By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter
CHEHALIS – Centralia police are working with BNSF to figure what sort of train struck a 21-year-old woman earlier today and how it happened.
The Centralia woman lived, but was in no shape to be interviewed before being whisked away by a helicopter to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, according to police.
Nearby citizens heard her calls for help and came out to investigate, Centralia Police Department Sgt. Dave Clary said. The train was already gone, and it’s likely the crew didn’t know what had occurred, he said.
Police and firefighters were called about 12:30 p.m. to the area about 300 yards north of the Sixth Street viaduct near Delaware Avenue, which runs adjacent to the tracks, according to authorities.
Clary said she was hit while crossing the tracks and her only injury was to her foot, although it was significant.
“How her foot was injured and not the rest of her seems to be like a Christmas miracle,” Clary said.
Medics with Riverside Fire Authority responded and summoned an Airlift Northwest helicopter to pick her up at the scene, according to Fire Capt. Scott Weinert.
The fire department described her injuries as traumatic, but she was conscious and alert when she departed, they said.
Clary said the public needs to heed their warnings, and sometimes tickets, about walking over railroad tracks in areas where there is no designated crossing.
“People need to take these trains extremely seriously, and know they will not win with a train,” he said. “This young woman’s foot, I can tell you, is never going to be the same.
“It was not worth not going up and around the Sixth Street viaduct.”
Tags: By Sharyn L. Decker, news reporter
Those damn trains keep sneaking up on people
WTH is wrong with people?