Fascinating Horror - On the 6th of July, 2013, in the early hours of the morning, a freight train which had been parked for the night on the railway tracks near Nantes in Quebec started to move.
Slowly at first, and then with greater and greater speed, it
began to roll downhill towards the nearby town of Lac-Mégantic.
The train consisted of 72 tanker cars, each one bearing a
full load of crude oil.
With nobody on board and nothing to stop it, the train barrelled towards the sleeping town, which was about to experience one of the worst rail disasters in Canadian history.
Background
Lac-Mégantic was founded in 1884, and even during its very
first years the railway was a crucial part of its economy.
The town was situated at the point where two different
railroads – that of the Canadian Pacific Railway company and the Quebec Central
Railway company – met on their route across the continent… and it was
considered so significant a hub that Canada’s first Prime Minister even visited
at one point as part of a campaign to champion the railways.
In the town’s more recent history, the railway is no less
significant.
Trains form a crucial part of the town’s economy, delivering
raw materials for several factories, and carrying away the finished products
they manufacture – products like furniture and particle board.
The town is also a hub for tourists, with people visiting
from all over the country to enjoy the vast and beautiful Lake Mégantic, from
which the town gets its name.
The Accident
On the 5th of July, 2013, a freight train was making its way
east across Canada, travelling from New Town in North Dakota to an oil refinery
in Saint John, New Brunswick.
The train consisted of 72 tanker cars loaded with 113,000
litres (or 30,000 gallons) of crude oil, as well as not one but five
locomotives to provide the power necessary to drive it.
As it neared Lac-Mégantic, night was falling.
The lone engineer on board – a man named Tom Harding – was
scheduled to leave the train on the main track at Nantes overnight so that it
could be picked up by another driver in the morning to continue its journey.
He might have been glad to leave the train, as it had been
experiencing technical difficulties for much of its route.
The lead locomotive was spewing excessive amounts of smoke.
Before leaving the train Mr Harding had to make it secure.
To do this he applied multiple handbrakes on all five
locomotives, and checked that they were sufficient to hold the train in place –
an important step given that it was parked on a very slight downward gradient.
This done, he contacted his employers, the Montreal, Maine
and Atlantic Railway.
He told them about the excess smoke, and after some
discussion they agreed to leave the train where it was and deal with the
problem in the morning.
Mr Harding left the site in a taxi, bound for the hotel in
Lac-Mégantic where he usually stayed when working this route.
Before the next morning could come a small fire broke out in
the smokestack of one of the locomotives.
Although the cause was not known at the time, it was later
revealed that the fire and the excess smoke which had come before it were down
to a bad repair job that had been done on an engine several months before – a
repair which had now finally failed.
Passing motorists on a nearby road saw the flames and called
the fire service.
They arrived on scene and, following standard protocol,
switched off the locomotives to prevent fuel circulating to the flames they
were trying to extinguish.
With this done, the flames were promptly put out.
Firefighters then called the MMA Railway, and advised them
of what had happened and what had been done.
MMA maintenance workers came out to the train and confirmed
that it was safe, before everyone left the scene.
It was around a quarter past midnight on the 6th of July.
The train was stationary on the tracks, the locomotives
switched off, and the fire extinguished.
To a casual observer, it would have seemed that nothing at
all was wrong.
But, in actual fact, all was not well.
The train was being held in place by two types of brake – a
handbrake which physically secured a brake shoe against the wheels, and an air
brake which used air pressure to do the same thing.
Now that the locomotives were switched off, the compressors
which provided the air for the air brakes were also switched off.
Air was leaking from the system and not being replaced.
Slowly, the pressure in the air brake system dropped until
it was no longer sufficient to hold the train in place.
Several minutes after the last firefighter left the scene,
the massive train began rolling downhill.
With nobody at the controls, the train gathered more and
more speed with each passing minute.
It blasted through level crossings, leaving drivers puzzled
by the speed of the train, as well as the lack of engine noise or lights.
By the time it reached the town of Lac-Mégantic it was
travelling at around 105 kilometres (or 65 miles) per hour – far too fast for
the section of track which passed through the town.
It approached at breakneck speed with no lights and no
warning except for the sparks and smoke which spewed from its wheels.
Near a level crossing close to the town’s main street, the
train derailed.
Tanker cars smashed into one another in a chaotic jumble,
spilling volatile crude oil.
This formed a burning river which swept through the downtown
area in a manner that some bystanders likened to a tsunami of fire.
Those who saw it coming tried to flee, with some even
leaping from windows to make their escape… but in many cases the flames simply
moved too quickly to be outrun.
Buildings were swamped, streets engulfed in fire, and sewers
and basements flooded with burning oil.
One of the worst-hit locations in Lac-Mégantic was a popular
bar known as the Musi-Café.
The building, which was still packed with patrons at the
time of the disaster, was completely consumed.
Only those who fled immediately on hearing the crash
survived.
Some patrons, mistaking the sound for an earthquake, took
shelter within the building rather than running.
