Watch CBS News

29 injured when commuter train derails on Long Island, official says

NEW HYDE PARK, N.Y.  A Long Island Rail Road train derailed near New Hyde Park around 9:10 p.m. Saturday, CBS New York reports

A Huntington-bound train derailed a half mile east of the New Hyde Park station. The passenger train collided with an LIRR work train.

The first three cars of the 12-car passenger train derailed and the work train caught fire, a LIRR spokesman told the Associated Press. 

Government issues safety alert on train railroad signals 02:47

There were approximately 600 passengers on board. Twenty-nine people were injured, Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano said in a press conference. 

Dozens of firefighters and police officers were at the scene of the derailment, about 20 miles east of Manhattan.

The second and third cars were hanging off the track, which is slightly elevated. The cars were mangled and the doors appeared to have been pried open.

Passenger Ray Martel, 41, of West Hempstead, was heading home after spending the evening in New York City visiting friends.

Martel, who was in the first car, said when the train stuck something “everyone gasped.”

“We knew we hit something but we didn’t know how bad it was,” he said.

Passenger Craig Heller of East Meadow told Newsday he was in the second car which “all of a sudden just started shaking.”

“A chair in the car I was in went flying and the door crashed open,” Heller said. “Fortunately, then it stopped and we were tilted in our car, but everybody in our car was fine. It felt like we could actually completely tip over, obviously, while it was happening. That was a fear.”

Train service in the area was suspended in both directions indefinitely.

The Federal Railroad Administration said it had investigators en route to the scene.

The derailment happened just over a week after a commuter train crashed into the terminal in Hoboken, New Jersey, killing one person and injuring more than 100. Federal investigators are still trying to determine the cause.

Long Island Rail Road trains have been involved in 72 accidents since Jan. 1, 2011, according to federal data, including 3 collisions and 15 derailments on tracks used for passenger service.

The accidents caused the deaths of five people in vehicles that wound up on the tracks, 30 injuries and nearly $10 million in damage to train tracks and equipment. 

“Thankfully, early reports indicate that injuries are minimal,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a statement. Cuomo said about 600 people were on the train when it crashed.

“Staff from the MTA and the LIRR are on the scene and will work around the clock to determine the cause of this derailment and restore service as quickly as possible,” Cuomo said.

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue