Sacramento

Train Slams Pedestrian In South Sacramento, Evening Commute Snarled

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Published on March 07, 2026
Train Slams Pedestrian In South Sacramento, Evening Commute SnarledSource: X/CHP-South Sacramento

A train hit a pedestrian on the tracks in south Sacramento Friday afternoon, triggering a major traffic mess across several key intersections and putting the evening commute through the wringer. The closures stretched across Gerber Road at French Road, Gerber Road at Reese Road and Florin Road at Frasinetti Road, slowing or stopping movement in the area as first responders worked the scene. Drivers were urged to steer clear and find alternate routes.

What Officials Are Saying

In a traffic alert posted by CHP-South Sacramento, officers described the incident as a “train vs pedestrian on the tracks” and flagged Gerber & French, Gerber & Reese and Florin & Frasinetti as affected intersections. The agency urged motorists to avoid the stretch and use alternate routes while crews remained on scene.

Traffic Impacts And Local Delays

According to CBS Sacramento, the alert went out Friday afternoon and officials did not immediately release information on the pedestrian’s condition. The closures pushed drivers onto nearby parallel streets and are expected to cause delays for anyone trying to cut across south Sacramento until the scene is fully cleared.

Why This Stretch Is So Risky

Florin Road is already on the city’s high-injury list and is the focus of a Vision Zero safety project aimed at cutting severe crashes and improving crossings, according to the City of Sacramento. Local coverage has also pointed to heavy rail traffic in the area. A previous report cited a federal review that logged more than 30 trains per day at nearby crossings, which only adds to the safety challenges along the corridor, as reported by KCRA.

What Happens Next

Authorities are investigating the collision and have not released additional details, including the pedestrian’s condition, as noted by CBS Sacramento. This story will be updated as agencies provide new information. Until then, drivers should plan for lingering congestion near the affected intersections and consider alternate routes.