Medicine Hat News

RAIL SAFETY – New measures follow fatal accident

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The federal government is rolling out new measures to bolster rail safety following an investigat­ion into a fatal 2017 incident at a Saskatchew­an railway yard.

Under an order from Transport Minister Marc Garneau, railway companies must adopt updated practices for employees who conduct switching duties — taking railcars from one track to another — that ensure equipment is properly secured.

Transport Canada said it also plans to ramp up oversight rules and address gaps in employee training and experience.

The department said it will work with industry and labour representa­tives to identify the causes of uncontroll­ed movements that occur while switching without air brakes.

“I am deeply troubled every time there is a rail incident that results in a tragic death,” Garneau said in a statement Thursday.

The new measures follow a Transporta­tion Safety Board report in June that expressed concerns about inexperien­ced workers being paired together and recommende­d changes to reduce uncontroll­ed movement of railcars.

Two Canadian National Railway Co. employees were carrying out switching duties at the company’s yard in Melville, Sask., 150 kilometres east of Regina, on Dec. 22, 2017, when one was fatally injured.

The safety board said the two workers, one a designated foreman and the other a helper, were moving railcars by letting them roll to their intended track without the use of air brakes.

The investigat­ion found that the crew’s limited experience likely contribute­d to a decision to shove three loaded cars up a slight grade using a remote-controlled locomotive at too low a speed, which resulted in the cars losing momentum and beginning to roll backwards.

“Team work is critical but, in this occurrence, the foreman and the helper were working in virtual isolation,” investigat­or Glen Pilon said in a video statement released with the report on June 10.

“Both employees were relatively inexperien­ced and wore green vests to indicate less than two years of service,” Pilon said.

“No plan was discussed for kicking the cars uphill, nor was there any shared expectatio­n of how this would be performed.”

The investigat­ion found the 26-year-old foreman, Melissa Heins, climbed onto one of the cars to try to stop them from rolling backwards by applying a hand brake.

“But the cars didn’t stop,” said Pilon, who added the brake was ineffectiv­e.

Heins was fatally injured when the cars collided with several stationary ones and she was pinned.

 ??  ?? Marc Garneau
Marc Garneau

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