Railroad Workplace Safety; Adjacent-Track On-Track Safety for Roadway Workers, 41214-41230 [E8-16140]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 138 / Thursday, July 17, 2008 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Part 214
[Docket No. FRA–2008–0059, Notice No. 1]
RIN 2130–AB93
Railroad Workplace Safety; AdjacentTrack On-Track Safety for Roadway
Workers
Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM).
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: FRA proposes to amend its
regulations on railroad workplace safety
to reduce further the risk of serious
injury or death to roadway workers. In
particular, FRA proposes to require that
railroads adopt specified on-track safety
procedures to protect certain roadway
work groups from the movement of
trains or other on-track equipment on
‘‘adjacent track.’’ FRA proposes to
define ‘‘adjacent track’’ as ‘‘any
controlled track whose track center is 19
feet or less from the track center of the
occupied track.’’ These on-track safety
procedures would be required for each
adjacent track when a roadway work
group with at least one of the roadway
workers on the ground, is engaged in a
common task with an on-track roadway
maintenance machine or coupled
equipment on an occupied track. FRA
also proposes to require that railroads,
contractors to railroads, and roadway
workers comply with these procedures.
DATES: Written comments must be
received no later than August 18, 2008.
Comments received after that date will
be considered to the extent possible
without incurring additional expense or
delay.
FRA anticipates being able to resolve
this rulemaking without a public, oral
hearing. However, if FRA receives a
specific request for a public, oral
hearing prior to August 18, 2008, one
will be scheduled and FRA will publish
a supplemental notice in the Federal
Register to inform interested parties of
the date, time, and location of any such
hearing.
ADDRESSES: Comments: You may submit
comments on this NPRM, identified by
Docket No. FRA–2008–0059, Notice No.
1, by any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments.
• Mail: Docket Management Facility,
U.S. Department of Transportation,
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West Building, Ground Floor, M–33,
Room W12–140, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery or Courier: Docket
Management Facility, U.S. Department
of Transportation, West Building,
Ground Floor, M–33, Room W12–140,
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m. ET, Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
• Fax: 202–493–2251.
Instructions: For detailed instructions
on submitting comments, and additional
information on the rulemaking process,
see the ‘‘Public Participation’’ heading
of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this preamble. Note that all
comments received will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided. Please
see the ‘‘Privacy Act’’ subheading under
the ‘‘Regulatory Impact and Notices’’
heading, below, in section VIII.I. of this
preamble.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov anytime, or to the
Docket Management Facility, U.S.
Department of Transportation, West
Building, Ground Floor, Room W12–
140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m. ET, Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays. Follow the online
instructions for accessing the docket.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kenneth Rusk, Staff Director, Track
Division, Office of Safety Assurance and
Compliance, FRA, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., RRS–15, Mail Stop 25,
Washington, DC 20590 (telephone 202–
493–6236); or Anna Winkle, Trial
Attorney, Office of Chief Counsel, FRA,
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., RCC–12,
Mail Stop 10, Washington, DC 20590
(telephone 202–493–6166 or 202–493–
6052).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents for Supplementary
Information
I. Public Participation
II. Overview of the Existing Roadway Worker
Protection (RWP) Rule
A. Applicability and Basic Definitions
B. Authorized Methods of Establishing OnTrack Safety
C. Existing On-Track Safety Requirements
for Roadway Work Groups with Respect
to Adjacent Tracks
III. Notice of Safety Advisory 2004–01
IV. Recent Roadway Worker Accidents
(1997–2008)
V. Joint Petition to FRA for an Emergency
Order
VI. Current Rulemaking to Revise the RWP
Rule
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A. Overview of the RSAC [Railroad Safety
Advisory Committee]
B. Proceedings in this Rulemaking to Date
Generally
C. Proceedings concerning On-Track Safety
Procedures for Adjacent Tracks
VII. Section-by-Section Analysis
VIII. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866 and DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive
Order 13272
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
D. Federalism Implications
E. Environmental Impact
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
G. Energy Impact
H. Trade Impact
I. Privacy Act
IX. List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 214
I. Public Participation
The Administrative Procedure Act (5
U.S.C. 551–559) permits an agency to
dispense with notice of rulemaking
when it is otherwise not required by
statute and the agency ‘‘for good cause
finds that notice and public procedure
thereon are impracticable, unnecessary,
or contrary to the public interest.’’ 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(B). FRA finds that the
typically long periods for notice and
public participation are, in this case,
unnecessary and contrary to the public
interest for the reasons set forth below;
thus, an abbreviated comment period of
30 days is appropriate for this NPRM.
As will be detailed in this NPRM, the
recent increase in roadway worker
fatalities that have occurred on an
adjacent track (i.e., under the existing
rule, any track within 25 feet of the
centerline of the track to which the
roadway work group was assigned to
perform one or more roadway worker
duties) has caused considerable concern
at FRA and throughout the industry,
even prompting the filing of a joint
petition for emergency order under 49
U.S.C. 20104 on April 11, 2008. See 49
CFR part 214, subpart C (‘‘Roadway
Worker Protection Rule’’ or ‘‘RWP
Rule’’). FRA issued a notice of safety
advisory to address the issue in May of
2004; however, it appears that the
salutary effects of the safety advisory,
which produced a period of 16 months
with no fatalities on an adjacent track,
were not long-lasting, as four fatalities
have since occurred on an adjacent track
where a roadway work group, with at
least one of the roadway workers on the
ground, was engaged in a common task
with an on-track roadway maintenance
machine or coupled equipment on an
occupied track. FRA believes that these
proposed amendments to the Roadway
Worker Protection Rule are noncontroversial in nature because they are
based on and substantively the same as
the consensus language developed
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through the Roadway Worker Protection
(RWP) Working Group of FRA’s
Railroad Safety Advisory Committee
(RSAC), which is comprised of various
representatives of the groups that are
affected by this rule (including railroad
management, railroad labor
organizations, and contractors).
Moreover, FRA finds that, based on the
data available, any further delay in
issuance of this NPRM 1 and a
subsequent final rule would fail to
reduce the risk of additional fatalities on
adjacent track that are likely to occur
late this year or early next year in the
absence of further regulatory action.
In summary, FRA believes that the
identification of a serious and escalating
safety concern which FRA’s actions to
date have not been sufficient to remedy
and the non-controversial nature of the
proposed amendments justify a
comment period of 30 days, rather than
the normal 60 days, in this NPRM. FRA
will consider, however, any comments
received after that date to the extent
possible without incurring additional
expense or delay.
II. Overview of the Existing RWP Rule
A. Applicability and Basic Definitions
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The RWP Rule requires each railroad
that operates rolling equipment on track
that is part of the general railroad
system of transportation to ‘‘adopt and
implement a program that will afford
on-track safety to all roadway workers
whose duties are performed on that
railroad.’’ See 49 CFR 214.3,
214.303(a).2 ‘‘On-track safety’’ is defined
as ‘‘a state of freedom from the danger
of being struck by a moving railroad
train or other railroad equipment,
provided by operating and safety rules
that govern track occupancy by
personnel, trains and on-track
equipment.’’ See § 214.7. The roadway
workers that must be afforded on-track
safety are any employees of a railroad,
or of a contractor to a railroad, whose
duties include ‘‘inspection,
construction, maintenance or repair of
railroad track, bridges, roadway, signal
1 While the consensus language relating to
adjacent track issues that was developed through
the RSAC was originally intended to be published
as part of a larger NPRM, FRA has decided to
propose these adjacent-track-related provisions in
this separate NPRM so that an appropriate
provision will be in effect in a more timely fashion
than if the provision were one of many in the larger
rulemaking that would need to undergo internal
review and approval and public notice and
comment. The remaining provisions not related to
adjacent track will be proposed in a separate NPRM
at a later date, as part of the larger RWP rulemaking.
2 All references in this preamble to a section or
other provision of a regulation are to a section, part
or, other provision in title 49, Code of Federal
Regulations unless otherwise specified.
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and communication systems, electric
traction systems, roadway facilities or
roadway maintenance machinery on or
near track or with the potential of
fouling a track, and flagmen and
watchmen/lookouts * * *.’’ See § 214.7,
‘‘Roadway worker.’’
B. Authorized Methods of Establishing
On-Track Safety
Several methods are authorized to be
used to provide on-track safety for
roadway workers, and many of those
methods involve establishing ‘‘working
limits,’’ which is defined in part as ‘‘a
segment of track with definite
boundaries established in accordance
with [part 214] upon which trains and
engines may move only as authorized by
the roadway worker having control over
that defined segment of track.’’ See
§§ 214.7 and 214.319. Working limits
may be established on controlled track
(i.e., ‘‘track upon which the railroad’s
operating rules require that all
movements of trains must be authorized
by a train dispatcher or a control
operator’’) through exclusive track
occupancy (§ 214.321), foul time
(§ 214.323), or train coordination
(§ 214.325). See §§ 214.7 and 214.319.
Regardless of which method is chosen,
the working limits are only permitted to
be under the control of a qualified
roadway worker in charge, and all
affected roadway workers must be
notified and either clear of the track or
provided on-track safety through train
approach warning (in accordance with
§ 214.329) before the working limits are
released to permit the operation of
trains or other on-track equipment
through the working limits. See id.
Train approach warning is another
common method of establishing ontrack safety in which a trained and
qualified watchman/lookout provides
warning to roadway worker(s) of the
approach of a train or on-track
equipment in sufficient time to enable
each roadway worker to move to and
occupy a previously arranged place of
safety not less than 15 seconds before a
train moving at the maximum speed
authorized on that track would arrive at
the location of the roadway worker. See
§§ 214.329 and 214.7 ‘‘Watchman/
lookout.’’ Train approach warning is
sometimes used as a temporary form of
on-track safety when a roadway worker
in charge needs to nullify the on-track
safety previously established by
working limits in order to permit a train
or piece of on-track equipment to enter
the roadway work group’s working
limits. Train approach warning permits
the roadway workers to continue
working for longer if the working limits
span several miles and the train or
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equipment will not be passing by the
work area for some time due to a speed
restriction, the distance away, or the
train or equipment halting its
movement. It should be noted that
switching temporarily to ‘‘train
approach warning’’ is permissible only
if the change was previously discussed
in detail with the roadway work group
either in the on-track safety job briefing
prior to beginning work or in an
updated on-track safety job briefing
pursuant to § 214.315(d). See § 214.315.
C. Existing On-Track Safety
Requirements for Roadway Work
Groups with Respect to Adjacent Tracks
Section 214.335(c) of the RWP Rule
currently requires that roadway work
groups engaged in ‘‘large-scale
maintenance or construction’’ be
provided with on-track safety in the
form of ‘‘train approach warning’’ for
train or equipment movements on
adjacent tracks if the adjacent tracks are
not already included within the working
limits. Under the current definition of
‘‘adjacent tracks,’’ on-track safety as
discussed above is required for any
tracks with track centers spaced less
than 25 feet apart from the track to
which a roadway work group is
assigned to perform large-scale
maintenance or construction. See
§§ 214.7, 214.335(c). The track to which
the roadway work group is assigned to
perform the large-scale maintenance or
construction is commonly referred to as
the ‘‘occupied track.’’ Thus, in triplemain track territory, if a roadway work
group is occupying the middle track
(e.g., Main Track No. 2) in order to
perform large-scale maintenance or
construction, and the track centers of
the tracks on either side of the occupied
track are within 25 feet of the occupied
track, then on-track safety is required to
be established on both adjacent tracks
(e.g., Main Track Nos. 1 and 3). In some
yards or territories, where track centers
may be spaced only 12 feet apart, an
occupied track (e.g., Yard Track No. 3)
may have up to four adjacent tracks
(e.g., Yard Track Nos. 1, 2, 4, and 5). In
such cases, the current rule requires ontrack safety to be established on all four
adjacent tracks, in addition, of course, to
the on-track safety required for the
occupied track itself. See §§ 214.335(c)
and 214.337(a).
Although the term ‘‘large-scale
maintenance or construction’’ is not
specifically defined in the regulation,
FRA noted in the preamble to the 1996
final rule establishing the RWP Rule
that the principle behind the reference
to large-scale maintenance or
construction ‘‘is the potential for
distraction, or the possibility that a
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prior to initiating work activities,
regardless of whether those activities
were ‘‘large-scale’’ or ‘‘small-scale.’’ The
safety advisory provided examples of
relevant factors to consider in making
such an assessment, including whether
the work could be conducted by
individuals positioned between the rails
of a track on which on-track safety has
been established, as opposed to being on
the field side of such a track toward an
adjacent track; whether there was a
structure between the tracks to prevent
intrusion (such as a fence between the
tracks at a passenger train station and
the tall beam of a through-plate girder
bridge); the track-center distance, to
ensure that the adjacent track would not
be fouled if a worker were to
inadvertently trip and fall; the nature of
the work (inspection or repair); the sight
distances; and the speed of trains on the
adjacent track. See 69 FR 24222. FRA
further noted that, upon completion of
an on-site risk assessment, the on-track
safety briefing required by § 214.315(a)
would be the ideal instrument to
implement preventive measures
concerning adjacent tracks. See id.
In addition to the above
recommendation concerning basic risk
assessment, FRA recommended that
railroads and contractors to railroads
consider taking the following actions:
• Use of [sic] working limits for
III. Notice of Safety Advisory 2004–01
activities where equipment could foul
After the occurrence of five roadway
adjacent track (whether large-scale or
worker fatalities in one calendar year
small-scale activities);
(2003), including one on an adjacent
• Use rotation stops to mitigate the
track, FRA responded on April 27, 2004,
dangers associated with on-track
by issuing Notice of Safety Advisory
equipment and trains passing on
2004–01, which was later published in
adjacent tracks;
the Federal Register on May 3, 2004.
• Review procedures for directing
See 69 FR 24220. FRA issued this safety
trains through adjacent track working
advisory to recommend certain safety
limits, and enhance such procedures
practices, to review existing
when necessary;
requirements for the protection of
• Install adjacent track warning signs/
roadway workers from traffic on
devices in the operating cab of on-track
adjacent tracks, and to heighten
machines to remind roadway
awareness to prevent roadway workers
from inadvertently fouling a track when maintenance machine operators to not
inadvertently depart the equipment onto
on-track safety is not provided. See id.
a track where there may be trains and
The safety advisory explained that the
other on-track equipment passing;
requirements of the RWP Rule,
• Provide additional training and
including the requirement to provide
monitoring to [their] employees,
adjacent track on-track safety for largeemphasizing the need to cross tracks in
scale maintenance or construction in
a safe manner (i.e., single file and after
§ 214.335(c), are only minimum
looking in both directions);
standards; railroads and railroad
• Reinforce to individual roadway
contractors are free to prescribe
workers that it is critical not to foul a
additional or more-stringent standards
consistent with the rule. See id. at 24222 track except in the performance of duty
and only when on-track safety has been
and § 214.301(b). FRA recommended
established. This training could be
that railroads and contractors to
accomplished through training sessions,
railroads develop and implement basic
as well as daily job briefings; and
risk assessment procedures for use by
• Institute peer-intervention measures
roadway workers to determine the
by which workers are encouraged to
likelihood that a roadway worker or
equipment would foul an adjacent track intervene when observing another
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roadway worker or roadway
maintenance machine might foul the
adjacent track and be struck by an
approaching or passing train,’’ and
further stated that ‘‘conditions in which
the risk of distraction is significant’’
require measures to provide on-track
safety on adjacent tracks. See 61 FR
65959, 65971 (December 16, 1996). To
further clarify what was meant by the
term ‘‘large-scale maintenance or
construction,’’ FRA adopted the
recommendation of the Roadway
Worker Safety Advisory Committee,
which described large-scale track
maintenance and/or renovations, such
as but not limited to, ‘‘rail and tie gangs,
production in-track welding, ballast
distribution, and undercutting.’’ See id.
Under such guidance, many railroads
were not providing on-track safety on
adjacent tracks for surfacing operations,
small tie renewal operations, or similar
maintenance operations that, while
smaller in scale, still included one or
more on-track roadway maintenance
machines or coupled equipment.
Fatalities occurred on the adjacent track
during such operations when on-track
safety was not established on the
adjacent track or had been temporarily
or permanently nullified or suspended
to permit the passage of a train or other
on-track equipment.
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roadway worker engaging in potentially
non-compliant and unsafe activity.
See id.
IV. Recent Roadway Worker Accidents
(1997–2008)
Since the RWP Rule went into effect
on January 15, 1997, there have been
nine roadway worker fatalities on an
adjacent track. Seven of those fatalities
have occurred on a controlled track that
was adjacent to the track on which a
roadway work group, with at least one
of the roadway workers on the ground,
was engaged in a common task with an
on-track roadway maintenance machine
or coupled equipment. FRA notes that
there has been only one adjacent-track
fatality where a roadway work group
had been engaged in a common task
with a lone hi-rail vehicle, defined in
§ 214.7 as ‘‘a roadway maintenance
machine that is manufactured to meet
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards
and is equipped with retractable flanged
wheels so that the vehicle may travel
over the highway or on railroad
tracks.’’ 3 In addition, there have been
no adjacent-track fatalities where a
roadway work group had been engaged
in a common task with a catenary
maintenance tower car on the occupied
track. This is likely because the duties
normally performed by an employee
operating a hi-rail or a catenary
maintenance tower car tend to be less
distracting to on-ground roadway
workers and produce less dust and
noise than a typical on-track roadway
maintenance machine. Given the above,
FRA proposes that adjacent-track ontrack safety not be required for roadway
work groups engaged in a common task
with a hi-rail or a catenary maintenance
tower car, as discussed in the sectionby-section analysis of paragraphs (b)(2)
and (b)(3), respectively, in new
proposed § 214.336.
Of the seven fatalities that occurred
under the circumstances described
above and which this rule proposes to
address, three occurred during the
period after the effective date of the rule
and before the publication of the safety
advisory on May 3, 2004, and four have
occurred since that period. In the fouryear period prior to May of 2004 (May
1, 2000–April 30, 2004), there has been
one adjacent-track fatality known to
have occurred under such
circumstances, for a rate of .25 per year.
