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FRA 07-07
Contact: Steve Kulm
Wednesday, February 14, 2007
or Warren Flatau
Tel.: (202) 493-6024
Federal Government Will Regulate Railroad Hours of Service and Increase Focus
on Safety Risk Reduction, Under the Administration’s Proposed Rail Safety
Legislation
For the first time ever the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) will have
authority to regulate railroad worker hours of service and will provide greater
focus on risk reduction to improve safety in the railroad industry under a rail
safety reauthorization bill submitted to the Congress today, announced FRA
Administrator Joseph H. Boardman.
“We must embrace new methods and strategies to further reduce the number of
accidents in the rail industry,” Boardman said. “Railroads must be more
accountable for the safety of their operations and rail employees need work
schedules that reduce fatigue and promote safety,” he added, noting that the
bill will reauthorize the federal rail safety program through 2011.
Boardman said the FRA proposal will replace railroad hours of service laws,
first enacted in 1907, with comprehensive, scientifically based regulations to
address the serious issue of worker fatigue. The laws, which set the maximum
on-duty or minimum off-duty hours for train crews, dispatchers, and signal
maintainers would now be set by the FRA, much like hours of services standards
are set for airline pilots and truck drivers. Under the proposal, the FRA
Railroad Safety Advisory Committee, made up of railroad management, labor
representatives and other key stakeholders, will review the issue and develop
recommendations on new hours of service limits based on current, sound science
before any changes are made.
To achieve additional safety improvements, the proposal also will supplement
traditional safety efforts with the establishment of risk reduction programs,
Boardman explained. FRA will place increased emphasis on developing methods to
systematically evaluate safety risks in order to hold railroads more accountable
for improving the safety of their own operations, including risk management
strategies and implementing plans to eliminate or minimize the opportunity for
workers to make errors which can result in accidents.
Other provisions in the proposal include requiring states and railroads to
update the National Highway-Rail Grade Crossing Inventory on a regular basis to
ensure current information is available for hazard analysis in determining where
federal safety improvement funding is directed. In addition, the proposed
legislation would expand the authority of the FRA to disqualify any individual
as unfit for safety-sensitive service for violation of federal regulations
related to transporting hazardous materials, among other items.
A copy of the full legislative proposal can be found at www.fra.dot.gov/us/content/48.
Briefing
Room