
Published: January 20th 2009
Source: Sun-Times News Group Wire Chicago
Printer friendly version
Engineer, Conductor Uninjured
CHICAGO (STNG) ―The engineer and the conductor of a freight train
were not injured when 14 cars and the locomotive they were inside
derailed late Monday on the West Side.
At 11:40 p.m., 14 cars and the locomotive of Canadian Pacific
freight train No. 242-19 derailed near the area of Cicero and Grand
avenues, according to CP spokesman Mike Lovecchio.
Police News Affairs Officer David Banks said the derailment occurred
in the 4600 block of West Grand Avenue.
Lovecchio said there were no leaks of any kind and the train --
which had left the CP rail yard in Bensenville and was bound for
Toronto in Ontario, Canada -- was not hauling any hazardous
materials.
The only people aboard the train were the conductor and the
engineer, who were both in the locomotive. They were not injured, he
said.
An unidentified number of cars in the 2,500-foot long train were
left standing and No. 242-19 is considered a "general merchandise''
train that may have been carrying grains in addition to the general
cargo, according to Lovecchio.
The train was traveling on tracks owned by the Belt Railway, which
will lead the recovery effort in up-righting the trains as well as
the investigation.
"The recovery crews are already on the scene and getting work
underway," according to Lovecchio, who said at 3:15 a.m. that is was
unknown how fast the train was traveling or why it derailed.
"I can tell you that certainly when Canadian Pacific investigates a
derailment we don't rule anything out and [extreme] weather can be a
factor, but in this specific case the investigation will be led by
the Belt Railway,'' Lovecchio said.
The train was not carrying passengers or hazardous materials and no
injuries were reported, Grand Central District police confirmed.
Grand Avenue in both directions was to be closed down to traffic
"for a while" due to the accident, according to David Banks about
2:15 a.m.

