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Coroner Confirms Suicide by Man in Crystal Lake

October 22, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Accident, Crystal Lake, Metra, Suicide, Train, Union Pacific

Coroner Marlene Lantz confirmed today, “It was an apparent suicide.”

She also told me that it was a man.

The Crystal Lake Police Department again directed me to the Union Pacific Railroad and I ended up talking to the same media guy I conversed with Saturday, Mark Davis.

Crystal Lake Police were at the site of the Saturday suicide, but the Department was still directing media calls to the Union Pacific Railroad two days later.

As he quickly read the UP report to himself I heard

  • “north side of the road,”
  • “trespassed sustained fatal injuries” and
  • “relatives being notified.”

And, Davis told me local officials would have to release further details.

So I called Metra and got Meg Reile.

She told me more than anyone else has.

And her source seemed to be the Crystal Lake Police Department.

A woman was stopped on Sands Road looking for something in her bag.

She saw a man get out of a vehicle and walk toward the tracks.

The engineer repeatedly blew the train’s horn.

The man stood by the crossing waiting for the train to come.

He stepped in front of the train.

The woman said he “disappeared.”

The man seems to have been a resident of the south side of Crystal Lake.  Her was was 61 years old.

I’m not releasing the name of the man because I can’t see any purpose it would serve.

That’s a bit more than you could have read about the accident in my Saturday article, where there are more pictures.

Sands Road Metra Suicide Seems Likely

October 20, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Crystal Lake, Death, Metra, Railroad, Railroad Tracks, Sands Road, Suicide, Train, Union Pacific

As I was driving to Fox River Grove in mid-afternoon, a Crystal Lake Police Car was blocking Sands Road at Route 14.

This afternoon about 4 PM Sands Road was blocked at Route 14. A Metra commuter train was blocking the road.

On the way home, I drove from Route 14 to Sands Road via Smitana Raod, the one that cuts off 14 next to Country Gas.

Here’s what I saw:

Coming up the hill to where Sands Road crosses the Union Pacific train tracks one could see men standing around.

Getting closer, here was the view:

The Metra Conductor was talking to a man.

From Sands Road, here is what was visible:

Men in hard hats were present.


“Somebody walked in front of a train,” Metra Spokesman Tom Miller said.

It was the 709 train, which left Chicago at 1:30 Saturday afternoon.

The train was due at the Pingree Road Station at 3:48 in the afternoon. It left Cary five minutes earlier and had just crossed the Route 14 overpass.

A call to the Crystal Lake Police Department was referred to the Union Pacific Railroad.

UP Spokesman Mark Davis, out of Omaha, told me, “I wouldn’t have anything,” saying that local officials would release the information.

“We will provide peer support to the engineer and the train crew, if they need it.”

Crystal Lake’s most memorable “Death by Metra” occurred when Metra Executive Director Phil Pagano walked in front of the last train to Chicago from McHenry in May of 2009.

Given blanket coverage on Chicago electronic media, there were many copycat suicides in the following months.

Tribune Drives Metra Transparency for On-Time Stats

June 22, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Alex Clifford, Commute, Commuter Service, Jeff Ladd, Late, Metra, Northwest Line, On Time, Railroad, Train, Union Pacific

Metra train crosses Walkup Avenue in Crystal Lake on the way to Woodstock...on time.

A bit ago, the Chicago Tribune ran an article showing that Metra, Chicago’s commuter rail operation’s transparency.

Metra  brags about having over 95% of its trains on time, but some lines are well below that level, the Tribune found.

Fortunately, one of the lines is the not the Union Pacific’s Northwest Line, which serves McHenry County.

That may be a legacy of former Metra Board Chairman Jeff Ladd, who focused on the trains being on schedule with laser-like regularity.

Now, the Tribune in reporting that Metra has put the on-time figures on its web site.

Look for further improvements on the web site, because reporters Richard Wronski and Joe Mahr point out that the statistics are still hard to find.

