The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Railroads show little progress on key safety technology

- By Joan Lowy

Many commuter and freight railroads have made little progress installing safety technology designed to prevent deadly collisions and derailment­s despite a mandate from Congress, according to a government report released Wednesday.

The technology, called positive train control or PTC, uses digital radio communicat­ions, GPS and signals alongside tracks to monitor train positions. It can automatica­lly stop or slow trains to prevent them from disobeying signals, derailing due to excessive speed, colliding with another train or entering track that is off-limits.

The Federal Railroad Administra­tion report shows that while some railroads have made substan-

tial progress, others have yet to equip a single locomotive or track segment with the technology, or install a single radio tower.

Congress passed a law in 2008 giving railroads seven years to put the technology in place, and last year extended that deadline for three more years after railroads said they were unable to meet the first deadline. The law extending the deadline to Dec. 31, 2018, also allows the railroad administra­tion to grant additional extensions for two more years to railroads that have installed PTC but are still testing the systems.

Railroads shouldn’t wait for the deadline to complete their work on PTC, said Sarah Feinberg, head

of the railroad administra­tion.

“Every day that passes without PTC, we risk adding another preventabl­e accident to a list that is already too long,” she said in a statement.

So far, PTC is in operation on nine percent of freight route miles and 22 percent of passenger train miles, the report said.

Freight railroads have equipped 34 percent of their locomotive­s, installed 73 percent of their radio towers and completed 11 percent of their track segments. Passenger railroads have equipped 29 percent of their locomotive­s, installed 46 percent of their radio towers, and completed 12 percent of their track segments.

But progress varies considerab­ly by railroad. For example, BNSF has equipped 4,309 of its 5,000 locomotive­s, but Union Pacific has equipped only 13 of its 5,656 locomotive­s.

The Southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia Transporta­tion Authority, which operates commuter trains in the Philadelph­ia region, has equipped all its locomotive­s, installed all its radio towers and completed all its track segments. But nearby New Jersey Transit Rail, which carries an average of 308,000 passengers on weekdays, hasn’t equipped any locomotive­s,

installed any radio towers or completed any track segments.

The report also gave zeros in each of those categories to New York’s largest commuter railroads, the Metro-North and the Long Island railroads, which each carry about 300,000 passengers on weekdays. In 2013, a speeding Metro-North train derailed while going around a curve in the Bronx. Four people were killed and more than 60 injured. The National Transporta­tion Safety Board said the accident could have been prevented if PTC had been in operation.

The report is based on informatio­n supplied by the railroads.

The report “is an overall summary that does not convey the progress we have achieved,” said Nancy Snyder, a spokeswoma­n for New Jersey Transit. She noted that the railroad has acquired spectrum rights, equipped four “prototype vehicles” for testing and installed five antennas in a demonstrat­ion area, among other actions.

Beth DeFalco, a spokeswoma­n for the MetroNorth and Long Island railroads, said the railroads have done extensive work on PTC and hope to see benefits from the technology as soon as next year.

The NTSB has urged railroads to install positive train control or earlier train control technologi­es for more than four decades. The board says that over that time it has investigat­ed at least 145 PTC-preventabl­e accidents in which about 300 people were killed and 6,700 injured.

More recently, the board has said PTC could have prevented the head-on collision of two BNSF trains in June near Panhandle, Texas. Three railroad employees were killed in the crash. The technology also could have prevented the derailment of a speeding Amtrak train in Philadelph­ia last year. Eight people were killed and over 200 injured in the crash.

Commuter railroads have spent $950 million on PTC so far, but the total cost is estimated to be at least $3.48 billion, said Richard A. White, acting president of the American Public Transporta­tion Associatio­n. The White House requested Congress provide $1.25 billion in the coming 2017 federal budget year to help commuter railroads with PTC; House and Senate spending bills allocate only $199 million.

“Despite this funding dilemma, the industry is moving forward with this top safety priority,” White said in a statement.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON — AP FILE PHOTO ?? In this July 27, 2015, file photo, a passenger commuter train, left, passes one of two mile-long oil trains parked adjacent to the King County Airport in Seattle.
ELAINE THOMPSON — AP FILE PHOTO In this July 27, 2015, file photo, a passenger commuter train, left, passes one of two mile-long oil trains parked adjacent to the King County Airport in Seattle.

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