Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Feds award $25 million safety grant for Brightline corridor

- By David Lyons

In a major initiative to cut down on deaths and injuries along Brightline’s rail corridor, the U.S. Government has allocated $25 million for safety improvemen­ts between Miami-Dade and Brevard counties, railroad and government officials announced Monday.

The money is helping to cover $45 million in measures that will include improvemen­ts at 328 roadway-railroad grade crossings and 33 miles of pedestrian protection features in Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, Martin, St. Lucie, Indian River and Brevard counties along the Florida East Coast Railway line, which is used by Brightline.

Brightline currently serves the downtowns of Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach and Miami with a daily schedule that see trains potentiall­y reaching speeds of 79 mph.

The safety measures, which will be installed throughout 2023, will become even more critical when the line opens a $2.7 billion, 170-mile extension between West Palm Beach and Orlando early next year. Constructi­on is more than 80% complete, according to the company.

Since February, the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion and the Federal Railroad Administra­tion it oversees have focused on a rash of rail deaths in Florida, conducting meetings among rail operators and South Florida local government officials including law enforcemen­t to pinpoint problem areas and to encourage public agencies to apply for millions in federal grant money.

Bipartisan backing

The latest round of funding, which was jointly pursued last spring by the FDOT, Brightline and the Florida East Coast Railway, was announced Monday at the Brightline station in downtown Fort Lauderdale. U.S. Reps. Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, both Democrats representi­ng districts in Broward, and Rep. Mario Diaz Balart, a Republican from MiamiDade, said they worked in concert to help deliver the money to South Florida.

The grant, from the U.S. DOT’s Rebuilding American Infrastruc­ture with Sustainabi­lity and Equity (RAISE) program, drew rare bipartisan support from South Florida’s congressio­nal delegation. Besides the three House members who appeared at the station, it has the backing of Reps. Frederica Wilson, Ted Deutch and Lois Frankel, as well as U.S. Sens. Rick Scott and Marco Rubio according to a company statement. Local municipali­ties and all of the region’s county metropolit­an planning organizati­ons, which help set transporta­tion policy, also supported it.

“Brightline is a critical part of Florida’s transporta­tion network and has significan­tly improved

the lives of many Floridians through an easy and efficient method of travel through South Florida,” said DiazBalart.

“It is a huge private investment,” he added. “When we are looking at these kinds of funds it requires the appropriat­ions committee to get it done. We don’t deal with partisan lines. We work together to get things done for Florida and for South Florida, and this another example of what we can do when we work together as a team.”

Wasserman Schultz suggested it’s not possible to keep everyone safe from harm around railroads, particular­ly those bent on committing suicide. She appealed to the public to exercise common sense when driving across tracks, especially when they are in a hurry.

“We want Brightline to be in the news for all of the right reasons,” she said. “Unfortunat­ely there have been too many incidents, some of which [are] when you’re dealing with a sadly determined person who wants to end their life on the tracks.”

“But, there are also people that really don’t understand, and aren’t necessaril­y prevented from being able to cross those tracks or try to race the gate,” she said. “I mean, my God, are you really in that much of a hurry?”

The FDOT made its own separate announceme­nt, citing a commitment to safety by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis. No one from the state made a public appearance at the Fort Lauderdale ceremony.

“Governor DeSantis and the department are committed to keeping Florida moving by continuall­y seeking investment­s and opportunit­ies to ensure Florida has a safe and strong transporta­tion system,” state Transporta­tion Secretary Jared W. Perdue said in a prepared statement.

“As I always say, these things take a village,” Brightline President Patrick Goddard said of the support. “This was a statewide effort.”

In their joint applicatio­n, Brightline, the FEC and the state said the companies and Florida would kick in $10 million apiece to supplement the $25 million in federal funds.

The upgrades, as earlier reported by the South Florida Sun Sentinel and others, include the following, according to the grant applicatio­n:

„ ▪ Rail dynamic envelopes: Consisting of Xs painted on roadways near rail crossings, the visual warning helps keep drivers out of crossing danger zones. The state, according to the applicatio­n, deployed the technique in early 2020 after a pilot program indicated that the number of vehicles that stopped on or too close to the tracks “was reduced by at least 15%.”

„ ▪ Delineator­s, raised pavement markers, and edge striping: Delineator­s are 4-foot-high reflective plastic posts that warn drivers that they are approachin­g a crossing. In 2018, according to the applicatio­n, the Long Island Railroad in New York “installed high-visibility safety delineator­s and striping at railroad crossings. Results indicated an 85% reduction in right-of-way intrusions by motor vehicles and 100% reduction in train/ vehicle crashes due to vehicle right-of-way intrusion.”

„ ▪ Fencing and landscapin­g: Many miles of the FEC corridor, particular­ly in densely populated downtowns, are easily accessible to pedestrian­s from nearby sidewalks and roadways. Sunrail, the commuter line in Central Florida, “observed a 91% reduction in trespasser­s over the two years following the installati­on of fencing in the Sanford area in 2018,” the applicatio­n says.

„ ▪ “Do Not Stop on Tracks” and crisis support signage: Many motorists do not recognize the potential hazards facing them when they approach a crossing.

The money is part of a broader series of initiative­s by Brightline, the federal and state Department­s of Transporta­tion, as well as local law enforcemen­t to curb motorist and pedestrian deaths along the FEC line.

Rail corridor deaths have plagued all of the intercity lines operating trains in South Florida, including Brightline, Tri-Rail, the Florida East Coast Railway freight carrier and Amtrak, the national passenger rail service. While trespassin­g and suicide incidents constitute some of the causes, rail crossing violations by motorists who try to beat trains across the tracks are another major contributo­r to fatalities, industry and law enforcemen­t officials say.

But the death toll has been the highest involving Brightline trains since the company inaugurate­d paid service in 2018, according to a continuing analysis by Associated Press. The tally now exceeds 60.

In June, Brightline and law enforcemen­t agencies in Broward led by the Broward Sheriff’s Office conducted “Operation Crossing Guard” to increase public awareness about safety hazards along the rail line and to reduce the number of deaths at rail crossings.

During the 11-day program, more than 500 citations were issued: 157 for stopping on railroad tracks, 146 for driving around closed gates, 122 for stopping too close to closed gates, 90 for blocking intersecti­ons and 25 for pedestrian­s walking around closed gates. The citations were delivered in BSO districts in Deerfield Beach, Pompano Beach, Oakland Park and Dania Beach.

 ?? JOE CAVARETTA | SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., speaks during a news conference at the Brightline Train station in Fort Lauderdale on Monday. Looking on are, from left, U.S. Rep Shiela Cherfilus-McCormick, D-Fla., U.S.Rep. Mario Diaz Ballart, R-Fla., and Brightline CEO Patrick Goddard. The Florida Department of Transporta­tion and Brightline were awarded a $25 million grant to enhance safety along the Florida East Coast Railway/Brightline corridor between Miami-Dade and Brevard counties.
JOE CAVARETTA | SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., speaks during a news conference at the Brightline Train station in Fort Lauderdale on Monday. Looking on are, from left, U.S. Rep Shiela Cherfilus-McCormick, D-Fla., U.S.Rep. Mario Diaz Ballart, R-Fla., and Brightline CEO Patrick Goddard. The Florida Department of Transporta­tion and Brightline were awarded a $25 million grant to enhance safety along the Florida East Coast Railway/Brightline corridor between Miami-Dade and Brevard counties.

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