Hours of Service of Railroad Employees; Substantive Regulations for Train Employees Providing Commuter and Intercity Rail Passenger Transportation; Conforming Amendments to Recordkeeping Requirements, 50360-50401 [2011-20290]
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50360
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 156 / Friday, August 12, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Part 228
[Docket No. FRA–2009–0043, Notice No. 2]
RIN 2130–AC15
Hours of Service of Railroad
Employees; Substantive Regulations
for Train Employees Providing
Commuter and Intercity Rail Passenger
Transportation; Conforming
Amendments to Recordkeeping
Requirements
Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
FRA is amending its hours of
service recordkeeping regulations, to
add substantive hours of service
regulations, including maximum onduty periods, minimum off-duty
periods, and other limitations, for train
employees (e.g., locomotive engineers
and conductors) providing commuter
and intercity rail passenger
transportation. The new substantive
regulations require that railroads
employing such train employees
analyze and mitigate the risks for fatigue
in the schedules worked by these train
employees, and that the railroads
submit to FRA for its approval the
relevant schedules and fatigue
mitigation plans. This final rule also
makes corresponding changes to FRA’s
hours of service recordkeeping
regulation, to require railroads to keep
hours of service records and report
excess service to FRA in a manner
consistent with the new substantive
requirements. This regulation is
authorized by the Rail Safety
Improvement Act of 2008.
DATES: Effective Date: This final rule is
effective October 15, 2011. Petitions for
reconsideration must be received on or
before October 5, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Petitions for
reconsideration: Any petitions for
reconsideration related to Docket No.
FRA–2009–0043, Notice No. 2, may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
• Web site: The Federal eRulemaking
Portal, https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the Web site’s online
instructions for submitting comments.
• Fax: 202–493–2251.
• Mail: Docket Management Facility,
U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200
New Jersey Avenue, SE., W12–140,
Washington, DC 20590.
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SUMMARY:
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• Hand Delivery: Room W12–140 on
the Ground level of the West Building,
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and
5 p.m. Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
Instructions: All submissions must
include the agency name and docket
number or Regulatory Identification
Number (RIN) for this rulemaking. Note
that all petitions received will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov including any
personal information. Please see the
Privacy Act heading in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document for Privacy Act
information related to any submitted
petitions, comments, or materials.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov or to Room W12–
140 on the Ground level of the West
Building, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and
5 p.m. Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mark H. McKeon, Special Assistant to
the Associate Administrator for Railroad
Safety/Chief Safety Officer, FRA, 1200
New Jersey Avenue, SE., RRS–1, Mail
Stop 25, Washington, DC 20590
(telephone: 202–493–6350); Dr. Thomas
G. Raslear, Staff Director, Human
Factors Research Program, Office of
Research and Development, FRA, 1200
New Jersey Avenue, SE., RPD–321, Mail
Stop 20, Washington, DC 20590
(telephone 202–493–6356); Colleen A.
Brennan, Trial Attorney, Office of Chief
Counsel, FRA, 1200 New Jersey Avenue,
SE., RCC–12, Mail Stop 10, Washington,
DC 20590 (telephone 202–493–6028 or
202–493–6052); or Matthew T. Prince,
Trial Attorney, Office of Chief Counsel,
FRA, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
RCC–12, Mail Stop 10, Washington, DC
20590 (telephone 202–493–6146 or 202–
493–6052).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents for Supplementary
Information
I. Executive Summary
II. Statutory Background and History
III. Scientific Background
A. Validated and Calibrated Fatigue
Models
1. Fatigue Avoidance Scheduling ToolTM
Model
2. Fatigue Audit InterDyneTM Model
B. Diary Study of Train Employees on
Commuter and Intercity Passenger
Railroads
IV. Railroad Safety Advisory Committee
Process
A. Overview of the RSAC
B. RSAC Proceedings in this Rulemaking
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C. Significant Task Force Contributions to
the Development of the NPRM
1. Schedule Analysis
2. Fatigue Mitigation Tool Box
D. Areas of Working Group and Task Force
Concern During Development of the
NPRM
1. Proposed Definitions of ‘‘Type 1
Assignment’’ and ‘‘Type 2 Assignment’’
2. Proposed Limitations on Number of
Consecutive Days
3. Precision of Fatigue Models and
Threshold
4. Freight Railroad Employees Acting as
Pilots for Commuter or Intercity
Passenger Trains
V. Response to Public Comments on the
NPRM
VI. Section-by-Section Analysis
VII. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866 and 13563 and
DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures
B. Executive Order 13132
C. Executive Order 13175
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive
Order 13272
1. Description of Regulated Entities and
Impacts
2. Certification
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
G. Environmental Assessment
H. Privacy Act
I. Executive Summary
Having considered public comments
in response to FRA’s March 22, 2011
proposed rule in this rulemaking (76 FR
16200), FRA issues this final rule
establishing substantive hours of service
regulations for train employees who
provide commuter or intercity rail
passenger transportation (passenger
train employees).
Federal laws governing railroad
employees’ hours of service date back to
1907 with the enactment of the Hours of
Service Act (Pub. L. 59–274, 34 Stat.
1415), and FRA, under delegations from
the Secretary of Transportation
(Secretary), has long administered
statutory hours of service requirements
for the three groups of employees now
covered under the statute, namely
employees performing the functions of
train employees, signal employees, and
dispatching service employees, as those
terms are defined at 49 U.S.C. 21101.
See 49 CFR 1.49; 49 U.S.C. 21101–
21109, 21303.
These requirements have been
amended several times over the years,
most recently in the Rail Safety
Improvement Act of 2008 (Pub. L. 110–
432, Div. A) (RSIA). The RSIA
substantially amended the requirements
of 49 U.S.C. 21103, applicable to train
employees, defined as ‘‘individual[s]
engaged in or connected with the
movement of a train, including a
hostler.’’ 49 U.S.C. 21101(5). However,
the RSIA also granted the Secretary
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authority to prescribe regulations
governing the hours of service of
passenger train employees. 49 U.S.C.
21109(b)–(c). As will be discussed
below, FRA interprets commuter or
intercity rail passenger transportation to
include rail passenger transportation by
tourist, scenic, excursion, and historic
railroads. The RSIA provided that this
particular subset of train employees
(i.e., passenger train employees) would
continue to be governed by 49 U.S.C.
21103 as it existed prior to the
enactment of the RSIA (old Section
21103), until the earlier of, the effective
date of final regulations prescribed by
the Secretary, or the date that is three
years from the date of enactment of the
RSIA. 49 U.S.C. 21102(c). In the absence
of a final rule in effect governing this
group of train employees, the
requirements of the RSIA currently in
effect for other train employees (new
Section 21103) would go into effect for
passenger train employees on October
16, 2011. 49 U.S.C. 21102(c).
As will be discussed further below,
FRA reviewed the applicable fatigue
science, and sought input from FRA’s
Railroad Safety Advisory Committee
(RSAC). Based on FRA’s understanding
of current fatigue science, and
information received through RSAC,
FRA determined that the requirements
imposed on train employees by the
RSIA were not appropriate for passenger
train employees. The chart below
compares and contrasts (1) the hours of
service requirements in 49 U.S.C. 21103
as amended by the RSIA, (2) the
statutory hours of service requirements
applicable to all train employees
immediately prior to the RSIA, which
are currently still applicable to
passenger train employees until the
effective date of this final rule, and (3)
the requirements of this final rule that
applies to passenger train employees
from the effective date of the rule, with
the compliance date of some provisions
delayed for a period of 180 or 545 days
from the effective date.
Freight train employee statute
Citation ...........................................
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Use of Fatigue Science .................
Limitations on Time on Duty in a
Single Tour.