In the four-year period since (May 1,
2004–April 30, 2008), there have been
four adjacent-track fatalities, for a rate of
3 In that case, the roadway workers were under
the impression that adjacent-track on-track safety
was in effect, but it was not, due to a
miscommunications.
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one per year, which is four times the
rate of the previous four-year period.
While FRA recognizes that even one
death can make rates change
dramatically when the total number of
deaths is small, the increase in the rate
of these deaths despite the safety
advisory leads FRA to conclude that
prompt regulatory action is needed to
avert an escalating number of deaths.
Moreover, given the extensive
participation in developing these
consensus regulatory provisions by
representatives of all of the key interests
involved in this issue, it is contrary to
the public interest to wait for all of the
other issues in the larger RWP
rulemaking to be resolved or to engage
in lengthy periods for notice and public
comment before acting to prevent more
deaths.
The following is a brief summary of
the results of FRA’s investigations of the
four most recent incidents that resulted
in these unfortunate fatalities:
• October 5, 2005: A roadway
surfacing gang tamper operator, with 28
years of service, was walking up to the
front of the tamper to put away the light
buggies as his surfacing gang, having
just completed its work, was getting
ready to travel to clear the number two
main track. The operator was walking
east on the side of the tamper between
the two main tracks when he was struck
by a westbound train on the adjacent
track. The track centers were spaced
approximately 13 feet apart, and the
train was traveling at an estimated
speed of 40 miles per hour (mph).
• March 12, 2007: A surfacing gang
was occupying the number one main
track in a double-main territory. The
surfacing gang foreman (the roadway
worker in charge), who earlier had
notified the other members of the gang
of pending movement on the adjacent
track, was standing in the gage of the
same adjacent track when he was struck
by a train. It remains unclear why he
was fouling the adjacent track at the
time of the incident. The track centers
were spaced approximately 13 feet, 6
inches apart, and the maximum
authorized speed on the adjacent track
was 50 mph.
• February 10, 2008: A train struck a
roadway worker inside an interlocking
on a triple-main track territory. The
worker was part of a gang that consisted
of approximately 10 workers that were
engaged in the repair of a crossover on
the middle main track with a tamper.
Foul time was being used as adjacenttrack on-track protection, but this
protection was removed by the roadway
worker in charge, who gave permission
to the dispatcher to permit a train to
operate on the adjacent track through
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the roadway work group working limits.
As the train entered the interlocking on
a limited clear signal indication for a
crossover move past the work area, one
of the roadway workers attempted to
cross the track in front of the train and
was struck. The track centers were
spaced approximately 13 feet apart, and
the maximum authorized speed for the
train on the adjacent track was 45 mph.
• March 27, 2008: Information at this
time is preliminary, but it is understood
that a surfacing gang was working on
multiple-track territory. The surfacing
gang foreman was standing in the foul
of the adjacent track while his surfacing
crew worked on the number two main
track. A train operating on the same
adjacent track struck the foreman. No
on-track safety was in effect on the
adjacent track involved at the time of
the incident. The track centers were
spaced approximately 14 feet, 7 inches
apart, and the maximum authorized
speed on the adjacent track was 70 mph.
While the above discussion focuses
on those fatalities that have occurred on
an adjacent track where a roadway work
group, with at least one of the roadway
workers on the ground, was engaged in
a common task with an on-track
roadway maintenance machine or
coupled equipment on an occupied
track, it is important to discuss some of
the common circumstances in all nine
of the fatalities that have occurred on an
adjacent track since the rule went into
effect, as these circumstances were
considered by FRA in its decision to
issue this NPRM. The first common
circumstance is the type of track. All
nine of the fatalities occurred on
‘‘controlled’’ track, rather than ‘‘noncontrolled’’ track. This was taken into
consideration in writing FRA’s
proposed definition of ‘‘adjacent track,’’
which would be included as part of
proposed new § 214.336(a), would
essentially replace the term ‘‘adjacent
tracks’’ in § 214.7, and would be limited
to controlled tracks whose track centers
are spaced 19 feet or less from the track
center of the occupied track.
Second, all nine of the fatalities
occurred on an adjacent track that was
quite closely-spaced to the track that the
roadway work group was occupying. Six
of the adjacent tracks had track centers
that were spaced approximately 14 feet
or less from the respective track centers
of the tracks that the roadway work
groups were occupying, and all nine of
the adjacent tracks were spaced 15 feet
or less from the track centers of the
respective occupied tracks. This
common circumstance was also taken
into consideration in FRA’s proposed
definition of ‘‘adjacent track,’’ which
would no longer include tracks with
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track centers that were spaced more
than 19 feet (but less than 25 feet) away
from the track center of the occupied
track.
The third common circumstance of
the nine fatalities on adjacent track is
the time of year. Four of the fatalities
occurred during the first quarter
(January–March), none of the fatalities
occurred in the second and third
quarters of the year (April–June and
July–September, respectively), and the
other five fatalities occurred during the
fourth quarter (October–December). As
noted earlier in Section I., above, if this
pattern continues, any further delay in
issuance of this rule would fail to
reduce the risk of additional fatalities on
adjacent track that are likely to occur
late this year or early next year in the
absence of further regulatory action.
Thus, FRA has decided to proceed with
an NPRM with an abbreviated comment
period.
V. Joint Petition to FRA for an
Emergency Order
On April 11, 2008, the Brotherhood of
Maintenance of Way Employes Division
(BMWED) and the Brotherhood of
Railroad Signalmen (BRS) filed a joint
petition requesting that FRA issue an
emergency order requiring adjacenttrack protection for roadway work
groups. The petition notes that similar
requests, which were filed on October 7,
2005, November 7, 2003, and December
21, 1999, were denied by FRA. The
petitioners expressed their belief that,
under the existing provisions of the
rule, roadway workers will continue to
suffer preventable serious injuries and
death. The petitioners assert that FRA
should require railroads and their
contractors to establish on-track safety
on adjacent tracks (‘‘adjacent-track ontrack safety’’) for a wider range of work
activities. In FRA’s January 5, 2006
denial of the October 2005 petition, FRA
noted that the RSAC working group to
review and revise the RWP Rule (‘‘RWP
Working Group’’) was ‘‘committed to
presenting comprehensive draft
language * * * that would more closely
tailor the solution to the problem.’’ And
while the RWP Working Group did in
fact draft this language, and both the
Working Group and the full RSAC were
able to reach consensus on such
language, BMWED and BRS are
concerned that the language, which has
not been published as an NPRM, would
not become a final rule for a
considerable period of time, leaving the
possibility for further preventable
fatalities. BMWED and BRS urge FRA to
issue an emergency order that would
adopt the adjacent-track consensus
language of the RWP RSAC.
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On April 18, 2008, the American
Train Dispatchers Association (ATDA)
filed a letter in support of the BMWED
and BRS joint petition. In the letter,
ATDA agreed that preventable injuries
and deaths continue to occur because of
a lack of positive regulation mandating
adjacent-track on-track safety and urged
FRA to issue an emergency order based
upon the RSAC-approved and
consensus-based replacement language
for § 214.235(c), as indicated in the joint
petition.
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VI. Current Rulemaking To Revise the
RWP Rule
A. Overview of the RSAC
In March 1996, FRA established
RSAC, which provides a forum for
developing consensus recommendations
to FRA’s Administrator on rulemakings
and other safety program issues. The
Committee includes representation from
all of the agency’s major customer
groups, including railroads, labor
organizations, suppliers and
manufacturers, and other interested
parties. A list of member groups follows:
• American Association of Private
Railroad Car Owners (AAPRCO);
• American Association of State
Highway and Transportation Officials
(AASHTO);
• American Chemistry Council;
• American Petroleum Institute;
• American Public Transportation
Association (APTA);
• American Short Line and Regional
Railroad Association (ASLRRA);
• American Train Dispatchers
Association (ATDA);
• Association of American Railroads
(AAR);
• Association of Railway Museums;
• Association of State Rail Safety
Managers (ASRSM);
• Brotherhood of Locomotive
Engineers and Trainmen (BLET);
• BMWED;
• BRS;
• Chlorine Institute;
• Federal Transit Administration
(FTA)*;
• Fertilizer Institute;
• High Speed Ground Transportation
Association (HSGTA);
• Institute of Makers of Explosives;
• International Association of
Machinists and Aerospace Workers;
• International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers (IBEW);
• Labor Council for Latin American
Advancement*;
• League of Railway Industry
Women*;
• National Association of Railroad
Passengers (NARP);
• National Association of Railway
Business Women*;
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• National Conference of Firemen &
Oilers;
• National Railroad Construction and
Maintenance Association (NRC);
• National Railroad Passenger
Corporation (Amtrak);
• National Transportation Safety
Board (NTSB)*;
• Railway Supply Institute (RSI);
• Safe Travel America (STA);
• Secretaria de Comunicaciones y
Transporte*;
• Sheet Metal Workers International
Association (SMWIA);
• Tourist Railway Association, Inc.;
• Transport Canada*;
• Transport Workers Union of
America (TWU);
• Transportation Communications
International Union/BRC (TCIU/BRC);
• Transportation Security
Administration (TSA)*; and
• United Transportation Union
(UTU).
*Indicates associate, non-voting
membership.
When appropriate, FRA assigns a task
to RSAC, and after consideration and
debate, RSAC may accept or reject the
task. If the task is accepted, RSAC
establishes a working group that
possesses the appropriate expertise and
representation of interests to develop
recommendations to FRA for action on
the task. These recommendations are
developed by consensus. A working
group may establish one or more task
forces to develop facts and options on
a particular aspect of a given task. The
individual task force then provides that
information to the working group for
consideration. If a working group comes
to unanimous consensus on
recommendations for action, the
package is presented to the full RSAC
for a vote. If the proposal is accepted by
a simple majority of RSAC, the proposal
is formally recommended to FRA. FRA
then determines what action to take on
the recommendation. Because FRA staff
play an active role at the working group
level in discussing the issues and
options and in drafting the language of
the consensus proposal, FRA is often
favorably inclined toward the RSAC
recommendation. However, FRA is in
no way bound to follow the
recommendation, and the agency
exercises its independent judgment on
whether the recommended rule achieves
the agency’s regulatory goal, is soundly
supported, and is in accordance with
policy and legal requirements. Often,
FRA varies in some respects from the
RSAC recommendation in developing
the actual regulatory proposal or final
rule. Any such variations would be
noted and explained in the rulemaking
document issued by FRA. If the working
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group or RSAC is unable to reach
consensus on a recommendation for
action, FRA moves ahead to resolve the
issue through traditional rulemaking
proceedings.
B. Proceedings in This Rulemaking to
Date Generally
On January 26, 2005, the RSAC
formed the RWP Working Group
(‘‘Working Group’’) to consider specific
actions to advance the on-track safety of
employees of covered railroads and
their contractors engaged in
maintenance-of-way activities
throughout the general system of
railroad transportation, including
clarification of existing requirements.
The assigned task was to review the
existing rule, technical bulletins, and a
safety advisory dealing with on-track
safety. The Working Group was to
consider implications and, as
appropriate, consider enhancements to
the existing rule. The Working Group
would report to the RSAC any specific
actions identified as appropriate, and
would report planned activity to the full
Committee at each scheduled
Committee meeting, including
milestones for completion of projects
and progress toward completion.
The Working Group is comprised of
members from the following
organizations:
• Amtrak;
• APTA;
• ASLRRA;
• ATDA;
• AAR, including members from
BNSF Railway Company (BNSF),
Canadian National Railway Company
(CN), Canadian Pacific Railway, Limited
(CP), Consolidated Rail Corporation
(Conrail), CSX Transportation, Inc.
(CSXT), Kansas City Southern (KCS),
Norfolk Southern Corporation (NS), and
Union Pacific Railroad Company (UP);
• Belt Railroad of Chicago;
• BLET;
• BMWED;
• BRS;
• Federal Railroad Administration
(FRA);
• Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad (IHB);
• Long Island Rail Road (LIRR);
• Metro-North Commuter Railroad
Company (Metro-North);
• Montana Rail Link;
• NRC;
• Northeast Illinois Regional
Commuter Railroad Corporation (Metra);
• RailAmerica, Inc.;
• Southeastern Pennsylvania
Transportation Authority (SEPTA);
• United Transportation Union
(UTU); and
• Western New York and
Pennsylvania Railroad (WNY&P).
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The Working Group held 12 multi-day
meetings. The group worked diligently
and was able to reach consensus on 32
separate items.
C. Proceedings Concerning On-Track
Safety Procedures for Adjacent Tracks
One of the items on which the
Working Group was able to reach
consensus dealt specifically with the
adjacent-track on-track safety issue in
§ 214.335. The consensus language
developed by the Working Group for
this topic, which was approved by the
full RSAC and formally recommended
to FRA, is as follows:
§ 214.335 On-track safety procedures for
roadway work groups.
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*
*
*
*
*
(c) On-track safety is required for adjacent
controlled track within 19 feet of the
centerline of the occupied track when
roadway work group(s) consisting of roadway
workers on the ground and on-track selfpropelled or coupled equipment are engaged
in a common task on an occupied track.
(1) Except as provided by paragraph (c)(3)
of this section, when trains are cleared
through working limits on an adjacent
controlled track, or when watchman/lookout
warning in accordance with § 214.329 is the
form of adjacent on-track safety, roadway
workers shall occupy a predetermined place
of safety and all on-ground work and
equipment movement activity within the
fouling space of the occupied track shall
cease upon notification of pending adjacent
track movement (working limits) or upon
receiving the watchman/lookout warning.
(2) When single or multiple movements are
cleared through adjacent controlled track
working limits, on-ground work and
equipment movement on the occupied track
may resume only after all such movements
on adjacent track have passed each
component of the Roadway Work Group(s). If
the train stops before passing all roadway
workers, the employee in charge shall
communicate with the engineer prior to
allowing the work to resume.
(3) When single or multiple movements are
cleared through adjacent controlled track
working limits at a speed no greater than 25
mph, work performed exclusively between
the rails of the occupied track, or to the field
side of the occupied track with no adjacent
track, may continue upon notification of each
roadway worker of movement on adjacent
track. On-ground work shall not be
performed within 25 feet to the front or
25 feet to the rear of roadway maintenance
machine(s) on the occupied track during
such adjacent track movement.
(d) Equipment may not foul an adjacent
controlled track unless protected by working
limits and there are no movements
authorized through the working limits by the
roadway worker in charge.
(e) The mandatory provisions for adjacent
controlled track protection under this subpart
are not applicable to work activities
involving—
(1) A hi-rail vehicle as defined in § 214.7,
provided such hi-rail vehicle is not coupled
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to railroad cars. Where multiple hi-rail
vehicles are engaged in a common task, the
on-track safety briefing shall include
discussion of the nature of the work to be
performed to determine if adjacent controlled
track protection is necessary. Nothing in this
subpart prohibits the roadway worker in
charge of the hi-rail vehicle from establishing
adjacent controlled track protection,
as he/she deems necessary.
(2) On-ground roadway workers
exclusively performing work on the field side
of the occupied track.
(3) Catenary maintenance tower cars with
roadway workers positioned on the ground
within the gage of the occupied track for the
sole purpose of applying or removing
grounds. Nothing in this subpart prohibits
the roadway worker in charge of the catenary
maintenance tower car from establishing
adjacent track protection, as he/she deems
necessary.
Upon reviewing the joint petition of
the BRS and BMWED for an emergency
order, the consensus language of the
Working Group quoted above, and the
relevant accident data concerning
roadway workers fouling adjacent track,
FRA has decided to issue this NPRM to
lower the safety risk associated with
roadway workers fouling adjacent track.
Although FRA’s safety advisory may
have had an initial effect and have
raised awareness enough to help keep
the number of all categories of roadway
worker fatalities in 2004 and through
almost six months in 2005 at zero, the
effect was not sustained enough to
combat the rise of roadway worker
fatality incidents since late June of 2005,
when the first roadway worker fatality
occurred after the issuance of the safety
advisory, or since October of 2005,
when the first adjacent track roadway
worker fatality occurred.
In light of recent roadway worker
fatality trends, FRA has determined that
the agency must propose a more
prescriptive approach to prevent further
fatalities. The need to mandate adjacenttrack on-track safety was recognized by
FRA, members of the Working Group,
and members of the full RSAC. The
consensus language developed by the
Working Group and recommended by
the full RSAC is expected to reduce the
risk of roadway worker fatalities due to
fouling an adjacent track while working
in conjunction with on-track equipment
on an occupied track. As part of the
process in drafting the NPRM in the
larger RWP rulemaking,4 FRA circulated
the consensus rule text concerning
adjacent track and other items for errata
review. Both AAR and BMWED
4 As noted in Section I. of this document, the
provisions related to adjacent track were originally
intended to be published as part of a larger NPRM
concerning Part 214, but have been proposed here
as a separate NPRM to expedite the effective date
of such provisions.
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41219
submitted comments on this provision.
To address these issues, and other
potential ambiguities discovered upon a
closer review of the rule text, FRA has
reorganized and modified the consensus
text in issuing this NPRM, as discussed
below in the section-by-section analysis.
VII. Section-by-Section Analysis
Amendments to 49 CFR Part 214,
Railroad Workplace Safety
Subpart A—General
Section 214.7 Definitions
FRA proposes to modify this section
by removing the definition of ‘‘adjacent
tracks.’’ As also discussed under
§ 214.336, FRA proposes to convert the
term ‘‘adjacent tracks’’ to the singular,
then move the definition of ‘‘adjacent
track’’ from § 214.7 to the only section
where the term would actually be used,
and finally define the new term more
narrowly by limiting it to a controlled
track whose track center is located 19
feet or less from the track center of the
occupied track. The current definition
of ‘‘adjacent tracks’’ includes any tracks,
controlled or non-controlled, whose
track centers are spaced less than 25 feet
apart.
