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Rail News Home Safety

10/11/2016



Rail News: Safety

LIRR resumes full service after derailment


Gov. Cuomo visits the site of this weekend's Long Island Rail Road derailment
Photo – Cuomo's Flickr account

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MTA Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) yesterday afternoon resumed full rush-hour service following an Oct. 8 derailment.

The incident occurred when a maintenance car and a 12-car passenger train sideswiped one another, which caused three of the passenger cars to derail, local media reported. Thirty-three people were injured, according to The New York Times.

The derailment occurred east of the New Hyde Park Station in Nassau County, N.Y.

The work vehicle appeared to be "violating the space" of the passenger train, but officials weren't sure why, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo told reporters at a Sunday morning briefing.

After the derailment, crews used a crane to re-rail the train to remove it from the site. Crews repaired the damaged track and conducted safety inspections and tests, according to a press release issued by Cuomo's office.

Yesterday morning, workers restored one of LIRR's two Main Line tracks, which allowed the railroad to resume limited, peak-direction train service.