The Punxsutawney Spirit

Buttigieg scolds railroads for not doing more to improve safety since Ohio derailment

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OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg has reiterated his concerns about railroad safety and scolded the industry for not doing more to improve since last year’s fiery Ohio derailment.

In a new letter to the freight railroads’ main trade group, Buttigieg acknowledg­ed that railroads say they are committed to safety. He also gave them credit for agreeing to provide paid sick time to nearly 90% of their workers over the past year, and for investing in an extensive network of detectors and other technology to help prevent derailment­s.

But he said too often regulators encounter resistance when trying to get the industry to do more to improve safety. And he said the Federal Railroad Administra­tion’s statistics don’t show safety improving significan­tly over the past decade.

“I want to enlist you in the project of rejecting, not defending, today’s status quo with its stagnant or worsening accident rates. The rate should be going down — and fast,” Buttigieg wrote in the letter to the Associatio­n of American Railroads that was made public late Monday. He urged the trade group to join with Congress and regulators to improve safety — not lobby against the reforms that were proposed after the East Palestine, Ohio, derailment in February 2023.

The latest statistics do show the total number of all accidents and the number of derailment­s declining in the U.S. at the major freight railroads over the past decade, but the amount of rail traffic is also down significan­tly over that time. When the distance freight travels is factored in, the rate of accidents and derailment­s has worsened.

Railroads do have a remarkably safe track record — much better than trucks — and the statistics show there are only 2.1 derailment­s per every million miles freight travels on rail across the country. But that still added up to 938 derailment­s nationwide last year. And as the Ohio derailment demonstrat­es, just one train crash involving hazardous materials can be disastrous.

The industry also notes that more than threequart­ers of all derailment­s happen at slow speeds and don’t cause significan­t damage. But Buttigieg said that with two workers killed last year in rail yard accidents he’s still concerned about those incidents. Plus, he pointed out that an explosion at a Union Pacific rail yard last fall prompted evacuation­s in Nebraska.

The head of the AAR trade group, Ian Jefferies, said in his own letter to Buttigieg last month that “railroads are wholeheart­edly dedicated to advancing safety through our own initiative­s and collaborat­ive efforts with DOT.”

Jefferies noted the major freight railroads — which include Norfolk Southern, BNSF, Union Pacific, CSX, Canadian National and CPKC — invest billions every year in maintenanc­e, technology and training to prevent derailment­s.

But Buttigieg said that the railroads have earned a reputation in recent years of being so obsessed with short-term profits that they neglect “other vital priorities like safety, long-term network developmen­t, customer service, worker wellbeing, and community engagement. When your industry objects to safety provisions, this perception deepens.”

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