Current:Home > NewsRushed railcar inspections and ‘stagnated’ safety record reinforce concerns after fiery Ohio crash -WealthGrow Network
Rushed railcar inspections and ‘stagnated’ safety record reinforce concerns after fiery Ohio crash
View
Date:2025-04-13 16:19:38
Major freight railroads are rushing railcar inspections, reinforcing known safety concerns raised by unions for years, but at a House hearing Tuesday they’ll present new evidence from federal inspectors that railcar checks are routinely less than two minutes per car.
The unions have sounded the alarm often in recent years as the major railroads all adopted versions of the lean Precision Scheduled Railroading operating model and collectively cut roughly one-third of all their workers. Labor groups like the Transportation Communications Union, which represents the expert carmen who are supposed to inspect railcars, have said all the cuts have led to rushed inspections that might miss problems and prompted railroads to rely on train crews to do more inspections.
The disastrous Norfolk Southern derailment last year in East Palestine, Ohio, that prompted Tuesday’s hearing was caused by an overheating bearing that wasn’t caught in time by trackside sensors. The National Transportation Safety Board didn’t speculate in its final report released last month whether an inspection in a railyard might have caught the failed bearing, but it did point out that the railroad never inspected the car after it picked it up in St. Louis even though it crossed through several railyards before the crash. And more than 25% of the cars on that train had defects despite being inspected beforehand.
The TCU union’s National Legislative Director David Arouca says inspections are happening less often and with less time these days because of all the job cuts.
“Sadly, in today’s era of railroading, many carmen have to make the difficult decision of what to inspect. Under impossible time pressures, carmen are simply unable to perform full inspections,” Arouca said.
There are at least 90 points on each side of a railcar that are supposed to be checked in an inspection — something that Arouca said can’t be done in the time allotted today. The Federal Railroad Administration study found that the major freight railroads allowed an average of 1 minute and 44 seconds per car while a federal inspector was watching, but documents showed that when an inspector isn’t there inspections are being done in about 44 seconds per car.
The FRA isn’t ready to say that the railroads’ current operating model is unsafe because more research is needed to determine whether that is the case. But FRA Administrator Amit Bose will testify Tuesday that the railroads’ “safety performance has stagnated over the last decade — and by some measures, deteriorated. Despite assertions to the contrary, derailment rates for our nation’s largest rail companies have not significantly improved.”
And even though most derailments don’t cause anything like the massive black plume of smoke and lingering health worries that followed the East Palestine derailment — because many of them happen at slow speeds without spilling toxic chemicals — Bose said smaller derailments shouldn’t be dismissed as the railroad equivalent of a fender-bender because they can still be deadly.
The railroads maintain they are committed to improving safety and have taken a number of steps since the East Palestine derailment including adding hundreds more trackside detectors to spot mechanical problems and reviewing the way they respond to temperature alerts from those devices.
Plus, the Association of American Railroads trade group continues to point out that even with derailments — which happen across the country roughly three times a day — railroads remain the safest option, with more than 99% of all hazardous chemicals arriving safely. But as the Ohio derailment shows, even one derailment can be disastrous if chemicals spill and catch fire.
Railroads also argue that new technology they are investing in can help supplement the visual inspections that workers do and spot problems while trains are moving down the tracks.
Ohio’s two senators — including Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance — led a bipartisan group in proposing a sweeping rail safety bill last year that included requirements for inspection standards and rules for those trackside detectors, but that bill stalled after it advanced out of committee and never got a floor vote.
Republican Rep. Troy Nehls, who leads the House subcommittee on railroads, recently introduced a similar, broad bill along with Democratic Rep. Seth Moulton. But most Republicans appear to want a more limited approach based on the findings of the NTSB investigation. A narrower bill hasn’t yet been introduced.
On Tuesday, Republican Rep. Sam Graves, the chair of the Transportation Committee, said he does not think any rail safety legislation was necessary to address the problems that led to the 2023 derailment. He added that a bill would not be emerging from his committee.
In addition to all the rail safety concerns the NTSB raised in its report on the derailment, the agency said Tuesday that it is worried that a federal effort by the Drug Enforcement Administration to reclassify marijuana as a less serious drug could prevent train crews, pilots and other transportation workers from being tested for marijuana even though it could impair their judgment.
The NTSB said that eliminating marijuana testing for transportation workers “would create a safety blind spot that could endanger the public.”
___
Associated Press writer Stephen Groves contributed to this report from Washington.
veryGood! (51)
Related
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- High-fat flight is first jetliner to make fossil-fuel-free transatlantic crossing from London to NY
- Former prison lieutenant sentenced to 3 years after inmate dies during medical crisis
- Powerball winning numbers for Nov. 27 drawing: Check your tickets for $374 million jackpot
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Alaska landslide survivor says force of impact threw her around ‘like a piece of weightless popcorn’
- Corruption case reopened against Argentina’s Vice President Fernández, adding to her legal woes
- Small plane crashes into car on Minnesota roadway; pilot and driver suffer only minor injuries
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Family of Los Angeles deputy killed in ambush shooting plans to sue county over forced overtime
Ranking
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- 5-year-old girl, man swept out by California wave identified as granddaughter, grandfather
- Michigan to join state-level effort to regulate AI political ads as federal legislation pends
- Sandy Hook families offer to settle Alex Jones' $1.5 billion legal debt for at least $85 million
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- Former Indiana lawmaker pleads guilty to casino corruption charge
- Horoscopes Today, November 28, 2023
- Former Child Star Evan Ellingson’s Cause of Death Revealed
Recommendation
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
Antonio Gates, Julius Peppers among semifinalists for 2024 Pro Football Hall of Fame class
Novelist Tim Dorsey, who mixed comedy and murder in his Serge A. Storms stories, dies at 62
Oil prices and the Israel-Hamas war
Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
The world economy will slow next year because of inflation, high rates and war, OECD says
Bowl projections: Michigan back in College Football Playoff field after beating Ohio State
Boy found dead in Missouri alley fell from apartment building in 'suspicious death'