Watch CBS News

Menlo Park Leaders May Seek Quiet Zone For Trains Amid Noise Complaints

MENLO PARK (KPIX 5) – The city of Menlo Park is trying to find a way to silence the dozens of trains that blare their horns as they travel up and down the Peninsula every day.

"They use a horn. They wake up almost everybody by 2 in the morning, 1:30 in the morning," Emilio Lua Gonzalez told KPIX 5.

Trains are required by federal regulation to sound their horn when they approach a street-level crossing as a safety measure. But because Menlo Park's four train crossings are clustered in a roughly one-mile stretch of track, neighbors said the noise becomes non-stop.

"When you have a baby or little kid, you want them to go to sleep. Or maybe, you want to go to sleep. So, anything they can do to make them a little quieter I support," says Susanne Chang.

The Menlo Park City Council is planning to vote to hire a company to conduct a safety analysis of its train crossings and determine if any additional safety measures like gates or warning signs need to be added before the feds would sign off on a quiet zone.

City leaders are also trying to determine the price tag for any proposed changes before moving forward with the plan.

Neighboring Atherton created a quiet zone along its train tracks roughly five years ago and Menlo Park residents have been clamoring for similar action ever since.

"I grew up with train noise as a youngster. If it were late at night, it could get a little overwhelming," said Cosette Dudley.

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.