
First Responder Calls Train Derailment ‘Shocking’ And ‘Surreal’
Listen
As clean up begins, firefighters are describing what it was like to respond to Monday’s Amtrak derailment in Pierce County, Washington.
Shortly after 7:30 a.m. during the morning commute, an Amtrak Cascades train derailed. Rail cars were on the freeway and hanging from a bridge.
West Pierce Fire and Rescue Battalion Chief Jay Sumerlin said the scene was shocking and surreal even though first responders prepare for just this kind of disaster.
“Something like this where train cars are precariously dangling over a freeway, that’s something that we do tabletops on and everybody comes in usually going ‘oh that’s not going to happen,’” Sumerlin said. “Well, here we are. That’s exactly what happened so I’m glad we train to that level, worst case, cause today that was one of those days.”
Responding firefighters used the jaws of life and ladders to rescue passengers from the train cars. They even searched the car that was dangling from the bridge. There were also motorists in cars and semis below who were part of the wreckage.
9(MDAyOTk4OTc0MDEyNzcxNDIzMTZjM2E3Zg004))
Related Stories:

US Marshals Service says that Travis Decker is dead
The U.S. Marshals Service has said that Travis Decker, the man wanted in connection with the deaths of his three daughters, is dead.

Displaced in the fields: Domestic farmworkers and the cost of immigration shifts in the Pacific Northwest
As immigration policies shift nationwide, local farmworkers in the Northwest say they are losing hours and losing ground. Some fear being replaced by foreign workers on visas, while others worry about detention.

Walla Walla Heroes Memorial Run to raise scholarship money
5K organizers in Walla Walla, Washington, hope runners and walkers will overwhelm paths with their support. The run will raise scholarship money in honor of three healthcare workers who recently passed away.