They did not survive.
The emergency response began almost immediately, with more
than 100 firefighters flocking to the scene.
They were presented with an incredibly complex task.
Rarely had any of them faced a fire that had quite so much
fuel at its disposal.
And, being liquid, this fuel spread in unexpected ways,
flowing down into drains and erupting into basements or cellars several streets
away.
Despite a confusing and dangerous situation, rescuers
co-ordinated extremely well.
Firefighters worked to block off drains and create
firebreaks, then used foam to tackle the flames.
Water was used to douse tanker cars that had not yet
exploded.
Among the people working across the vast area of the
disaster was Mr Harding – the engineer who had left the train on the tracks in
the first instance.
He had seen the flames consuming the downtown area from his
hotel, and had called his bosses to tell them what was going on.
It had come as a terrible surprise to him to find out that
it was his train that had rolled down into the town and caused this devastation.
Leaving his hotel, he joined a small group consisting of firefighters
and workers from local industries, who used heavy loading equipment from the
factories where they worked to move the few tankers and locomotives that were
still on the rails away from the fire, preventing further devastation.
Meanwhile the local hospital was put on high alert… but
ultimately received very few casualties.
Few of the injuries caused by the disaster had been in any
way survivable.
All in all 47 people were killed in the disaster, which also
destroyed more than thirty buildings, displaced thousands of residents and
hundreds of businesses, and all but levelled a huge part of Lac-Mégantic.
The Aftermath
The flames took two days to extinguish.
Once they were finally out, an investigation was launched.
It was found that many factors had contributed to the
disaster.
Prominently Mr Harding, the train engineer, had failed to
apply enough handbrakes before leaving the train.
He had used seven handbrakes, but should have applied more
than twice that number for a train of that size and weight.
He had made another error by testing the brakes while both
the handbrakes and the airbrakes were applied.
He should have switched off the air brakes for the test, to
ensure that the train could be held in place by the action of the handbrakes
alone.
Three men, including Mr Harding and two other railway
employees, were put on trial, charged with 47 counts of criminal negligence
causing death.
While there was considerable public anger about the
disaster, most of it was not directed at these individuals, but instead was saved
for the MMA Railway.
It emerged that the company had provided minimal training,
had ignored complaints about the safety of its track, had used outdated
tankers, cut corners on repairs, and in many other ways demonstrated an
extremely relaxed attitude towards safety over the course of many years.
Given these factors, all three men were eventually acquitted.
Legal proceedings began against the MMA Railway, which
subsequently announced bankruptcy and laid off most of its employees.
Outside of the MMA Railway, many changes in procedure were
brought in by railways across Canada and the US.
Stricter rules to cover how trains must be left if left
overnight, how they must be maintained, and to determine which trains and which
routes can accommodate dangerous or flammable substances.
Most railway companies now require at least two engineers on
a train carrying dangerous materials, and insist on a stringent series of
safeguards whenever a train of this type is left overnight on the tracks.
To this day the damage to Lac-Mégantic is still visible.
A huge part of the town has been lost, including the beloved
Musi-café bar, the local library, and several other civic buildings.
Some have been moved and reinstated elsewhere.
Contaminated with crude oil, the downtown area that was the
epicentre of the disaster remains relatively desolate.
Trains continue to run on the tracks which brought the disaster to town… although, at the request of residents, for at least one day most years – the 6th of July – no trains run through town, as a mark of respect for a community mourning its dead. (The Lac-Mégantic Disaster)
SOURCES:
- "Lac-Megantic: The Runaway Train That Destroyed a Town" by Jessica Murphy, published by BBC News, January 2018. Link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-42548824
- "Railway Investigation Report R13D0054" published by The Transportation Safety Board of Canada, August 2018. Link: https://www.tsb.gc.ca/eng/rapports-reports/rail/2013/R13D0054/R13D0054.html
- "Canada Runaway Train: Lac-Megantic Death Toll Rises" published by BBC News, July 2013. Link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-23218614
- "Lac Megantic Explosion: a Chronicle of the Tragedy" published by The Star, July 2013. Link: https://www.thestar.com/news/insight/2013/07/12/lac_megantic_explosion_a_chronicle_of_the_tragedy.html
- "Last Moments of Lac-Mégantic: Survivors Share Their Stories" by Justin Giovannetti, published by The Globe and Mail, November 2013. Link: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/lac-megantic-musi-cafe/article15656116/
- "The Frantic Moment When the Train Driver in Lac-Megantic Raced to the Scene" by Andy Blatchford, published by The Windsor Star, July 2013. Link: https://web.archive.org/web/20130718053713/https://windsorstar.com/news/national/Witnesses+describe+train+driver+raced+disaster+scene/8653801/story.html
- "Lac-Megantic Marks Seventh Anniversary of 2013 Rail Disaster With Memorial Site" by Stephanie Marin, published by CTV News, July 2020. Link: https://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/lac-megantic-marks-seventh-anniversary-of-2013-rail-disaster-with-memorial-site-1.5011999
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