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Chronicle LiveThe four workers killed in 2004 by a runaway wagon at Tebay will be remembered [today]
The last union commemoration of the Tebay rail tragedy will take place at midday today.
Twelve years ago, four railway workers on the West Coast Main Line were killed by a runaway wagon near Tebay, Cumbria.
Colin Buckley, 49, Darren Burgess, 30, Gary Tindall, 46, and Chris Waters, 53, have been remembered with an annual ceremony around the anniversary of the tragedy, February 15.
Their families and friends will congregate today.
A trailer secured only by blocks of wood had started rolling down the track in the early hours, killing the four men and injuring another five.
Mark Connolly, 44, of Anglesey, and Roy Kennett, 29, of Maidstone, Kent, two subcontractors for Network Rail, were found guilty of manslaughter through gross negligence at Newcastle Crown Court in 2006, and jailed for seven and two years respectively.
Ahead of the commemoration, Mick Cash, the secretary general of the RMT▸ , blamed privatisation for the tragedy and pledged to fight for rail workers^ safety.
He said: "Tebay was not simply an accident despite what some have attempted to claim.
"The events of that night came about as a direct result of the privatisation and fragmentation of our railways.
"Those dangers still exist on the railway today and RMT continues the fight for proper protection systems to be introduced right across the network and we are at last making some important progress on that very basic demand.
"Twelve years after Tebay, we still have a mess of contractors, subcontractors and a host of labour-only agencies ^ often using zero hour contracts in a race to the bottom. That^s a breeding ground for over-riding core safety considerations and it must end.
[continues]
I find myself somewhat confused as to whether or not it's right for Mr Cash to be making what could be seen as political points at such a commemoration. Part of me feel it's not in the best of taste, yet part of me feels it's the very time ...