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Train employee statutory
provisions immediately prior
to the RSIA and currently
applicable only to passenger
train employees
49 U.S.C. 21103 (as amended by
the RSIA effective July 16,
2009) (new section 21103) (Applies to train employees on
freight railroads. Will apply to
train employees on commuter
and intercity passenger railroads if no regulations are in effect by October 16, 2011).
None .............................................
49 U.S.C. 21103 as it existed
prior to the October 16, 2008,
enactment of the RSIA (old
section 21103) (Train employees providing commuter and
intercity rail passenger transportation are currently covered
by these provisions pursuant to
49 U.S.C. 21102(c).).
None .............................................
12 consecutive hours of time on
duty or 12 nonconsecutive
hours on duty if broken by an
interim release of at least 4
consecutive hours uninterrupted
by communication from the railroad likely to disturb rest, in a
24-hour period that begins at
the beginning of the duty tour.
12 consecutive hours of time on
duty or 12 nonconsecutive
hours on duty if broken by an
interim release of at least 4
consecutive hours, in a 24-hour
period that begins at the beginning of the duty tour.
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50361
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FRA passenger train employee
final rule
49 CFR part 228, subpart F.
This final rule requires passenger
train employees’ work schedules to be analyzed under an
FRA-approved validated biomathematical fatigue model
such as the specified version of
the Fatigue Avoidance Scheduling ToolTM or Fatigue Audit
InterDyneTM, with the exception
of certain schedules (completely within the hours of 4
a.m. and 8 p.m., or nested within other schedules that have
been previously modeled and
shown to present an acceptable
level of risk for fatigue, and otherwise in compliance with the
limitations in the regulation)
deemed as categorically presenting an acceptable level of
risk for fatigue that does not
violate the defined fatigue
threshold. Analysis must be
complete 180 days from the effective date of the final rule, except that tourist, scenic, historic
and excursion railroads have
545 days from the effective
date of the final rule to complete their analysis.
12 consecutive hours of time on
duty or 12 nonconsecutive
hours on duty if broken by an
interim release of at least 4
consecutive hours, in a 24-hour
period that begins at the beginning of the duty tour. This is effective on the effective date of
the final rule.
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Freight train employee statute
Train employee statutory
provisions immediately prior
to the RSIA and currently
applicable only to passenger
train employees
FRA passenger train employee
final rule
Limitations on Consecutive Duty
Tours or Total Duty Tours in Set
Period.
May not be on duty as a train employee after initiating an on-duty
period on six consecutive days
without receiving 48 consecutive hours off duty free from any
service for any railroad carrier
at the employee’s home terminal. Employees are permitted
to initiate a seventh consecutive
day when the employee ends
the sixth consecutive day at the
away-from-home terminal, as
part of a pilot project, or as part
of a grandfathered collectively
bargained arrangement. Employees performing service on
this additional day must receive
72 consecutive hours free from
any service for any railroad carrier at their home terminal before going on duty again as a
train employee.
None .............................................
Cumulative Limits on Time on Duty
Limited to 276 hours of time on
duty, in deadhead transportation to a point of final release,
or any other mandatory activity
for the railroad carrier.
Limited to 30 hours of time spent
on duty and waiting for or in
deadhead transportation to a
point of final release after
reaching 12 hours of time on
duty and waiting for or in
deadhead transportation to a
point of final release.
10 consecutive hours of time off
duty free from any communication from the railroad likely to
disturb rest, with additional time
off duty if on-duty time plus time
in or awaiting deadhead transportation to final release exceeds 12 hours.
48 consecutive hours off duty,
free from any service for any
railroad carrier, after initiating
an on-duty period for 6 consecutive days. If 7 consecutive
days are permitted, mandatory
off-duty period extended to 72
consecutive hours.
None .............................................
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Mandatory Off-Duty Periods ..........
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8 consecutive hours (10 consecutive hours if time on duty
reaches 12 consecutive hours).
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If employee initiates an on-duty
period each day for six consecutive calendar days including at least one ‘‘Type 2’’ assignment (generally, those including time on duty between 8
p.m. and 4 a.m.) employee
must have 24 consecutive
hours off duty at the employee’s home terminal. If an employee initiates an on-duty period on 13 or more calendar
days of a period of 14 consecutive days then must have 2 consecutive calendar days without
initiating an on-duty period at
the employee’s home terminal.
Employees may be permitted to
perform service on an additional day to facilitate their return to their home terminal.
These limitations are effective
180 days from the effective
date of the final rule, except
that they become effective for
tourist, scenic, historic and excursion railroads 545 days from
the effective date of the final
rule.
None.
8 consecutive hours (10 consecutive hours if time on duty
reaches 12 consecutive hours).
This is effective on the effective
date of the final rule.
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Specific Rules for Nighttime Operations.
None .............................................
None .............................................
Specific Rules for Unscheduled
Assignments.
None .............................................
None .............................................
Recordkeeping requirements .........
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Freight train employee statute
Train employee statutory
provisions immediately prior
to the RSIA and currently
applicable only to passenger
train employees
Record for each duty tour must
contain 15 elements specified
in 49 CFR 228.11(b).
Record for each duty tour must
contain the first 12 elements
specified in 49 CFR 228.11(b),
as items 13 through 16 relate to
RSIA requirements not applicable to train employees providing
commuter or intercity rail passenger transportation.
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50363
FRA passenger train employee
final rule
Schedules that include any time
on duty between 8 p.m. and 4
a.m. must be analyzed using a
validated
biomathematical
model of human performance
and fatigue approved by FRA.
Schedules with excess risk of
fatigue must be mitigated or
supported by a determination
that mitigation is not possible
and the schedule is operationally necessary and approved by
FRA. Analysis must be complete and required submissions
must be made 180 days from
the effective date of the final
rule, except that tourist, scenic,
historic and excursion railroads
have 545 days from the effective date of the final rule to
complete their analysis and any
required submission.
The potential for fatigue presented by unscheduled work
assignments must be mitigated
as part of a railroad’s FRA-approved fatigue mitigation plan.
Plans must be submitted for
FRA review and approval along
with the associated schedules
requiring mitigation, 180 days
from the effective date of the
final rule, except that tourist,
scenic, historic and excursion
railroads have 545 days from
the effective date of the final
rule to complete their analysis
and any required submission.
Record for each duty tour must
contain the first 12 elements
specified in 49 CFR 228.11(b).
Record must also indicate the
date on which the series of at
most 14 consecutive calendar
days begins, as well as the
date of any calendar day on
which the employee did not initiate an on-duty period during
the series. These recordkeeping requirements go into
effect at the same time as the
substantive provisions being
tracked by them, which is 180
days from the effective date of
the final rule, except that those
provisions go into effect for
tourist, scenic, historic and excursion railroads 545 days from
the effective date of the final
rule, as would the associated
recordkeeping requirements.
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Freight train employee statute
Excess Service Reporting Requirements.
Train employee statutory
provisions immediately prior
to the RSIA and currently
applicable only to passenger
train employees
Requires reporting of any of 10
different ways in which hours of
service limitations may be exceeded.
Requires reporting of any of 4 different ways in which hours of
service limitations may be exceeded.
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This rule mirrors the existing
limitations set by old section 21103 on
the maximum number of hours in a duty
tour and minimum number of hours in
a statutory off-duty period. Additional
limitations are added on the number of
consecutive days or total days within a
prescribed period that a passenger train
employee may work, depending on the
time of day of the assignment. This
differentiation takes into account the
fact that work during nighttime hours
may present a greater risk for fatigue.
(For ease of reference, these provisions
of this regulation are collectively
referred to as ‘‘consecutive-days
limitations’’). Conforming changes are
also made to the recordkeeping and
reporting requirements to accommodate
the consecutive-days limitations.
The limitations on maximum hours
worked, minimum hours of rest, and
consecutive days or total days within a
prescribed period provide a ‘‘floor,’’ a
minimum set of limitations, within
which the rule requires railroads subject
to this rule to analyze the work
schedules of their passenger train
employees using a validated and
calibrated biomathematical model of
human performance and fatigue, and to
mitigate any fatigue identified that
violates the fatigue threshold for the
model.1 The fatigue threshold is a level
of fatigue at which safety may be
1 In the NPRM, FRA referred to ‘‘exceeding’’ the
fatigue threshold. The two currently approved
models differ in how their thresholds are expressed,
with FAST requiring an effectiveness score greater
than or equal to its threshold, and FAID requiring
a score less than or equal to its threshold, so FRA
realized there could be confusion as to what it
meant to ‘‘exceed’’ the threshold depending which
model is being used, while it is equally applicable
to say the threshold is violated, however that
threshold is expressed.
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compromised. As will be discussed
below, especially under Section III.A,
there are two models that currently have
been validated and calibrated using data
from freight railroads, that have been
approved by FRA to be used for the
analysis required by this rule. The rule
also allows for the development of new
models. It discusses procedures for
validating and calibrating a model, and
provides that evidence of a new model’s
validation and calibration may be
submitted to FRA for approval.
The rule defines as a ‘‘Type 1
assignment’’ any assignment that
requires an employee to report for duty
no earlier than 4 a.m. and be released
from duty no later than 8 p.m. Based on
analysis conducted during the
formulation of this rule, such
assignments are subjected to a less
restrictive consecutive-days limitation,
and such schedules are deemed to
present an acceptable level of fatigue
when otherwise in compliance with the
limitations established in this rule.
Thus, these schedules are not required
to be submitted to FRA for approval, nor
is the application of fatigue mitigation
tools to these schedules required.
A ‘‘Type 2 assignment’’ is any
assignment having any period of time
during a calendar day before 4 a.m. or
after 8 p.m. Within 180 days of the
effective date of this regulation,
railroads are required to analyze the
fatigue risk of assignments that they
make to their passenger train employees
using an FRA-approved fatigue model. If
the analysis shows that a schedule does
not violate the fatigue threshold, and the
schedule is otherwise in compliance
with the limitations of the rule and does
not require the employee to be on duty
for any period of time between midnight
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FRA passenger train employee
final rule
Requires reporting of any of 8 different ways in which hours of
service limitations may be exceeded (reflecting various ways
of violating new consecutivedays requirements). These recordkeeping requirements go
into effect at the same time as
the substantive provisions being
tracked by them, which is 180
days from the effective date of
the final rule, except that those
provisions go into effect for
tourist, scenic, historic and excursion railroads 545 days from
the effective date of the final
rule, as would the associated
recordkeeping requirements.
and 4 a.m., the rule allows that schedule
to be treated as a Type 1 assignment for
the purposes of the consecutive-days
limitation, and there is no requirement
to submit the schedule to FRA or to
mitigate fatigue in that schedule.
However, for those schedules that the
analysis indicates have a level of risk for
fatigue violating the fatigue threshold,
the railroad is required to mitigate the
fatigue. Railroads are also required to
complete their analysis and submit any
schedules with a risk violating the
fatigue threshold, and the mitigation
tools the railroad applied to mitigate the
fatigue risk in those schedules to FRA
for approval. In addition, any schedule,
the fatigue risk of which could not be
sufficiently mitigated so that it no
longer violates the fatigue threshold, but
which the railroad deems operationally
necessary, must also be submitted for
FRA approval, along with a declaration
of operational necessity for FRA
approval.
The rule also requires railroads to
submit any schedule changes that result
in a schedule that would have been
required to be submitted if it were an
original schedule, unless the new
schedule is the same as another
schedule that has previously been
analyzed and approved.
Within 120 days of any railroad
submission, FRA will notify the railroad
of any exceptions taken to its
submission and the time frame within
which the railroad must correct the
exceptions. While the rule requires FRA
approval of the schedules and fatigue
mitigation tools, FRA expects that it will
work with a railroad to make necessary
modifications to schedules or mitigation
tools to minimize fatigue to the greatest
extent possible.
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railroads are providing to their
employees.
FRA analyzed the economic impacts
of this rule against two baselines. One
is a ‘‘status quo’’ baseline that reflects
present conditions (i.e., primarily, the
statutory hours of service provisions
(specifically, old section 21103) and,
secondarily, the hours of service
recordkeeping and reporting
regulations) that have applied, and will
continue to apply to passenger railroads,
with respect to their train employees,
until this final rule becomes effective.
The other baseline is a ‘‘no regulatory
action’’ baseline that reflects what
Railroads are required to consult with
affected employees and applicable labor
organizations regarding the analysis of
work schedules, fatigue mitigation tools,
and submissions to FRA. Should the
employees or labor organizations
disagree with the railroad, they have the
opportunity to file a statement for FRA’s
consideration in reviewing the
submission and determining whether to
approve it.
Finally, the rule requires initial
fatigue training, addressing a list of
subjects, and refresher training every
three years. This training may be
combined with other training that the
would have happened in the absence of
this rulemaking (i.e., the freight hours of
service laws would have been applied to
passenger railroads with respect to their
train employees).
With respect to the ‘‘no regulatory
action’’ baseline, this rule represents a
substantially more cost-effective
alternative for achieving the goal of
identifying and mitigating unacceptable
fatigue risk levels and thus ensuring the
safety of passenger train operations. The
following table presents the costs of the
final rule compared to the ‘‘no
regulatory action’’ alternative.
No regulatory action alternative—freight HSL
Final rule
Cost description
Undiscounted
PV@7%
PV@3%
Undiscounted
PV@7%
$31,237,549
$26,299,825
$28,705,081
0 .....................................
0 .................................
0.
$4,599,050
$2,278,431
$3,327,802
0 .....................................
0 .................................
0.
$30,847,974
$25,942,971
$28,330,908
0 .....................................
0 .................................
0.
$8,636,745
$4,278,146
$6,249,071
0 .....................................
0 .................................
0.
$189,723
$177,312
$184,198
($126,482 + $240,316) =
$366,799.
($118,208 + $122,175)
= $240,382.
($122,798 + $175,894)
= $298,692.
......................
......................
......................
¥$91,700 .......................
¥$60,096 ...................
¥$74,673.
0
0
0
Use of Rest Facilities ............................
Fatigue Training ....................................
Fatigue Training (Tourist & Excursion)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
$417,500 (includes
$192,500 for training
on model use).
$30,988 ..........................
$1,312,920 .....................
$20,000 ..........................
$268,723 (includes
$119,175 for training on model use).
$28,961 ......................
$782,634 ....................
$12,000 ......................
$337,240 (includes
$152,843 for training on model use).
$30,086.
$1,025,158.
$16,000.
Total (rounded) ..............................
$75,511,041
$58,976,685
$66,797,059
$2,056,507 .....................
$1,272,605 .................
$1,632,502.
New Engineer Training, Initial (20%
New Hires).
New Engineer Training, Refresher
(20% New Hires).
New Conductor Training, Initial (20%
New Hires).
New Conductor Training, Refresher
(20% New Hires).
Work Schedule Analysis (No-Reg Action)/Initial Analysis of Work Schedules + Follow-up Analysis and Fatigue Mitigation Plan Review (FRA
rule).
Indirect Determination that Type 2
Schedules are Acceptable (‘‘Nested’’
Schedules Reduction).
Biomathematical Model of Fatigue Software (Training on model use).
FRA estimates that the recordkeeping
and reporting costs per employee record
under the no-regulatory action
alternative and this rule will be
practically the same.
The estimated accident reduction
benefits of the rule relative to the
statutory hours of service requirements
currently in place include prevented
accident damages, injuries, and
fatalities. The table below presents the
PV@3%
estimates for the 20-year period of
analysis for the benefits of this rule,
which FRA estimates to be the same as
the benefits of the no-regulatory action
alternative.