Without the hint in the article, I would not have found them.

Here’s where to look.

Credit Phil Pagano’s replacement Alex Clifford.

I hope I can credit with better presentation in the near future.

Marijuana to Chicago by the Railroad Carload

December 16, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Chicago Heights, Comercializadora De Minerale, Earth Minerals, Marijuana, Mexico, Nicole Kim, Steven Grimes, Train, Union Pacific

Now the Mexican drug lords are bringing marijuana into Chicago by the train.

Whole cars filled with marijuana.

It is really hard to comprehend such a large scale operation.

The U.S. Attorney’s press release is below:

U.S. SEIZES NEARLY 11 TONS OF MARIJUANA ABOARD TRAIN FROM MEXICO;

SEVEN DEFENDANTS ARRESTED AT CHICAGO HEIGHTS STORAGE SITE

Homeland Security/DEA investigation yields largest marijuana seizure ever in Chicago area

CHICAGO — Federal marijuana distribution conspiracy charges were filed today against seven defendants who were arrested yesterday during what law enforcement officials said they believe is the largest seizure ever of marijuana in the Chicago area — conservatively estimated at approximately 21,800 pounds, or nearly 11 tons, packed into six railroad cars from Mexico that arrived at a warehouse in south suburban Chicago Heights earlier this month.

The marijuana is estimated to have a value of approximately $22 million.

The arrests and seizure followed an intensive month-long investigation and were announced today by

  • Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois;
  • Gary J. Hartwig, Special Agent-in-Charge of ICE Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) in Chicago;
  • Jack Riley, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Field Division of the Drug Enforcement Administration;
  • David Murphy, Director of Field Operations for U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in Chicago; and
  • John Beutlich. Director of Operations for CBP Air and Marine, Northern Region.

The Illinois State Police, the Will County Cooperative Police Assistance Team Task Force (WCPAT), and the Union Pacific Railroad Police Department also participated in the investigation, which was conducted under the umbrella of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF).

The defendants are:

  • Carlos Osvaldo Quintero, also known as “Carlos Gomez” and “Miguel Dominguez,” 31;
  • his father, Martin Quintero, 63;
  • Felipe de Jesus Magana-Campos,aka “Padrino,” 47;
  • Eduardo Angel Zalayaran-Ruiz, aka “Other Inge,” 54;
  • Javier Vera, aka “Ducky,” 24; Christian Gonzalez, aka “Chris,” 24; and
  • Miguel Cordova, aka “Mike,” 20.

All seven were charged with conspiracy to possess and distribute marijuana in a criminal complaint filed today in U.S. District Court. They appeared this morning before U.S. Magistrate Judge Arlander Keys and remain in federal custody pending detention and preliminary hearings, which were scheduled for 2:30 p.m. next Tuesday.

“This historic drug seizure represents law enforcement partnership and cooperation at their best,” said Mr. Hartwig.

“HSI and DEA agents, together with our state and local partners, removed nearly 11 tons of marijuana intended for our communities. ICE will continue identifying and dismantling criminal organizations that smuggle drugs across our borders and into our communities.”

Mr. Riley, of the DEA, said:

“The estimated $22 million dollars worth of marijuana seized in this joint investigation translates to a significant blow to the availability of marijuana in the region, as well as a denial of illicit proceeds back to those responsible for this shipment.”

According to a 74-page affidavit by an HSI special agent, on Nov. 17, CBP officers in Eagle Pass, Tex., discovered that a Union Pacific train bound for Chicago Heights was carrying approximately 21,800 pounds of suspected marijuana.

CBP officers observed a number of large bundled packages, referred to as “super sacks,” in six cars on the train. A CBP canine alerted officers to the presence of narcotics in the train cars near several of the super sacks. CBP officers then opened a super sack and observed 13 cubic bundles, which were encrusted in a thick layer of fine red masonry pigment dust. CBP officers broke open several of these cubic bundles and observed a green leafy substance, which field tested positive for the presence of marijuana. In total, CBP officers observed that approximately 109 super sacks in the train cars contained cubic bundles comprised of a green leafy substance. Officers weighed 13 of the cubic bundles from one super sack and determined that they weighed approximately 200 pounds.

