IDAHO NATIONAL
Idaho
Transportation |
A self-powered crane took an unexpected bath in Benewah Lake recently when the trestle on which it was traveling collapsed. “I heard the whistle in time to move off and all of a sudden, the train was gone,” one of the fishermen reported. “My first thought was ‘did the wind blow that sucker off?’ " Crane operator John Taco Martinez and fellow worker Mark Harpole were not injured when the tracks dropped into the water. “After I realized what was going on, it was a smooth ride down,” Martinez told a reporter for the St. Maries Gazette Record. “We didn’t have much of a choice; we had to ride it down.” The crane landed on its side in relatively shallow water, with the exit door remaining above the surface. Both workers climbed out of the crane and onto the trestle. The incident occurred about 10 miles west of St. Maries at 12:48 on April 24. He said the crane’s 120-gallon fuel tank contained about 30 gallons of diesel, but there was no report that any escaped the tank and contaminated the lake, said a representative of the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality. The partially submerged crane was removed from the lake
by barge-mounted cranes. Repairs to the trestle could take several months,
Sullivan estimated. In the interim, trucks will transport the lumber
between the company’s two sites. Published 5-5-06 |