /> <br />The train was traveling about 10 mph, Small estimated. <br /> <br />"After it happened, we both just stared at each other," Small said of the dog. "There was not a soul around. It was like 'The Twilight Zone."' <br /> <br />It was one of about 60 BNSF freight trains that usually carry coal and other items through Denver every day, said BNSF's terminal superintendent, James Perdew. <br /> <br />The cause of the accident is under investigation, Perdew said. <br /> <br />The train company does not have a damage estimate, he said. <br /> <br />Small and his dog searched for victims and then ran back to his son's apartment, where he called police. <br /> <br />"It's not every day that a train drops right in front of you," Small said. "My heart is still racing." <br /> <br />A second train derailed in Grand County on Thursday night, trapping two rail employees for a while, said detention officer Jason Nichols of the Sheriff's Department. <br /> <br />One of the trapped men was reportedly uninjured. The other's condition was unknown, he said. <br /> <br />Nichols said a rockslide in a remote area about 2 miles north of Tabernash, along the Fraser River, caused the Union Pacific coal train to derail about 9:15 p.m. <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
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