The bill of lading associated with these cars stated that they contained 58 super sacks in each train car, or a total of approximately 340 super sacks.

The shipping documents stated that the super sacks contained packages listed as “TITANIUM PIGMENTS OR.”

The documents further stated that the train cars were loaded and sent by a company called Comercializadora De Minerale, located in Jalisco, Mexico, and were being imported by a company called Earth Minerals Corp., in Rockdale, just south of Joliet.

CBP officers contacted HSI special agents for further investigation.

The HSI agents then placed the suspected marijuana back into the rail cars and sealed them.

The rail cars were then placed back into the normal course of commerce, and with the railroad’s cooperation, HSI and DEA agents surveilled the train cars as they traveled to a storage warehouse in the 1200 block of S. State Road, in Chicago Heights, with rail access.

One defendant, identified as Carlos Osvaldo Quintero, allegedly spoke to a Union Pacific employee on multiple occasions to coordinate the delivery of the train cars to the warehouse.

A shot from Channel Five of the box cars before unloading.

From Dec. 6 through 10, the rail cars were unloaded by individuals who used forklifts to move large bundled packages containing marijuana from inside the cars to a storage facility located approximately 50 yards from the initial warehouse.

On several occasions on Nov. 17 and 18, CBP officers spoke with a customs broker who works in Eagle Pass, Tex.

The broker stated that he had been hired by Earth Minerals, and that a man identifying himself as “Miguel Dominguez” had called him multiple times on Nov. 17 to inquire about the whereabouts and estimated arrival date for the rail cars.

Further investigation yielded no public records of any businesses named Chicago Earth Minerals Corp. or Earth Minerals Corp. in Illinois.

On Dec. 1, agents arranged for the delivery of a test train car, believed to be carrying no marijuana, to the Chicago Heights warehouse premises. The gate to the premises was locked and the test rail car was parked outside overnight.

The next morning, agents observed an individual identified as “Carlos Gomez” and three unidentified men arrive at the premises. Gomez and the others were observed pushing the test car inside of the warehouse premises, using a mechanical device. Later that day, agents observed Gomez and the others use a forklift to move cargo from the test car onto pallets. Using aerial surveillance, agents further observed the pallets being loaded onto a semi-tractor trailer, with a flatbed.

On Dec. 6, agents caused the six interdicted rail cars to be delivered to train tracks adjoining the Chicago heights warehouse. Agents observed several individuals arrive at the site and watched as the individuals moved one of the rail cars inside of the warehouse premises, using a mechanical device.

Throughout last week, HSI and DEA agents, using court-authorized video recording inside the facility and aerial surveillance, observed individuals unloading the large super sacks from the rail cars, and specifically observed the following pattern of activity:

  • approximately four individuals used forklifts to unload super sacks from one of the rail cars that was parked inside of the site;
  • the individuals loaded the majority of the super sacks from the rail cars onto a flatbed semi-truck.  Once the flatbed was filled with super sacks, the truck was driven approximately 50 yards to an a smaller storage facility located just to the west; and
  • the individuals then used a forklift to unload the super sacks from the flatbed, and moved them inside of the warehouse where they were stored until yesterday.  Between Dec. 7-10, the process was repeated of unloading the super sacks from the six rail cars and moving them to the warehouse.

Agents maintained constant surveillance and did not observe any marijuana being removed from the storage facility. Between Dec. 6 and 15, agents used court-authorized wiretaps to intercept numerous telephone conversations in which Carlos Osvaldo Quintero and others allegedly discussed unloading, transporting and distributing the marijuana.

