Montana
Related: About this forumTrain carrying beer derails in western Montana
By Mitchell McCluskey, CNN
Updated 8:29 AM EDT, Mon April 3, 2023
A train sits derailed near Quinn's Hot Springs Resort west of St. Regis, Montana, on Sunday.
Ben Allan Smith/The Missoulian/AP
CNN A freight train derailed in Paradise, Montana, on Sunday, according to the Sanders County Sheriffs Office. ... Approximately 25 cars were derailed around 9:20 a.m. near Highway 135, dispatcher Bill Brown told CNN.
The train derailed on the banks of the Clark Fork River, approximately 200 miles northwest of Bozeman. Images from the scene show some of the cars in the river.
A group of fishermen claim a bottle of beer from the derailed railcar.
Ben Allan Smith/The Missoulian/AP
The sheriffs office did not provide information on what the train was hauling. However, Brown said there did not appear to be any hazardous materials onboard.
The Sanders County Fire Department was on the scene responding to the derailment, Brown said. The office of emergency management and the Montana Rail Link have also been notified of the incident. ... There have been no injuries reported. The cause of the derailment is under investigation.
Hiawatha Pete
(1,945 posts)I was fortunate enough to ride that route as a passenger back in 2003:
From my website: https://northamericabyrail.info/usa-west/the-montana-daylight/
Folks in the boat pictured in the article don't seem to be complaining about the derailment...
Response to Hiawatha Pete (Reply #1)
sl8 This message was self-deleted by its author.
CrispyQ
(38,025 posts)I'm not enough of a beer connoisseur to ID the other brand.
sl8
(16,223 posts)IjustDontlikeRepugs
(724 posts)Blue Moon is my favorite beer. Im ashamed it is made by Coors.
moose65
(3,284 posts)I'll bet Kavanaugh was on the scene in record time
Hugh_Lebowski
(33,643 posts)One side is river, the other a forested hillside ... how do you get the equipment needed into that spot I wonder?
mahatmakanejeeves
(60,568 posts)They got them out.
https://www.google.com/search?q=fuselage+derail+montana
Sat Jul 5, 2014: Train derailment west of Missoula closes river, spills Aircraft bodies
Sat Jul 5, 2014: Boeing fuselages in Montana river after train derails
Sat Jul 5, 2014: "This picture illustrates an absolute bungle in safety management at the BNSF. W. Buffet should ..."
The incident occurred on the Montana Rail Link, not the BNSF. MRL Owner Dennis Washington is surely concerned, but Warren Buffett, who owns the BNSF, not so much, other than about the delays to his trains that run over the MRL along the way.
Montana Rail Link (reporting mark MRL) is a privately held Class II railroad in the United States. MRL, which operates on trackage originally built by the Northern Pacific Railway, is a unit of the Washington Companies, and is headquartered in Missoula, Montana.
The railroad runs between Huntley, Montana and Spokane, Washington, largely within Montana, and the main line passes through the towns of Missoula, Livingston, Bozeman, Billings, and Helena. Montana Rail Link connects with the BNSF on both ends and also in Garrison, Montana. The railroad has over 900 miles (1,400 km) of track, serves 100 stations, and employs approximately 1,000 personnel. The main yard is in Laurel, Montana, while a smaller yard is in Missoula.
{snip}
6 hours ago {9 a.m., Missoula time} By DILLON KATO of the Missoulian
{snip}
Nineteen train cars derailed about 10 miles west of Alberton at 4 p.m. Thursday. Thirteen cars were carrying aircraft components, soybeans and denatured alcohol, and half a dozen were empty.
This Sunday, July 6, 2014 photo by Jerry Compton provided by Wiley E. Waters Whitewater Rafting shows part of a freight train that derailed near Alberton in western Montana, sending three cars carrying aircraft components down a steep embankment and into the Clark Fork River on Thursday, July 3. Removing three Boeing 737 fuselages could take until Tuesday. Montana Rail Link spokeswoman Lynda Frost said on Sunday a crew of 50 with eight heavy equipment machines is working in conjunction on the steep bank. (AP Photo/Wiley E. Waters Whitewater Rafting, Jerry Compton)
The MRL splits up going west from Missoula at DeSmet. One line goes up and over a range via Ravalli. The other follows the Clark Fork River. The two lines come back together at Paradise.
You said:
OSHA, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, does not inspect railroad tracks. The Federal regulatory agency that has jurisdiction for rail safety is the Federal Railroad Administration. Its track inspectors go out to see what sort of work the MRL is doing. To view the Track & Rail and Infrastructure Integrity Compliance Manual online, go to FRA Track Division.
There are a few pictures of trains at Alberton on the 'Net. Here's one from April:
Leasers: Nine of Montana Rail Link's SD45-2s are earning their keep this spring by being leased to BNSF Railway. Most of the engines, like MRL No. 329 and its sister seen here at Alberton, Montana, are sticking close to home and moving BNSF traffic over MRL, but three of the engines are allowed to go offline.
Photographer: Justin Franz
Railroad: Montana Rail Link
Locomotive: EMD SD45-2
Location: Alberton, Montana, USA
Locomotive #: MRL 329
Train ID: H-KCKSPO1-13A
Photo Date: April 20, 2014
Best wishes.
Hugh_Lebowski
(33,643 posts)If it had been 1/2 a mile back or so guessing it'd be a lot easier as you'd have a large staging area. This spot looks real narrow.
mahatmakanejeeves
(60,568 posts)And good morning.
Hugh_Lebowski
(33,643 posts)along the edge. Not sure if that matters as I don't know how these things are done but seems like it might complicate it.
Morning!
mahatmakanejeeves
(60,568 posts)That's a pretty part of the world, if you don't mind it getting forty below during the winter.
Hugh_Lebowski
(33,643 posts)But there's similar spots in the Sierra's, and they don't get nearly that cold
mahatmakanejeeves
(60,568 posts)» Milwaukee Road (more..)
» GE EF-4 (more..) » Unknown
» St. Regis, Montana, USA (more..)
» August 09, 1973
Locomotive No./Train ID Photographer
» MILW E76 (more..)
» Unknown » Steve Patterson (more..)
» Contact Photographer · Photographer Profile
Remarks & Notes
MILW Little Joe E76 powers up and leads three SD40-2s (3009, 3018, 3000) eastward out of St. Regis, Montana across the namesake St. Regis River on August 9, 1973. Following the river was the Northern Pacific.
Let's do that again, this time, all-electric.
https://www.railpictures.net/photo/316183/
https://www.railpictures.net/showimage.php?id=459723&key=7247245
» GE EF-4 (more..) » MP 1716 Montana Div.
» St.Regis, Montana, USA (more..)
» June 15, 1973
Locomotive No./Train ID Photographer
» MILW E-75 (more..)
» Eastbound (more..) » Bill Hooper (more..)
» Contact Photographer · Photographer Profile
Remarks & Notes
Eastbound double Joe with dead boxcabs in tow crosses the Clark Fork River and BN's former NP Main. The BN station is visible on the right
Hiawatha Pete
(1,945 posts)My own pic from rp.net...
Thx for posting the in-action pics.