INTERCITY PASSENGER, COMMUTER, TOURIST AND EXCURSION RAILROADS
[All track types]
VSL = $6 M
undiscounted
benefits
Accident reduction benefits
VSL = $6 M
discounted
PV@7%
VSL = $6 M
discounted
PV@3%
$685,915
94,861
407,634
$348,713
48,227
207,237
$502,039
69,431
298,358
Total (rounded) .....................................................................................................................
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Property Damage .........................................................................................................................
Injuries .........................................................................................................................................
Fatalities .......................................................................................................................................
1,188,410
604,177
869,828
FRA does not expect that the overall
number of casualties and property
damages attributable to the rule will
differ from those that would be
prevented under the statutory freight
hours of service requirements. However,
as noted above, there are significant
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additional potential safety enhancement
benefits that may result from the FRA
approach. FRA believes that the safety
of passenger train operations will be
enhanced under this rule as a result of
subjecting every crew assignment to a
biomathematical analysis either via the
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analyses conducted while developing
the RSAC recommendation or the
analyses that will be performed by
railroads in the years ahead. The
information that railroads will have as
a result of this rule regarding fatigue, its
causes and symptoms, and its impact on
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safety, will allow them to make crew
assignments that take this into
consideration and minimize fatigue
beyond the requirements of this rule.
Based on its literature review, FRA is
confident that, overall, fatigue
awareness training will positively
contribute to a stronger safety culture
that will extend beyond railroad
operations, which is a benefit that
extends beyond what would result
under the freight hours of service law.
For instance, safety and health benefits
may accrue from the transfer of
knowledge to employees, their families,
friends, and others with whom they may
share the fatigue knowledge that they
acquire from the required fatigue
awareness training programs. This
fatigue awareness may result in more
optimal decisions regarding rest and
sleep, leading to less fatigue and
improved safety outside of passenger
train operations during the course of
daily activities that may also include the
operation of motor vehicles or other
heavy machinery. This fatigue
awareness may also result in proper
identification and treatment, if
necessary, of fatigue symptoms.
Although FRA has not identified
research on the effectiveness of the
specific types of fatigue training
programs required under this rule, many
studies have indicated health training
programs in general produce meaningful
behavioral performance improvements.
With respect to the ‘‘status-quo’’
baseline, this rule imposes costs that are
higher than the safety benefits FRA was
able to quantify. Costs compared to the
‘‘status quo’’ baseline total $2.1 million
(undiscounted), $1.3 million (PV, 7
percent), and $1.6 million (PV, 3
percent). Quantified benefits compared
to the ‘‘status quo’’ baseline total $1.2
million (undiscounted), $0.6 million
(PV, 7 percent), and $0.9 million (PV, 3
percent). However, there are additional
benefits that have not been quantified,
but should be considered when
comparing the overall costs and
benefits. As when compared to the ‘‘noregulatory action’’ baseline, FRA
believes that the safety of passenger
train operations will be enhanced under
this rule as a result of a stronger safety
culture that may extend beyond railroad
operations, which would be a benefit
that extends beyond what would result
under the freight hours of service law.
Separately, accident avoidance will
result in fewer unplanned delays to
passengers and freight commodities
impacted by passenger train accidents
and incidents that result in blocking one
or more tracks for prolonged periods.
These costs can be very substantial
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given the need to investigate accidents
and often clear wreckage. It is not
unreasonable to expect that the
unquantified benefits will raise the
benefits to a level quite comparable to
the costs. FRA also believes that the
unquantified benefits coupled with the
quantified safety benefits are
comparable to the costs associated with
meeting the intent of the statutory
mandate.
After careful consideration of
comments received in response to the
NPRM, FRA has made modifications to
its proposal in the final rule that reduce
the overall burden by approximately
$100,000 due in equal part to
flexibilities added by extending the
deadline for fatigue awareness training
and the expanded ability to rely on the
findings of analyses conducted for other
assignments.
II. Statutory Background and History
Federal laws governing railroad
employees’ hours of service date back to
1907 with the enactment of the Hours of
Service Act. These laws, codified as
amended primarily at 49 U.S.C. 21101–
21109, are intended to promote safe
railroad operations by limiting the hours
of service of certain railroad employees
and ensuring that they receive adequate
opportunities for rest in the course of
performing their duties. Public Law
103–272 (1994). The Secretary is
charged with the administration of those
laws, collectively referred to in this
document as the hours of service laws
(HSL). This function has been delegated
to the FRA Administrator. 49 U.S.C.
103(c); 49 CFR 1.49(d).
Congress substantially amended the
HSL on three occasions. The first
significant amendments occurred in
1969. Public Law 91–169, 83 Stat. 463.
The 1969 amendments reduced the
maximum time on duty for train
employees 2 from 16 hours to 14 hours
effective immediately, with a further
2 A ‘‘train employee’’ is defined at 49 U.S.C.
21101(5) and 49 CFR 228.5 as an individual
engaged in or connected with the movement of a
train, including a hostler. FRA also interpreted this
statutory term in published interpretations in 49
CFR part 228, appendix A, providing: ‘‘Train or
engine service refers to the actual assembling or
operation of trains. Employees who perform this
type of service commonly include locomotive
engineers, firemen, conductors, trainmen,
switchmen, switchtenders (unless their duties come
under the provisions of section 3 [49 U.S.C. 21105])
and hostlers.’’ Other employees, such as food
service providers or sleeping car attendants, who
may work on passenger trains, but have no
responsibility for assembling or operating the train,
are not within the definition of a train employee,
and are, as such, not generally covered by this rule,
or any other hours of service limitations, but they
would be covered if they performed functions
related to assembling or operating the train,
regardless of the employee’s job title.
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reduction to 12 hours automatically
taking effect two years later. Congress
also established provisions for
determining, in the case of a train
employee, whether a period of time is
to be counted as time on duty. 49 U.S.C.
21103(b). In so doing, Congress also
addressed the issue of deadhead
transportation 3 time, providing that
‘‘[t]ime spent in deadhead
transportation to a duty assignment’’ is
counted as time on duty. Although time
spent in deadhead transportation from a
duty assignment to the point of final
release is not included within any of the
categories of time on duty, Congress
further provided that it shall be counted
as neither time on duty nor time off
duty. 49 U.S.C. 21103(b)(4). This
provision effectively created a third
category of time, known commonly as
‘‘limbo time.’’
In 1976, Congress again amended the
HSL in several important respects. Most
significantly, Congress expanded the
coverage of the laws, by including
hostlers within the definition of
employees now termed ‘‘train
employees,’’ and adding the section
providing hours of service requirements
for ‘‘signal employees,’’ now codified at
49 U.S.C. 21104. Congress also added a
provision that prohibited a railroad from
providing sleeping quarters that are not
free from interruptions of rest caused by
noise under the control of the railroad,
and that are not clean, safe, and
sanitary, and prohibited beginning
construction or reconstruction of
sleeping quarters in an area or in the
immediate vicinity of an area in which
humping or switching operations are
performed after July 7, 1996. See Public
Law 94–348, 90 Stat. 818 (1976).
Section 108 of the RSIA also amended
the HSL in a number of significant
ways, most of which became effective
July 16, 2009. See Section 108 of Public
Law 110–432, Div. A, and FRA Interim
Statement of Agency Policy and
Interpretation at 74 FR 30665 (June 26,
2009). The RSIA established a limit of
276 hours per calendar month for train
employees on service performed for a
railroad and on time spent in or waiting
for deadhead transportation to a point of
final release, increased the quantity of
the statutory minimum off-duty period
after being on duty for 12 hours in
broken service from 8 hours of rest to 10
hours of rest, prohibited communication
with train or signal employees during
certain minimum statutory rest periods,
and established mandatory time off duty
3 ‘‘Deadheading’’ is defined at 49 CFR 228.5 as the
physical relocation of a train employee from one
point to another as a result of a railroad-issued
verbal or written directive.