As discussed above in ‘‘IV. Recent
Roadway Worker Accidents (1997–
2008),’’ in all nine of the fatal accidents
that occurred on ‘‘adjacent tracks’’ as
currently defined, the adjacent track
was a controlled track with a track
center that was spaced 15 feet or less
from the track center of the occupied
track. Six of the adjacent tracks had
track centers that were spaced
approximately 14 feet or less from the
respective track centers of the tracks
that the roadway work groups were
occupying. In examining whether to
expand the types of work activities
requiring adjacent-track on-track safety
in § 214.335(c), the Working Group also
considered whether the recommended
amendments to the section would be
over-inclusive when applied in
conjunction with the existing definition
of ‘‘adjacent tracks.’’ After examining
the accident data, the Working Group
agreed that 19 feet would be a
reasonable and safe threshold to trigger
the requirement to establish adjacenttrack on-track safety and that it would
be reasonable to cover controlled tracks
within that 19-foot zone but to exclude
non-controlled tracks. FRA notes that
the lack of fatalities on non-controlled
adjacent tracks may be attributable to
the reduced operating speeds on noncontrolled tracks, where railroad
operating rules generally require that
movements must stop short of
obstructions within half the range of
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vision. The Working Group discussed
and the full RSAC recommended for
inclusion in § 214.335(c) that on-track
safety be required for ‘‘adjacent
controlled track within 19 feet of the
centerline of the occupied track’’ for
certain work activities. FRA agrees with
this analysis and has reflected it in the
proposed definition of ‘‘adjacent track.’’
Subpart C—Roadway Worker Protection
Section 214.315 Supervision and
Communication
Given the importance of an on-track
safety job briefing in roadway workers’
understanding of the nature of the work
they will be conducting and the
conditions under which they will
conduct it, FRA also thinks that the
existing requirements in § 214.315 for a
job briefing ‘‘when an employer assigns
duties to a roadway worker that call for
that employee to foul a track’’ should be
expanded to cover the new proposed
procedures for adjacent-track on-track
safety in § 214.336 if such procedures
are required for that assignment. With a
few minor changes, the text concerning
the additional components of an ontrack safety job briefing that is proposed
in this NPRM was also consensus
language developed by the Working
Group and recommended by the full
RSAC. The consensus language relating
to adjacent-tracks was proposed as a
new paragraph (a)(2) in § 214.315, to
read as follows:
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(2) Information about any tracks adjacent to
the track to be occupied, on-track safety for
such tracks, and identification of roadway
maintenance machines that will foul any
adjacent track. In such cases, the briefing
shall include procedural instructions
addressing the nature of the work to be
performed and the characteristics of the work
location to ensure compliance with this part.
On December 18, 2007, FRA e-mailed
the Working Group members and
requested an errata review of a
document in which FRA had compiled
all of the consensus items. In its errata
review comments, AAR requested that
FRA clarify that the provision is not
intended to require a discussion on the
on-track safety of an adjacent track
unless on-track safety was required on
that track by part 214. FRA agrees that
this is not the intent of the proposed
requirement, and has added the
language ‘‘if required by this subpart’’ to
the consensus rule text, which has been
proposed as new paragraph (a)(3). This
proposed section would still require the
on-track safety job briefing to include
information concerning any ‘‘tracks
adjacent’’ (in the general sense of the
word ‘‘adjacent’’) to the track to be
fouled, so as to serve as a warning to
each roadway worker of the potential
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danger in fouling such a track, even if
no on-track safety is required for that
particular track because it does not meet
the definition of ‘‘adjacent track.’’ FRA
has further clarified in a proposed
revision to introductory paragraph (a)
that this section lists only the minimum
items that must be discussed in an ontrack safety briefing. The words ‘‘at a
minimum’’ were added, and the rest of
existing paragraph (a) has been moved
to proposed paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2).
Section 214.335 On-Track Safety
Procedures for Roadway Work Groups,
General
FRA proposes to amend this section
by deleting paragraph (c) and replacing
it with a new section to address
adjacent-track on-track safety for
roadway work groups, § 214.336, for the
reasons discussed below. Existing
paragraph (c) reads as follows:
(c) Roadway work groups engaged in largescale maintenance or construction shall be
provided with train approach warning in
accordance with § 214.327 for movements on
adjacent tracks that are not included within
working limits.
The proposal would also amend the
heading of § 214.335 to reflect the
general nature of the remaining
requirements in that section.
Section 214.336 Adjacent-Track OnTrack Safety for Roadway Work Groups;
Procedures, Training, and
Recordkeeping
Paragraphs (a), Procedures; general; and
(b), Exceptions to the requirement for
adjacent-track on-track safety
As discussed in section II.C., above,
§ 214.335(c) currently requires adjacenttrack on-track safety for a roadway work
group only if such a work group is
engaged in ‘‘large-scale maintenance or
construction.’’ Under this criterion and
the limited guidance provided in the
preamble to the final rule, many
railroads have not been providing ontrack safety on adjacent tracks for
surfacing operations, small tie-renewal
operations, or similar maintenance
operations that, while smaller in scale,
still include on-track, self-propelled
equipment. This proposed new section
seeks to eliminate this interpretive issue
by establishing new, more objective
criteria for determining whether
adjacent-track on-track safety is required
for a roadway work group. Fatalities
have occurred in connection with such
operations, which many believe the
existing language should be interpreted
to cover.
In developing language to address the
increasing number of roadway worker
fatalities on an adjacent track, the
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Working Group considered that most of
the fatalities on an adjacent track
occurred when a roadway work group
with at least one of the roadway workers
on the ground, was engaged in a
common task with on-track, selfpropelled equipment on an occupied
track. In those circumstances, the
potential for a roadway worker in the
group to be distracted from the danger
of an oncoming train was great due to
the noise and dust generated by
operation of the roadway maintenance
machines, the need to avoid
entanglement in the operation of those
machines, and the need to monitor the
quality of the work being performed.
This set of factual circumstances
became the basis for the proposed new
criteria for triggering the requirement to
establish adjacent-track on-track safety
in introductory paragraph (c)(1) of the
consensus language, and in paragraph
(a) of proposed new § 214.336, which, as
a general rule, would require that ontrack safety be established for each
adjacent track when a roadway work
group with at least one of the roadway
workers on the ground, is engaged in a
common task with an on-track roadway
maintenance machine or coupled
equipment on an occupied track. In
particular, the on-track safety would
have to be provided in accordance with
§ 214.319 (Working limits, generally);
§ 214.321 (Exclusive track occupancy);
§ 214.323 (Foul time); § 214.325 (Train
coordination); or § 214.329 (Train
approach warning provided by
watchmen/lookouts). The general rule
in paragraph (a) would have three
exceptions described in proposed
paragraph (b).
Paragraph (a) would also add
definitions of two terms used in
§ 214.336: ‘‘adjacent track’’ and
‘‘occupied track.’’ For purposes of this
section (the only section where the term
is used), ‘‘adjacent track’’ would mean
‘‘a controlled track whose track center is
spaced 19 feet or less from the track
center of the occupied track.’’ The
current definition of ‘‘adjacent tracks’’
(in § 214.7) includes any tracks,
controlled or non-controlled, whose
track centers are spaced less than 25 feet
apart. As the term ‘‘adjacent track’’ was
used several times in the recommended
consensus language of § 214.335(c), and
to avoid any confusion of terms, FRA
proposes to remove the definition of
‘‘adjacent tracks’’ from § 214.7, to
convert the term to the singular, and to
adopt this new, narrower definition of
‘‘adjacent track’’ based on the roadway
worker fatality data discussed above
under the section-by-section analysis of
§ 214.7, which show that the adjacent
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tracks on which the roadway worker
fatalities occurred were all controlled
tracks and the track centers of these
controlled tracks were within 15 feet of
the track centers of the occupied track.
The second proposed definition to be
used for purposes of § 214.336 is
‘‘occupied track.’’ FRA proposes to
define the term ‘‘occupied track’’ to
mean the track on which a roadway
maintenance machine or coupled
equipment is located while engaged in
a common task with a roadway work
group. FRA replaced the consensus
language of ‘‘on-track, self-propelled or
coupled equipment’’ with ‘‘on-track
roadway maintenance machine or
coupled equipment’’ so as to use a term
that is already defined in part 214. It
should be noted that while the language
that would trigger the requirement to
establish adjacent-track on-track safety
contains the term ‘‘on-track roadway
maintenance machine’’ (which excludes
hi-rails), the proposed definition of
‘‘occupied track’’ contains the broader
term ‘‘roadway maintenance machine’’
(which includes hi-rails), since a
roadway work group that is engaged in
a common task with a hi-rail would still
be ‘‘occupying’’ the track, regardless of
whether adjacent-track on-track safety
would be required during that task. The
language in RSAC-recommended
paragraph (a) was also modified in light
of the proposed new definition of
‘‘adjacent track,’’ namely by moving
references to ‘‘controlled track’’ and the
19-foot track center distance and placing
them in the definition.
The Working Group also considered
whether it is safe to permit work to
continue under certain limited
circumstances, and proposed some
exceptions in paragraphs (c)(2)–(c)(3)
and (e)(1)–(e)(3) of the consensus
language, which the full RSAC later
recommended to FRA. FRA has adopted
all of the exceptions recommended by
the full RSAC in this proposal and has
reorganized and modified the text for
clarity, in response to comments
received from the AAR and the BMWED
in their errata review of the consensus
language, and to address other potential
ambiguities discovered upon a closer
review of the rule text.
In an effort to make the section easier
to understand, FRA has reorganized the
section into proposed paragraph (a)(1),
which lists the procedures to follow for
adjacent-track movements over 25 mph
(i.e., if a train or other on-track
equipment is authorized to move on an
adjacent track at a speed greater than 25
mph), and proposed paragraph (a)(2),
which lists the procedures to follow
when adjacent-track movements are
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authorized at a speed of 25 mph or less.5
Proposed paragraph (a)(1) would require
that each roadway worker in the
roadway work group stop any work on
the ground and stop the movement of
any roadway maintenance machine or
coupled equipment in the fouling space
of the occupied track and the adjacent
track, and occupy a predetermined
place of safety. If on-track safety has
been established on the adjacent track
through train approach warning in
accordance with § 214.329, all work
would have to cease upon receiving a
watchman/lookout warning. On the
other hand, if working limits have been
established on the adjacent track and
the roadway work group has not been
assigned a watchman/lookout, all work
would have to cease upon receiving
notification that the roadway worker in
charge intends to authorize one or more
train movements or other on-track
equipment movements through the
working limits on an adjacent track.
This notification would have to occur
before the roadway worker in charge
releases the working limits, in order to
comply with existing § 214.319(c).
In its errata review comments on the
FRA document compiling all of the
Working Group consensus language,
AAR requested that FRA clarify whether
work would be permitted to resume at
a particular location after the head-end
of the movement had passed or after the
entire train had passed, under the
RSAC-recommended § 214.335(c)(2). A
review of the available accident data
shows that none of the fatalities that
occurred on the adjacent track were due
to an employee walking into the side of
the train; rather, the employees walked
in front of the train’s path. Thus, it is
reasonable to permit work to resume
after the head-end of the movement has
passed the location of each component
of the roadway work group (provided
that the roadway workers do not later
advance to a position ahead of the headend), and the relevant language in
consensus text in paragraph (c)(2) has
been modified accordingly by FRA in its
proposed paragraph (a)(1)(ii).
5 If a roadway worker in charge, in his discretion,
authorizes a train through working limits on an
adjacent track at 30 mph, but the train is actually
traveling at a speed of only 20 mph, the procedures
in proposed paragraph (a)(1), regarding adjacenttrack movements over 25 mph, would still apply.
Where exclusive track occupancy is the method of
on-track safety established on the adjacent track,
FRA notes that existing § 214.321(d) provides that
movements of trains and roadway maintenance
machines within working limits shall be made only
under the direction of the roadway worker having
control over the working limits, and further notes
that such movements shall be at restricted speed
unless a higher speed has been specifically
authorized by the roadway worker in charge of the
working limits.
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41221
In modifying the language in
consensus paragraph (c)(2) for inclusion
in its proposal, FRA realized that this
same paragraph did not address whether
such work would be permitted to
continue if a train or other on-track
equipment, due to the maximum
timetable speed of 25 mph, were
operating at speeds no greater than 25
mph on an adjacent track, where train
approach warning was the established
method of adjacent-track on-track safety.
As the roadway workers are presented
with similar safety risks and would still
receive notification of the train or other
on-track equipment movements,
regardless of the method of adjacenttrack on-track safety established, FRA
has decided to adopt clarifying language
and has combined consensus
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) into a new
paragraph (a)(1)(ii) in this NPRM. Under
the proposal, a component of a roadway
work group may resume on-ground
work and movement of any roadway
maintenance machine or coupled
equipment on the occupied track only
after the head-end of all trains or other
on-track equipment moving on the
adjacent track (either authorized
through the working limits by the
roadway worker in charge or for which
a watchman/lookout has provided a
warning) has passed and remains ahead
of that component of the roadway work
group. This provision may be best
explained through examples showing
how the proposed requirements would
apply under various factual scenarios.
For example, if a roadway worker in
charge were to authorize three trains
through the working limits, and only
working limits were in effect, the work
would not be permitted to continue
until all three movements had passed
the roadway work group component’s
location. If train approach warning
procedures were also in effect under the
same circumstances, the roadway work
group component would be allowed to
continue all work after the head-end of
the first train passed, (so long as the
work remained behind the head-end
and would not foul the adjacent track)
until receiving the warning for the
second train, and so on.
On the other hand, if the train or other
on-track equipment were to stop before
its head-end passed all of the roadway
workers in the roadway work group (or
if a roadway worker in the roadway
work group moved to a position on or
fouling the occupied track in advance of
the head-end of the adjacent-track
movement), the work to be performed
on or while fouling the occupied track
ahead of the train or other on-track
equipment on the adjacent track would
be permitted to resume only if adjacent-
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track on-track safety is currently in
effect or re-established. In most cases,
this would likely mean that on-track
safety through train approach warning
(§ 214.329) is still in effect or has been
re-established on the adjacent track. In
the remaining cases, this would mean
that the roadway worker in charge has
communicated with the train engineer
or equipment operator and obtained or
regained control of such train or other
on-track equipment. Of course, any
work that would foul the adjacent track
on which the movement is occurring
would not be permitted to resume
immediately upon the head-end of the
movement passing by the roadway work
group component, as adjacent track ontrack safety cannot be re-established for
that adjacent track at least until the
entire train or other on-track equipment
movement has passed (and remains
past) the roadway work group
component’s location, unless the train
or other on-track equipment were
stopped and under the control of the
roadway worker in charge.
The proposed procedures to be
followed for adjacent-track movements
of 25 mph or less are the same as those
procedures for adjacent-track
movements over 25 mph, except that
work would be permitted to continue in
certain circumstances without regard to
when the head-end passed the roadway
work group’s location, due to the low
speed of the movements. In proposed
paragraph (a), FRA makes clear that if
an occupied track has two adjacent
tracks, and one of the tracks has one or
more adjacent-track movements
authorized at 25 mph or less, and the
other has one or more concurrent
adjacent-track movements authorized at
over 25 mph, the more restrictive
procedures in paragraph (a)(1) would
apply.
The circumstances under which work
may continue during low-speed
movements on adjacent tracks have
been included in proposed paragraphs
(a)(2)(i)-(a)(2)(ii). In both sets of
circumstances, any work that would be
permitted to continue after notification
of an adjacent-track movement would
have to be performed more than 25 feet
away from the front or rear of any
roadway maintenance machine that is
on or fouling the occupied track. While
existing § 214.341(a)(5) requires each
employer to include in its on-track
safety program specific provisions
addressing spacing ‘‘between machines
and roadway workers to prevent
personal injury,’’ the rule does not
prescribe a specific distance, as certain
work activities may require a roadway
worker to work closer to a machine than
others. Many railroads that subscribe to
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the General Code of Operating Rules
(‘‘GCOR’’), for example, have adopted a
15-foot work zone in which roadway
workers are not permitted to enter
without first communicating with the
operator of the equipment and
establishing safe work procedures. See
GCOR Rule 136.7.3. The Working Group
proposed a larger work zone of 25 feet
to help lessen the distraction and danger
posed by a roadway maintenance
machine working on or fouling an
occupied track, as both an on-ground
roadway worker and an operator of a
roadway maintenance machine will be
performing work with the additional
distraction of one or more adjacent-track
movements. FRA proposes to adopt this
recommendation as one of the
circumstances for permitting work to
continue as described in proposed
paragraphs (a)(2)(i) and (a)(2)(ii).
The first set of circumstances is when
work is performed exclusively while
positioned between the rails of the
occupied track, provided that any onground work is performed more than 25
feet away from the front or rear of any
roadway maintenance machine that is
on or fouling the occupied track during
such an adjacent-track movement. The
rationale for permitting work to
continue between the rails is that a
roadway worker who is positioned
between the rails of the occupied track
is in little danger of fouling the adjacent
track. This proposed condition is
similar to an existing provision in
§ 214.103(d) that permits bridge workers
to perform minor repair work
exclusively between the rails without
any fall protection. As this condition
has worked well in the bridge worker
area, FRA proposes to adopt the RSACrecommended condition in the roadway
worker area.
The first set of circumstances is when
work is performed exclusively while
positioned between the rails of the
occupied track, provided that any onground work is performed more than 25
feet away from the front or rear of any
roadway maintenance machine that is
on or fouling the occupied track during
such an adjacent-track movement. The
rationale for permitting work to
continue between the rails is that a
roadway worker who is positioned
between the rails of the occupied track
is in little danger of fouling the adjacent
track. This proposed condition is
similar to an existing provision in
§ 214.103(d) that permits bridge workers
to perform minor repair work
exclusively between the rails without
any fall protection. As this condition
has worked well in the bridge worker
area, FRA proposes to adopt the RSAC-
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recommended condition in the roadway
worker area.
