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Newsroom: Press Releases

Press Release of Senator Lautenberg

Senate Passes Lautenberg Bill To Improve Railroad Safety

N.J. Sen.'s Bill Would Make Railroads Safer for Passengers and Employees, Make Highway Crossings Safer for Drivers

Contact: Lautenberg Press Office 202.224.3224
Friday, August 1, 2008

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, the U.S. Senate approved legislation authored by U.S. Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg (D-NJ) to make America’s railroads safer for train passengers and railroad employees, as well as people who drive across or live next to railroad tracks.

    “A twenty-first century rail system cannot run safely on laws from decades ago.  We are risking too much by letting train crews work too long and leaving highway crossings unsafe,” Sen. Lautenberg said.  “We need to decrease the risks with smarter regulation and modern technology, and the Senate’s passage of my bill today brings us much closer to achieving that goal.”

    The federal rail safety programs have not been reauthorized since 1994.  Last year, 841 Americans died in railroad accidents.  Sen. Lautenberg’s bill would address three industry-wide safety concerns:

        •    Employee fatigue under the “hours of service” laws:  Today, train crews can work upwards of 400 hours in 30 days.  Lautenberg’s bill would set new limits on the number of hours train crews can work in a month, authorize the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) to update these rules to combat employee fatigue and guarantee that employees be provided at least 10 hours off-duty within a 24-hour period.  The bill would also reduce “limbo time,” or time spent traveling—or waiting to travel—to and from work an employee’s duty station before or after working;

        •    New safety technology, or “Positive Train Control (PTC)”:  Lautenberg’s bill would require railroads to address their most dangerous safety problems by using the latest safety technology.  PTC systems can reduce train crashes and help save lives by automatically braking a moving train if the engineer fails to apply the brake before a stop signal.  This type of technology has been on the National Transportation Safety Board’s “most wanted safety improvements” list for the rail industry since 1990; and

        •    Grade crossing safety:  Ninety-four percent of all rail-related deaths involve collisions between trains and cars at highway-rail crossings, or incidents involving people trespassing on railroads.  Lautenberg’s bill would require states and railroads to report how highway-rail grade crossings are being protected.  The bill would also require states and railroads to help prevent deaths at or near train stations by making oncoming trains more visible to drivers and pedestrians crossing the tracks.  And it requires railroads to post a toll-free phone number at grade crossings so the public can easily report safety problems, such as faulty crossing warning devices.

    Sen. Lautenberg first introduced his bipartisan bill, The Railroad Safety Enhancement Act of 2007, while chairing a hearing in the Commerce, Science and Transportation Subcommittee on Surface Transportation a year ago.  Lautenberg’s subcommittee has jurisdiction over railroad safety and security.

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