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for train employees of 48 hours after
initiating an on-duty period on six
consecutive days, or 72 hours after
initiating an on-duty period on seven
consecutive days. 49 U.S.C. 21103–
21104. The RSIA also revised the
definition of ‘‘signal employee’’ to
include contractors who perform the
work of a signal employee within the
scope of the statute. 49 U.S.C. 21101(4).
However, Section 108(d) of the RSIA,
which became effective on October 16,
2008, provided that the requirements
described above for train employees
would not go into effect on July 16,
2009, for train employees when
providing commuter or intercity rail
passenger transportation. 49 U.S.C.
21102(c). Section 108(d) further
provided that these train employees,
who provide commuter or intercity
passenger rail service, would continue
to be governed by the old HSL (as they
existed immediately prior to the
enactment of the RSIA, at 49 U.S.C.
21103 prior to its 2008 amendment),
until the effective date of regulations
promulgated by the Secretary. 49 U.S.C.
21102(c). However, if no new
regulations are in effect before October
16, 2011, the provisions of Section
108(b), which applied to train
employees, would be extended to these
employees at that time. Id.
Section 108(e) of the RSIA specifically
provides the Secretary with the
authority to issue hours of service rules
and orders applicable to train
employees engaged in commuter rail
passenger transportation and intercity
rail passenger transportation (as defined
in 49 U.S.C. 24102), that may be
different from the statute applied to
other train employees. 49 U.S.C.
21109(b). Section 108(e) of the RSIA
further provides that such regulations
and orders may address railroad
operating and scheduling practices,
including unscheduled duty calls,
communications during time off duty,
and time spent waiting for deadhead
transportation or in deadhead
transportation from a duty assignment
to the place of final release, that could
affect employee fatigue and railroad
safety. Id.
Section 108(e) of the RSIA also
provides—
[i]n issuing regulations under subsection (a)
the Secretary shall consider scientific and
medical research related to fatigue and
fatigue abatement, railroad scheduling and
operating practices that improve safety or
reduce employee fatigue, a railroad’s use of
new or novel technology intended to reduce
or eliminate human error, the variations in
freight and passenger railroad scheduling
practices and operating conditions, the
variations in duties and operating conditions
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for employees subject to this chapter, a
railroad’s required or voluntary use of fatigue
management plans covering employees
subject to this chapter, and any other relevant
factors.
49 U.S.C. 21109(c). Section 21109(a) of
title 49 of the U.S. Code refers to other
regulatory authority granted to FRA, as
the Secretary’s delegate related to the
HSL, which is not relevant to this rule.
One of the goals of the present
rulemaking is to identify and reduce
unacceptable fatigue for the employees
who will be covered by the final rule.
Therefore, as will be described below,
FRA has based these regulations on
scientific research related to fatigue and
fatigue abatement, as applied to railroad
scheduling practices and operating
conditions for train employees
providing commuter and intercity rail
passenger transportation. Section III
below will describe the primary
scientific foundation and support for the
requirements contained in this rule. In
addition, scientific considerations will
also be addressed in discussion of
various elements of the rule, including
in the discussion of specific provisions
in Section VI, Section-by-Section
Analysis, below.
III. Scientific Background
Most mammals, including human
beings, have an approximately 24-hour
sleep-wake cycle known as a ‘‘circadian
rhythm.’’ Rapid changes in the circadian
pattern of sleep and wakefulness disrupt
many physiological functions such as
hormone releases, digestion, and
temperature regulation. Physiological
functions can be affected, performance
may be impaired, and a general feeling
of fatigue and debility may occur until
realignment is achieved. Jet lag, a
commonly experienced syndrome when
flying across several time zones,
especially when flying east, is similar to
the experience of individuals working
schedules with abrupt changes in the
timing of work and subsequent sleep.
Fatigue risk in an industry that
operates 24 hours a day and 7 days a
week is not just dependent on how
many hours per day a person is
permitted to work, or the amount of
time that a person is required to be off
duty between periods of work. Other
significant factors in the level of fatigue
risk include the time of day that an
employee works, the number of
consecutive hours worked, direction
and rate of schedule rotation, and the
number of consecutive days that an
employee works. In addition, the
quantity and quality of sleep vary with
the time of day and environmental
conditions in which sleep occurs.
Furthermore, there are significant
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individual factors such as sleep
disorders, age and time of day (e.g.,
morning or evening that may affect
one’s fatigue and alertness. Because of
natural circadian rhythms and
environmental and social factors, most
people are able to achieve the best
quality and most restful sleep at night.
The railroad industry by necessity is
a continuous operation, 24 hours a day,
seven days a week, 365 days a year,
including both day and night work.
Consequently, fatigue risk mitigation is
a very important strategy of a railroad
safety management system. In fact, the
design and operation of the work
schedule system are perhaps the most
essential elements of that fatigue risk
management strategy. While the
purpose of any work schedule system is
to provide the organization with a
methodical means of organizing the
timing and structure of work to
maximize efficiency and productivity,
seldom are these schedules designed to
minimize the safety risks associated
with work schedules that are
incompatible with human biological
limitations, such as our circadian
system. Because the railroad industry is
a continuous service industry, and
because both employees and the general
public are exposed to the safety risks
associated with railroad operations,
researchers have long called for
validated fatigue models to better
identify and mitigate fatigue-related
risks associated with work scheduling.4
The general purpose for a regulation
requiring an industry to use a valid
fatigue model is to impose a minimum
standard for identifying and mitigating
fatigue risk that otherwise might not
occur without such a standard. These
models take into account the complex
interaction between human physiology
and work times, something that would
be very difficult to specify through other
means. Use of fatigue modeling tools to
evaluate work schedules, however, is
just one aspect of mitigating fatigue risk
in a larger system. While FRA intends
to enforce the minimum standards in
the regulatory text, including those
related to fatigue models, it also hopes
that the industry will go beyond
compliance with this standard by using
the models and other tools to assess and
address fatigue risk across the system.5
For example, if a fatigue model were
to identify a particular type of work
4 See Pilcher and Coplen, Ergonomics, 2000, Vol.
43, No. 5, 573–588.
5 FRA notes that other provisions of the RSIA
mandate issuance of regulations requiring certain
railroads to implement railroad safety risk
reduction programs and plans; one component of
each plan is a fatigue management plan. See 49
U.S.C. 20156.
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schedule that violates the model’s
fatigue threshold, and thus requires
fatigue mitigation, the carrier may
discover underlying systems issues and
factors (e.g., inadequate rest facilities,
etc.) that contribute to fatigue-related
risks on not only that work schedule,
but also on other less fatiguing
schedules that do not violate the fatigue
threshold. The use of fatigue modeling
in this way, then, provides the
organization with a method for
systematically identifying and
addressing the underlying system risks,
as opposed to those risks only for a
given work schedule. In going beyond
compliance with the minimum
standard, the organization also builds its
organizational capacity for mitigating
fatigue as a major safety risk factor
across the system.
As previously mentioned, the
statutory hours of service requirements
currently in effect for train employees
providing commuter and intercity rail
passenger transportation establish a
maximum on-duty time of 12 hours in
a 24-hour period, and a minimum offduty time of 8 hours in a 24-hour
period, or 10 hours after a period of 12
consecutive hours on duty. Statutory
requirements applicable to train
employees on freight railroads, as
revised by the RSIA, include a
limitation on the number of consecutive
days on which a train employee may
initiate an on-duty period. However, the
HSL for the railroad industry have
never, up to the present day,
differentiated in their requirements
based on the time of day in which
service is performed, or the time of day
that a period is available for rest.