The marijuana distribution conspiracy carries a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in prison and a maximum of life imprisonment and a $4 million fine. If convicted, the Court must determine a reasonable sentence to impose under the advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Steven Grimes, Nicole Kim and Erika Csicsila.

A complaint contains only charges and is not evidence of guilt. The defendants are presumed innocent and are entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

Route 47 Detour for Railroad Grade Crossing Widening Next Weekend

October 06, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Detour, Huntley, Railroad Crossing, Railroad Grade Crossing, Railroad Tracks, Route 47, Union Pacific

The detour route.

People who take Route 47 into McHenry County are going to have problems getting home as early as they usually do on Friday night.

And getting to work on Monday morning will be a hassle, too.

There certainly will be a need to allow more time to get to the Tollway that morning.

The Route 47 railroad grade crossing at night.

The railroad grade crossing is being re-configured and that means a detour.

Here’s the notice from the Village of Huntley:

Traffic Advisory:Rt 47 will be closed at the railroad crossing from Friday October 8th at 2:00pm to Monday October 11

The Union Pacific Railroad will CLOSE Route 47 in Huntley at the railroad crossing to all traffic on Friday October 8th at 2:00 PM and will reopen Route 47 by 12:00 PM on Monday October 11th. Northbound and southbound Route 47 traffic will be detoured around the Route 47 rail crossing.  Expect delays.

Manzullo Seeks McHenry County Amtrak Stop

April 22, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Amtrak, Chestnut Mountain Resort, Dick Durbin, Don Manzullo, Eagle Ridge Resort, Galena, Huntley, Marengo, McHenry County, Metra, Mississippi River, Pat Quinn, Regional Transportation Authority, RTA, Union, Union Pacific

Didn’t know an Amtrak route is planned through McHenry County.

Well, if you are a regular reader of McHenry County Blog, you would.

Links to McHenry County Blog’s stories follow:

April 3, 2010 – Quinn Says Amtrak Going Through Belvidere

April 6, 2010 – Illinois Railway Museum’s Executive Director Nick Kallas Analyzes Amtrak Route Selection through McHenry County

With 16th District Congressman Don Manzullo’s sending out a press release about his efforts to convince Amtrak to pick up and discharge passengers on the new state-financed line that is proposed to run through southern McHenry County, don’t you think that the Northwest and Daily Heralds will finally run a story on the subject?

Congressman Manzullo’s press release follows:

Manzullo Seeks Amtrak Stop for McHenry County

[CRYSTAL LAKE] Congressman Don Manzullo (R-IL) today called on Illinois Governor Pat Quinn to designate a stop in McHenry County as part of the state’s decision to extend Amtrak passenger rail from Chicago to Dubuque, Iowa.

U.S.Senator Dick Drubin and U.S. Representative Don Manzullo at Amtrak hearing held in Rockford a couple of years ago.

Manzullo, who has worked closely with U.S. Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL) to return Amtrak and commuter rail to northern Illinois, sent a letter to the Governor today requesting an Amtrak stop in either Huntley or Marengo.

The $60 million in funds necessary to upgrade the tracks for the Chicago to Iowa Amtrak route were included in the state capital bill, and construction is expected to take 18 months with service scheduled to begin in 2012.

Amtrak Route from Elgin to Rockford running through Huntley, Union and Marengo in McHenry County.

Gov. Quinn announced earlier this month Amtrak would follow a northern route on existing tracks running from Elgin’s Big Timber Metra station through the counties of McHenry, Boone, Winnebago, Stephenson and JoDaviess counties before crossing into Iowa.

Quinn and Amtrak previously announced stops in Belvidere, Rockford, Freeport, and Galena, and Manzullo is requesting a stop in McHenry County.

“Establishing a stop in McHenry County will help increase Amtrak ridership and secure the route’s viability while providing tremendous benefits for businesses, tourism, and quality of life in one of the fast-growing collar counties of Chicago,” Manzullo said.

