San Diego Union-Tribune

TRAIN HORNS WILL GO SILENT AGAIN

‘Quiet zone’ reinstated downtown; city crews have been bringing 12 intersecti­ons up to federal standards

- BY EMILY ALVARENGA MEG MCLAUGHLIN emily.alvarenga @sduniontri­bune.com

Trains traveling through downtown San Diego will again stop sounding their horns when approachin­g railroad crossings, now that the Federal Railroad Administra­tion has reinstated the area’s “quiet zone” designatio­n.

The city’s quiet zones were temporaril­y suspended two weeks ago after an inspection found safety violations that needed to be fixed.

Trains have since been blaring their horns between the Laurel Street and Fifth Avenue crossings as city crews worked to bring 12 intersecti­ons into compliance with federal standards.

Mayor Todd Gloria said Tuesday in a statement that the city’s Transporta­tion Department had expedited all of the required sign installati­ons and striping to get the quiet zone restored more quickly than anticipate­d.

City crews created and installed more than 120 railroad crossing signs and new road markings at downtown crossings.

On Friday, the city submitted documentat­ion to show that the improvemen­ts had been completed, along with a required traffic survey to count how many vehicles enter the crossings daily.

The regulator sent the city a letter Monday confirming that its quiet zones were once again fully compliant with safety regulation­s, allowing trains to stop routinely sounding their horns.

Transit agencies have seven days to comply with the quiet zone reinstatem­ent. The North County Transit District and the San Diego Metropolit­an Transit System had both already suspended the use of train horns in the area by Tuesday. BNSF Railway, which operates freight trains, acknowledg­ed the receipt of the request but had not yet reinstated the quiet zone.

The suspension comes after a rash of fatal train strikes in the region, with four people hit and killed on the coastal train tracks in the span of five days this month. A number of people have also been struck by trains downtown, where there are many grade crossings, in recent years.

San Diego’s $21 million quiet zone safety system downtown, designed to reduce the decibel level of train horns at grade-level intersecti­ons, was approved by the City Council in 2010. Because of the sophistica­ted warning systems, trains were no longer required to sound their horns for 15-20 seconds upon approach.

 ?? U-T ?? Train tracks downtown on Tuesday. The federal government has reinstated the area’s “quiet zone” designatio­n.
U-T Train tracks downtown on Tuesday. The federal government has reinstated the area’s “quiet zone” designatio­n.

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