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WSWS : News
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The New South Wales rail systema disaster waiting to
happen
By Barry Jobson
14 August 1999
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Two recent incidents have highlighted that conditions exist
for a major rail disaster in New South Wales, Australia's most
populous state. Two weeks ago a coal train and a passenger train
narrowly avoided a head-on collision when they stopped within
300 metres of each other.
The southbound coal train was on the same section of the track
as a northbound passenger train with 20 passengers on board travelling
towards Maitland, in the Hunter Valley, some 180 kilometres north-west
of Sydney. A preliminary investigation indicated that the Freight
Corp train had gone through a red signal.
On July 9, six carriages of an eight-car passenger train travelling
from Sydney on the northern line derailed when it was diverted
into a siding after pulling out of the busy suburban Hornsby station,
where scores of passengers had alighted.
The carriages became tangled in power lines when they leapt
the tracks and ploughed into a gravel embankment. Luckily, the
carriages remained upright. Emergency workers freed the 66 badly
shaken passengers and three were taken to hospital with back and
neck injuries.
One passenger said he had been violently tossed forward from
his seat. There was a frightening jolt, then a second one.
My biggest fear was what would happen if the power lines come
down, he said. Another said the train had entered the siding
at normal speed. I then felt like something was pulling
me backwards and forwards. My greatest fear was that a fire might
have broken out.
The latest incidents follow a series of derailments over the
past 12 months, all of which could have resulted in a heavy loss
of life.
In May 1998, a goods locomotive left the tracks near Moss Vale,
about 140 km south of Sydney, costing the life of the driver and
his assistant. The train struck a concrete column near a bridge
following an earth slide caused by heavy rain.
The following month a passenger train careered off the track,
broke through a wire fence and ended up across a roadway in the
densely populated inner Sydney suburb of Concord.
The train was travelling between 110 and 120 km/h on a section
of track that was subject to 25 km/h speed restrictions. It was
only because the accident happened in the early hours of the morning
that deaths did not occur. The train was not carrying passengers
and the road was deserted.
In October last year another derailment occurred at Beresfield,
on the Hunter Valley line (not far from the site of the latest
near head-on collision) when a locomotive pulling 72 wagons loaded
with coal went through stop signals, ran into the back of a stationary
coal train and ploughed into the station.
The driver and observer, as well as a passenger standing on
the platform, were seriously injured. If the accident had occurred
a little later in the morning, the platform would have been crowded
with passengers.
In all these cases, the State Rail Authority (SRA), aided by
the media, attempted to shift the blame onto the train crews.
In the case of the freight train derailments last year at Moss
Vale and Beresfield, the Authority was forced to drop its accusations
of driver error after an inquiry showed that cuts
to manning levels and shift changes had created a high level of
driver fatigue.
Following the recent derailment at Hornsby the SRA and media
initially blamed infrastructure failure or faulty
track. An SRA spokesman said: Our reports are that some
part of the track signal has failed. However within two
days, the SRA announced that a troubleshooter would
investigate if the driver had missed a stoplight. The Sydney Sun-Herald
newspaper carried a two-inch high front-page headline: Did
he run a red light.
Such claims were also bandied around in the media at the time
of last year's Concord incident. A recently released statement
by the SRA on the findings of an internal inquiry into the Concord
derailment said that both track and signals were in good order
and cited human error and excessive speed as the accident's
primary cause.
Despite affirming that the track and signals were in good order,
the inquiry recommended the installation of a mechanism to automatically
slow trains going through caution signals and called for more
warning signs near low speed zones on stretches of track
similar to that at Concord.
Another surprising statement accompanied the report. Transport
Minister Carl Scully announced that the driver was free to resume
his duties. Could this extraordinary decision, that is completely
out of line with the findings, suggest that the government wishes
to get the matter off the agenda, with as little fuss as possible,
fearing that other issues might come to light?
Evidence has emerged over the past few weeks that budget cuts
by the current state Labor Party government and its predecessors,
both Labor and Liberal, have played no small part in creating
potentially lethal conditions in the rail network.
A document circulated by the Rail Access Corporation (RAC),
the body responsible for the maintenance of the track, reveals
that the rail authorities have been forced to impose speed restrictions
on 100 sections of track on metropolitan and regional lines.
In some areas the restrictions require trains to travel at
no more than 10 km/h. The document claims that restrictions have
existed for over 12 months on many major lines, including stretches
between Goulburn and the country's capital, Canberra; on the Lithgow
to Orange line; and on the Port Kembla freight line, which carries
trains heavily-laden with iron ore, steel or coal.
The report says the restrictions are necessary because of suspected
faults or damage to the track and dozens of sections
of track, ranging from 100 metres to one more than one kilometre
are badly affected.
The last state budget slashed capital grants to the Rail Access
Corporation from $64 million to just $7 million. At the same time
the government cut its maintenance grant to the SRA by $13 million,
from $123 million to $110 million.
Given these damning facts, it is little wonder the NSW government
has still not carried out the wide-ranging safety-audit
of the rail system that it promised after coming to office in
1995. Such an investigation would surely have revealed the dangerous
state of affairs, which requires the expenditure of millions of
dollars to rectify.
See Also:
Government
cuts prepare rail disaster
Three derailments in Australia
[30 July 1998]
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