It should be noted that paragraph
(a)(2) only directly addresses the types
of work that a component of a roadway
work group may continue performing
while waiting for the head-end of an
adjacent-track movement to pass by that
component’s location. It does not
directly address when all other work
(i.e., work that paragraph (a)(2) does not
cover) may resume. Thus, roadway
workers who are assigned to perform
work not covered by paragraph (a)(2)
must look to the procedures in
paragraph (a)(1) for guidance. For
example, since on-ground work that
would be performed near a roadway
maintenance machine (i.e., within 25
feet of the front or rear of a machine that
is on or fouling the occupied track) is
not covered by paragraph (a)(2), such
work would not be permitted to resume
until the conditions in paragraph (a) had
been fulfilled. That is to say, such work
(as well as all other work not covered
by paragraph (a)(2) that would not foul
the adjacent track) would be permitted
to resume only after the head-end of all
movements (authorized through the
working limits by the roadway worker
in charge or for which a watchman/
lookout has provided a warning) have
passed by (and remain ahead of) the
roadway work group component’s
location.
The second set of circumstances for
permitting work to continue when a
movement on the adjacent track is
authorized at 25 mph or less is when
work is performed to the field side of
the occupied track furthest from the
adjacent track where the movement is
occurring, provided that there is no
danger posed by an adjacent track on
that side (i.e., either no adjacent track is
on that side or else on-track safety has
been established on any adjacent track
on that side), and provided that any onground work is performed more than 25
feet away from the front or rear of any
roadway maintenance machine on or
fouling the occupied track during such
adjacent track-movement. Both the
Working Group and FRA recognize that
if there is little danger of a roadway
worker fouling an adjacent track (e.g.,
Main Track No. 1) while positioned
between the rails of the occupied track
(e.g., Main Track No. 2), a roadway
worker is in even less danger of fouling
that adjacent track if he or she is
positioned on the field side of the
occupied track furthest from the
adjacent track. If, however, there is
another adjacent track present (e.g.,
Main Track No. 3) on the field side
farthest from the adjacent track on
which a train or other on-track
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equipment movement has been
authorized (e.g., Main Track No. 1), then
the roadway worker would potentially
be in danger for fouling the other
adjacent track (e.g., Main Track No. 3).
FRA makes clear that even if adjacenttrack on-track safety in the form of
working limits had been established on
the other adjacent track, the roadway
worker would still be in potential
danger if he or she were to foul the other
adjacent track if the protection had in
effect been nullified by the roadway
worker in charge authorizing a train or
other on-track equipment movement
through the working limits on that other
adjacent track.
Given the potential danger posed by
concurrent movements on two adjacent
tracks, it is important to note that while
the proposed § 214.336 would apply to
each adjacent track individually, the
impact on the type of work that would
be permitted to continue on the
occupied track must be examined as a
whole. Thus, where a roadway worker
receives notification of adjacent-track
movements authorized at 25 mph or less
that are occurring concurrently on both
adjacent tracks, FRA proposes that the
roadway worker would not be permitted
to work to either field side of the
occupied track, as the movement on one
adjacent track would not permit any
work to the field side closest to it, and
the movement on the other adjacent
track would not permit any work to the
field side closest to it. See proposed
paragraph (a)(2)(ii). On-ground work
closer than 25 feet, and all other work
(including work to the field side) that
would not foul either adjacent track,
would be permitted to continue once
the head-end of all movements
(authorized through by the roadway
worker in charge or for which a
watchman/lookout has provided a
warning) has passed by (and remains
ahead of) the roadway work group
component’s location. Field-side work
that would foul the closest adjacent
track would not be permitted to resume
until on-track safety has been reestablished on the closest adjacent track;
thus, work would not be permitted to
resume until the entire length (i.e., not
just the head-end) of all movements on
the closest adjacent track (authorized
through the working limits by the
roadway worker in charge or for which
a watchman/lookout has provided a
warning) has passed by (and remains
ahead of) the roadway work group
component’s location.
The Working Group also discussed,
and the RSAC recommended, three
exceptions when adjacent-track on-track
safety would not have to be established
at all. See consensus paragraphs (e)(1)–
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(e)(3). FRA proposes to adopt all three
exceptions in this NPRM. See proposed
§ 214.336(b).
The first proposed exception to the
requirement for adjacent-track on-track
safety would be for an on-ground
roadway worker performing work while
exclusively positioned on the field side
of the occupied track, provided that
there should essentially be no danger
posed by any other adjacent track. In
particular, there would be no danger
posed by any other adjacent track either
because there is no adjacent track on the
field side of the occupied track or, even
though there is an adjacent track on the
field side of the occupied track, on-track
safety has been established in
accordance with the RWP Rule on that
adjacent track.
The second exception to the
requirement for adjacent-track on-track
safety would be for a hi-rail vehicle on
the occupied track, provided such hirail vehicle is not coupled to any
equipment. See proposed
§ 214.336(b)(2). As discussed in section
IV. of this preamble, there has been only
one adjacent-track fatality where a
roadway work group had been engaged
in a common task with a hi-rail vehicle
as defined in § 214.7, and the roadway
workers in that case were under the
impression that adjacent-track on-track
safety was in effect when, due to a
miscommunication, it was not. Given
the circumstances of the one fatality and
because the duties normally performed
by an employee operating a hi-rail tend
to be less distracting to on-ground
roadway workers and produce less dust
and noise than a typical on-track
roadway maintenance machine, FRA
proposes that adjacent-track on-track
safety not be required for roadway work
groups engaged in a common task with
a hi-rail. The consensus language for
this exception also included language
indicating that where multiple hi-rails
are engaged in a common task, the ontrack safety briefing shall include
discussion of the nature of the work to
be performed to determine if adjacenttrack on-track safety is necessary. FRA
has removed this language in its
proposal because the roadway worker in
charge must always consider the nature
of the work to be performed to
determine the appropriate level of ontrack safety. In fact, the consensus
language emphasizes that nothing in
this subpart prohibits the roadway
worker in charge from establishing
adjacent-track on-track safety as he or
she deems necessary.
The third proposed exception to the
requirement for adjacent-track on-track
safety is for a catenary maintenance
tower car with one or more roadway
PO 00000
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41223
workers positioned on the ground
exclusively within the gage of the
occupied track for the sole purpose of
applying or removing grounds. As
discussed in section IV. of this
preamble, there have been no adjacenttrack fatalities where a roadway work
group had been engaged in a common
task with a catenary maintenance tower
car on the occupied track and the duties
normally performed by an employee
operating a catenary maintenance tower
car tend to be less distracting to onground roadway workers and produce
less dust and noise than a typical ontrack roadway maintenance machine.
In its errata review comments on the
FRA document compiling all of the
Working Group consensus language that
was recommended to FRA by the RSAC,
BMWED noted that from the manner in
which the consensus exceptions
(paragraphs (e)(1)–(e)(3)) were
constructed, one could interpret that the
roadway worker in charge of on-ground
roadway workers exclusively
performing work on the field side of the
occupied track described in consensus
paragraph (e)(2) would not be afforded
the same right to establish a greater level
of adjacent-track on-track safety as the
roadway worker in charge of the hi-rail
vehicle or catenary maintenance tower
car described in paragraphs (e)(1) and
(e)(3), respectively. FRA agrees that the
provisions should be consistent. The
section has been reorganized so that the
language indicating that nothing in this
subpart prohibits the roadway worker in
charge from establishing adjacent-track
on-track safety as he or she deems
necessary has been removed from
paragraphs (e)(1) and (e)(3) and moved
into the body of the introductory text of
proposed new paragraph (b) so as to
apply to all three exceptions in
proposed paragraphs (b)(1)–(b)(3).
Consensus paragraph (e)(1) (now
proposed paragraph (b)(2)) was also
amended to remove the words ‘‘as
defined in § 214.7’’ from the hi-rail
exception, since each time that a term
defined in § 214.7 is used in part 214,
FRA intends the term to be interpreted
in the manner in which it is defined in
§ 214.7, unless otherwise noted.
Regarding the prohibition in
consensus paragraph (d) against
‘‘equipment’’ fouling an adjacent track
unless protected by working limits, FRA
has changed the term to ‘‘roadway
maintenance machine’’ to clarify that
this prohibition is meant to be broad
and would include hi-rails that are part
of the roadway work group. See
proposed § 214.336(b)(3). While a hi-rail
alone would not trigger the requirement
to establish adjacent-track on-track
safety, once a hi-rail has become part of
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a roadway work group involving at least
one roadway worker on the ground and
‘‘an on-track roadway maintenance
machine or coupled equipment,’’ the hirail would be subject to this prohibition
against fouling, as well as to the
machine spacing requirement in
consensus paragraph (c)(3). See
proposed §§ 214.336(a)(2), 214.336(a)(3),
and 214.336(b)(2). Further, FRA clarifies
that the prohibition was not meant to be
so broad that a roadway worker would
not be permitted to use readily portable
tools or equipment similar to a
jackhammer, such as a pneumatic
tamping gun or a spike driver, on an
adjacent track while afforded on-track
safety through train approach warning.
FRA would urge that employers and
employees use common sense in
determining which tools or equipment
they would permit to be used or use
under train approach warning. If there
is any doubt as to whether the
equipment could be readily removed,
the employee must not foul the track
with those tools or equipment under
watchman/lookout (i.e., train approach
warning) protection.
Paragraph (c), Training, and (d),
Recordkeeping, of § 214.336
Training and recordkeeping
requirements were also added to ensure
compliance with this new section.
Proposed new paragraph (c) provides
that before an employer (‘‘a railroad, or
a contractor to a railroad, that directly
engages or compensates individuals to
perform any of the duties defined in
[part 214]’’) assigns an employee to
perform roadway worker duties for
which adjacent-track on-track safety is
required, the employer shall provide
such an employee either with training
on this section or a copy of a railroadissued bulletin, order, general order,
notice, operating rule, or other
document adopting the adjacent-track
on-track safety requirements of this
section. See § 214.7. FRA expects that
each railroad would revise its on-track
safety program and documents required
by §§ 214.303 and 214.309 as necessary
to include the requirements of this
proposed new section. Issuing a
bulletin, order, general order, notice, or
other document adopting the adjacenttrack on-track safety requirements of
this section would suffice until a more
permanent update is made. A contractor
to a railroad would have to ensure that
its employees are aware of this change
and of any other changes to a railroad’s
operating and safety rules related to this
proposed new section, and FRA would
ask each railroad to cooperate with its
contractors to have these documents or
any other updates to its on-track safety
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Jkt 214001
program and documents required by
§§ 214.303 and 214.309 available for
contractors performing roadway worker
duties on its property. The proposed
requirements for providing training or a
copy of a railroad-issued document (i.e.,
that adopts the new adjacent-track ontrack safety requirements) is intended to
allow railroads and contractors to
railroads the maximum flexibility, while
still ensuring that employees are aware
of the requirements prior to performing
a roadway worker duty for which
adjacent-track on-track safety would be
required. Thus, an employee performing
only the duty of a lone worker would
not need to be trained by the effective
date of this rule, under the proposed
requirements. A railroad or a contractor
to a railroad would also be able comply
with this proposed training requirement
by providing its employees with an
extended on-track safety job briefing
that discusses the new requirements
prior to assigning them to perform a
roadway worker duty affected by this
section.
Proposed new paragraph (d) would
require each employer to obtain from
each affected employee a written receipt
or acknowledgement of the delivery of
a copy of the adjacent-track on-track
safety training or document required by
paragraph (c), and retain such a receipt
or acknowledgement until the employee
receives, pursuant to § 214.343,
recurrent training that includes
discussion of the procedures for
adjacent-track on-track safety required
by this section. If the training is
received for the first time as part of an
employee’s recurrent training, a record
kept pursuant to § 214.343(d) will serve
as the receipt or acknowledgement for
purposes of this section. If an employee
receives training for the first time, but
not as part of recurrent training and
does not receive recurrent training
within two years of the initial training
(e.g., if the employee is on extended
leave or no longer works for the
employer), then the record would no
longer need to be kept. Further, under
the proposed language, records of the
written receipts or acknowledgements
would need to be made available to
representatives of FRA and States
participating under part 212 for
inspection and copying during normal
business hours.
VIII. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866 and DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures
This NPRM has been evaluated in
accordance with existing policies and
procedures, and determined not to be
significant under both Executive Order
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Frm 00012
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Sfmt 4702
12866 and DOT policies and
procedures. See 44 FR 11034 (Feb. 26,
1979). FRA has prepared and placed in
the docket a regulatory evaluation
addressing the economic impact of this
NPRM. Document inspection and
copying facilities are available at the
Federal Docket Management Facility,
U.S. Department of Transportation,
West Building, Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC 20590. Docket material
is also available for inspection on the
Internet at https://www.regulations.gov.
Photocopies may also be obtained by
submitting a written request to the FRA
Docket Clerk at Office of Chief Counsel,
Mail Stop 10, Federal Railroad
Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590;
please refer to Docket No. FRA–2008–
0059, Notice No. 1.
Certain of the requirements reflect
current industry practice, or restate
existing regulations, or both. As a result,
in calculating the costs of this NPRM,
FRA has neither included the costs of
those actions that would be performed
voluntarily in the absence of a
regulation, nor has FRA included the
costs of those actions that would be
required by an existing regulation.
This evaluation includes quantitative
measurements and qualitative
discussions of implementation costs for
this proposed rule. The costs would
primarily be imposed by a small
increase in job briefing time and
additional resources spent to provide
protection for the safe conduct of other
than large-scale maintenance and
construction of track adjacent to track
with train movements. Training and
recordkeeping costs would also accrue.
The benefits would primarily accrue
from a reduction in roadway worker
casualties (fatalities and injuries).
Business benefits stemming from
avoided train delays and property
damages would also accrue.
FRA estimates that the present value
(PV, 7%) of the total 20-year costs
which the industry would be expected
to incur to comply with the
requirements in this NPRM is $137.8
million. FRA also estimates the PV (7%)
of the total 20-year benefits accruing to
society from the implementation of the
requirements is $88.1 million. FRA
believes that taking into account nonquantifiable benefits, including reduced
train delays and property damages
resulting from roadway worker
incidents, the benefits associated with
this proposed rule would justify the
implementation costs.
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B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and
Executive Order 13272
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) and Executive Order
13272 require a review of proposed and
final rules to assess their impact on
small entities. FRA has prepared and
placed in the docket a Small Entity
Impact Assessment and Evaluation that
assesses the small entity impact of this
NPRM. Document inspection and
copying facilities are available at the
Docket Management Facility, U.S.
Department of Transportation, West
Building, Ground Floor, Room W12–
140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC 20590. Docket material
is also available for inspection on the
Internet at https://www.regulations.gov.
Photocopies may also be obtained by
submitting a written request to the FRA
Docket Clerk at Office of Chief Counsel,
Mail Stop 10, Federal Railroad
Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590;
please refer to Docket No. FRA–2008–
0059, Notice No. 1.
This Small Entity Impact Assessment
and Evaluation concludes that this
proposed rule would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. In
order to determine the significance of
the economic impact for the final rule’s
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
requirements, FRA invites comments
from all interested parties concerning
data and information regarding the
potential economic impact caused by
this proposed rule, during the comment
period.
The U.S. Small Business
Administration (SBA) stipulates in its
‘‘Size Standards’’ a ‘‘for profit’’ railroad
business firm may not have more than
1,500 employees for ‘‘Line-Haul
Operating’’ Railroads, and 500
employees for ‘‘Switching and Terminal
Establishments’’ to be considered as a
‘‘small entity.’’ 6 ‘‘Small entity’’ is
defined in 5 U.S.C. 601 as a small
business concern that is independently
owned and operated, and is not
dominant in its field of operation. SBA’s
‘‘size standards’’ may be altered by
Federal agencies upon consultation with
SBA and in conjunction with public
comment.
Pursuant to that authority, FRA has
published a final policy that classifies
‘‘small entities’’ as being railroads that
6 ‘‘Table of Size Standards,’’ U.S. Small Business
Administration, January 31, 1996, 13 CFR Part 121.
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meet the line haulage revenue
requirements of a Class III railroad.7
Currently, the revenue requirements are
20 million inflation-adjusted dollars or
less in annual operating revenue. The
$20-million limit is based on the
Surface Transportation Board’s
threshold of a Class III railroad carrier,
which is adjusted by applying the
railroad revenue deflator adjustment.8
The same dollar limit on revenues is
established to determine whether a
railroad shipper or contractor is a small
entity. FRA is using this definition of
‘‘small entity’’ for regulatory flexibility
purposes in this rulemaking.
There are approximately 665 small
railroads.9 Potentially all small railroads
could be impacted by this proposed
regulation. However, because of certain
characteristics that these railroads
typically have, there should not be any
impact on the majority of them. Most
only have single-track operations. Some
small railroads such as the tourist and
historic railroads, operate across the
lines of other railroads that would bear
the burden or impact of the proposed
rules requirements. Finally, others, if
they do have more than a single track,
typically have operations that are light
enough such that the railroads have
generally always performed the
pertinent trackside work with the track
and right-of-way taken out of service, or
conducted the work during hours the
track is not used.
In addition, FRA is not aware of any
commuter railroads that qualify as small
entities. This is likely because
commuter railroad operations in the
United States are part of larger
governmental entities whose
jurisdictions exceed 50,000 in
population.
FRA is uncertain as to the number of
contractors that would be affected by
this issue. FRA is aware that some
railroads hire contractors to conduct
some of the functions of roadway
workers on their railroads. However,
most of the costs associated with the
burdens from this rulemaking would
ultimately get passed on to the pertinent
railroad. Most likely, the contracts
would be written to reflect that, and the
contractor would bear no additional
68 FR 24891 (May 9, 2003).
further information on the calculation of the
specific dollar limit, please reference 49 CFR part
1201.
9 715 railroads ¥50 (large freight, medium
freight, passenger, and commuter railroads) = 665
small railroads.
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burden for the proposed requirements.
In addition, FRA is uncertain as to the
number of contractors that would be
considered to be small entities. FRA
requests any information during the
rulemaking comment period related to
contractors and the burdens that might
impact them as a result of this proposed
rulemaking.
