NTSB report finds truck on tracks after warning
Camera on train shows gates down in deadly collision
The report on the Jan. 31 crash said the probable cause of the accident has not been determined. But it offered some new details about the crash, which killed a trash collector and injured several other people.
The chartered Amtrak train was carrying dozens of GOP lawmakers to an annual retreat in West Virginia.
The NTSB report said data taken from a track image camera on the train showed that as the crossing came into view, the gates were down and the garbage truck was on the crossing.
Preliminary information from the train’s onboard recorder indicates that the train was traveling about 61 mph when the engineer applied emergency braking.
The train struck the left rear of the truck, causing the truck to rotate counterclockwise and then collide with a railroad signal bungalow next to the tracks.
The two trash collectors were ejected from the truck. One of them, Christopher Foley, 28, was killed, while the other remains hospitalized. The truck’s driver received minor injuries.
Three Amtrak crew members and three train passengers received minor injuries, including Rep. Jason Lewis, R-Minn., who was taken to a hospital to be checked for a concussion.
Three people who live near the railroad crossing said the safety gates, which are designed to come down to warn drivers of approaching trains, were known to frequently malfunction.
The NTSB report said investigators “continue to examine issues related to the highway-railroad grade crossing.”
A spokesman for the NTSB said that as of Wednesday, investigators had not yet interviewed the truck driver.
The Albemarle County Police Department had received reports about the safety gates malfunctioning dating back to 2010. Six people called police between 2010 and 2016 to report problems with the crossing gates, including complaints that they were staying down for an extended period of time, and that one gate was up while the other was down, according to a response to a Freedom of Information Act request.
CSX Corp. owns the stretch of track where the crash occurred but leases it to Buckingham Branch Railroad, which is responsible for maintaining it.
Boyd McCauley, founder of the trash company, Time Disposal, identified the truck driver as Dana Naylor Jr. He said Naylor, 30, is a longtime employee who was familiar with the railroad crossing, which is located at an intersection at the top of a hill where visibility is limited.
“Dana had been running that same route for seven years. He crossed that track once a week,” McCauley said.
Online court records show that Naylor has a history of motor vehicle infractions dating back to 2008, including driving an uninspected vehicle, failing to display license plates, having an improper exhaust system and failing to wear a seat belt. The infractions appear to be related to maintenance and inspection of his vehicles, not moving violations.
He was also convicted of possession of marijuana in 2011 and resisting arrest in 2009.
McCauley did not immediately return calls Wednesday seeking comment on Naylor’s driving record or the NTSB’s preliminary report.
In an earlier interview, McCauley said Naylor is devastated by the loss of Foley, who died despite life-saving efforts by several congressmen on the train who are also doctors.
“Survivor’s remorse,” McCauley said.