Houston Chronicle

Agency withdraws proposed rule on 2-person railroad train crews

- By Ashley Halsey III

WASHINGTON — The White House has pulled an Obama-era proposal that would have mandated two crew members in most locomotive­s, and it has banned states from requiring railroads to do so.

The proposal had been stalled by the Office of Management and Budget under President Barack Obama and by top Transporta­tion Department officials, who said there was no evidence that twomember crews made trains safer.

A former senior-level Obama official conceded that point. “The challenge that we had was that we had anecdotal evidence” suggesting that two-member crews would improve performanc­e, the official said, “but we didn’t have empirical evidence that it would make it safer.”

The Federal Railroad Administra­tion decided to withdraw the proposed rule because “no regulation of train crew staffing is necessary or appropriat­e for railroad operations to be conducted safely.”

The FRA said it would not allow individual states to regulate staffing of train crews. At least nine states have approved laws that mandate crew size, the agency said.

In an era when autonomous cars are seen on the horizon, advances in railroad technology have made the prospect of automatica­lly run trains if not yet on the horizon perhaps just over it. For example, positive train control, with onboard computers and track side sensors, is expected to virtually eliminate human error when it is fully implemente­d by the end of next year.

Though far less complex, rail shuttles between airport terminals already operate without crews.

“The railroads losing their minds over this proposal wasn’t about current operations,” said the former Obama official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he did not want to jeopardize his current job. “It was always about the ability to go to fewer (crew members) in the future. What (the proposed rule) was saying is that if you want to go to fewer than two crew members on a train, that the Federal Railroad Administra­tion and the American public should have a seat at the table to verify that all safety measures were being taken.”

Most trains run with two crew members, an engineer and a conductor. On passenger trains, often with more than one conductor, the chief conductor is in the passenger cars but is in communicat­ion with the engineer. But on freight locomotive­s, the conductor may be in the locomotive unless they have more pressing duties.

Labor unions said the FRA decision to pull the rule “placed corporate profits above public safety.” In a joint statement, two unions cautioned against autonomous trains.

“If the ongoing grounding of the Boeing Max aircraft has taught us nothing else, FRA and the Department of Transporta­tion should be mindful of the danger of transferri­ng the risk of a human-factors accident from (crew members) to (a computer) programmer when autonomous technology is implemente­d.”

John Previsich, president of the Transporta­tion Division of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transporta­tion Workers, elaborated on the statement. “The threat is that, in the face of automation, as we’re seeing in just about every industry, the financial pressure on the railroads is making them desirous of one (crew member) or none,” Previsich said. “They want no crew regulation­s period. The FRA said not only are we going to drop it, but we don’t believe that we need to oversee automation at all, which is astonishin­g because there’s no transporta­tion mode in the country that doesn’t have some regulatory oversight for automation.”

An FRA official said pushing a new rule into place was “an unnecessar­y obstacle to future innovation in the rail industry.”

The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak publicly, said railroads have “a strong safety record in the absence of regulation on this issue and that regulating train crew staffing is not necessary or appropriat­e.” Previsich disagreed.

“We believe that the recent actions of FRA pose a significan­t threat to the safety of our members and the public,” he said.

The rulemaking process was invoked by then-FRA Administra­tor Joseph Szabo after an unattended 74-car freight train carrying crude oil crashed into the Canadian town of Lac-Mégantic in 2013, killing 49 people.

Later that year — still on Szabo’s watch — two trains collided in Casselton, N.D., causing several explosions of 476,000 gallons of crude oil and a massive cloud of smoke that led to the evacuation of the surroundin­g area. Lawmakers were placated by Szabo’s promise to require two-man crews.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States