Sacramento train derailment leaves 27 injured

SACRAMENTO, CA - MARCH 25: Conductor Evan Gerdes works on Amtrak's California Zephyr at a train stop during its daily 2,438-mile trip to Emeryville/San Francisco from Chicago that takes roughly 52 hours on March 25, 2017 in Sacramento, United States. President Trump has proposed a national budget that would terminate federal support for Amtrak's long distance train services, which would affect the California Zephyr and other long distance rail lines run by Amtrak. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

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Thirteen people were taken to trauma hospitals after a maintenance and a passenger train collided in northern California

Authorities say more than two dozen people have been injured in a light rail train derailment in northern California.

Capt Keith Wade of Sacramento fire department told news outlets that 27 people were injured, including 13 people who were transported to trauma hospitals. He said the remaining patients were treated at the scene and released.

There were 15 ambulances at the site of the derailment, and more than 40 firefighters responded. Wade said it was the first time in his 19 years on the job that he had seen a train accident with such a high number of injuries.

News outlets quoted a spokesperson for Sacramento Regional Transit as saying the derailment was the result of a collision between a passenger and a maintenance train, but the cause was still under investigation.