A 'death Train' Is Haunting South Florida
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The article discusses the safety concerns surrounding Brightline, a high-speed train service in South Florida, dubbed the 'Death Train' due to several fatal incidents, sparking debate on the role of technology in transportation safety.
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Oct 22, 2025 at 8:27 AM EDT
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Why do Floridians think they can drive around activated railroad barriers and cross the tracks fast enough to beat oncoming trains?
Seriously, it seems like we have a news story about a train hitting a car every few days, and in every case I've seen, Florida (wo)man drives around the descended barrier.
https://www.railwaygazette.com/infrastructure/japan-addresse...
I suppose that the difference may be that, at higher speeds, the train is further away when the gates come down, and people don't realize how soon it's going to get there, and so decide to go around the gates. (And, I suppose, when there is an accident, it's more likely to be fatal because of the speed.) If you meant anything other than those two options, though, I'm not sure why you think that "grade crossings are inherently unsafe at those speeds".
t. Professional Driver
Of course, it's not free to retrofit all the existing gates, and drivers would find new ways to put themselves in danger.
At least the incident with the elderly couple reads as if they were aware of the track in general but were believing they were out of danger once they left the track with the freight train, not realizing they just drove the car from the one onto the other track.
If the line was a single track for so long, people living nearby might have developed a sort of "muscle memory" - if a train aporoaches, just walk aside - and because of this easy way to evade trains might not have remembered the line as "safe" enough that it could be crossed away from the crossings. However, with two tracks, this way to evade trains can become deadly.
Coming from Europe, I think the combination of at-grade + no fencing + high-speed trains + multiple tracks is at least unusual. I've seen some unfenced, at-grade tracks in Switzerland that crossed right through a meadow, but as far as I remember those were all single-track.