No other small businesses (nonrailroads) are expected to be impacted
by this proposed rulemaking.
There are some minor recordkeeping
requirements in the new section of the
proposed rule. These proposed
requirements relate to documenting that
all affected roadway workers are trained
on the new section. However, since FRA
believes that no small railroads will be
required to establish adjacent-track ontrack safety to perform track work under
the proposed requirements, these
recordkeeping requirements are not
expected to impact any small railroads.
As noted prior, these railroads either
only have a single track, and therefore
no adjacent track to protect, or currently
take all pertinent track out of service
when performing track work.
The impacts from this regulation are
primarily a result of the proposed
requirements for roadway work groups
to be provided on-track safety when
working on a track within close
proximity of an adjacent track. Again,
since small railroads either do not have
any adjacent track or conduct track
work on the occupied track with an
adjacent track when the adjacent track
is out of service, there is no impact for
small railroads. Since FRA does not
anticipate that this proposed rule would
impose any burdens on small entities,
there is no alternative treatment
proposed for small entities.
Having made these determinations,
FRA certifies that this NPRM is not
expected to have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities under the Regulatory Flexibility
Act or Executive Order 13272.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection
requirements in this proposed rule have
been submitted for approval to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 19995, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. The
sections that contain the new
information collection requirements,
and the estimated time to fulfill each
requirement are as follows:
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Respondent
universe
CFR section
Total annual
responses
Average time per response
Total annual
burden hours
Total annual
burden cost
350 Safety Inspectors.
150 forms ................
4 hours ....................
600
$24,000
718 Railroads .........
2,736
139,536
5 New Railroads .....
20 Railroads ...........
20 prog. amend. +
584 prog. amend.
5 safety prog ...........
80 challenges .........
20 hours: 4 hours ...
—Subsequent Years: New Programs
214.313—Good Faith Challenges to OnTrack Safety Rules.
214.315/335—Supervision and Communication Job Briefings.
214.321—Exclusive Track Occupancy—
Working Limits.
214.325—Train Coordination:
—Establishing
Working
Limits
through Communication.
214.327—Inaccessible Track:
—Working Limits on Non-controlled
Track: Notifications.
214.336—Procedures for Adjacent-Track
Movements Over.
25 mph (New Requirements) : Notifications/Watchmen/ Lookout Warnings.
—Roadway Worker Communication
with Train Engineers or Equipment
Operators.
—Procedures for Adjacent-Track
Movements 25 mph or less: Notifications/Watchmen/Lookout Warnings.
—Roadway Worker Communication
with Train Engineers or Equipment
Operators.
—Training .........................................
—Recordkeeping ..............................
250 hours ................
4 hours per challenge.
2 minutes 30 seconds.
1 minute ..................
1,250
320
63,750
12,800
640,375
21,800,000
11,679
467,160
214.337—On-Track Safety Procedures
for Lone Workers: Statements by Lone
Workers.
214.343/345/347/349/351/353/355—
Training Requirements.
—Records of Training ..............................
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Form FRA F 6180.1119—Part 214 Railroad Workplace Safety Violation Report.
214.303—Railroad On-Track Safety Programs:
—Amendments to Programs ............
718 Railroads .........
214.503—Good Faith Challenges; Procedures for Notification and Resolution.—
Notice of Unsafe Vehicle or Non-compliance with FRA rules.
—Development of Resolution Procedures.
214.505—Req’d Environmental Control
and Protection Systems for New OnLine Roadway Maintenance Machines
with Enclosed Cabs.
214.507—A-Built Light Weight on New
Roadway Maintenance Machines.
214.511—Req’d Audible Warning Devices for New On-Track Roadway
Maintenance Machines.
214.513—Retrofitting of Existing OnTrack Roadway Maintenance Machines:
—Identification of Triggering Mechanism—Horns.
214.515—Overhead Covers for Existing
On-Track Roadway Maintenance Machines.
214.517—Retrofitting of Existing OnTrack Roadway Maintenance Machines Manufactured After 1990: Stenciling/Marking of Light Weight.
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50,000 Roadway
Workers.
8,583 Roadway
Workers.
16,350,000 briefings
50,00 Roadway
Workers.
36,500 communications.
15 seconds .............
152
6,080
718 Railroads .........
50,000 occurrences
or notifications.
10 minutes ..............
8,333
333,320
100 Railroads .........
10,000 warnings .....
15 seconds .............
42
1,680
100 Railroads .........
3,000 communications.
1 minute ..................
50
2,000
100 Railroads .........
3,000 warnings .......
15 seconds .............
13
520
100 Railroads .........
1,500 communic. ....
1 minute ..................
25
1,000
718 Railroads .........
718 Railroads .........
35,000 tr. empl .......
35,000 receipts +
35,000 coopies.
2,080,000 statements.
5 minutes ................
1 minute; 3 seconds
2,916
612
10
24,480
30 seconds .............
17,333
693,320
50,000 Roadway
Workers.
50,000 Roadway
Workers.
50,000 Roadway
Workers.
50,000 tr. Empl .......
4.5 hours .................
225,000
9,000,000
50,000 records ........
2 minutes ................
1,667
85,017
125 notifications ......
10 minutes ..............
21
840
644 Railroads .........
10 procedures .........
2 hours ....................
20
1,020
644 Railroads .........
9 lists ......................
1 hour .....................
9
459
644 Railroads .........
1,000 stickers .........
5 minutes ................
83
3,320
644 Railroads .........
3,700 identified
mechanisms.
5 minutes ................
308
12,320
644 Railroads .........
200 mechanisms ....
5 minutes ................
17
680
645 Railroads .........
500 requests + 500
responses.
10 minutes; 20 minutes.
250
11,837
644 Railroads .........
500 stencils .............
5 minutes ................
42
1,680
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Frm 00014
700,739 written authorities.
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CFR section
Respondent
universe
Total annual
responses
Average time per response
214.518—Safe and Secure Position for
Riders:
—Positions identified by stencilings/
markings/notices.
214.523—Hi-Rail Vehicles .......................
—Non-Complying Conditions ............
644 Railroads .........
1,000 stencils ..........
5 minutes ................
83
3,320
644 Railroads .........
644 Railroads .........
2,000 insp. record ...
500 tags + 500 reports.
550 tags + 550 reports.
250 records .............
60 minutes ..............
10 minutes; 15 minutes.
5 minutes; 15 minutes.
15 minutes ..............
2,000
208
80,000
8,320
184
7,360
63
3,213
214.527—Inspection for Compliance; Repair Schedules.
214.533—Schedule of Repairs; Subject
to Availability of Parts: Compliance
Records.
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1 Incl.
644 Railroads .........
644 Railroads .........
Total annual
burden hours
Total annual
burden cost
RIA.
All estimates include the time for
reviewing instructions; searching
existing data sources; gathering or
maintaining the needed data; and
reviewing the information. Pursuant to
44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(B), FRA solicits
comments concerning: whether these
information collection requirements are
necessary for the proper performance of
the functions of FRA, including whether
the information has practical utility; the
accuracy of FRA’s estimates of the
burden of the information collection
requirements; the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and whether the burden of
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of automated collection techniques
or other forms of information
technology, may be minimized. For
information or a copy of the paperwork
package submitted to OMB, contact Mr.
Robert Brogan, Information Clearance
Officer, at 202–493–6292, or Ms. Nakia
Poston at 202–493–6073.
Organizations and individuals
desiring to submit comments on the
collection of information requirements
should direct them to Mr. Robert Brogan
or Ms. Nakia Poston, Federal Railroad
Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., 3rd Floor, Washington, DC
20590. Comments may also be
submitted via e-mail to Mr. Brogan or
Ms. Poston at the following address:
robert.brogan@dot.gov;
nakia.poston@dot.gov.
OMB is required to make a decision
concerning the collection of information
requirements contained in this proposed
rule between 30 and 60 days after
publication of this document in the
Federal Register. Therefore, a comment
to OMB is best assured of having its full
effect if OMB receives it within 30 days
of publication. The final rule will
respond to any OMB or public
comments on the information collection
requirements contained in this proposal.
FRA is not authorized to impose a
penalty on persons for violating
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information collection requirements
which do not display a current OMB
control number, if required. FRA
intends to obtain current OMB control
numbers for any new information
collection requirements resulting from
this rulemaking action prior to the
effective date of the final rule. The OMB
control number, when assigned, will be
announced by separate notice in the
Federal Register.
D. Federalism Implications
FRA has analyzed this NPRM in
accordance with the principles and
criteria contained in Executive Order
13132, issued on August 4, 1999, which
directs Federal agencies to exercise great
care in establishing policies that have
federalism implications. See 64 FR
43255. This NPRM will not have a
substantial direct effect on the States, on
the relationship between the National
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among various levels of
government.
One of the fundamental federalism
principles, as stated in section 2(a) of
Executive Order 13132, is that
‘‘Federalism is rooted in the belief that
issues that are not national in scope or
significance are most appropriately
addressed by the level of government
closest to the people.’’ Congress
expressed its intent that there be
national uniformity of regulation
concerning railroad safety matters when
it enacted 49 U.S.C. 20106. That section
provides that all regulations prescribed
by the Secretary of Transportation with
respect to railroad safety matters and the
Secretary of Homeland Security with
respect to railroad security matters
preempt any State law, regulation, or
order covering the same subject matter,
except a provision necessary to
eliminate or reduce an essentially local
safety or security hazard that is not
incompatible with a Federal law,
regulation, or order and that does not
unreasonably burden interstate
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
commerce. Nothing in this NPRM
proposes to alter the preemptive effect
of the RWP Rule.
FRA notes that the above factors have
been considered throughout the
development of this NPRM both
internally and through consultation
within the RSAC forum, as described in
Sections VI and VII of this preamble.
The full RSAC, which, prior to the
publication of this NPRM, reached
consensus on the proposed rule text and
recommended the proposal to FRA, has
as permanent voting members two
organizations representing State and
local interests: AASHTO and ASRSM.
As such, these State organizations
concurred with the proposed
requirements, which differ in only
limited respects from the requirements
contained in this NPRM. The RSAC
regularly provides recommendations to
the FRA Administrator for solutions to
regulatory issues that reflect significant
input from its State members. To date,
FRA has received no indication of
concerns about the Federalism
implications of this rulemaking from
these representatives or from any other
representative.
For the foregoing reasons, FRA
believes that this NPRM is in
accordance with the principles and
criteria contained in Executive Order
13132.
E. Environmental Impact
FRA has evaluated this NPRM in
accordance with its ‘‘Procedures for
Considering Environmental Impacts’’
(FRA’s Procedures) (see 64 FR 28545
(May 26, 1999)) as required by the
National Environmental Policy Act (see
42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), other
environmental statutes, Executive
Orders, and related regulatory
requirements. FRA has determined that
this NPRM is not a major FRA action
(requiring the preparation of an
environmental impact statement or
environmental assessment) because it is
categorically excluded from detailed
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environmental review pursuant to
section 4(c)(20) of FRA’s Procedures.
See 64 FR 28547 (May 26, 1999). In
accordance with section 4(c) and (e) of
FRA’s Procedures, the agency has
further concluded that no extraordinary
circumstances exist with respect to this
regulation that might trigger the need for
a more detailed environmental review.
As a result, FRA finds that this NPRM
is not a major Federal action
significantly affecting the quality of the
human environment.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
Pursuant to Section 201 of the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(Pub. L. No. 104–4, 2 U.S.C. 1531), each
Federal agency ‘‘shall, unless otherwise
prohibited by law, assess the effects of
Federal regulatory actions on State,
local, and tribal governments, and the
private sector (other than to the extent
that such regulations incorporate
requirements specifically set forth in
law).’’ Section 202 of the Act (2 U.S.C.
1532) further requires the following:
[B]efore promulgating any general notice of
proposed rulemaking that is likely to result
in the promulgation of any rule that includes
any Federal mandate that may result in
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100,000,000 or more
(annually adjusted for inflation) in any 1
year, and before promulgating any final rule
for which a general notice of proposed
rulemaking was published, the agency shall
prepare a written statement* * *
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with PROPOSALS2
The written statement must detail the
effect on State, local, and tribal
governments and the private sector.
This NPRM will not result in the
expenditure, in the aggregate, of
$132,300,000 in any one year, and thus
preparation of such a statement is not
required.
G. Energy Impact
Executive Order 13211 requires
Federal agencies to prepare a Statement
of Energy Effects for any ‘‘significant
energy action.’’ See 66 FR 28355 (May
22, 2001). Under the Executive Order, a
‘‘significant energy action’’ is defined as
any action by an agency (normally
published in the Federal Register) that
promulgates or is expected to lead to the
promulgation of a final rule or
regulation, including notices of inquiry,
advance notices of proposed
rulemaking, and notices of proposed
rulemaking: (1)(i) That is a significant
regulatory action under Executive Order
12866 or any successor order, and (ii) is
likely to have a significant adverse effect
on the supply, distribution, or use of
energy; or (2) that is designated by the
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Administrator of the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs as a
significant energy action. FRA has
evaluated this NPRM in accordance
with Executive Order 13211. FRA has
determined that this NPRM is not likely
to have a significant adverse effect on
the supply, distribution, or use of
energy. Consequently, FRA has
determined that this regulatory action is
not a ‘‘significant energy action’’ within
the meaning of Executive Order 13211.
The Trade Agreements Act of 1979
(Pub. L. No. 96–39, 19 U.S.C. 2501 et
seq.) prohibits Federal agencies from
engaging in any standards or related
activities that create unnecessary
obstacles to the foreign commerce of the
United States. Legitimate domestic
objectives, such as safety, are not
considered unnecessary obstacles. The
statute also requires consideration of
international standards and, where
appropriate, that they be the basis for
U.S. standards.
FRA has assessed the potential effect
of this NPRM on foreign commerce and
believes that its requirements are
consistent with the Trade Agreements
Act. The requirements imposed are
safety standards, which, as noted, are
not considered unnecessary obstacles to
trade.
I. Privacy Act
Anyone is able to search the
electronic form of all comments
received into any of FRA’s dockets by
the name of the individual submitting
the comment (or signing the comment,
if submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). You may
review DOT’s complete Privacy Act
Statement in the Federal Register
published on April 11, 2000 (65 FR
19477–78), or you may visit https://
DocketsInfo.dot.gov.
IX. List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 214
Occupational safety and health,
Penalties, Railroad safety, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
The Proposed Rule
In consideration of the foregoing, FRA
proposes to amend part 214 of chapter
II, subtitle B of title 49, Code of Federal
Regulations, as follows:
PART 214—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 214
is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 20102–20103, 20107,
21301–21302, 21304; 28 U.S.C. 2461, note;
and 49 CFR 1.49.
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
§ 214.7
[Amended]
2. Section 214.7 is amended by
removing the definition of ‘‘Adjacent
tracks’’.
Subpart C—Roadway Worker
Protection
3. Section 214.315 is amended by
revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 214.315 Supervision and
communication.
H. Trade Impact
PO 00000
Subpart A—General
Sfmt 4702
(a) When an employer assigns a duty
to a roadway worker that calls for that
employee to foul a track, the employer
shall provide the employee with an ontrack safety job briefing that, at a
minimum, includes the following:
(1) Information on the means by
which on-track safety is to be provided
for each track identified to be fouled;
(2) Instruction on each on-track safety
procedure to be followed; and
(3) Information about any tracks
adjacent to the track to be fouled, ontrack safety for such tracks, if required
by this subpart, and identification of
any roadway maintenance machines
that will foul such tracks. In such cases,
the on-track safety job briefing shall
address the nature of the work to be
performed and the characteristics of the
work location to ensure compliance
with this subpart.
*
*
*
*
*
4. Section 214.335 is amended by
removing paragraph (c) and revising the
section heading to read as follows:
§ 214.335 On-track safety procedures for
roadway work groups, general.
*
*
*
*
*
5. New § 214.336 is added to read as
follows:
§ 214.336 Adjacent-track on-track safety
for certain roadway work groups;
procedures, training, and recordkeeping.
(a) Procedures; general. Except as
provided in paragraph (b) of this
section, on-track safety is required for
each adjacent track when a roadway
work group with at least one of the
roadway workers on the ground, is
engaged in a common task with an ontrack roadway maintenance machine or
coupled equipment on an occupied
track. The required on-track safety shall
be in accordance with § 214.319
(Working limits, generally); § 214.321
(Exclusive track occupancy); § 214.323
(Foul time); § 214.325 (Train
coordination); or § 214.329 (Train
approach warning provided by
watchmen/lookouts) and as more
specifically described in this paragraph
(a). If an occupied track has two
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adjacent tracks, and one of the tracks
has one or more adjacent-track
movements authorized at 25 mph or
less, and the other has one or more
concurrent adjacent-track movements
authorized at over 25 mph, the more
restrictive procedures in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section apply. For purposes
of this section, ‘‘adjacent track’’ means
a controlled track whose track center is
spaced 19 feet or less from the track
center of the occupied track, and
‘‘occupied track’’ means the track on
which a roadway maintenance machine
or coupled equipment is located while
engaged in a common task with a
roadway work group.
(1) Procedures for adjacent-track
movements over 25 mph. If a train or
other on-track equipment is authorized
to move on an adjacent track at a speed
greater than 25 mph, each roadway
work group to which this section
applies must comply with the following
procedures:
(i) Each roadway worker in the
roadway work group shall cease any onground work and movement of any
roadway maintenance machine or
coupled equipment in the fouling space
of the occupied track and the adjacent
track, and occupy a predetermined
place of safety upon receiving—
(A) A watchman/lookout warning, if
on-track safety through train approach
warning (§ 214.329) has been
established on the adjacent track; or
(B) A notification in accordance with
§ 214.319(c) that the roadway worker in
charge intends to authorize one or more
train or other on-track equipment
movements through the working limits
on the adjacent track, if adjacent-track
on-track safety has been established
through working limits alone.
