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BART train derails, catches fire in East Bay - several passengers injured

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Jan 1, 2024, 6:30:04 PMJan 1
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A BART train caught fire after it derailed near Orinda Station on Monday
morning, injuring several people and leading to the evacuation of all cars
and a partial service shutdown.

The train had just left Orinda for Lafayette shortly after 9 a.m. when “it
appears the front two cars derailed,” BART spokesperson Jim Allison told
reporters at the Orinda Station. Two cars reportedly caught fire, he said.
Passengers were evacuated, and Orinda and Layafette fire crews arrived at
the scene and extinguished the blaze.

Several passengers were transported to local hospitals with minor
injuries, Allison said, although the total number was unclear. The rest of
the passengers walked back to Orinda Station. It was uncertain how many
people were on the train.

Service was discontinued on the Yellow Line between Rockridge and Walnut
Creek in both directions. BART officials said the Orinda Station would be
closed for the rest of the day and recommended passengers seek alternative
means of transportation.

Some passengers were still at the station two hours after the incident,
wrapped in gray blankets distributed by fire crews.

Among them was Enrique Gonzalez, 53, who said he was in the car that
caught fire.

Gonzalez said he was asleep while riding in a car with about a dozen
others when the operator announced she had to get off and “manually switch
something.” After a delay of about 20 minutes, the train started moving,
and he said he heard a “few loud pops” and “saw smoke billowing out in
between cars” — and then saw the fire erupt.

“I was sitting right there at the window and saw the flames shoot up,” he
said.

Video he took at the scene shows flames coming up from under the car and
reaching the top of the train.

Passengers opened the door and “we jumped out,” he said. Late Monday
morning, he was still trying to figure out another way to get home.

While the transit system was carrying fewer passengers than usual on New
Year’s Day, the disruption in service was likely to affect tens of
thousands of people, Allison said. “It’s certainly unfortunate people are
stranded on a holiday like this,” he said.

Officials had not determined when service on the affected line would be
restored, Allison said. Before that can happen, the train must be removed
from the tracks and the rail must be inspected.

By midafternoon, officials were preparing to get a crane to the site to
lift the car, which required closing one of the Caldecott bores eastbound
to get it there and then at least six hours to get the car back on the
track and for service to be restored, Allison said, although it could be
significantly longer.

It was possible that trains might not be running along the affected route
in time for the Tuesday morning commute, he said.

In the meantime, BART officials said, the train operator was drug-tested
and interviewed, per protocol, and would be on administrative leave. In
addition, the California Public Utilities Commission, the designated state
investigative agency, had been at the scene to gather information.

Four hours after the incident, BART announced AC Transit would provide a
bus bridge between the Rockridge and Walnut Creek stations, with stops at
Orinda and Lafayette.

Early indications were that the derailment happened at an interlocking,
the most complicated piece of track, where trains can switch from one
track to another, Allison said.

It was unclear how fast the train was going, but Allison said that based
on what he saw at the scene, the lead car ended up on one track, with the
second car at a 45-degree angle, its wheels 4 to 6 inches off the ground.
The remaining six cars were lined up on the other track.

Normally, interlocking are controlled remotely, but it’s “not unusual” for
train operators to get off and move them manually, Allison said.

There was no initial indication of foul play, and no evidence showed that
the track was damaged before the incident, Allison said. Friction from
metal wheels on rails can create a spark and set debris on fire, he said,
but there was no indication yet of what was burning under the train.

Allison said the fiberglass cover that protects the electrified third rail
appeared to be damaged, and a crane might be needed to remove the cars
from the track.

That last time a BART train derailed was in June 2022 near Concord, when
excessive heat caused the track to misalign.

Passenger Carmen Barrie, 73, of San Leandro said she was riding the train
en route to Concord when the New Year’s Day derailment occurred.

Initially, she said, the train stopped between Orinda and Lafayette for
about 15 minutes. “They said there was an equipment problem,” she said.
The train then “moved forward maybe a foot or two, stopped again, and then
it went backward.”

Then the operator ran through the train but didn’t say anything, ran back
again, and then ultimately pressed the doors open, she said. The
passengers had to jump about 5 feet down to the track to exit the train.
There was no sense that there was an emergency until passengers
disembarked and “people were running from the front of the train saying
there was a fire,” she said.

“We had no word” that was happening, Barrie said. “I didn’t know how bad
it was until I was off the train and then I saw smoke from the train.”

Reach Jill Tucker: jtu...@sfchronicle.com

https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/bart-train-derails-fire-
orinda-lafayette-18583940.php
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