Two
men charged in Sherwood Park train derailment
Published: January 12th 2009
Source:
By Richard Warnica, edmontonjournal.com
EDMONTON — Two men have been charged in connection with a train derailment in
Sherwood Park that sent two engines and 13 railcars spilling off the tracks in
July 2008.
Edward Arthur Vallee and Ian Douglas Gillie, both 26, are accused of stealing an
11,000-kg dirt packer, driving it across a farmer’s field and parking it in the
middle of the CN tracks just off the Highway 16 overpass just east of Cloverbar
Road.
An 85-car train barrelled into the packer at 77 km/h on July 10, 2008 just
before 3 a.m. It knocked the machine off the tracks and skidded over the
overpass before both engines and 13 cars tumbled over just north of the highway.
Both engineers travelling with the train escaped without serious injury.
Vallee and Gillie have both been charged with mischief endangering life,
mischief over $5,000 and theft over $5,000.
Vallee, who police say is from Sherwood Park, has been released on bail. He is
scheduled to appear in provincial court on Feb. 3.
Gillie, from Edmonton, has yet to be arrested. Sherwood Park RCMP have issued
warrants for his arrest.
Police believe alcohol played a role in the incident.
Engineer recounts night his train derailed
Published: January 12th 2009
Source:
By Elise Stolte , edmontonjournal.com
Originally published on Sept. 12, 2008.
EDMONTON - David Hackner ducked behind the instrument panel in his CN Rail
engine as his 85-car train hurtled toward a huge piece of road equipment parked
on the tracks.
"You don't really think about dying, you just think about all that train behind
you," he said Thursday of the accident on the Yellowhead overpass last July.
"You think of all that just piling on top of you."
RCMP haven't found the person who stole the 11,000-kilogram dirt-packer, drove
it across a farmer's field and parked it on the tracks 150 metres from a highway
overpass.
The train hit the packer at 77 km/h. Hackner still finds it incredible that he
and the conductor both walked away. He said he can sleep again now and no longer
catches himself staring blankly into space. But he'll never be the same.
"I just want to walk off the property in one piece," said Hackner, 52, a 21-year
veteran who is now just waiting for retirement.
His conductor that night was Trevor Wilcox, 21, who had been employed with CN
Rail for a year and a half. Before that he worked at McDonald's and Blockbuster.
Wilcox was used to the slower trains that chugged through his hometown of
Terrace, B.C., at 40 km/h; he volunteered for the run between Edmonton and
Wainwright because staff was short.
The trip to Wainwright on July 9 was uneventful. They passed a few hours
sleeping in the Wainwright bunkhouse, then took over from the crew on Train 107.
They left at 9:30 p.m. "It was a nice, fast train," Hackner said, one of the new
ones.
Trains often travel 100 km/h along straight rail lines of the Canadian Prairies.
Wilcox seemed nervous about the speed, Hackner said, and asked the engineer
about collisions he'd had in his career. Hackner told him he hadn't hit anything
larger than a few animals, small rocks and a few cars at crossings. No one was
ever seriously injured.
Shortly after midnight on July 10, they reached the signal at Bremner, which
told them: Clear to medium -- the track is free, but slow to 40 km/h before the
next signal.
Hackner steamed ahead, full speed, at about 100 km/h.
"Then I don't know what happened. For some reason I just decided to knock it
down 10 miles. I don't know why. I still haven't figured that one out."
Hackner figures if he hadn't, they might both be dead.
The headlights illuminated the machine on the tracks when they were about 30
car-lengths away. Hackner said he thought at first it might have been a
cardboard box. "We were looking straight at the bridge," Wilcox said.
Both grabbed their emergency brakes.
"I just sat there," said Wilcox. "I didn't know what to do."
The impact threw him forward against the dash. He fell back in his seat, grabbed
both armrests and put his feet on the dash as the train plowed ahead.
"I think the conductor yelled out, 'The overpass,' " said Hackner. "I just said,
'Oh oh.' I really didn't think we were going to hit the bridge straight on."
Wilcox could see gravel flying past the windows as the locomotive left the
rails. Somehow, it stayed upright.
It continued straight over the 90-metre highway overpass and made it at least a
100 metres further onto solid ground before coming to a stop. The secondary
locomotive fell on its side and a dozen container cars derailed, but none fell
onto traffic on the highway below.
Only the bridge caught fire.
Wilcox and Hackner escaped down the broken stairs and out of the locomotive.
Hackner got on his cellphone with Edmonton's rail traffic control.
Wilcox grabbed a radio but said he was so flustered, he couldn't remember which
channel traffic control was on. He called 911, but hung up after he realized he
couldn't give a location.
Then he grabbed an armful of flares and ran across a farmer's field to set them
on the highway and the train track.
Then he stopped, took a deep breath on the side of the highway, and called his
parents. "I was in shock. I think I'm really, really lucky. If we went over the
overpass, we would have been killed."
Wilcox needed physiotherapy for whiplash, had trouble sleeping for weeks and was
off work for a month and a half. Since he came back two weeks ago, he's only had
shifts driving slower trains.
Hackner wouldn't stay away more than a week. "I didn't want to come bck to work
and feel like I was victimized. I just wanted to come back and do my job."
Const. Wally Henry with the Strathcona County RCMP said investigators are still
trying to find those responsible but haven't had new tips for awhile.
Crime Stoppers plans to tape a re-enactment this weekend and police hope that
will convince people who know something to come forward.
The fact they both survived is "unbelievable," Hackner said. "For the locomotive
to do the tight-rope walk across that bridge and stay on the track, that's
almost like one in a million."
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