Albuquerque Journal

Deadly NM rail crash spurs ideas

NTSB wants companies to install video and audio recorders onboard

- BY SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board on Tuesday recommende­d that railroad companies install video and audio recording devices in their locomotive cabs to monitor the activities of crew members and ensure safe operations.

The board during a meeting in Washington, D.C., also recommende­d that federal railroad regulators find ways to prevent collisions like one in eastern New Mexico in 2015 in which an engineer was killed and a crew member was seriously injured.

Investigat­ors say the two crew members had only seconds to apply their emergency brakes and decide whether to ride out the crash or jump as their Southweste­rn Railroad train headed toward a parked train on a siding near Roswell.

They jumped and the trains collided, causing about $2 million in damage.

The wreck reignited concerns about manual switches, which federal safety officials described as a known high-risk hazard for the railroad industry.

Investigat­ors and members of the board all pointed to previous crashes that stemmed from similar problems, including a 2005 derailment in South Carolina that killed nine people and displaced thousands of residents due to the release of chlorine from a ruptured tanker car.

Board chairman Robert Sumwalt said the recommenda­tions are aimed at developing devices or techniques to eliminate the possibilit­y of railroad employees failing to perform critical tasks such as aligning switches or ensuring train cars are in the clear.

He also said installing recording devices might deter the violation of safety rules by crew members as they’re headed down the tracks.

“A train is not an employee’s private retreat. It’s an enormous machine that can injure or kill. It can damage property and it can damage the environmen­t,” he said. “And given the stakes, image and audio recorders belong in this setting.”

“In transporta­tion, compliance with the rules is a matter of public safety and not public choice,” he said before adjourning the meeting.

The Associatio­n of American Railroads, a policy and research organizati­on that works with the industry, did not immediatel­y return a message seeking comment about the latest recommenda­tions.

This is not the first time the board has recommende­d recording devices or the use of technology to address the problem of misaligned track.

The federal safety board also raised concerns Tuesday about drug use among railroad employees as a toxicology test determined the engineer of the moving train tested positive for marijuana and the conductor tested positive for oxycodone.

While it was unclear whether the conductor had a prescripti­on for the medication, investigat­ors say the engineer had likely smoked marijuana between five hours and 30 minutes before the crash.

Investigat­ors did say there was no sign of impairment by the crew given their behavior and response before the collision. They indicated the crew acted appropriat­ely and likely didn’t have much time to react to the parked train as they had been told the switch was in the proper position.

Aside from the lack of an adequate warning system, investigat­ors determined human error contribute­d to the cause of the collision since the crew member of the parked train failed to reset the switch.

 ?? SOURCE: ROSWELL POLICE ?? This was the scene on April 28, 2015, in Chaves County at the site of head-on collision between two freight trains about 10 miles southeast of Roswell. One crew member, identified as Jesse T. Coburn III, 48, of Texico was pronounced deceased at the...
SOURCE: ROSWELL POLICE This was the scene on April 28, 2015, in Chaves County at the site of head-on collision between two freight trains about 10 miles southeast of Roswell. One crew member, identified as Jesse T. Coburn III, 48, of Texico was pronounced deceased at the...

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