The Commercial Appeal

US says key rail safety technology 90% complete

- Matthew Daly ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON – The railroad industry has installed safety technology on nearly 90% of tracks where it is required, federal officials said Wednesday, but “significant work” is needed to ensure the technology is completely installed by a December 2020 deadline.

Federal Railroad Administra­tion chief Ronald Batory told a Senate committee that technology known as positive train control, or PTC, is in operation on more than 50,000 route miles of the nearly 58,000 miles where it is required. The Gps-based technology is intended to prevent deadly crashes by automatica­lly stopping or slowing a train before a collision or derailment.

Congress required in 2008 that railroads adopt PTC and gave them seven years to do the job. When it became clear that wasn’t enough, Congress extended the deadline through 2018 and again through Dec. 31, 2020. No more extensions are expected.

At a hearing Wednesday before the Senate Commerce, Science and Transporta­tion Committee, Batory praised the railroad industry for “its significant progress” toward fully putting PTC systems in place nationwide, despite a series of delays that pushed the current deadline to 12 years after Congress initially adopted the law.

“Nonetheles­s, railroads must still complete significant work to fully implement their PTC systems by Dec. 31, 2020,” he said, adding that the railroad agency “will continue to hold railroads accountabl­e for timely implementa­tion of PTC systems and will enforce the statutory mandate.”

The industry expects to spend nearly $15 billion implementi­ng the technology on Amtrak and freight and commuter railroads throughout the country. An additional $80 million to $130 million a year will be spent on maintenanc­e and operation, according to the American Public Transporta­tion Associatio­n, an industry group.

Forty-two railroads are subject to the PTC mandate, including 30 commuter railroads, Amtrak and 11 freight railroads. According to the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, 22 rail accidents it investigat­ed since the 2008 law could have been prevented by PTC, including the December 2017 derailment of an Amtrak passenger train in Washington state that killed three passengers and injured 57 people.

Sen. Roger Wicker, R-miss., the committee chairman, said after the hearing he was “mindful there’s some challenges” in implementi­ng PTC, but said he was confident most or all of the required installati­on would be completed ahead of the 2020 deadline.

Officials will likely have a better handle on progress by the end of this year, Wicker said, adding, “I don’t know if we’re going to vaporize people who do not comply.”

In a report last month, the NTSB’S vice chairman blasted what he described as a “Titanic-like complacenc­y” among those charged with ensuring that train operations on the new Amtrak route from Tacoma, Washington, to Portland, Oregon, were safe.

PTC had not been implemente­d on the new bypass route when the derailment occurred, but now is in effect on the bypass and on the rest of the Amtrak Cascades passenger route from the Canadian border to Eugene, Oregon, officials said.

Bruce Landsberg, the NTSB’S vice chairman, said the term “accident” was inappropri­ate “because that implies that this (2017 derailment) was an unforeseen and unpredicta­ble event. It was anything but unforeseea­ble.”

Sen. Maria Cantwell of Washington state, the committee’s top Democrat, pushed Batory and other regulators to enforce the new deadline for implementi­ng PTC. Fines of up to $28,474 a day can be imposed on railroads that fail to meet the deadline.

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