One morning last January, Metra foreman Robert Tellin was startled as he peered out the window of his office at Elgin’s commuter station. There, Tellin saw a man standing in the center of the tracks, just as the PA announced an approaching train.
Hurrying outside, Tellin asked the man what he was doing on the tracks. The man responded: I want to die.
Quickly, Tellin grabbed the man and safely pulled him from the rails, seconds before the train arrived.
It was a heroic effort on the part of Tellin, whom Metra’s board of directors honored with a resolution in March.
Unfortunately, for every moment of heroism there are many more moments of tragedy across the Chicago area’s vast network of railroad tracks. It seems every few weeks a Metra line is shut down due to a “pedestrian accident.” One just incident occurred last Thursday when a woman was struck in Northbrook by an Amtrak train, which shares the same tracks.
Indeed, death on the tracks is a problem that is particularly endemic to the Chicago area.
According to the Federal Railroad Administration, in 2015 there were 32 suicides-by-train in Illinois. That’s one-tenth of the national total. And as the Chicago Tribune reported in 2014, the metro area itself has a higher incidence of suicides by train than the national average.
Research by Northwestern University professor Ian Savage found that 47 percent of railroad-pedestrian fatalities in the Chicago area were apparent suicides, versus 30 percent nationally.
One reason, Savage explained, is simply…