As will be discussed further below,
FRA conducted two work/rest diary
studies with train employees in freight
and passenger operations. Data from
these studies indicate that train
employees get more sleep than the
average U.S. adult. While 46 percent of
U.S. adults get less than seven hours of
sleep, only 35 percent of freight train
employees and 41 percent of passenger
train employees get less than seven
hours of sleep. This amount of sleep
results in a level of fatigue that increases
accident risk by 21 to 39 percent.6
Moreover, certain operational
characteristics of commuter and
intercity passenger service mitigate the
fatigue associated with this amount of
sleep loss relative to freight service. For
example, many train employees on
commuter and intercity passenger
railroads work scheduled assignments,
in which they begin and end their work
day at approximately the same time
6 See
Hursh, et al. infra at footnote 7.
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each day. These employees also usually
begin and end their duty tour at the
same location, meaning that they can go
home at the end of their work day and
sleep in their own beds. In addition,
very few scheduled assignments on
most railroads operate during late night
hours, and many of them result in duty
tours significantly shorter than the
maximum hours that the employee
would be allowed to remain or go on
duty under the existing law or this
regulation. Because these characteristics
are more likely to allow for periods of
rest that are consistent with normal
circadian rhythms, they will provide
better opportunities for rest, and less
risk for fatigue. In addition, as will be
discussed further below, two FRA work/
rest diary studies demonstrate that
levels of fatigue are not equivalent in
freight and passenger operations (Work
Schedules and Sleep Patterns of
Railroad Train and Engine Service
Workers https://www.fra.dot.gov/
downloads/Research/ord0922.pdf)
(which included data from a small
number of train employees in passenger
operations); Work Schedules and Sleep
Patterns of Railroad Train and Engine
Employees in Passenger Operations
https://www.fra.dot.gov/rpd/downloads/
TR_Work_Schedules_and_Sleep_
Patterns_final.pdf (the diary study
conducted to support this rulemaking).
For all of these reasons, FRA has
determined that some of the specific
limitations that Congress applied to
train employees on freight railroads in
the RSIA are not appropriate for train
employees on commuter and intercity
passenger railroads.
However, FRA also recognizes that
some train employees covered by this
rule experience a level of fatigue at
which safety may be compromised. This
is particularly true of those employees
who do not work scheduled
assignments and may not return home at
the end of each duty tour, or who are
required to perform service during late
night hours, or to work duty tours of the
maximum length allowed by existing
requirements, with only the minimum
required rest between duty tours. FRA
has attempted, in this regulation, to
specifically address those employees
who are most at risk for fatigue, even
when in compliance with specific hours
of service limitations. As will be
discussed below, research that resulted
in the validation of fatigue models using
data from freight railroads demonstrated
that fatigue increases the risk of a
human factors accident. In addition, as
will be discussed below, diary data
show the risk of fatigue in passenger
operations. The risk must be measured
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in order to be managed, and fatigue
models allow for that measurement.
An effective proactive fatigue risk
management program needs to balance
the amount of work performed against
when the work is performed, how long
a work schedule is in effect in terms of
hours in a day, consecutive days, and
other variables. This regulation
addresses fatigue risk by going beyond
establishing limitations on the amount
of time that an employee may work, and
the minimum amount of time that an
employee must be off duty between
duty tours. It additionally requires the
analysis of the fatigue risk in employee
work schedules using a biomathematical
model of performance and fatigue,
identification of those schedules that
present an unacceptable level of fatigue
risk, and mitigation of the identified
fatigue risk. In addition, the regulation
establishes different requirements for
schedules of employees who operate
trains during the late night hours in
which the fatigue risk is greatest. Thus,
the rule will specifically address those
schedules the characteristics of which
present a risk for fatigue, even when
otherwise in compliance with required
maximum on-duty and minimum offduty periods and other limitations.
These risks would not be addressed by
a regulation that simply established
maximum on-duty and minimum offduty periods, just as they are not
addressed by the existing statutory
requirements.
A. Validated and Calibrated Fatigue
Models 7
A biomathematical model of
performance and fatigue that has been
properly validated and calibrated
predicts accident risk based on analysis
of identified periods of wakefulness and
periods available for sleep.
‘‘Validation’’ of a biomathematical
model of human performance and
fatigue means determining that the
output of the model actually measures
human performance and fatigue. There
are two dimensions to this validation.
The first is that the model must be
demonstrated to be consistent with
currently established science in the area
of human performance, sleep, and
fatigue. The second part of the
validation process involves determining
that the model output has a statistically
reliable relationship with the risk of a
human factors accident caused by
fatigue, and that the model output does
7 For a discussion of existing models and their
application, see Dean II, D.A., Fletcher, A., Hursh,
S.R. and Klerman, E.B., Developing Models of
Neurobehavioral Performance for the ‘‘Real World,’’
J. Biol. Rhythms 2007; 22; 246.
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not have such a relationship with
nonhuman factors accident risk.
In general, and for the purpose of
compliance with this rule, a model will
be validated if statistical analyses
demonstrate the existence of a
statistically significant relationship
between the output of the model and the
human factors accident risk ratio, and
the absence of such a relationship
between the output of the model and the
non-human factors accident risk ratio.
The presence of a statistically
significant relationship is evaluated by
way of the correlation coefficient (r)
with statistical significance requiring a
p-value of less than 0.05. The first step
is the selection of bin 8 edges that
correspond to varying levels of fatigue,
(e.g., the ‘‘not fatigued’’ bin and the
‘‘severely fatigued’’ bin). The ‘‘not
fatigued’’ bin is determined by the
output of the model when sleep occurs
or can occur for 8 or more hours,
without abrupt phase changes, between
10 p.m. and 10 a.m. This is similar to
the amount of fatigue produced by the
standard 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday work week. The
performance bin ‘‘severely fatigued’’ is
determined by the output of the model
when there is total sleep deprivation for
42.5 hours after waking at 7 a.m. This
is similar to the amount of fatigue
produced by a permanent night shift
schedule with six consecutive 12-hour
work periods followed by 1 day off.
These two bins are the ‘‘anchor’’ bins for
the validation procedure. Four
additional bins, equally spaced between
the anchor bins, accommodate the
intermediate fatigue scores.
Calibration is, in general, the
assignment of numerical values to
represent aspects of empirical
observations. In the case of human
fatigue and performance, the calibration
of a fatigue scale would start with the
assignment of values to ‘‘not fatigued,’’
and the most fatigued condition might
be described as ‘‘severely fatigued.’’ The
calibration process starts during the
validation process with the assignment
of model output values to anchor bins
for ‘‘not fatigued’’ and ‘‘severely
fatigued.’’ The next step consists of
determining the fatigue threshold. Given
a scale for human fatigue and
performance and a relationship between
that scale and human factors accident
risk, a final calibration point would be
to determine the fatigue value at which
fatigue becomes unacceptable because
the increase in accident risk at that level
8 In statistics, a ‘‘bin’’ is a discrete, nonoverlapping interval of a variable. Here, the variable
is the level of fatigue.
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compromises safety. This is the fatigue
threshold.9
The procedure for determining the
fatigue threshold consists of several
computations. First, the cumulative risk
for the six fatigue score bins is
determined for human factor and nonhuman factor accidents. Next, a 95percent confidence interval is calculated
for the cumulative risk in each bin.
Finally, the fatigue score bin in which
human factor cumulative risk exceeds
both human factors Accident Risk Ratio
= 1 and the mean non-human factors
risk is determined. This is the fatigue
threshold for the model.10
The accident risk is defined as an
odds ratio, expressed as a percentage of
accidents occurring when employees
involved in the accident are within a
given range of fatigue, divided by the
percentage of time spent by the
individual working in that given range
of predicted fatigue. For example, if 20
percent of accidents occur when an
employee is within a particular range of
predicted fatigue, and 10 percent of an
employee’s time in a given duty tour is
spent within that range of predicted
fatigue, then that specific range of
predicted fatigue has doubled the
accident risk.11
1. Fatigue Avoidance Scheduling
ToolTM Model
FRA-sponsored research resulted in
the development of a Sleep, Activity,
Fatigue, and Task Effectiveness (SAFTE)
model and Fatigue Avoidance
Scheduling ToolTM (FAST) that have
been validated and calibrated using data
from freight railroads. FAST is a
biomathematical model of performance
and fatigue that can be used to assess
the risk of fatigue in work schedules and
to plan schedules that ameliorate
fatigue. The model takes into account
the time of day when work occurs
(circadian rhythm) and opportunities for
sleep based on work schedules.12
9 For the purposes of this regulation, the fatigue
threshold is referred to as a level of fatigue at which
safety may be compromised, in recognition of the
fact that while it is possible to determine the level
of fatigue expected to be produced by working a
certain schedule, that is not necessarily the exact
level of fatigue experienced by each individual
employee working that schedule.