“Establishing an Amtrak stop in McHenry County could also expedite the eventual extension of Milwaukee District/West Metra commuter rail service from Big Timber to Huntley and Marengo and beyond to Belvidere and Rockford since they will traverse the same tracks.”

The mayors of Huntley and Marengo have each submitted letters to Manzullo expressing interest in hosting an Amtrak stop. Manzullo’s letter to the Governor as well as the mayors’ letters are attached.
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Sign just before reaching the Eagle Ridge Inn.

The Skinner family drove to Galena during the middle of the week of Spring Break.

The tracks Amtrak would take along the Mississippi River to get to Galena.

We had an enjoyable stay at the Eagle Ridge Inn.  It’s about a 2 hour and fifteen minute drive from Crystal Lake.

I even saw two eagles flying over the trees about 50 feet from our third floor room, allowing the resort to live up to its name of Eagle Ridge. (Couldn’t find the camera in time though, unfortunately.)

What fun it would be to take the train.

We even saw the track that the train would take to Galena while we were exploring the Mississippi River.  They were the same tracks that Amtrak used when we rode from Chicago to  Denver, renting a car to drive to Colorado Springs a couple of years ago.

Sign pointing to the Chestnut Mountain Resort.

Driving over the Mississippi into Iowa wasn’t good enough for me. I insisted the two 12-year olds be able to touch it.

We ended up between the railroad tracks and another resort, Chestnut Mountain.

If we took Amtrak, I’m willing to be that both resorts would provide bus service to and from Downtown Galena, where the train station is locate.

What an adventure it would be for those who have never taken a train except to Chicago.

Metra Ridgefield Station Chugs Along, But Planning and Zoning Commissioners Want Traffic Improvements, Too

March 18, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Alan Skluzacek, Bridge to Nowhere, Chris DeRosia, Cornhusker Kickback, Country Club Road, Craig Steagall, Dave Goss, Don Batastini, East Woodstock Station, Flowerwood, Hillside Road, Jeff Greenman, Joe Gottemoller, Ken Koehler, Lake In the Hills, Lily Pond Road, McConnell Road, McHenry County, McHenry County College, Metra, Metra Station, Michelle Rentzsch, Patrick Engineering, Pingree Road, Pingree Road Metra Station, Rick Mack, Ridgefield, Ridgefield Metra Station, Ridgefield Road, Ridgefield Station, Ryan Westrom, Tartan Drive, Traffic Count, Union Pacific, Vincent Esposito

Metra's Rick Mack and local attorney Joe Gottemoller appear before the Crystal Lake Planning and Zoning Commission.

The Crystal Lake Planning and Zoning Commission gave preliminary approval to Metra’s proposed Ridgefield Train Station, but conditioned it on making multi-million dollar road improvements recommended by city engineering firm Patrick Engineering.

Patrick Engineering's Ryan Westrom and Chris DeRosia presented their traffic study.

The improvements, most overdue, according to Patrick engineers Ryan Westrom and Chris DeRosia, would include signals at Country Club and Hillside Road, plus Market and Ridgefield Road next to the Union Pacific railroad tracks. In addition, suggested improvements at McConnell Road and Country Club were requested. Finally, the motion asked that Metra make whatever improvements would be necessary for commuters to be able to get out of the parking lot on the 9,360 vehicle per day Country Club Road.

“If improvements are made, they will accommodate the traffic we projected,” Westrom told the commissioners.

Patrick Engineering predicts those using the Ridgefield Metra Station will live within the yellow outline.

The engineering firm, starting from scratch, projected that about 36% of the station’s commuters would come down Country Club Road from the north, 41% down Hillside Road and 22% from north of the site across the tracks through Downtown Ridgefield. Do the math and you see that 77% is predicted to come from the same side of the tracks where the 17.5 acre station will be located.

