Found this on the web today, thought it was an interesting read…
"California Train-Related Injuries and Deaths on the Rise
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The number of people killed or wounded by trains statewide climbed 15 percent over the last three years largely because of population growth, new development and increased rail traffic, experts say.
California led the nation in railroad injuries and deaths in the last decade with a combined total of 1,200. Last year alone, 85 people were killed and 50 wounded. Nationwide these types of accidents are decreasing.
“We’ve tried for some time to get a handle on this problem,” said Warren Flatau, a spokesman for the Federal Railroad Administration.
Many victims were struck by trains while crawling, jumping, thrill-seeking or playing practical jokes on the tracks, according to the FRA. Others got their shoes or feet caught on the tracks while trying to escape the path of oncoming trains.
“We’ve had instances of adults with headphones jogging along the tracks. We’ve had people walking their dogs,” said David Solow, president of Southern California Metrolink. “It’s not a single demographic group.”
The increase is partly driven by urban development, experts said. Consumers are purchasing homes near passenger stations to avoid long commutes while transit agencies are building light-rail lines through densely populated neighborhoods.
As a result, railroad traffic is growing. In 2002, trains traveled about 30 million miles in California, up from 21 million miles a decade earlier. Metrolink, meanwhile, runs 142 trains in Southern California each day compared to 26 when the service began in 1992.
“We’ve got more trains than we’ve ever had before in the history of the state,” said Eric Jacobson, president of Operation Lifesaver, an industry- and government-funded train safety organization. "You’ve got this huge amount of traffic, and you’ve got this huge population