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Montana
Related: About this forum'This is our community': Montana farm communities mobilize to help train wreck victims
People work at the scene of an Amtrak train derailment on Saturday, Sept. 25, 2021, in north-central Montana, after multiple people were injured when the train that runs between Seattle and Chicago derailed.
CHESTER, Mont. Trevor Fossen was running late for a wedding Saturday afternoon when he turned onto a dusty, gravel road in rural Montana as a westbound train approached the crossing in front of him.
The train never made it to the crossing. The next thing Fossen saw was a wall of dust fill the sky.
I started looking at that, wondering what it was, and then I saw the train had tipped over and derailed, said Fossen, a 29-year-old farmer.
It was an Amtrak Empire Builder en route from Chicago to Seattle that had derailed, killing three people and injuring dozens of others. Investigators still dont know what caused the crash.
CHESTER, Mont. Trevor Fossen was running late for a wedding Saturday afternoon when he turned onto a dusty, gravel road in rural Montana as a westbound train approached the crossing in front of him.
The train never made it to the crossing. The next thing Fossen saw was a wall of dust fill the sky.
I started looking at that, wondering what it was, and then I saw the train had tipped over and derailed, said Fossen, a 29-year-old farmer.
It was an Amtrak Empire Builder en route from Chicago to Seattle that had derailed, killing three people and injuring dozens of others. Investigators still dont know what caused the crash.
https://www.greatfallstribune.com/story/news/2021/09/28/train-derailment-montana-communities-mobilize-help-amtrak-crash-victims/5904570001/
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'This is our community': Montana farm communities mobilize to help train wreck victims (Original Post)
Ptah
Sep 2021
OP
Champp
(2,114 posts)1. Is there a good reason for raising the ladder on the left with the support legs up?
Whatever. Good on the neighbors. The same in every town I've ever lived in. People being good people.
It happens. A lot.
I wonder what it might be?
Ptah
(33,569 posts)6. It's a folding ladder
Thunderbeast
(3,570 posts)4. A Gorrilla Ladder has spread legs at both ends
when configured as an extension ladder.
When used as a step ladder, the spread is on both sides.
Thank you for your answer.
mahatmakanejeeves
(62,103 posts)7. Here's the same article, from the Billings Gazette:
EDITOR'S PICK | TOPICAL | ALERT | FEATURED
In rural Montana, it was all-hands-on-deck after derailment
AMY BETH HANSON Associated Press 18 hrs ago
CHESTER Trevor Fossen was running late for a wedding Saturday afternoon when he turned onto a dusty, gravel road in rural Montana as a westbound train approached the crossing in front of him.
The train never made it to the crossing. The next thing Fossen saw was a wall of dust fill the sky.
I started looking at that, wondering what it was, and then I saw the train had tipped over and derailed, said Fossen, a 29-year-old farmer.
It was an Amtrak Empire Builder en route from Chicago to Seattle that had derailed, killing three people and injuring dozens of others. Investigators still don't know what caused the crash.
Fossen called 911, setting off a chain reaction of help from residents in the nearby towns of Joplin and Chester as people jumped into action to get people off the train, care for injured passengers and those who were stunned and had suffered bumps, bruises and other less serious injuries.
The regional response of volunteer emergency responders, firefighters, law enforcement, medical providers and regular citizens all working together to help those whose trip was so suddenly and violently interrupted embodied the spirit of a rural part of Montana's Hi-Line region near the Canadian border.
{snip}
In rural Montana, it was all-hands-on-deck after derailment
AMY BETH HANSON Associated Press 18 hrs ago
CHESTER Trevor Fossen was running late for a wedding Saturday afternoon when he turned onto a dusty, gravel road in rural Montana as a westbound train approached the crossing in front of him.
The train never made it to the crossing. The next thing Fossen saw was a wall of dust fill the sky.
I started looking at that, wondering what it was, and then I saw the train had tipped over and derailed, said Fossen, a 29-year-old farmer.
It was an Amtrak Empire Builder en route from Chicago to Seattle that had derailed, killing three people and injuring dozens of others. Investigators still don't know what caused the crash.
Fossen called 911, setting off a chain reaction of help from residents in the nearby towns of Joplin and Chester as people jumped into action to get people off the train, care for injured passengers and those who were stunned and had suffered bumps, bruises and other less serious injuries.
The regional response of volunteer emergency responders, firefighters, law enforcement, medical providers and regular citizens all working together to help those whose trip was so suddenly and violently interrupted embodied the spirit of a rural part of Montana's Hi-Line region near the Canadian border.
{snip}