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Due to statewide safety efforts, Illinois no longer leads the nation in the
number of railroad grade crossing accidents. But the situation is still serious.
135 grade crossing accidents occurred last year, resulting in unnecessary death and
injuries.
What is being done?
The railroads of Illinois, in cooperation with state agencies and other safety
organizations, are promoting OPERATION LIFESAVER a proven positive, year the
campaign to reduce the number of S-grade crossing accidents.
Operation Lifesaver stresses the three E's of highway safety:
- EDUCATION to stimulate awareness of crossing dangers.
- ENFORCEMENT of existing traffic laws governing railroad grade crossings.
- ENGINEERING for improved warning signs and signals.
Do your part - Look! Listen! Live!
The fact that 70% of the accidents are occurring at crossings with active
warning devices indicates that more than crossing devices are required to stop
the needless loss of life, injuries and property damage.
1. Support Operation Lifesaver programs in your community.
2. Be a good driver. Obey crossing safety rules and signs. Show you care
about your own safety, your passengers' safety.
Signs for survival
Make this a basic driving rule: Watch for the round, advance railroad
warning sign whenever you drive. At the familiar yellow and black -RR- sign,
slow down - you are approaching a railroad crossing. Look both ways and listen
because you may have to stop. Remember, anytime is train time.
- A railroad marks the crossbuck sign crossing itself. A sign below the
crossbuck tells if there is more than one track.
- Some crossings also have gates and flashing lights. Stop before the
gates lower across your side of the road.
- Flashing red lights are used with crossbuck signs at many railroad
crossings. When they flash, stop just as you would at any flashing red
traffic signal.
Don't stop once you start
If you start over a crossing and the flashing lights or gates start down, don't
freeze; keep going. The warning signals allow enough time to drive over the
crossing before the train arrives. No gate on the other side will block your
lane. If you stop and try to back up, you may stall.
Watch the second track
You are waiting for a train to pass. Be patient; darting out, just as the
caboose passes, may put you into the path of another train on a second track.
Wait until the lights stop flashing and the train has completely cleared to
ensure good visibility.
Abandon your car if it stalls on the tracks
If your car is boxed in or stalls on a track, get everyone out immediately and
safely away from the car. Post a lookout in each direction of the track and, if
a train is approaching, try to flag a warning to it. If no train is in sight,
have someone try to push the car clear or start it. No car is worth a human
life.
'Boxed In' can be fatal
Gates won't trap you, but a halt in highway traffic how might. Never drive onto
a railroad track until you are certain you can drive all the way across. Be sure
the traffic ahead of you will not stop and box you in on a track.
Be extra alert at night or in bad weather
Never overdrive your headlights. The consequences of ignoring this rule are more
deadly when you approach a railroad crossing. You may suddenly see a train when
you are going too fast and are too close to stop. Consider the horror.
Incredibly, about one of every four crossing accidents involves a motor vehicle
being driven into a train. Watch for the advance warning sign - slow down and be
prepared to stop when you see it.
Familiarity breeds contempt
Maybe you go back and forth over the same track every day, perhaps several times
a day. You have lived here all your life and take train times for granted. But
railroads operate around-the-clock and change schedules. You will be just as
dead, hit by an unexpected train.
For the motorist
"Lifesaver" signs imply a warning - and if their presence will implant the image
of a 100-car train traveling 60 mph and requiring a mile of braking distance to
stop, the grade crossing problem would indeed be minimized. In fact, if
motorists obeyed all existing traffic laws, there would be virtually no grade
crossing accidents.
And for the professional
Professional drivers have an even greater responsibility at grade crossings.
Those operating school buses, or buses carrying passengers for hire must
consider the lives of their passengers and stop where the law requires them to
check for trains before proceeding.
Placarded trucks carrying hazardous or flammable materials; must also stop and
check for approaching trains. Drivers of all these vehicles have more than their
own lives at stake; and they are also professionals who can set the pace for
grade crossing safety for the rest of the driving public!
Common causes of crossing accidents
- The driver sees the train coming, but misjudges speed and distance.
- The motorist races the train to the crossing, and is either struck by
the trains or runs into the side of it.
- As train clears a crossing, the motorist immediately starts across the
tracks without looking for other trains, and either strikes or is struck by
a train running on an adjacent track.
A motorist becomes "too familiar" with a crossing and uses no caution
whatsoever when coming to the crossing.
- The driver fails to observe and obey the advance railroad warning sign
and other crossing warning signs and signals.
- The driver has too much alcohol in his system and is, therefore,
incapable of properly driving a motor vehicle.
- The motorist, driving at night or in a location which is not familiar,
travels at a speed too great in such circumstances and because he cannot
stop in time, drives in front of, or into the side of, a train.
- The motorist overdrives his headlights or fails to properly conform his
driving speed to night or prevailing weather conditions.
- With air conditioning and radio running, a motorist cannot hear
approaching train, and he fails to look.
- Driving along and carrying on conversation with passengers in his
vehicle, the driver's attention is primarily on the conversation, and he
ignores signs and whistle warnings.
- Windows of the motorist's car are frosted up or dirty.
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