Train trestle fire near New Orleans doused, Amtrak route cut


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NORCO, La. (AP) — Firefighters Saturday used helicopters and airboats to douse a blaze on a train trestle west of New Orleans, but some Amtrak and freight service remain disrupted.

St. Charles Parish spokesman Tristin Babin said Saturday evening that the fire had been extinguished following an all-day effort. He said remaining hot spots should be out by Sunday morning.

Officials responded after 8 a.m. when people working on the Canadian National Railway trestle reported the fire. Babin had earlier said workers were grinding rails, but later said he couldn't confirm the cause. CN spokesman Patrick Waldron said the cause is being investigated.

Amtrak truncated the southbound run of its City of New Orleans train in Jackson, Mississippi. Christina Leeds, a spokeswoman for the rail service, said passengers were bused south from there. Passengers for Saturday evening's northbound departure toward Chicago were also bused northward from New Orleans and intervening stops to Jackson.

Waldron said the trestle also carries four to eight freight trains a day. He said crews from Montreal-based CN will evaluate the damage and plan repairs.

"I can't give a timeline when it will reopen," Waldron said. "You can see from the pictures there is damage that has to be repaired."

Leeds said Amtrak is working on arrangements for future travel.

Billowing smoke and towering flames attracted widespread attention because the rail bridge runs along Interstate 10 as it crosses the Bonnet Carre Spillway. However, Babin said the interstate wasn't shut down. In part because the spillway remains soggy after it was opened last month to divert Mississippi River floodwaters, the fire did not spread.

Because the area near Lake Pontchartrain is swampy, Babin said firefighters relied on 11 boats and two helicopters to fight the blaze.

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