Current:Home > ScamsBurley Garcia|Freight railroads must keep 2-person crews, according to new federal rule -Elevate Profit Vision
Burley Garcia|Freight railroads must keep 2-person crews, according to new federal rule
EchoSense Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-11 00:37:48
Major freight railroads will have Burley Garciato maintain two-person crews on most routes under a new federal rule that was finalized Tuesday.
The Transportation Department’s Federal Railroad Administration released the details of the rule Tuesday morning, after working on it for the past two years.
There has been intense focus on railroad safety since the fiery February 2023 derailment in eastern Ohio, but few significant changes have been made apart from steps the railroads pledged to take themselves and the agreements they made to provide paid sick time to nearly all workers. Such changes include adding hundreds more trackside detectors and tweaking how they respond to alerts from them. A railroad safety bill proposed in response to the derailment has stalled in Congress.
Rail unions have long opposed one-person crews because of a combination of safety and job concerns. Labor agreements requiring two-person crews have been in place for roughly 30 years at major railroads, although many short-line railroads already operate with one-person crews without problems.
“As trains — many carrying hazardous material — have grown longer, crews should not be getting smaller,” said Eddie Hall, the president of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen union. He praised the FRA for taking the step Biden promised, which marks a milestone in labor’s long fight to preserve two-person crews. Hall said keeping two people in the cab of a locomotive is crucial now that railroads are relying on longer and longer trains that routinely stretch miles long.
Railroads have sought the discretion to operate trains with only one person and move conductors to ground-based jobs in places where automatic braking systems have been installed. It has been a key issue in contract talks in the industry for years, though the railroads abandoned the proposal just as the 2022 negotiations approached the brink of a strike because of workers’ quality-of-life concerns.
The railroads argue that the size of train crews should be determined by contract talks, not regulators or lawmakers, because they maintain there isn’t enough data to show that two-person crews are safer. The norm on major railroads is two-person crews, so current safety statistics reflect that reality.
Union Pacific tried last year to test out how quickly a conductor in a truck can respond to problems on a train compared to the conductor aboard the locomotive, although the railroad never got that pilot program up and running. That plan would have maintained two people at the controls of its trains during the test.
The East Palestine, Ohio, derailment put a national spotlight on rail safety because of the disastrous consequences of the hazardous chemicals that spilled and caught fire in that crash that forced thousands of people to evacuate their homes and left them with lingering health concerns.
But investigators haven’t suggested the crew on that train did anything wrong. It actually included three people because there was a trainee aboard. Instead, the National Transportation Safety Board has said the derailment was likely caused by an overheating wheel bearing on one of the railcars that wasn’t caught in time by trackside sensors.
At least 11 states have already approved rules requiring two-person crews because officials worry that losing a crew member would make railroads riskier and hurt the response to any rail disaster because a conductor wouldn’t be available to help right away. States frustrated with the federal government’s reluctance to pass new regulations on railroads have also tried to pass restrictions on train length and blocked crossings.
The industry often challenges the state rules in court, though with this new federal rule it’s not clear whether the railroads will resort to that tactic. The railroads generally argue in their state lawsuits that the federal government should be the only one to regulate the industry to ensure there’s a uniform set of rules, and they wouldn’t be able to make that argument in a challenge to the federal rule.
___
Associated Press writer Ashraf Khalil in Washington contributed to this report.
veryGood! (462)
Related
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- NASCAR driver Ryan Preece gets medical clearance to return home after terrifying crash at Daytona
- Keke Palmer Celebrates 30th Birthday With Darius Jackson Amid Breakup Rumors
- Keke Palmer Celebrates 30th Birthday With Darius Jackson Amid Breakup Rumors
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Liam Payne hospitalized for kidney infection, cancels upcoming concerts: 'Need to rest'
- Love, war and loss: How one soldier in Ukraine hopes to be made whole again
- Some experts see AI as a tool against climate change. Others say its own carbon footprint could be a problem.
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Police say University of South Carolina student fatally shot while trying to enter wrong home
Ranking
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Investors shun Hawaiian Electric amid lawsuit over deadly Maui fires
- 8 US Marines remain in hospital after fiery aircraft crash killed 3 in Australia
- Pete the peacock, adored by Las Vegas neighborhood, fatally shot by bow and arrow
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Stock market today: Asian shares mostly rise after Fed chief speech
- Indianapolis police say officer killed machete-wielding man
- Texas takeover raises back-to-school anxiety for Houston students, parents and teachers
Recommendation
'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
Former Olympian Alexandra Paul killed in car crash at 31, Skate Canada says
On the March on Washington's 60th anniversary, watch how CBS News covered the Civil Rights protest in 1963
Liam Payne postpones South American tour due to serious kidney infection
'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
South Carolina college student shot and killed after trying to enter wrong home, police say
How Simone Biles separated herself from the competition with mastery of one skill
Aaron Rodgers connects with WR Garrett Wilson for touchdown in Jets debut