BNSF main line still closed after Idaho derailment

BNSF main line still closed after Idaho derailment

By Justin Franz | January 3, 2020

| Last updated on October 22, 2025


Locomotive ends up in river, requiring crew rescue by first responders

BNSF_Derailment_IdahoPolice
BNSF’s main line to the Pacific Northwest remains closed because of this Wednesday derailment. Idaho State Police

BONNERS FERRY, Idaho — BNSF Railway’s main line to the Pacific Northwest is still closed, more than a day after a derailment sent a locomotive into a frigid Idaho river.

On Wednesday night, a westbound manifest freight derailed on BNSF’s Kootenai River Subdivision near Katka, about 10 miles east of Bonners Ferry. Three locomotives and six cars went off the rails. The lead locomotive ended up in the Kootenai River and first responders had to erect a rope system to rescue the crew. No one was injured in the wreck [See: BNSF crew briefly trapped after train derails into Idaho river,” Trains News Wire, Jan. 2, 2019].

The derailment was the result of a rockslide.

BNSF spokesperson Gus Melonas tells Trains News Wire that the railroad is currently working with state agencies on a plan to safely remove the locomotive from the river. BNSF crews had to deploy containment booms around the wreck because fuel from the lead locomotive has leaked into the river. Local officials say it’s unclear how much fuel got into the river.

Melonas says the railroad hopes to have the main line reopened Saturday.

The derailment has brought rail traffic in the area to a standstill. Some trains are being detoured via Montana Rail Link and others were parked along the line. Multiple high-priority trains were stationed in Whitefish, Mont., early Friday morning waiting for the route to reopen.

The derailment has also impacted Amtrak’s Empire Builder between Chicago and Portland-Seattle. On Thursday, Amtrak turned westbound No. 7 at Whitefish after servicing the train at the BNSF yard and resupplying it from local grocery stores. Chartered buses took passengers west of Whitefish. Amtrak spokesperson Marc Magliari tells Trains News Wire that eastbound trains Nos. 8 and 28 will depart Seattle and Portland tonight as normal. Westbound train No. 7, which departed Chicago on Thursday, will be held in Whitefish tonight until the line is clear.

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