6/28/2009 6:05 PM
Email this article Print this article  

Trains, tragedy oten visit Westmoreland County town

Associated Press

This article has been read 247 times.

SUTERSVILLE, Pa. (AP) — It was a typical Mother’s Day in the Chenault house in this tiny western Pennsylvania town.

Julie, Rachael and Dustin cooked breakfast. Rachael and Julie had “dippy eggs” and Dustin scrambled. They joked about the big old pan Rachael used to fry one egg at a time. Dustin was flying high after attending his girlfriend’s prom the night before.

Down the block, at June Bugs bar, grandma Jean Goodman was helping with the Mother’s Day breakfast rush.

At about 1:15 p.m., a CSX train hauled through town, as it does at least six times a day.




Rate This Story:
1 the lowest - 5 the highest
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Current rating:
Dustin, planning to hang out with friends, was just walking across the tracks. Minutes later, he was a statistic: the fourth person hit and the second killed in the past 18 months by a train going through Sutersville.

This blue-collar western Pennsylvania town about 20 miles southeast of Pittsburgh has fewer than 600 people. It is sandwiched between the Youghiogheny River and a major CSX train line. The tracks run through the center, between the main streets — 2nd and 3rd — barely 15 feet from homes and shops, many long abandoned.

“There have been people getting killed on the tracks for as long as I can remember,” John Lyons, mayor and lifelong Sutersville resident, said.

For decades, the town and CSX have had an ongoing debate about who should pay the $175,000 for rails and lights at the town’s three crossings — only one of which has a fully functional rail that goes down when a train comes through. Lyons says the town doesn’t have the money. CSX won’t pay.

“We make an effort to be good neighbors to the railroad. They could also try to be good neighbors,” Lyons said. “They don’t seem to care.”

CSX did not respond to several phone calls.

For the past 18 months, with residents and police saying the accidents have become more frequent, especially when compared to other towns that sit on tracks, the incidents have consumed Sutersville.

In West Newton, for example, another rail town of 2,870 people just four miles away, the last train-related death was in October 2007. There, residents point out, all the crossings have rails and lights.

In all of Pennsylvania in 2008, 47 people were killed by trains. Across the country, 880.

So for little Sutersville, the numbers are high.

© 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Home



0 comments
All comments will be reviewed by administrators and posted to their respective articles within 24 hours. Comments deemed inappropriate will not be posted.
Subject:
Body:
Poster:
captcha b8d698cc89f4456ab4f9ad58edf3dcae
Enter text seen above:








Marketplace
Classifieds
Jobs
Cars
Real Estate
Rate card
Photo Store
News
Local
Obituaries
Police Beat
Business
State
Nation
World
Communities
Washington County
Greene County
South Hills
Sports
Headlines
Blogs
Columns
Opinion
Editorials
Letters
Submit Letter
Blogs
Columns
Forum
Lifestyle
Entertainment
Engagements
Weddings
Anniversaries
Births
Calendar
Announcement Forms
Service
Subscribe
Temp. stop delivery
About Us
Contact Us
Terms of Service
Facebook | Twitter
Newsletter
This page is best viewed using Firefox.
Spreadfirefox Affiliate Button
© 2009 Observer Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.