Powerful tribute at Werris Creek honouring rail workers
The 20th National Rail Safety Week is being marked with a solemn ceremony at the Australian Railway Monument in Werris Creek in northern NSW today.
The ceremony will honour rail workers who have died in service to Australia’s rail network.
More than 100 families, friends, and colleagues of those who have died, as well as representatives from across the rail industry, will hold a minute's silence and lay wreaths next to the names that will be remembered forever.
Each of the more than 4,500 names on the National Railway Monument at Werris Creek represents the loss of a railway worker since the 1850s.
This year, four new names have been added to the walls of the monument. One of them was Troy Ernst, a freight train driver who died in an accident in December last year.
The others are names of railway workers, one whose death dates back to early this century and two others from the 1920s and 30s. Their names have only just been added to the monument due to recent research by volunteers from the Australian Railway Monument and Rail Journeys Museum.
Hosted by NSW TrainLink and the TrackSAFE Foundation, the event is both a moment of reflection and a time for the rail industry to collectively commit to preventing future tragedies among Australia's 165,000-strong rail workforce.
Following the memorial event TrackSAFE is hosting a national webinar on mental health fitness in the rail industry. More information here.
Read the full media release here (PDF, 206.82 KB)