Whitehorse Daily Star

Most of the injured suffered ‘scratches and bruises’

The vintage rail company that hauls hundreds of thousands of tourists every year along the route of the historic Klondike Gold Rush has suspended operations while it investigates the derailment that injured nine people.

By AP on July 24, 2014

ANCHORAGE – The vintage rail company that hauls hundreds of thousands of tourists every year along the route of the historic Klondike Gold Rush has suspended operations while it investigates the derailment that injured nine people.

The train derailed as it reached the White Pass Summit.

The National Transportation Safety Board was informed of the accident, but it wasn’t immediately clear if rail safety personnel would investigate, state officials said.

Medical workers went to the scene, where responders outnumbered the injured, said Jeremy Zidek, a spokesman for the state Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management.

Initial reports had as many as 12 people injured.

Power was restored to the train, and it brought everyone back to Skagway, about 100 miles northwest of Juneau, railway officials said.

Some of the injured already had been released from a Skagway clinic before 6 p.m., approximately three hours after the derailment, said Buckwheat Donahue, tourism director for the municipality.

Coast Guard planes and other air ambulances were on standby in case they were needed to transport the injured, but that didn’t appear to be necessary, Donahue said.

Most of the people on the train suffered “scratches and bruises,’’ he said.

The train is a popular tourist attraction, taking passengers on a three-hour, 40-mile roundtrip tour out of Skagway. It climbs to 2,865 feet at White Pass Summit before it turns around and heads back, said railway president John Finlayson.

He said the White Pass Summit trip is the railway’s most popular, offering passengers the views they were promised on an Alaska vacation: mountains, glaciers, waterfalls and even glimpses of the trails used by miners hoping to make it rich in the 1898 Gold Rush.

Donahue said four large cruise ships were in town Wednesday, swelling Skagway’s population of 927 by 10,000 people.

There were an additional thousand independent visitors in town, he said.

Up to seven train trips were cancelled after the derailment, leaving many people with about four unscheduled hours.

“We’re doing our very best to try to gather information as quickly as possible,’’ Finlayson said.

By Mark Thiessen
The Associated Press

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