What the[censored] is wrong with people? If you don’t want to hear the [censored] horn, then move away from the tracks. I knew that some people were stupid, but not this stupid. The horn’s are used for safety. If I was an engineer I would blow the horn more often. Asking an engineer not to blow the horn is like asking a cow to stop mooing: It makes no sense
She’s an idiot!
When she approaches you, suggest that she contact the railroad, for a cab ride.
Let her see what the crews see at the crossings these self centered NIMBY’s want silenced.
I live in a valley, and at night theres a certain reassuring feeling I get when I hear the NS ans CSX horns echo off the ridges.
Jimmy
I Understand What you are saying, But have you noticed, If that happens and they get the railroad to stop blowing there horns through town they have at least 50 more safety rules for that area. Plus if someone gets into an accident they sue the RR!!! That’s so stupid, I totaly agree with Allan
Dustin
Not quite that simple. Municipalities do not have the power to unilaterally impose whistle bans. If they wish a ban they must first go through consultations with teh public, the road authority (if the crossing is over a road under provincial jurisdiction such as a main highway) and all relevant organizations such as emergency services. Then they must ensure that the crossing protection meets Transport Canada’s guidelines for a whistle ban. After that they apply to the railway for a ban, and the railway arranges for Transport Canada to inspect the relevant crossings and approve a ban in that location.
In certain circumstances either the railway or TC may deny the request on safety grounds, even if the crossing meets the spec - in that case they have to explain their reasons. Furthermore, there is no requirement for the railway to pay for upgrading crossing protection to meet a municipality’s demand for a whistle ban.
See http://www.tc.gc.ca/railway/guideline/eliminatingwhistling.htm for all the details. This has changed recently - the last time I had looked this up the municipality had to negotiate with Transport Canada, now they can go directly to the railway.
I can see her point. Having to listen to train horns at night can be bothersom. But still, the safety concern is still out their. How many tracks are at the grade crossing?
From reading this thread it doesn’t seem to me that it has been made crystal clear that all of this horn blowing is a result of an FRA decision. So don’t go blaming the RR’s.
As an engineer, I can see both sides of the arguement.
You can compare a road crossing to a lock, in that the lock is only there to keep the honest people out. At a road crossing, I don’t care how much horn blowing you do, there seems like there is always someone that just can’t wait to get across.
We had a town that over the years went from limited blowing (none between 9pm to 6am), to no blowing, to blowing all of the time, to no blowing. The crossing was protected at various times by crossbucks, then crossbucks with flashing lights, then a combination of crossbucks with flashing lights and gates, then all gated. Unfortunatly we had a volunteer fireman responding to a call ignore the flashing lights and horn blowing. He is no longer of this world. After the town went all gated they received an OK for a quite zone. There hasn’t been and accident since. I haven’t even had a “close call” there.
Knock on wood, I haven’t hit an automobile yet on a road crossing. I have had “close calls” too numerous to mention and all at crossings where the horn was being blown.!!!
As an engineer what do I think of all of this ranting and raving about horn blowing? It doesn’t make any difference. Just like at a road crossing, there are those that just can’t wait, even for as little as ten seconds. Those are the people that are going to get themselves and others killed for no more reason than to be a few minutes farther up the road.
I like the quite zones. I can understand where the lady is coming from. It’s that much less noise that I have to deal with. I wish we had whistles instead of horns. I wish all of our horns could be graduated, instead of an on/off impersonnal BLAAAT blast.
Qu
As a locomotive engineer this lady can shove it. Let her be the one that takes a life at a non-blow crossing. There are still idiots that are getting hit at crossings where I blow my whistle so you can imagine what will happen at no-blow crossings. I still will never get out of my mind the unfortunate souls who I have hit and they have died. This is something I have to live with the rest of my life. For me I will keep on sounding off loud and clear for I do not wi***o get scared again. Unless you have been in my situation before you have no idea what it is like for someone to kill themselves with my train. I fear every crossing I go across because I know it will happen again because someone, someday will not stop, look and listen.
Blow or no-blow you still have to contend with the idiots and those that don’t pay attention. The idiots don’t care about the flashing red lights or the sound or the ten million candle power head and ditch lights. Nothing you or I can do will stop them.
Now maybe if the police would have the time and manpower to start arresting these idiots, maybe the rest of the world would start paying attention. Maybe they need to go back to school to learn that red means STOP!
Maury,
You talk like you have hit quite a few people at road crossings in your time. Have you ever had someone just lay down in front of you to let you be the instrument in their suicide? If so did your horn make them get back up? Mine didn’t. Am I sorry for the boy and his family? Yes, I am. Do I let it keep me awake at night or allow it to give me nightmares? No, I don’t! Why? Because there wasn’t a thing that I could do about it!
Heh hehe…
After the last of my parents passed away a few years ago, I had trouble selling the house I grew up in for a decent price (local economy)…So, rather than make 2 house payments, I moved into my childhood homestead.
I’m a non foaming rail fan, Although I like trains …I’m not one of those zealots who will r take rails side of every debate because they think doing so makes them cool or appear 'patriotic to the cause"…I see that rail is fully capable of being in the “wrong” on as many issues as it is on the right.
Train Horns are MUCH louder than they were in the late 1960’s…MUCH louder.
Maybe that is good for crossing safety, but it ALSO means that this lady IS NOT AUTOMATICALLY in the wrong, just because she chooses to oppose the choo choo.
She may very well have some basis of legitimacy to her claim.
My house is (roughly) 1/2 mile from the nearest grade crossing, and esperially if the guy running the train becomes an idiot and REALLY LAYS ON THE HORN…it gets very annoying, and some of the engineers sound like they are playing with the horn for the first time in their lives, …like some little kid or something.
Heh, if I lived right next to the track in those instances, I’d be pretty sore too.
I think the whistles are louder, too, Gates, but as far as becoming an idiot and laying on the whistle, that could be me. I lay into that whistle and that’s my only defense against those idiots on the highway. Oh yeah, I do have the bell going, too.
Wish you’d got that railroad job, you could have gotten another perspective.
Two observations.
1 - so many of the people going around the gates - with the engineeers blowing the whistle at them - have children in the car…
2 - the new GEVO - has a lower pitched whistle. At least the one we heard did. It doesn’t seem quite as shrill - still loud - but not so high pitched. Anyone else notice?
…From a distance to the crossing of a half mile or so it makes a great bit of difference which way the wind is blowing to how loud the sound of the horn is out that far…We live about 3/4th of a mile away and wind direction can really influence the loudness. Train frequency is another item for most routes and surely people can stand the sound of a whistle occasionally knowing the reason it is blowing. I simply can’t imagine not blowing a warning sound at a RR crossing as a train approaches.
I still question why you think the horn is your defense? As I have said before, simply blowing the horn is not going to stop ANYTHING! It may startle some people to attention that were just tooling along with their head up their butt, but, those sound waves won’t slow the determined “crossing crasher” one bit.
Why must some engineers show their lack of musical intelligence playing “Wake the Dead” on their horns in the middle of the night with not a soul (ghoul) around?
Then, what are you going to do with the idiots that run into your train AFTER you have occupied the crossing. Don’t laugh, it happens every year.
There are more than two sides to this problem. The answer is not whether we blow for crossings or not. Again, I’ve seen “quite Zones” that are infinitly safer than those that I blow for.
The answer to the problem is in not being so afflicted with “Tunnel Vison” that you cannot see the other persons point of view!
The answer has to be in the education of drivers and the enforcement of laws relating to the running of road crossings while lights and gates are activated. We’ve probably all heard it since grade school…
STOP…LOOK…LISTEN
It’s like this, Big Jim. I don’t disagree with what you say about quiet zones but we don’t have any on my territory. As for my only defense, I stand by that, you can’t stop a determined gate crasher or a moron who thinks it can’t happen to them but if I’ve blown the whistle, that’s all I can do and I’ve done my part. I see that as my role in crossing safety and if the public chooses to ignore the whistle, they do so at their own peril.
We have the same problem in emergency services. When we are running lights and siren, people either ignore you or do really stupid things. My “favorite” is coming up behind two vehicles on the highway - the car in front pulls over (as they should) and the one behind them passes…
Much like with the railroads, if we have an accident involving an emergency vehicle running in emergency mode, the first question is “was the siren activated?” As long as there is the danger of some rushed yuppie entering the crossing, the horns need to blow, even if the driver can’t hear them because he’s got his favorite tunes turned up so loud. As was said, it’s the only defense the engineer has…
I fully appreciate your side as well… I’m sure you see some stupid stunts, and know some co-workers who will carry emotional scars from peoples carelessness at crossings.
And, I have zero empathy for people who try and cheat the crossing
I always enjoy seeing a crossing go into action, it means I get to stop and do some train watching. I’ve even been known to slow down in hopes that an approaching train will activate the crossing in time for me to stop.
I just chose to play devils advocate on this thread, as I have seen this as well as similar threads turn into serial bashing threads with (potentially) inaccurate assumptions based upon "why did they buy a house next to the tracks if they didn’t
wanna hear train horns? etc.
because there are a few variables that have changed from the rail side of the equation, over the past several decades.
I’ll tell ya what I’ve noticed that surprises me, I like to take lots of walks, and tend to walk towards the old Wabash, with the earlier mentioned grade crossing being west of me.
I walk north towards the track, and OFTEN my first indication of an eastbound freight will be to see it rolling past me, obviously having already gone through the nearby crossing without blowing it’s horn.
Not a complaint, per se…just that when I know a train is coming, I’ll usually walk to a vantage with a good view. But when they don’t blow first, and I see it just roll on by without giving any chance to prepare, it makes me wonder “how’d this happen”?
I like those horns on the ex Conrail units that give a high pitch squeel before they sound the true pitch. Those definately get my attention as they are wierd and menacing sounding.
Not to sound too much like a callous old man, but during my 20 years running trains, and 9 fatal incidents, I developed a rather cynical attitude towards the people that all the posters above refer to.
I long ago stopped being nervous or afraid of having an accident. I certainly never wanted one, but I stopped worrying about when it would happen again. I long ago stopped getting the adrenaline rush due to a ‘near-miss’, or even after an incident. It became just another part of the job. Sure, the aftermath of an incident are usually messy, and then there is the paperwork, and the possibility of having to appear in court when the moron’s survivors try to sue. But as I said, it became just another (unpleasant) part of the job.
It’s a bad enough part of the job that even 20 years after my first incident, I can still vividly remember the sights, sounds, and smells associated with the event.
I actually have a certain amount of anger towards these imbiciles that get themselves killed! Why should I have to be haunted by recurring visions and memories years after an event? I did nothing to deserve that sentence. Perhaps train crews should begin to counter-sue the survivors, seeking compensation for “suffering and anxiety” caused by the actions of the deceased. If they can sue us (the railroad) for imagined wrongs, then we shoud have the right to also sue.
And in my day we did not have “grief counsellors” or any of that stuff. We just picked up the pieces, hosed off the front of the unit, and went on our way. Nowdays the crews get up to three days off for “recovery”! Sheesh! I wish I had got three days off every time I hit someone!
My suggestion to the current train crew/engineers out there: Realize that there is nothing you can do about what happens. If you are following all the rules and laws, then your conscience should be clear.
I just found out recently that in Austin ,Texas… Stupid, rich, treehugging people bought land and built half million dollar home near the Austin Texas Central Rail Line.
After only 2 weeks after the building of the houses the people had a city ordinace for NO!! train horns within a certain area. This started when The Railroads 2-8-2 #786 was wyeing for the Twilight Flyer around 10 pm and had to blow its wistle to cross a Very Crowded Crosing. But this upseted Mr. Treehuger so he got City Ordinace.
What’s gona happen is that a car gona get hit or kill someone and the Railline is gona get sued and end up paying lots of valuble money that could be used for the Organization
STUPID STUPID People[soapbox]
And its their own fault for buying land near a railline
they should know better
Another thing… the American Truck Driver is sick of the Stupid DOT laws…
THE WORST IS NO ENGINE BRAKE
Stupid people!!!
This is AMERICA!!!
if you dont like it get out[soapbox]