Click to enlarge and you may be able to see the road improvements that Patrick Engineering thinks are needed to move traffic in the area of the proposed Ridgefield Metra Commuter Station. While the bypass of Downtown Ridgefield was discussed, that option was not recommended by the Planning and Zoning Commissioners

Members expressed frustration that none of the roads were under city jurisdiction. The engineering report said current traffic volumes merited signals on both ends of Market Street in Downtown Ridgefield.  And, one at Tartan Drive and Ridgefield Road by 2015.

Consensus was expressed that commissioners wanted to protect Ridgefield residents and business owners, although none are located within Crystal Lake city limits.

Dave Goss and Don Bastastini confer during the meeting.

Motions to change the zoning from Estate Residential to Semi-Public and Public Use passed 5-0, as did a motion to approve how Metra proposed to meet the city’s Watershed Ordinance.

A motion from former City Councilman Dave Goss to approve a Preliminary Planned Unit Development, contingent on staff recommendations and road improvements suggested by Patrick Engineering passed 3-2.

Metra’s presentation suggested that property values around train stations generally increased with the prediction being that farmland north of the station site on Country Club Road would “have development pressure…(with) higher density development, higher land values.”

Goss voted against his own motion, based on his belief that the commuter station would lower property values in Ridgefield. He was joined by Commission Chairman Jeff Greenman.

Commissioners Don Batastini, Vince Esposito, Alan Skluzacek voted in the affirmative, although Esposito had said earlier, “I don’t think a train station that size needs to be out there.”

When the issue reaches city council on April 6th, a three-fifths approval vote will be needed, according to Metra’s local attorney Joe Gottemoller.

Earlier, Gottemoller had argued that the new traffic generated by Metra “is very small.” He noted that none of the improvements recommended by the traffic consulting firm, for example improving Market Street, were on McHenry County’s Five-Year Plan.

During the public comment period Chris Conway from Hillside road worried about increased garbage on the road and its taking more than the ten minutes it now takes her to get out of her driveway.

“We kind of feel there’s some insider trading going on on this property,” speaking for herself and neighbors.

The property is half owned by McHenry County Board Chairman Ken Koehler.

Also speaking was Craig Steagall, land owner across the tracks from Koehler’s land.

Craig Steagall asks questions while Metra's Rick Mack (on the right) and attorney Joe Gottemoller look on.

He questioned the traffic experts traffic projections. Earlier he had hired his own traffic consultant and presented results to the city council.

“How did 84 Lumber get in there without making those improvements?” he asked.

Steagall also asked how the decades-old agriculture zoning for the former Flowerwood nursery property got changed to industrial through “a zoning map correction.” (Later Planning and Economic Development Director Michelle Rentzsch confirmed that what Stegall said was correct.)

“There’s been an allegation I’m on my high horse because of a sour land deal,” he continued, telling of how Metra approached him to buy 12 acres and how Alexandra Lumber was considering purchasing 20 acres prior to purchasing 84 Lumber’s abandoned yard. Steagall then pointed out that under the discussions he had had with Metra to buy land south of the tracks, he and his partner would have had to put in $500,000 to a million for infrastructure improvements, a cost burden he considered unreasonable.

Steagall compared Metra’s planned station to

  • “Health Care—Start over,”
  • “the Bridge to Nowhere” and
  • “the Cornhusker Kickback.”

Speaking also of the Lily Pond Road station, which will be built on donated land, Stegall concluded,

“It’s Metra stations for all our friends.”

Another man asked if people, especially McHenry County College students and employees would have walking and biking access.

“Would it be good service to the college.”

No one from McHenry College offered public comment.

“What prevented Metra from putting the station on the south side of the tracks,” another person asked.

In rebuttal, a factoid came out that was interesting.

Over 60% of the people using the Pingree Road Station are from Lake in the Hills.

Replying to Steagall, Gottemoller said, “Sour grapes. That’s a political item that we don’t have anything to do with.”

Metra's Rick Mack addresses commissioners while attorney Joe Gottemoller observes.