10 A model may also be calibrated by reference to
a model that has been previously validated and
calibrated, as discussed in Section III.A.2, below.
11 For more information on the proper procedures
for validation and calibration of a biomathematical
model of performance and fatigue, see Raslear, T.G.,
Criteria and Procedures for Validating
Biomathematical Models of Human Performance
and Fatigue; Procedures for Analysis of Work
Schedules. (A copy of this document has been
placed in the docket for this rulemaking.)
12 For a description of the FAST model, see
Hursh, S. R., Redmond, D. P., Johnson, M. L.,
Thorne, D. R., Belenky, G., Balkin, T. J., Storm, W.
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The model validation used work
histories from 400 human factors
accidents and 1,000 non-human factors
accidents on freight railroads. The
model has not specifically been
validated using passenger railroad
accidents, because there were not
enough such accidents in the relevant
time period to obtain statistically
significant results, and had the period of
analysis been extended sufficiently to
capture enough passenger railroad
accidents, much of the needed work
schedule data for the employees
involved in those accidents would no
longer be available. However, FAST
measures fatigue and effectiveness,
based on laboratory analysis of cognitive
and sensory motor functions during
sleep deprivation, which are not job
specific. Furthermore, the tasks
associated with freight and passenger
train operations are actually highly
similar. In addition, there was no
statistically significant difference
between the proportion of accidents in
categories associated with fatigue,
between freight and passenger railroads.
For all of these reasons, FRA has
determined that the model is valid for
use in evaluating fatigue levels in
passenger railroad schedules for the
purposes of this rule. Indeed, the FAST
model has been used by other entities,
including the military and the airline
industry.
FAST was used to calculate cognitive
effectiveness (the inverse of fatigue) on
a scale from 0 (worst) to 100 (best) using
the 30-day work histories of locomotive
engineers prior to the accidents and at
the time of the accidents.13 Cognitive
effectiveness is a metric that tracks
speed of performance on a simple
reaction time test and is strongly related
to overall response speed, vigilance, and
the probability of lapses.
The analysis revealed a significant
high correlation between reduced
predicted crew effectiveness (as a result
of increased fatigue) and the risk of a
human factor accident for freight
railroads. As was discussed above,
F., Miller, J. C., and Eddy, D. R. (2004). Fatigue
models for applied research in warfighting.
Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine, 75,
A44–53.
13 Hursh, S. R., Raslear, T. G., Kaye, A. S., and
Fanzone, J. F. (2006). Validation and calibration of
a fatigue assessment tool for railroad work
schedules, summary report (Report No. DOT/FRA/
ORD–06/21). Washington, DC: U.S. Department of
Transportation.
https://www.fra.dot.gov/downloads/Research/
ord0621.pdf; Hursh, S. R., Raslear, T. G., Kaye, A.
S., and Fanzone, J. F. (2008). Validation and
calibration of a fatigue assessment tool for railroad
work schedules, final report (Report No. DOT/FRA/
ORD–08/04). Washington, DC: U.S. Department of
Transportation. https://www.fra.dot.gov/downloads/
Research/ord0804.pdf.
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although FAST was validated using
freight railroad accidents, the cognitive
and sensory motor functions it measures
are not job specific, so the resulting
determinations of effectiveness and
accident risk are equally applicable to
passenger railroads. There was no
significant relationship between
increased fatigue and non-human factor
accidents. In addition, the data showed
that there is a reliable relationship
between the time of day of human factor
accidents and the expected, normal
circadian rhythm. The circadian pattern
was not reliably present for non-human
factor accidents. The risk of a human
factor accident is increased by 20
percent by working during the hours
from midnight to 3 a.m. Id.
The study showed that there is an
elevated risk of human factors accidents
at any effectiveness score below 90, and
accident risk increased as effectiveness
decreased. The risk of a human factors
accident is increased by 21 percent at
effectiveness scores at or below 70,
which is a level of risk elevated beyond
chance level, and greater than the mean
risk of non-human factor accidents.
Twenty-three percent of the freight
accidents examined occurred when an
employee involved was at or below an
effectiveness score of 70. The study also
found that cause codes associated with
accidents that occurred at or below an
effectiveness score of 70 showed an
over-representation of the type of
human factors accident that might be
expected of a fatigued crew, such as
passing a signal indicating stop, or
exceeding the maximum authorized
speed, which confirmed that the
detected relationship between accident
risk and predicted effectiveness is
meaningful.
Other research, comparing the effects
of alcohol and sleep deprivation on
performance on a driving simulator, has
also indicated that an effectiveness
score of 70 is the rough equivalent of a
0.08 blood alcohol level, or the
equivalent of being awake for 21 hours
following an 8-hour sleep period the
previous night.14 However, direct
comparisons between the performance
effects of alcohol and fatigue must be
made with caution. Some aspects of a
complex task, such as driving an
automobile simulator, show a high
degree of congruence between the
effects of alcohol and fatigue, while the
14 See Arnedt, J.T., Wilde, G.J., Munt, P.W., and
MacLean, A.W. (2001). How do prolonged
wakefulness and alcohol compare in the
decrements they produce on a simulated driving
task? Accident Analysis and Prevention, 33, 3, 337–
44; Dawson, D., and Reid, K. (1997). ‘‘Fatigue,
alcohol and performance impairment.’’ Nature 388,
23.
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effects of alcohol and fatigue on other
aspects of the same task are highly
dissimilar. For instance, Arnedt et al.
(2001) found that tracking, tracking
variability, and speed variability were
all similarly affected by alcohol and
fatigue in a driving simulator. However,
Arnedt et al. found that, while subjects
drove faster after consuming alcohol,
fatigue did not affect driving speed. In
addition, alcohol produced a more rapid
deterioration in performance in off-road
events (incidents in which the
simulated vehicle was driven off the
road) than did fatigue. Thus, while it is
clear that alcohol and fatigue can both
cause deterioration in task performance,
the effect of alcohol is often more severe
and extensive.15
As a result of this analysis, a fatigue
threshold (the fatigue level at which
there is an unacceptable accident risk
due to fatigue) of 70 was established for
FAST.16 Accordingly, an effectiveness
score less than or equal to 70 violates
that threshold for the purposes of this
regulation.17
2. Fatigue Audit InterDyneTM Model 18
Another biomathematical model of
performance and fatigue that has
recently been validated and calibrated is
the Fatigue Audit InterDyne TM (FAID).
FAID was validated and calibrated using
the same accident data from freight
railroads as FAST used.19 For the same
reasons described above with regard to
FAST, FRA has determined that FAID is
valid for use in evaluating fatigue levels
in passenger railroad schedules for the
purposes of this rule.
Analysis of the FAID scores resulted
in a statistically significant correlation
for human factor accidents and no
statistically significant correlation for
non-human factor accidents, which
meant that FAID could be validated for
freight railroads, and, as explained
15 See also Williamson, A., Feyer, A.M., Friswell,
R., and Finlay-Brown, S. (2000). Development of
Measures of Fatigue: Using an Alcohol Comparison
to Validate the Effects of Fatigue on Performance
(Road Safety Research Report CR 189). Canberra,
Australia: Australian Transport Safety Bureau.
