Train driver killed in crash hailed as 'great stalwart of the local community'
En resumen
- Shaun Burton, 60, a train driver and former local councillor, has been hailed as a 'great stalwart of the local community' after dying in a train crash near Bedford.
- The collision injured 100 people.
Resumen generado por IA
Por qué importa
A train driver, Shaun Burton, 60, was killed when two London-bound services collided near Bedford, an incident that also injured 100 people. Burton was a former parish and district councillor and was praised for his community contributions.
The driver who was killed when two trains crashed near Bedford has been hailed as "a great stalwart of the local community".
Shaun Burton, 60, died in Friday's collision between two London-bound services, in which 100 people were injured.
Burton, who had previously been a parish and district councillor for The Stukeleys in Cambridgeshire, was a driver for East Midlands Railway (EMR).
"I think all of us in the local community are just devastated as well as shocked at what happened," said Tom Sanderson, Huntingdonshire District Council member for The Stukeleys.
"We would see him, sometimes cycling to and from the station, working those unsociable hours that train drivers do.
"He did a tremendous amount for the community and all of us who had the pleasure of knowing Shaun will miss him greatly."
Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander also paid tribute in the House of Commons on Monday.
Sanderson said Burton was "very experienced and knowledgeable" when it came to trains.
"I know he enjoyed his work very much as well. I can't imagine what the family must be going through at the moment."
He added that Burton had campaigned passionately over road safety in the village.
"Shaun was an expert on planning and wrote a lot of policies for the neighbourhood plan, and I think his legacy will live on for many years to come.
"He was just a very genuinely decent, down-to-earth person.
"He's the sort of person you'd want as your next-door neighbour... it was always good to see him."
Network Rail said the line was expected to remain closed between Bedford and Luton for the rest of the week, until 28 June.
The two trains were removed from the site of the crash on Monday, and EMR said its priority was to safely "recover the railway."
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Preguntas abiertas
- What caused the collision?
- What is the full extent of injuries?