(ii) A component of a roadway work
group may resume on-ground work and
movement of any roadway maintenance
machine or coupled equipment on or
fouling the occupied track only after the
head-end of all trains or other on-track
equipment moving on the adjacent track
(either authorized through the working
limits by the roadway worker in charge
or for which a watchman/lookout has
provided a warning) has passed and
remains ahead of that component of the
roadway work group; however, if the
train or other on-track equipment stops
before its head-end has passed all of the
roadway workers in the roadway work
group (or if a roadway worker in the
roadway work group moves to a
position on or fouling the occupied
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track in advance of the head-end of the
adjacent-track movement), the work to
be performed on or fouling the occupied
track ahead of the train or other on-track
equipment on the adjacent track may
resume only—
(A) If on-track safety through train
approach warning (§ 214.329) is still in
effect or has been re-established on the
adjacent track; or
(B) After the roadway worker in
charge has communicated with the train
engineer or equipment operator and
obtained or regained control of such
train or other on-track equipment, if
adjacent-track on-track safety has been
established by working limits alone.
(2) Procedures for adjacent-track
movements 25 mph or less. If a train or
other on-track equipment is authorized
to move on an adjacent track at a speed
of 25 mph or less, each roadway work
group to which this section applies
must comply with the procedures listed
in paragraph (a)(1) of this section,
except that the following work may
continue:
(i) Work that is performed exclusively
while positioned between the rails of
the occupied track, provided that any
on-ground work is performed more than
25 feet away from the front or rear of
any roadway maintenance machine on
or fouling the occupied track during
such adjacent-track movement;
(ii) Work that is performed
exclusively to the field side of the
occupied track furthest from the
adjacent track where the movement is
authorized, provided that—
(A) Either no adjacent track is on that
side or on-track safety has been
established in accordance with this
subpart on any adjacent track on that
side; and
(B) Any on-ground work is performed
more than 25 feet away from the front
or rear of any roadway maintenance
machine on or fouling the occupied
track during such adjacent-track
movement.
(3) Procedures for a roadway
maintenance machine or coupled
equipment fouling an adjacent track. A
roadway maintenance machine or
coupled equipment shall not foul an
adjacent track unless working limits
have been established on the adjacent
track and there are no movements
authorized through the working limits
by the roadway worker in charge.
(b) Exceptions to the requirement for
adjacent-track on-track safety.
Adjacent-track on-track safety is not
PO 00000
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41229
required for the work activities
described in paragraphs (b)(1) through
(b)(3) of this section. Nothing in this
section prohibits the roadway worker in
charge from establishing adjacent-track
on-track safety as he or she deems
necessary.
(1) One or more on-ground roadway
workers performing work while
exclusively positioned on the field side
of the occupied track, provided that
either no adjacent track is on that side
or on-track safety has been established
in accordance with this subpart on any
such adjacent track.
(2) A hi-rail vehicle on or fouling the
occupied track while engaged in a
common task with one or more roadway
workers on the ground, provided such
hi-rail vehicle is not coupled to one or
more railroad cars.
(3) A catenary maintenance tower car
on or fouling the occupied track that is
engaged in a common task with one or
more roadway workers positioned on
the ground within the gage of the
occupied track for the sole purpose of
applying or removing grounds.
(c) Training. Prior to assigning an
employee to perform roadway worker
duties for which adjacent-track on-track
safety is required, the employer shall
provide the employee with—
(1) Training on the procedures for
adjacent-track on-track safety required
by this section; or
(2) A copy of a railroad-issued
bulletin, order, general order, notice,
operating rule, or other document
adopting the procedures for adjacenttrack on-track safety required by this
section.
(d) Recordkeeping. (1) Each employer
shall obtain from each affected
employee a written receipt or
acknowledgement of the adjacent-track
on-track safety training or document
required by paragraph (c). If the training
is received for the first time as part of
an employee’s recurrent training, a
record kept pursuant to § 214.343(d)
serves as the receipt or
acknowledgement for purposes of this
section.
(2) Each employer shall retain the
written receipt or acknowledgement
required by paragraph (d)(1) of this
section—
(i) Until the employee receives,
pursuant to § 214.343, recurrent training
that includes discussion of the
procedures for adjacent-track on-track
safety required by this section; or
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(ii) For two years following the date
the employee was provided with the
training or document required by
paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
(3) Records of the written receipts or
acknowledgements shall be made
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20:32 Jul 16, 2008
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available to representatives of FRA and
States participating under 49 CFR part
212 for inspection and copying during
normal business hours.
PO 00000
Issued in Washington, DC, on July 9, 2008.
Joseph H. Boardman,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. E8–16140 Filed 7–16–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–06–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 138 (Thursday, July 17, 2008)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 41214-41230]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-16140]
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Part III
Department of Transportation
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Federal Railroad Administration
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49 CFR Part 214
Railroad Workplace Safety; Adjacent-Track On-Track Safety for Roadway
Workers; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 138 / Thursday, July 17, 2008 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 41214]]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Part 214
[Docket No. FRA-2008-0059, Notice No. 1]
RIN 2130-AB93
Railroad Workplace Safety; Adjacent-Track On-Track Safety for
Roadway Workers
AGENCY: Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM).
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SUMMARY: FRA proposes to amend its regulations on railroad workplace
safety to reduce further the risk of serious injury or death to roadway
workers. In particular, FRA proposes to require that railroads adopt
specified on-track safety procedures to protect certain roadway work
groups from the movement of trains or other on-track equipment on
``adjacent track.'' FRA proposes to define ``adjacent track'' as ``any
controlled track whose track center is 19 feet or less from the track
center of the occupied track.'' These on-track safety procedures would
be required for each adjacent track when a roadway work group with at
least one of the roadway workers on the ground, is engaged in a common
task with an on-track roadway maintenance machine or coupled equipment
on an occupied track. FRA also proposes to require that railroads,
contractors to railroads, and roadway workers comply with these
procedures.
DATES: Written comments must be received no later than August 18, 2008.
Comments received after that date will be considered to the extent
possible without incurring additional expense or delay.
FRA anticipates being able to resolve this rulemaking without a
public, oral hearing. However, if FRA receives a specific request for a
public, oral hearing prior to August 18, 2008, one will be scheduled
and FRA will publish a supplemental notice in the Federal Register to
inform interested parties of the date, time, and location of any such
hearing.
ADDRESSES: Comments: You may submit comments on this NPRM, identified
by Docket No. FRA-2008-0059, Notice No. 1, by any of the following
methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online instructions for submitting
comments.
Mail: Docket Management Facility, U.S. Department of
Transportation, West Building, Ground Floor, M-33, Room W12-140, 1200
New Jersey Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590.
Hand Delivery or Courier: Docket Management Facility, U.S.
Department of Transportation, West Building, Ground Floor, M-33, Room
W12-140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., Washington, DC, between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m. ET, Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Fax: 202-493-2251.
Instructions: For detailed instructions on submitting comments, and
additional information on the rulemaking process, see the ``Public
Participation'' heading of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this preamble. Note that all comments received will be posted without
change to https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal
information provided. Please see the ``Privacy Act'' subheading under
the ``Regulatory Impact and Notices'' heading, below, in section
VIII.I. of this preamble.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
comments received, go to https://www.regulations.gov anytime, or to the
Docket Management Facility, U.S. Department of Transportation, West
Building, Ground Floor, Room W12-140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. ET, Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. Follow the online instructions for accessing
the docket.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kenneth Rusk, Staff Director, Track
Division, Office of Safety Assurance and Compliance, FRA, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue, SE., RRS-15, Mail Stop 25, Washington, DC 20590
(telephone 202-493-6236); or Anna Winkle, Trial Attorney, Office of
Chief Counsel, FRA, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., RCC-12, Mail Stop 10,
Washington, DC 20590 (telephone 202-493-6166 or 202-493-6052).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents for Supplementary Information
I. Public Participation
II. Overview of the Existing Roadway Worker Protection (RWP) Rule
A. Applicability and Basic Definitions
B. Authorized Methods of Establishing On-Track Safety
C. Existing On-Track Safety Requirements for Roadway Work Groups
with Respect to Adjacent Tracks
III. Notice of Safety Advisory 2004-01
IV. Recent Roadway Worker Accidents (1997-2008)
V. Joint Petition to FRA for an Emergency Order
VI. Current Rulemaking to Revise the RWP Rule
A. Overview of the RSAC [Railroad Safety Advisory Committee]
B. Proceedings in this Rulemaking to Date Generally
C. Proceedings concerning On-Track Safety Procedures for
Adjacent Tracks
VII. Section-by-Section Analysis
VIII. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866 and DOT Regulatory Policies and
Procedures
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive Order 13272
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
D. Federalism Implications
E. Environmental Impact
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
G. Energy Impact
H. Trade Impact
I. Privacy Act
IX. List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 214
I. Public Participation
The Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 551-559) permits an
agency to dispense with notice of rulemaking when it is otherwise not
required by statute and the agency ``for good cause finds that notice
and public procedure thereon are impracticable, unnecessary, or
contrary to the public interest.'' 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B). FRA finds that
the typically long periods for notice and public participation are, in
this case, unnecessary and contrary to the public interest for the
reasons set forth below; thus, an abbreviated comment period of 30 days
is appropriate for this NPRM.
As will be detailed in this NPRM, the recent increase in roadway
worker fatalities that have occurred on an adjacent track (i.e., under
the existing rule, any track within 25 feet of the centerline of the
track to which the roadway work group was assigned to perform one or
more roadway worker duties) has caused considerable concern at FRA and
throughout the industry, even prompting the filing of a joint petition
for emergency order under 49 U.S.C. 20104 on April 11, 2008. See 49 CFR
part 214, subpart C (``Roadway Worker Protection Rule'' or ``RWP
Rule''). FRA issued a notice of safety advisory to address the issue in
May of 2004; however, it appears that the salutary effects of the
safety advisory, which produced a period of 16 months with no
fatalities on an adjacent track, were not long-lasting, as four
fatalities have since occurred on an adjacent track where a roadway
work group, with at least one of the roadway workers on the ground, was
engaged in a common task with an on-track roadway maintenance machine
or coupled equipment on an occupied track. FRA believes that these
proposed amendments to the Roadway Worker Protection Rule are non-
controversial in nature because they are based on and substantively the
same as the consensus language developed
[[Page 41215]]
through the Roadway Worker Protection (RWP) Working Group of FRA's
Railroad Safety Advisory Committee (RSAC), which is comprised of
various representatives of the groups that are affected by this rule
(including railroad management, railroad labor organizations, and
contractors). Moreover, FRA finds that, based on the data available,
any further delay in issuance of this NPRM \1\ and a subsequent final
rule would fail to reduce the risk of additional fatalities on adjacent
track that are likely to occur late this year or early next year in the
absence of further regulatory action.
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\1\ While the consensus language relating to adjacent track
issues that was developed through the RSAC was originally intended
to be published as part of a larger NPRM, FRA has decided to propose
these adjacent-track-related provisions in this separate NPRM so
that an appropriate provision will be in effect in a more timely
fashion than if the provision were one of many in the larger
rulemaking that would need to undergo internal review and approval
and public notice and comment. The remaining provisions not related
to adjacent track will be proposed in a separate NPRM at a later
date, as part of the larger RWP rulemaking.
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In summary, FRA believes that the identification of a serious and
escalating safety concern which FRA's actions to date have not been
sufficient to remedy and the non-controversial nature of the proposed
amendments justify a comment period of 30 days, rather than the normal
60 days, in this NPRM. FRA will consider, however, any comments
received after that date to the extent possible without incurring
additional expense or delay.
II. Overview of the Existing RWP Rule
A. Applicability and Basic Definitions
The RWP Rule requires each railroad that operates rolling equipment
on track that is part of the general railroad system of transportation
to ``adopt and implement a program that will afford on-track safety to
all roadway workers whose duties are performed on that railroad.'' See
49 CFR 214.3, 214.303(a).\2\ ``On-track safety'' is defined as ``a
state of freedom from the danger of being struck by a moving railroad
train or other railroad equipment, provided by operating and safety
rules that govern track occupancy by personnel, trains and on-track
equipment.'' See Sec. 214.7. The roadway workers that must be afforded
on-track safety are any employees of a railroad, or of a contractor to
a railroad, whose duties include ``inspection, construction,
maintenance or repair of railroad track, bridges, roadway, signal and
communication systems, electric traction systems, roadway facilities or
roadway maintenance machinery on or near track or with the potential of
fouling a track, and flagmen and watchmen/lookouts * * *.'' See Sec.
214.7, ``Roadway worker.''
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\2\ All references in this preamble to a section or other
provision of a regulation are to a section, part or, other provision
in title 49, Code of Federal Regulations unless otherwise specified.
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B. Authorized Methods of Establishing On-Track Safety
Several methods are authorized to be used to provide on-track
safety for roadway workers, and many of those methods involve
establishing ``working limits,'' which is defined in part as ``a
segment of track with definite boundaries established in accordance
with [part 214] upon which trains and engines may move only as
authorized by the roadway worker having control over that defined
segment of track.'' See Sec. Sec. 214.7 and 214.319. Working limits
may be established on controlled track (i.e., ``track upon which the
railroad's operating rules require that all movements of trains must be
authorized by a train dispatcher or a control operator'') through
exclusive track occupancy (Sec. 214.321), foul time (Sec. 214.323),
or train coordination (Sec. 214.325). See Sec. Sec. 214.7 and
214.319. Regardless of which method is chosen, the working limits are
only permitted to be under the control of a qualified roadway worker in
charge, and all affected roadway workers must be notified and either
clear of the track or provided on-track safety through train approach
warning (in accordance with Sec. 214.329) before the working limits
are released to permit the operation of trains or other on-track
equipment through the working limits. See id.
Train approach warning is another common method of establishing on-
track safety in which a trained and qualified watchman/lookout provides
warning to roadway worker(s) of the approach of a train or on-track
equipment in sufficient time to enable each roadway worker to move to
and occupy a previously arranged place of safety not less than 15
seconds before a train moving at the maximum speed authorized on that
track would arrive at the location of the roadway worker. See
Sec. Sec. 214.329 and 214.7 ``Watchman/lookout.'' Train approach
warning is sometimes used as a temporary form of on-track safety when a
roadway worker in charge needs to nullify the on-track safety
previously established by working limits in order to permit a train or
piece of on-track equipment to enter the roadway work group's working
limits. Train approach warning permits the roadway workers to continue
working for longer if the working limits span several miles and the
train or equipment will not be passing by the work area for some time
due to a speed restriction, the distance away, or the train or
equipment halting its movement. It should be noted that switching
temporarily to ``train approach warning'' is permissible only if the
change was previously discussed in detail with the roadway work group
either in the on-track safety job briefing prior to beginning work or
in an updated on-track safety job briefing pursuant to Sec.
214.315(d). See Sec. 214.315.
C. Existing On-Track Safety Requirements for Roadway Work Groups with
Respect to Adjacent Tracks
Section 214.335(c) of the RWP Rule currently requires that roadway
work groups engaged in ``large-scale maintenance or construction'' be
provided with on-track safety in the form of ``train approach warning''
for train or equipment movements on adjacent tracks if the adjacent
tracks are not already included within the working limits. Under the
current definition of ``adjacent tracks,'' on-track safety as discussed
above is required for any tracks with track centers spaced less than 25
feet apart from the track to which a roadway work group is assigned to
perform large-scale maintenance or construction. See Sec. Sec. 214.7,
214.335(c). The track to which the roadway work group is assigned to
perform the large-scale maintenance or construction is commonly
referred to as the ``occupied track.'' Thus, in triple-main track
territory, if a roadway work group is occupying the middle track (e.g.,
Main Track No. 2) in order to perform large-scale maintenance or
construction, and the track centers of the tracks on either side of the
occupied track are within 25 feet of the occupied track, then on-track
safety is required to be established on both adjacent tracks (e.g.,
Main Track Nos. 1 and 3). In some yards or territories, where track
centers may be spaced only 12 feet apart, an occupied track (e.g., Yard
Track No. 3) may have up to four adjacent tracks (e.g., Yard Track Nos.
1, 2, 4, and 5). In such cases, the current rule requires on-track
safety to be established on all four adjacent tracks, in addition, of
course, to the on-track safety required for the occupied track itself.
See Sec. Sec. 214.335(c) and 214.337(a).
Although the term ``large-scale maintenance or construction'' is
not specifically defined in the regulation, FRA noted in the preamble
to the 1996 final rule establishing the RWP Rule that the principle
behind the reference to large-scale maintenance or construction ``is
the potential for distraction, or the possibility that a
[[Page 41216]]
roadway worker or roadway maintenance machine might foul the adjacent
track and be struck by an approaching or passing train,'' and further
stated that ``conditions in which the risk of distraction is
significant'' require measures to provide on-track safety on adjacent
tracks. See 61 FR 65959, 65971 (December 16, 1996). To further clarify
what was meant by the term ``large-scale maintenance or construction,''
FRA adopted the recommendation of the Roadway Worker Safety Advisory
Committee, which described large-scale track maintenance and/or
renovations, such as but not limited to, ``rail and tie gangs,
production in-track welding, ballast distribution, and undercutting.''
See id. Under such guidance, many railroads were not providing on-track
safety on adjacent tracks for surfacing operations, small tie renewal
operations, or similar maintenance operations that, while smaller in
scale, still included one or more on-track roadway maintenance machines
or coupled equipment. Fatalities occurred on the adjacent track during
such operations when on-track safety was not established on the
adjacent track or had been temporarily or permanently nullified or
suspended to permit the passage of a train or other on-track equipment.
