City considers stopping train whistle on Lorne Street crossings
KAMLOOPS — Ten times a day, a 90-decibel whistle blows just metres away from some Lorne Street homes.
The ground rumbles, coal dust floats in the air, and car traffic can be stopped for up to 15 minutes as a one-kilometre-long train passes through.
This wasn’t the case before last April when coal trains were routed through the area. Fred Baxter lives in an adjacent townhouse and worked on a petition to city council to stop the train whistle. He says hundreds of people live in the area and find it hard to coexist with the train traffic.