Rick Mack, representing Metra, explained that 15 trains would come down the track each morning and that the Lily Pond Road Station (called East Woodstock) was put on the south side of the tracks so most cars using it wouldn’t have to cross the tracks.

He explained that capacity throughout McHenry County was being expanded, pointing to all the empty land between Woodstock and Harvard.

“This is an entire upgrade, not just to address today,” Mack continued. Earlier, it had been pointed out that train storage would be moved from Crystal Lake to north of Woodstock, that there was no room to store additional trains in Crystal Lake.

“All of these improvements are interconnected.”

Traffic concerns were widespread among the commissioners.

Greenman said,

Jeff Greenman

“We’re going to trust the county to do what it needs to do and trust the state to do what it needs to do.

“There are so many interdependencies, so many ‘what if’s’

“It’s a huge risk.”

At the end of the meeting, Goss thanked the city council “for standing up for the traffic study.”

Metra had asked to use its own traffic consultant, but that was rejected by the council in favor of one on the city’s approved list.

Video of 2008 Tornado Taking Down Train Cars in McHenry County’s Lawrence

July 07, 2009 By: Cal Skinner Category: Lawrence, McHenry County, Tornado, Union Pacific

Remember that January 7, 2008 tornado that came through Boone County and hit Lawrence in McHenry County?

The picture you see was taken just after it overturned train cars near Lawrence, Illinois.

There was a camera on the Union Pacific train that got blown over and the video has surfaced.

What is on the YouTube posting below is stunning. You will see the wind blowing train cars off the track.

Rockford’s WREX Channel 13 television station posted the YouTube footage. Meteorologist Eric Sorensen deserves the credit for finding it.

And, just in case you don’t know where Lawrence is, it’s in the Northwest portion of McHenry County.

This was the tornado during which Crystal Lake District 47 grade school students–probably 18 miles from the storm–were sent to basement shelters, disrupting parental pickups.

1,204 Foot Wichita, Kansas, Broadcast Tower Collapses End of Last Month

April 09, 2009 By: Cal Skinner Category: BMB Communications Management, Bridge Collapse, Broadcast Tower, Crystal Lake, John Maguire, KYQQ, McHenry County College, Railroad Tracks, Rt. 14, Snake in the Grass, Union Pacific, Wichita

I remember the chastisement I received in an email for showing a collapsed broadcast tower whose image had been projected on the McHenry County College Conference Center screen.

BMB Communications Management spokesman John Maguire said I should have used a picture of the “first to yield” collapse. That’s when the stoutly constructed bottom section does not collapse, but higher portions do.

Such design, his engineer said, does not result in a flat out failure where the tower would lay out its entire length.

Well, maybe.

But, that’s not what happened in Wichita, Kansas, with a KYQQ-FM 1,204 foot broadcast tower the end of last month in heavy icing and strong winds.

It looks like a failure of the complete structure to me. Doesn’t the complete tower seem to be snaking across the grass.

What do you think?

Two inches of ice is what the FM station spokesman told KFDI-TV, from whose video these pictures came.

If you want to see photos, here are some.

Video is here.

Route 14, Ridgefield Road and the Union Pacific railroad tracks are all within 1,500 feet of the BMB tower site.

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I asked before I posted this whether this tower was held up with guy wires, but didn’t get an answer until after it went up.

The answer is that this is a guyed wire tower, not a free standing one as BMB proposes in Crystal Lake.

Train Wreck on Siding Near Crystal Lake Jewel

December 11, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: Crystal Lake, Main Street, Train Crash, Union Pacific

As I was leaving Colonial Cafe after Wednesday’s Crystal Lake Kiwanis meeting, I drove up Main Street and saw three Union Pacific engines blocking the entrance to the Jewel shopping center.

I saw a Crystal Lake Police car with lights blinking between the train and Main.

When I checked out the Northwest Herald later, I saw that an 82-year old woman had been hit by the slow moving engines.