III. Notice of Safety Advisory 2004-01
After the occurrence of five roadway worker fatalities in one
calendar year (2003), including one on an adjacent track, FRA responded
on April 27, 2004, by issuing Notice of Safety Advisory 2004-01, which
was later published in the Federal Register on May 3, 2004. See 69 FR
24220. FRA issued this safety advisory to recommend certain safety
practices, to review existing requirements for the protection of
roadway workers from traffic on adjacent tracks, and to heighten
awareness to prevent roadway workers from inadvertently fouling a track
when on-track safety is not provided. See id. The safety advisory
explained that the requirements of the RWP Rule, including the
requirement to provide adjacent track on-track safety for large-scale
maintenance or construction in Sec. 214.335(c), are only minimum
standards; railroads and railroad contractors are free to prescribe
additional or more-stringent standards consistent with the rule. See
id. at 24222 and Sec. 214.301(b). FRA recommended that railroads and
contractors to railroads develop and implement basic risk assessment
procedures for use by roadway workers to determine the likelihood that
a roadway worker or equipment would foul an adjacent track prior to
initiating work activities, regardless of whether those activities were
``large-scale'' or ``small-scale.'' The safety advisory provided
examples of relevant factors to consider in making such an assessment,
including whether the work could be conducted by individuals positioned
between the rails of a track on which on-track safety has been
established, as opposed to being on the field side of such a track
toward an adjacent track; whether there was a structure between the
tracks to prevent intrusion (such as a fence between the tracks at a
passenger train station and the tall beam of a through-plate girder
bridge); the track-center distance, to ensure that the adjacent track
would not be fouled if a worker were to inadvertently trip and fall;
the nature of the work (inspection or repair); the sight distances; and
the speed of trains on the adjacent track. See 69 FR 24222. FRA further
noted that, upon completion of an on-site risk assessment, the on-track
safety briefing required by Sec. 214.315(a) would be the ideal
instrument to implement preventive measures concerning adjacent tracks.
See id.
In addition to the above recommendation concerning basic risk
assessment, FRA recommended that railroads and contractors to railroads
consider taking the following actions:
Use of [sic] working limits for activities where equipment
could foul adjacent track (whether large-scale or small-scale
activities);
Use rotation stops to mitigate the dangers associated with
on-track equipment and trains passing on adjacent tracks;
Review procedures for directing trains through adjacent
track working limits, and enhance such procedures when necessary;
Install adjacent track warning signs/devices in the
operating cab of on-track machines to remind roadway maintenance
machine operators to not inadvertently depart the equipment onto a
track where there may be trains and other on-track equipment passing;
Provide additional training and monitoring to [their]
employees, emphasizing the need to cross tracks in a safe manner (i.e.,
single file and after looking in both directions);
Reinforce to individual roadway workers that it is
critical not to foul a track except in the performance of duty and only
when on-track safety has been established. This training could be
accomplished through training sessions, as well as daily job briefings;
and
Institute peer-intervention measures by which workers are
encouraged to intervene when observing another roadway worker engaging
in potentially non-compliant and unsafe activity.
See id.
IV. Recent Roadway Worker Accidents (1997-2008)
Since the RWP Rule went into effect on January 15, 1997, there have
been nine roadway worker fatalities on an adjacent track. Seven of
those fatalities have occurred on a controlled track that was adjacent
to the track on which a roadway work group, with at least one of the
roadway workers on the ground, was engaged in a common task with an on-
track roadway maintenance machine or coupled equipment. FRA notes that
there has been only one adjacent-track fatality where a roadway work
group had been engaged in a common task with a lone hi-rail vehicle,
defined in Sec. 214.7 as ``a roadway maintenance machine that is
manufactured to meet Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards and is
equipped with retractable flanged wheels so that the vehicle may travel
over the highway or on railroad tracks.'' \3\ In addition, there have
been no adjacent-track fatalities where a roadway work group had been
engaged in a common task with a catenary maintenance tower car on the
occupied track. This is likely because the duties normally performed by
an employee operating a hi-rail or a catenary maintenance tower car
tend to be less distracting to on-ground roadway workers and produce
less dust and noise than a typical on-track roadway maintenance
machine. Given the above, FRA proposes that adjacent-track on-track
safety not be required for roadway work groups engaged in a common task
with a hi-rail or a catenary maintenance tower car, as discussed in the
section-by-section analysis of paragraphs (b)(2) and (b)(3),
respectively, in new proposed Sec. 214.336.
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\3\ In that case, the roadway workers were under the impression
that adjacent-track on-track safety was in effect, but it was not,
due to a miscommunications.
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Of the seven fatalities that occurred under the circumstances
described above and which this rule proposes to address, three occurred
during the period after the effective date of the rule and before the
publication of the safety advisory on May 3, 2004, and four have
occurred since that period. In the four-year period prior to May of
2004 (May 1, 2000-April 30, 2004), there has been one adjacent-track
fatality known to have occurred under such circumstances, for a rate of
.25 per year. In the four-year period since (May 1, 2004-April 30,
2008), there have been four adjacent-track fatalities, for a rate of
[[Page 41217]]
one per year, which is four times the rate of the previous four-year
period. While FRA recognizes that even one death can make rates change
dramatically when the total number of deaths is small, the increase in
the rate of these deaths despite the safety advisory leads FRA to
conclude that prompt regulatory action is needed to avert an escalating
number of deaths. Moreover, given the extensive participation in
developing these consensus regulatory provisions by representatives of
all of the key interests involved in this issue, it is contrary to the
public interest to wait for all of the other issues in the larger RWP
rulemaking to be resolved or to engage in lengthy periods for notice
and public comment before acting to prevent more deaths.
The following is a brief summary of the results of FRA's
investigations of the four most recent incidents that resulted in these
unfortunate fatalities:
October 5, 2005: A roadway surfacing gang tamper operator,
with 28 years of service, was walking up to the front of the tamper to
put away the light buggies as his surfacing gang, having just completed
its work, was getting ready to travel to clear the number two main
track. The operator was walking east on the side of the tamper between
the two main tracks when he was struck by a westbound train on the
adjacent track. The track centers were spaced approximately 13 feet
apart, and the train was traveling at an estimated speed of 40 miles
per hour (mph).
March 12, 2007: A surfacing gang was occupying the number
one main track in a double-main territory. The surfacing gang foreman
(the roadway worker in charge), who earlier had notified the other
members of the gang of pending movement on the adjacent track, was
standing in the gage of the same adjacent track when he was struck by a
train. It remains unclear why he was fouling the adjacent track at the
time of the incident. The track centers were spaced approximately 13
feet, 6 inches apart, and the maximum authorized speed on the adjacent
track was 50 mph.
February 10, 2008: A train struck a roadway worker inside
an interlocking on a triple-main track territory. The worker was part
of a gang that consisted of approximately 10 workers that were engaged
in the repair of a crossover on the middle main track with a tamper.
Foul time was being used as adjacent-track on-track protection, but
this protection was removed by the roadway worker in charge, who gave
permission to the dispatcher to permit a train to operate on the
adjacent track through the roadway work group working limits. As the
train entered the interlocking on a limited clear signal indication for
a crossover move past the work area, one of the roadway workers
attempted to cross the track in front of the train and was struck. The
track centers were spaced approximately 13 feet apart, and the maximum
authorized speed for the train on the adjacent track was 45 mph.
March 27, 2008: Information at this time is preliminary,
but it is understood that a surfacing gang was working on multiple-
track territory. The surfacing gang foreman was standing in the foul of
the adjacent track while his surfacing crew worked on the number two
main track. A train operating on the same adjacent track struck the
foreman. No on-track safety was in effect on the adjacent track
involved at the time of the incident. The track centers were spaced
approximately 14 feet, 7 inches apart, and the maximum authorized speed
on the adjacent track was 70 mph.
While the above discussion focuses on those fatalities that have
occurred on an adjacent track where a roadway work group, with at least
one of the roadway workers on the ground, was engaged in a common task
with an on-track roadway maintenance machine or coupled equipment on an
occupied track, it is important to discuss some of the common
circumstances in all nine of the fatalities that have occurred on an
adjacent track since the rule went into effect, as these circumstances
were considered by FRA in its decision to issue this NPRM. The first
common circumstance is the type of track. All nine of the fatalities
occurred on ``controlled'' track, rather than ``non-controlled'' track.
This was taken into consideration in writing FRA's proposed definition
of ``adjacent track,'' which would be included as part of proposed new
Sec. 214.336(a), would essentially replace the term ``adjacent
tracks'' in Sec. 214.7, and would be limited to controlled tracks
whose track centers are spaced 19 feet or less from the track center of
the occupied track.
Second, all nine of the fatalities occurred on an adjacent track
that was quite closely-spaced to the track that the roadway work group
was occupying. Six of the adjacent tracks had track centers that were
spaced approximately 14 feet or less from the respective track centers
of the tracks that the roadway work groups were occupying, and all nine
of the adjacent tracks were spaced 15 feet or less from the track
centers of the respective occupied tracks. This common circumstance was
also taken into consideration in FRA's proposed definition of
``adjacent track,'' which would no longer include tracks with track
centers that were spaced more than 19 feet (but less than 25 feet) away
from the track center of the occupied track.
The third common circumstance of the nine fatalities on adjacent
track is the time of year. Four of the fatalities occurred during the
first quarter (January-March), none of the fatalities occurred in the
second and third quarters of the year (April-June and July-September,
respectively), and the other five fatalities occurred during the fourth
quarter (October-December). As noted earlier in Section I., above, if
this pattern continues, any further delay in issuance of this rule
would fail to reduce the risk of additional fatalities on adjacent
track that are likely to occur late this year or early next year in the
absence of further regulatory action. Thus, FRA has decided to proceed
with an NPRM with an abbreviated comment period.
V. Joint Petition to FRA for an Emergency Order
On April 11, 2008, the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes
Division (BMWED) and the Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen (BRS) filed
a joint petition requesting that FRA issue an emergency order requiring
adjacent-track protection for roadway work groups. The petition notes
that similar requests, which were filed on October 7, 2005, November 7,
2003, and December 21, 1999, were denied by FRA. The petitioners
expressed their belief that, under the existing provisions of the rule,
roadway workers will continue to suffer preventable serious injuries
and death. The petitioners assert that FRA should require railroads and
their contractors to establish on-track safety on adjacent tracks
(``adjacent-track on-track safety'') for a wider range of work
activities. In FRA's January 5, 2006 denial of the October 2005
petition, FRA noted that the RSAC working group to review and revise
the RWP Rule (``RWP Working Group'') was ``committed to presenting
comprehensive draft language * * * that would more closely tailor the
solution to the problem.'' And while the RWP Working Group did in fact
draft this language, and both the Working Group and the full RSAC were
able to reach consensus on such language, BMWED and BRS are concerned
that the language, which has not been published as an NPRM, would not
become a final rule for a considerable period of time, leaving the
possibility for further preventable fatalities. BMWED and BRS urge FRA
to issue an emergency order that would adopt the adjacent-track
consensus language of the RWP RSAC.
[[Page 41218]]
On April 18, 2008, the American Train Dispatchers Association
(ATDA) filed a letter in support of the BMWED and BRS joint petition.
In the letter, ATDA agreed that preventable injuries and deaths
continue to occur because of a lack of positive regulation mandating
adjacent-track on-track safety and urged FRA to issue an emergency
order based upon the RSAC-approved and consensus-based replacement
language for Sec. 214.235(c), as indicated in the joint petition.
VI. Current Rulemaking To Revise the RWP Rule
A. Overview of the RSAC
In March 1996, FRA established RSAC, which provides a forum for
developing consensus recommendations to FRA's Administrator on
rulemakings and other safety program issues. The Committee includes
representation from all of the agency's major customer groups,
including railroads, labor organizations, suppliers and manufacturers,
and other interested parties. A list of member groups follows:
American Association of Private Railroad Car Owners
(AAPRCO);
American Association of State Highway and Transportation
Officials (AASHTO);
American Chemistry Council;
American Petroleum Institute;
American Public Transportation Association (APTA);
American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association
(ASLRRA);
American Train Dispatchers Association (ATDA);
Association of American Railroads (AAR);
Association of Railway Museums;
Association of State Rail Safety Managers (ASRSM);
Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen (BLET);
BMWED;
BRS;
Chlorine Institute;
Federal Transit Administration (FTA)*;
Fertilizer Institute;
High Speed Ground Transportation Association (HSGTA);
Institute of Makers of Explosives;
International Association of Machinists and Aerospace
Workers;
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW);
Labor Council for Latin American Advancement*;
League of Railway Industry Women*;
National Association of Railroad Passengers (NARP);
National Association of Railway Business Women*;
National Conference of Firemen & Oilers;
National Railroad Construction and Maintenance Association
(NRC);
National Railroad Passenger Corporation (Amtrak);
National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB)*;
Railway Supply Institute (RSI);
Safe Travel America (STA);
Secretaria de Comunicaciones y Transporte*;
Sheet Metal Workers International Association (SMWIA);
Tourist Railway Association, Inc.;
Transport Canada*;
Transport Workers Union of America (TWU);
Transportation Communications International Union/BRC
(TCIU/BRC);
Transportation Security Administration (TSA)*; and
United Transportation Union (UTU).
*Indicates associate, non-voting membership.
When appropriate, FRA assigns a task to RSAC, and after
consideration and debate, RSAC may accept or reject the task. If the
task is accepted, RSAC establishes a working group that possesses the
appropriate expertise and representation of interests to develop
recommendations to FRA for action on the task. These recommendations
are developed by consensus. A working group may establish one or more
task forces to develop facts and options on a particular aspect of a
given task. The individual task force then provides that information to
the working group for consideration. If a working group comes to
unanimous consensus on recommendations for action, the package is
presented to the full RSAC for a vote. If the proposal is accepted by a
simple majority of RSAC, the proposal is formally recommended to FRA.
FRA then determines what action to take on the recommendation. Because
FRA staff play an active role at the working group level in discussing
the issues and options and in drafting the language of the consensus
proposal, FRA is often favorably inclined toward the RSAC
recommendation. However, FRA is in no way bound to follow the
recommendation, and the agency exercises its independent judgment on
whether the recommended rule achieves the agency's regulatory goal, is
soundly supported, and is in accordance with policy and legal
requirements. Often, FRA varies in some respects from the RSAC
recommendation in developing the actual regulatory proposal or final
rule. Any such variations would be noted and explained in the
rulemaking document issued by FRA. If the working group or RSAC is
unable to reach consensus on a recommendation for action, FRA moves
ahead to resolve the issue through traditional rulemaking proceedings.
B. Proceedings in This Rulemaking to Date Generally
On January 26, 2005, the RSAC formed the RWP Working Group
(``Working Group'') to consider specific actions to advance the on-
track safety of employees of covered railroads and their contractors
engaged in maintenance-of-way activities throughout the general system
of railroad transportation, including clarification of existing
requirements. The assigned task was to review the existing rule,
technical bulletins, and a safety advisory dealing with on-track
safety. The Working Group was to consider implications and, as
appropriate, consider enhancements to the existing rule. The Working
Group would report to the RSAC any specific actions identified as
appropriate, and would report planned activity to the full Committee at
each scheduled Committee meeting, including milestones for completion
of projects and progress toward completion.
The Working Group is comprised of members from the following
organizations:
Amtrak;
APTA;
ASLRRA;
ATDA;
AAR, including members from BNSF Railway Company (BNSF),
Canadian National Railway Company (CN), Canadian Pacific Railway,
Limited (CP), Consolidated Rail Corporation (Conrail), CSX
Transportation, Inc. (CSXT), Kansas City Southern (KCS), Norfolk
Southern Corporation (NS), and Union Pacific Railroad Company (UP);
Belt Railroad of Chicago;
BLET;
BMWED;
BRS;
Federal Railroad Administration (FRA);
Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad (IHB);
Long Island Rail Road (LIRR);
Metro-North Commuter Railroad Company (Metro-North);
Montana Rail Link;
NRC;
Northeast Illinois Regional Commuter Railroad Corporation
(Metra);
RailAmerica, Inc.;
Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority
(SEPTA);
United Transportation Union (UTU); and
Western New York and Pennsylvania Railroad (WNY&P).
[[Page 41219]]
The Working Group held 12 multi-day meetings. The group worked
diligently and was able to reach consensus on 32 separate items.
C. Proceedings Concerning On-Track Safety Procedures for Adjacent
Tracks
One of the items on which the Working Group was able to reach
consensus dealt specifically with the adjacent-track on-track safety
issue in Sec. 214.335. The consensus language developed by the Working
Group for this topic, which was approved by the full RSAC and formally
recommended to FRA, is as follows:
Sec. 214.335 On-track safety procedures for roadway work groups.
* * * * *
(c) On-track safety is required for adjacent controlled track
within 19 feet of the centerline of the occupied track when roadway
work group(s) consisting of roadway workers on the ground and on-
track self-propelled or coupled equipment are engaged in a common
task on an occupied track.
(1) Except as provided by paragraph (c)(3) of this section, when
trains are cleared through working limits on an adjacent controlled
track, or when watchman/lookout warning in accordance with Sec.
214.329 is the form of adjacent on-track safety, roadway workers
shall occupy a predetermined place of safety and all on-ground work
and equipment movement activity within the fouling space of the
occupied track shall cease upon notification of pending adjacent
track movement (working limits) or upon receiving the watchman/
lookout warning.
(2) When single or multiple movements are cleared through
adjacent controlled track working limits, on-ground work and
equipment movement on the occupied track may resume only after all
such movements on adjacent track have passed each component of the
Roadway Work Group(s). If the train stops before passing all roadway
workers, the employee in charge shall communicate with the engineer
prior to allowing the work to resume.
(3) When single or multiple movements are cleared through
adjacent controlled track working limits at a speed no greater than
25 mph, work performed exclusively between the rails of the occupied
track, or to the field side of the occupied track with no adjacent
track, may continue upon notification of each roadway worker of
movement on adjacent track. On-ground work shall not be performed
within 25 feet to the front or 25 feet to the rear of roadway
maintenance machine(s) on the occupied track during such adjacent
track movement.
(d) Equipment may not foul an adjacent controlled track unless
protected by working limits and there are no movements authorized
through the working limits by the roadway worker in charge.
(e) The mandatory provisions for adjacent controlled track
protection under this subpart are not applicable to work activities
involving--
(1) A hi-rail vehicle as defined in Sec. 214.7, provided such
hi-rail vehicle is not coupled to railroad cars. Where multiple hi-
rail vehicles are engaged in a common task, the on-track safety
briefing shall include discussion of the nature of the work to be
performed to determine if adjacent controlled track protection is
necessary. Nothing in this subpart prohibits the roadway worker in
charge of the hi-rail vehicle from establishing adjacent controlled
track protection, as he/she deems necessary.
(2) On-ground roadway workers exclusively performing work on the
field side of the occupied track.
(3) Catenary maintenance tower cars with roadway workers
positioned on the ground within the gage of the occupied track for
the sole purpose of applying or removing grounds. Nothing in this
subpart prohibits the roadway worker in charge of the catenary
maintenance tower car from establishing adjacent track protection,
as he/she deems necessary.
Upon reviewing the joint petition of the BRS and BMWED for an
emergency order, the consensus language of the Working Group quoted
above, and the relevant accident data concerning roadway workers
fouling adjacent track, FRA has decided to issue this NPRM to lower the
safety risk associated with roadway workers fouling adjacent track.
Although FRA's safety advisory may have had an initial effect and have
raised awareness enough to help keep the number of all categories of
roadway worker fatalities in 2004 and through almost six months in 2005
at zero, the effect was not sustained enough to combat the rise of
roadway worker fatality incidents since late June of 2005, when the
first roadway worker fatality occurred after the issuance of the safety
advisory, or since October of 2005, when the first adjacent track
roadway worker fatality occurred.
In light of recent roadway worker fatality trends, FRA has
determined that the agency must propose a more prescriptive approach to
prevent further fatalities. The need to mandate adjacent-track on-track
safety was recognized by FRA, members of the Working Group, and members
of the full RSAC. The consensus language developed by the Working Group
and recommended by the full RSAC is expected to reduce the risk of
roadway worker fatalities due to fouling an adjacent track while
working in conjunction with on-track equipment on an occupied track. As
part of the process in drafting the NPRM in the larger RWP
rulemaking,\4\ FRA circulated the consensus rule text concerning
adjacent track and other items for errata review. Both AAR and BMWED
submitted comments on this provision. To address these issues, and
other potential ambiguities discovered upon a closer review of the rule
text, FRA has reorganized and modified the consensus text in issuing
this NPRM, as discussed below in the section-by-section analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ As noted in Section I. of this document, the provisions
related to adjacent track were originally intended to be published
as part of a larger NPRM concerning Part 214, but have been proposed
here as a separate NPRM to expedite the effective date of such
provisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
VII. Section-by-Section Analysis
Amendments to 49 CFR Part 214, Railroad Workplace Safety
Subpart A--General
Section 214.7 Definitions
FRA proposes to modify this section by removing the definition of
``adjacent tracks.'' As also discussed under Sec. 214.336, FRA
proposes to convert the term ``adjacent tracks'' to the singular, then
move the definition of ``adjacent track'' from Sec. 214.7 to the only
section where the term would actually be used, and finally define the
new term more narrowly by limiting it to a controlled track whose track
center is located 19 feet or less from the track center of the occupied
track. The current definition of ``adjacent tracks'' includes any
tracks, controlled or non-controlled, whose track centers are spaced
less than 25 feet apart.
As discussed above in ``IV. Recent Roadway Worker Accidents (1997-
2008),'' in all nine of the fatal accidents that occurred on ``adjacent
tracks'' as currently defined, the adjacent track was a controlled
track with a track center that was spaced 15 feet or less from the
track center of the occupied track. Six of the adjacent tracks had
track centers that were spaced approximately 14 feet or less from the
respective track centers of the tracks that the roadway work groups
were occupying. In examining whether to expand the types of work
activities requiring adjacent-track on-track safety in Sec.
214.335(c), the Working Group also considered whether the recommended
amendments to the section would be over-inclusive when applied in
conjunction with the existing definition of ``adjacent tracks.'' After
examining the accident data, the Working Group agreed that 19 feet
would be a reasonable and safe threshold to trigger the requirement to
establish adjacent-track on-track safety and that it would be
reasonable to cover controlled tracks within that 19-foot zone but to
exclude non-controlled tracks. FRA notes that the lack of fatalities on
non-controlled adjacent tracks may be attributable to the reduced
operating speeds on non-controlled tracks, where railroad operating
rules generally require that movements must stop short of obstructions
within half the range of
[[Page 41220]]
vision. The Working Group discussed and the full RSAC recommended for
inclusion in Sec. 214.335(c) that on-track safety be required for
``adjacent controlled track within 19 feet of the centerline of the
occupied track'' for certain work activities. FRA agrees with this
analysis and has reflected it in the proposed definition of ``adjacent
track.''
Subpart C--Roadway Worker Protection
Section 214.315 Supervision and Communication
Given the importance of an on-track safety job briefing in roadway
workers' understanding of the nature of the work they will be
conducting and the conditions under which they will conduct it, FRA
also thinks that the existing requirements in Sec. 214.315 for a job
briefing ``when an employer assigns duties to a roadway worker that
call for that employee to foul a track'' should be expanded to cover
the new proposed procedures for adjacent-track on-track safety in Sec.
214.336 if such procedures are required for that assignment. With a few
minor changes, the text concerning the additional components of an on-
track safety job briefing that is proposed in this NPRM was also
consensus language developed by the Working Group and recommended by
the full RSAC. The consensus language relating to adjacent-tracks was
proposed as a new paragraph (a)(2) in Sec. 214.315, to read as
follows:
(2) Information about any tracks adjacent to the track to be
occupied, on-track safety for such tracks, and identification of
roadway maintenance machines that will foul any adjacent track. In
such cases, the briefing shall include procedural instructions
addressing the nature of the work to be performed and the
characteristics of the work location to ensure compliance with this
part.
On December 18, 2007, FRA e-mailed the Working Group members and
requested an errata review of a document in which FRA had compiled all
of the consensus items. In its errata review comments, AAR requested
that FRA clarify that the provision is not intended to require a
discussion on the on-track safety of an adjacent track unless on-track
safety was required on that track by part 214. FRA agrees that this is
not the intent of the proposed requirement, and has added the language
``if required by this subpart'' to the consensus rule text, which has
been proposed as new paragraph (a)(3). This proposed section would
still require the on-track safety job briefing to include information
concerning any ``tracks adjacent'' (in the general sense of the word
``adjacent'') to the track to be fouled, so as to serve as a warning to
each roadway worker of the potential danger in fouling such a track,
even if no on-track safety is required for that particular track
because it does not meet the definition of ``adjacent track.'' FRA has
further clarified in a proposed revision to introductory paragraph (a)
that this section lists only the minimum items that must be discussed
in an on-track safety briefing. The words ``at a minimum'' were added,
and the rest of existing paragraph (a) has been moved to proposed
paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2).
Section 214.335 On-Track Safety Procedures for Roadway Work Groups,
General
FRA proposes to amend this section by deleting paragraph (c) and
replacing it with a new section to address adjacent-track on-track
safety for roadway work groups, Sec. 214.336, for the reasons
discussed below. Existing paragraph (c) reads as follows:
(c) Roadway work groups engaged in large-scale maintenance or
construction shall be provided with train approach warning in
accordance with Sec. 214.327 for movements on adjacent tracks that
are not included within working limits.
The proposal would also amend the heading of Sec. 214.335 to reflect
the general nature of the remaining requirements in that section.
Section 214.336 Adjacent-Track On-Track Safety for Roadway Work Groups;
Procedures, Training, and Recordkeeping
Paragraphs (a), Procedures; general; and (b), Exceptions to the
requirement for adjacent-track on-track safety
As discussed in section II.C., above, Sec. 214.335(c) currently
requires adjacent-track on-track safety for a roadway work group only
if such a work group is engaged in ``large-scale maintenance or
construction.'' Under this criterion and the limited guidance provided
in the preamble to the final rule, many railroads have not been
providing on-track safety on adjacent tracks for surfacing operations,
small tie-renewal operations, or similar maintenance operations that,
while smaller in scale, still include on-track, self-propelled
equipment. This proposed new section seeks to eliminate this
interpretive issue by establishing new, more objective criteria for
determining whether adjacent-track on-track safety is required for a
roadway work group. Fatalities have occurred in connection with such
operations, which many believe the existing language should be
interpreted to cover.
In developing language to address the increasing number of roadway
worker fatalities on an adjacent track, the Working Group considered
that most of the fatalities on an adjacent track occurred when a
roadway work group with at least one of the roadway workers on the
ground, was engaged in a common task with on-track, self-propelled
equipment on an occupied track. In those circumstances, the potential
for a roadway worker in the group to be distracted from the danger of
an oncoming train was great due to the noise and dust generated by
operation of the roadway maintenance machines, the need to avoid
entanglement in the operation of those machines, and the need to
monitor the quality of the work being performed. This set of factual
circumstances became the basis for the proposed new criteria for
triggering the requirement to establish adjacent-track on-track safety
in introductory paragraph (c)(1) of the consensus language, and in
paragraph (a) of proposed new Sec. 214.336, which, as a general rule,
would require that on-track safety be established for each adjacent
track when a roadway work group with at least one of the roadway
workers on the ground, is engaged in a common task with an on-track
roadway maintenance machine or coupled equipment on an occupied track.
In particular, the on-track safety would have to be provided in
accordance with Sec. 214.319 (Working limits, generally); Sec.
214.321 (Exclusive track occupancy); Sec. 214.323 (Foul time); Sec.
214.325 (Train coordination); or Sec. 214.329 (Train approach warning
provided by watchmen/lookouts). The general rule in paragraph (a) would
have three exceptions described in proposed paragraph (b).
Paragraph (a) would also add definitions of two terms used in Sec.
214.336: ``adjacent track'' and ``occupied track.'' For purposes of
this section (the only section where the term is used), ``adjacent
track'' would mean ``a controlled track whose track center is spaced 19
feet or less from the track center of the occupied track.'' The current
definition of ``adjacent tracks'' (in Sec. 214.7) includes any tracks,
controlled or non-controlled, whose track centers are spaced less than
25 feet apart. As the term ``adjacent track'' was used several times in
the recommended consensus language of Sec. 214.335(c), and to avoid
any confusion of terms, FRA proposes to remove the definition of
``adjacent tracks'' from Sec. 214.7, to convert the term to the
singular, and to adopt this new, narrower definition of ``adjacent
track'' based on the roadway worker fatality data discussed above under
the section-by-section analysis of Sec. 214.7, which show that the
adjacent
[[Page 41221]]
tracks on which the roadway worker fatalities occurred were all
controlled tracks and the track centers of these controlled tracks were
within 15 feet of the track centers of the occupied track.
The second proposed definition to be used for purposes of Sec.
214.336 is ``occupied track.'' FRA proposes to define the term
``occupied track'' to mean the track on which a roadway maintenance
machine or coupled equipment is located while engaged in a common task
with a roadway work group. FRA replaced the consensus language of ``on-
track, self-propelled or coupled equipment'' with ``on-track roadway
maintenance machine or coupled equipment'' so as to use a term that is
already defined in part 214. It should be noted that while the language
that would trigger the requirement to establish adjacent-track on-track
safety contains the term ``on-track roadway maintenance machine''
(which excludes hi-rails), the proposed definition of ``occupied
track'' contains the broader term ``roadway maintenance machine''
(which includes hi-rails), since a roadway work group that is engaged
in a common task with a hi-rail would still be ``occupying'' the track,
regardless of whether adjacent-track on-track safety would be required
during that task. The language in RSAC-recommended paragraph (a) was
also modified in light of the proposed new definition of ``adjacent
track,'' namely by moving references to ``controlled track'' and the
19-foot track center distance and placing them in the definition.
The Working Group also considered whether it is safe to permit work
to continue under certain limited circumstances, and proposed some
exceptions in paragraphs (c)(2)-(c)(3) and (e)(1)-(e)(3) of the
consensus language, which the full RSAC later recommended to FRA. FRA
has adopted all of the exceptions recommended by the full RSAC in this
proposal and has reorganized and modified the text for clarity, in
response to comments received from the AAR and the BMWED in their
errata review of the consensus language, and to address other potential
ambiguities discovered upon a closer review of the rule text.
In an effort to make the section easier to understand, FRA has
reorganized the section into proposed paragraph (a)(1), which lists the
procedures to follow for adjacent-track movements over 25 mph (i.e., if
a train or other on-track equipment is authorized to move on an
adjacent track at a speed greater than 25 mph), and proposed paragraph
(a)(2), which lists the procedures to follow when adjacent-track
movements are authorized at a speed of 25 mph or less.\5\ Proposed
paragraph (a)(1) would require that each roadway worker in the roadway
work group stop any work on the ground and stop the movement of any
roadway maintenance machine or coupled equipment in the fouling space
of the occupied track and the adjacent track, and occupy a
predetermined place of safety. If on-track safety has been established
on the adjacent track through train approach warning in accordance with
Sec. 214.329, all work would have to cease upon receiving a watchman/
lookout warning. On the other hand, if working limits have been
established on the adjacent track and the roadway work group has not
been assigned a watchman/lookout, all work would have to cease upon
receiving notification that the roadway worker in charge intends to
authorize one or more train movements or other on-track equipment
movements through the working limits on an adjacent track. This
notification would have to occur before the roadway worker in charge
releases the working limits, in order to comply with existing Sec.
214.319(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ If a roadway worker in charge, in his discretion, authorizes
a train through working limits on an adjacent track at 30 mph, but
the train is actually traveling at a speed of only 20 mph, the
procedures in proposed paragraph (a)(1), regarding adjacent-track
movements over 25 mph, would still apply. Where exclusive track
occupancy is the method of on-track safety established on the
adjacent track, FRA notes that existing Sec. 214.321(d) provides
that movements of trains and roadway maintenance machines within
working limits shall be made only under the direction of the roadway
worker having control over the working limits, and further notes
that such movements shall be at restricted speed unless a higher
speed has been specifically authorized by the roadway worker in
charge of the working limits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In its errata review comments on the FRA document compiling all of
the Working Group consensus language, AAR requested that FRA clarify
whether work would be permitted to resume at a particular location
after the head-end of the movement had passed or after the entire train
had passed, under the RSAC-recommended Sec. 214.335(c)(2). A review of
the available accident data shows that none of the fatalities that
occurred on the adjacent track were due to an employee walking into the
side of the train; rather, the employees walked in front of the train's
path. Thus, it is reasonable to permit work to resume after the head-
end of the movement has passed the location of each component of the
roadway work group (provided that the roadway workers do not later
advance to a position ahead of the head-end), and the relevant language
in consensus text in paragraph (c)(2) has been modified accordingly by
FRA in its proposed paragraph (a)(1)(ii).
In modifying the language in consensus paragraph (c)(2) for
inclusion in its proposal, FRA realized that this same paragraph did
not address whether such work would be permitted to continue if a train
or other on-track equipment, due to the maximum timetable speed of 25
mph, were operating at speeds no greater than 25 mph on an adjacent
track, where train approach warning was the established method of
adjacent-track on-track safety. As the roadway workers are presented
with similar safety risks and would still receive notification of the
train or other on-track equipment movements, regardless of the method
of adjacent-track on-track safety established, FRA has decided to adopt
clarifying language and has combined consensus paragraphs (c)(1) and
(c)(2) into a new paragraph (a)(1)(ii) in this NPRM. Under the
proposal, a component of a roadway work group may resume on-ground work
and movement of any roadway maintenance machine or coupled equipment on
the occupied track only after the head-end of all trains or other on-
track equipment moving on the adjacent track (either authorized through
the working limits by the roadway worker in charge or for which a
watchman/lookout has provided a warning) has passed and remains ahead
of that component of the roadway work group. This provision may be best
explained through examples showing how the proposed requirements would
apply under various factual scenarios.
For example, if a roadway worker in charge were to authorize three
trains through the working limits, and only working limits were in
effect, the work would not be permitted to continue until all three
movements had passed the roadway work group component's location. If
train approach warning procedures were also in effect under the same
circumstances, the roadway work group component would be allowed to
continue all work after the head-end of the first train passed, (so
long as the work remained behind the head-end and would not foul the
adjacent track) until receiving the warning for the second train, and
so on.
On the other hand, if the train or other on-track equipment were to
stop before its head-end passed all of the roadway workers in the
roadway work group (or if a roadway worker in the roadway work group
moved to a position on or fouling the occupied track in advance of the
head-end of the adjacent-track movement), the work to be performed on
or while fouling the occupied track ahead of the train or other on-
track equipment on the adjacent track would be permitted to resume only
if adjacent-
[[Page 41222]]
track on-track safety is currently in effect or re-established. In most
cases, this would likely mean that on-track safety through train
approach warning (Sec. 214.329) is still in effect or has been re-
established on the adjacent track. In the remaining cases, this would
mean that the roadway worker in charge has communicated with the train
engineer or equipment operator and obtained or regained control of such
train or other on-track equipment. Of course, any work that would foul
the adjacent track on which the movement is occurring would not be
permitted to resume immediately upon the head-end of the movement
passing by the roadway work group component, as adjacent track on-track
safety cannot be re-established for that adjacent track at least until
the entire train or other on-track equipment movement has passed (and
remains past) the roadway work group component's location, unless the
train or other on-track equipment were stopped and under the control of
the roadway worker in charge.
The proposed procedures to be followed for adjacent-track movements
of 25 mph or less are the same as those procedures for adjacent-track
movements over 25 mph, except that work would be permitted to continue
in certain circumstances without regard to when the head-end passed the
roadway work group's location, due to the low speed of the movements.
In proposed paragraph (a), FRA makes clear that if an occupied track
has two adjacent tracks, and one of the tracks has one or more
adjacent-track movements authorized at 25 mph or less, and the other
has one or more concurrent adjacent-track movements authorized at over
25 mph, the more restrictive procedures in paragraph (a)(1) would
apply.
The circumstances under which work may continue during low-speed
movements on adjacent tracks have been included in proposed paragraphs
(a)(2)(i)-(a)(2)(ii). In both sets of circumstances, any work that
would be permitted to continue after notification of an adjacent-track
movement would have to be performed more than 25 feet away from the
front or rear of any roadway maintenance machine that is on or fouling
the occup