16 See Hursh, et al., supra note 7.
17 A 21-day free trial of the FAST Model can be
downloaded at https://fatiguescience.com/products/
fast.
18 For a description of FAID, see Roach, G. D.,
Fletcher, A., and Dawson, D. (2004). A model to
predict work-related fatigue based on hours of
work. Aviation, Space, and Environmental
Medicine, 75, A61–9.
19 For details see Tabak, B., and Raslear, T. G.
(2010). Procedures for Validation and Calibration of
Human Fatigue Models: The Fatigue Audit
InterDyne (FAID) Tool (Report No. DOT/FRA/ORD–
10/14). Washington, DC: U.S. Department of
Transportation. (https://www.fra.dot.gov/rpd/
downloads/TR_Procedures_or_Validation_
and_Calibration_final.pdf) (‘‘FAID validation
report’’).
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above, FRA has determined that it is
equally applicable to passenger
railroads. The FAID model was
validated with scores of 40 and 120,
corresponding to ‘‘not fatigued’’ and
‘‘extremely fatigued.’’ FAID scores
showed a statistically reliable
relationship (p-value below .05) with
the risk of a human factors accident but
did not show such a relationship with
other accident risk.20
However, in analyzing the FAID data
for the purpose of calibration, none of
the confidence intervals demonstrated a
statistically significant increase in
cumulative risk. This was true for both
human factors and non-human factors
accidents. An alternative procedure,
using FAST, which was already a
validated and calibrated model, allowed
for calibration of FAID. The alternative
procedure required correlating FAST
and FAID scores. The calibration of
FAST is the equivalent of fundamental
measurement in physics, while the
calibration of FAID by reference to
FAST is the equivalent of derived
measurement, both of which are valid
measurement methods.21
Correlation of individual FAST and
FAID scores found a high level of
variation in the individual FAST scores
within a FAID bin, so linking fatigue
scores on an individual level was not
feasible. An alternative method is to
calculate confidence intervals for the
population, or mean, score. Since
biomathematical models are known to
be more accurate at predicting
population behavior rather than
individual behavior, the confidence
intervals of the bin means were
compared. When analyzed at the
population level, the regression line for
FAID scores as a function of FAST
scores, or FAST scores as a function of
FAID scores, has an r of 0.909.
The calibration of FAID indicated that
FAID scores above 80 indicate a severe
level of fatigue, and that FAID scores
between 70 and 80 indicate extreme
fatigue. A fatigue threshold (as with
FAST, the fatigue level at which there
is an unacceptable accident risk due to
fatigue) of 60 was established for FAID
in its validation report, and an
effectiveness score greater than or equal
to 60 would violate that threshold.22
In the NPRM, FRA proposed to use
the threshold of 60 to trigger the
requirements to mitigate fatigue in work
20 Id.
at 9.
D.H., Luce, R.D., Suppes, P., and
Tversky, A. (1971). Foundations of measurement.
Volume 1. Additive and polynomial
representations. New York: Academic Press.
22 A free trial of the FAID Model can be
downloaded at https://www.faidsafe.com/productsmain.htm#faid330.
21 Kranz,
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schedules analyzed using FAID.
However, following publication of the
NPRM, further schedule analysis
revealed that some schedules that had
an acceptable level of risk for fatigue
when analyzed using FAST, violated the
proposed FAID threshold when
analyzed using FAID, including
schedules, to be discussed in detail
below, that included work entirely
between the hours of 4 a.m. and 8 p.m.
10.6 percent of these schedules violated
the proposed FAID threshold rather
than the 2.5 percent expected.
Schedules wholly within these hours
are defined as ‘‘Type 1 assignments,’’
that are deemed not to violate the
fatigue threshold, are not required to be
analyzed, mitigated or submitted to FRA
for approval, and are subjected to a less
restrictive consecutive-days limitation.
Representatives of the Association of
American Railroads (AAR) and the
American Public Transportation
Association (APTA) who actively
participated in the development of this
rulemaking, submitted to FRA data
illustrating this issue, and suggestions
for addressing it. These documents have
been added to the docket for this
rulemaking.
The calibration of FAID, as indicated
in its validation report,23 and described
above, was not successful as a direct
process using the fatigue accident
validation database. Instead, an indirect
process in which values for FAID were
related to values for FAST was used.
This process is similar to calibrating a
measurement instrument by reference to
a known standard. In this case, FAST is
the known standard because it was
directly calibrated using the fatigue
accident validation database. There is
inherent variability in both FAST and
FAID values, so FRA used regression
analysis, a statistical method, to
determine the estimated mean values of
FAID that correspond to mean values of
FAST. Table 8 in the FAID validation
report shows the corresponding
approximate values for FAID and FAST
using this procedure. The exact
threshold for FAID, as noted in its
validation report, is 63.18,24 as
calculated from the regression equation:
FAID score = 149 ¥ 1.227 × (FAST
score). Taking into account the
variability associated with predicting
mean FAID scores from mean FAST
scores, a range of FAID scores that is
highly likely to include the true mean
FAID score can be calculated. The upper
99-percent confidence limit 25 for
23 Tabak
and Raslear, infra note 19.
at 24.
25 The upper 99-percent confidence limit
represents the highest value of a variable within a
24 Id.
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effectiveness score of 72 or greater as
determined by FAID. The applicable
effectiveness score could be different if
a railroad were using another model that
had been properly validated and
calibrated. FRA encourages the
development, validation, and
calibration of alternative models, and
their submission to FRA for approval
under § 228.407(c), by any railroad
desiring to use an alternative model for
the analyses required by this rule.26
FRA expects fatigue science to continue
to develop, and also anticipates the
implementation of the rule will assist
the agency in better assessing the role of
fatigue in accidents that may occur in
the future. As a result, FRA will
consider such developments and new
evidence in its regularly-scheduled
retrospective review of the rule, and
will expedite that review of the rule
should evidence suggest such review is
appropriate.
estimating FAID at FAST = 70 is 72.16.
This means that we can expect the true
mean FAID score to be as high as 72.16.
Allowing the FAID threshold for
fatigue to be as high as 72 reduces the
percentage of schedules that violate the
FAID threshold from 10.6 percent to
2.11 percent in the data presented by
AAR and APTA. The passenger train
and engine diary study (Work Schedules
and Sleep Patterns of Railroad Train and
Engine Service Employees in Passenger
Operations. DOT/FRA/ORD–11/05),
which will be discussed in detail in
Section III.B below, indicates that none
of the employees subject to this
regulation work more than 2.5 percent
of the time at a FAST score of ≤ 70.
Therefore, FRA concludes that allowing
the FAID threshold to be placed at the
upper 99 percent confidence limit of 72
is a reasonable solution to this issue.
FRA expects that the percentage of
schedules that violate a FAID threshold
of 72 would be approximately 2.5
percent, which will allow the railroads
to focus mitigation efforts on those
schedules that are at greater risk for
producing an unacceptable level of
fatigue and thereby reduce fatiguerelated accidents and injuries.
FRA believes that the prediction of
the effectiveness of an employee’s
performance may be used to improve
work schedules, to alter to the extent
possible the timing of safety-critical
tasks to coincide with periods of
optimal performance, and to apply
countermeasures to reduce the fatigue
risk, and the corresponding risk of
accidents or other errors associated with
that fatigue. It is for this reason that FRA
has concluded that it is appropriate to
require analysis of employee work
schedules using a validated and
calibrated biomathematical model of
performance and fatigue, as an essential
component of these hours of service
regulations.
As will be discussed in detail below,
this rule requires railroads to mitigate
the fatigue resulting from following a
certain work schedule, and submit the
schedules and fatigue mitigations to
FRA for approval. These requirements
will be triggered when analysis reveals
that an employee working a given
schedule will experience 20 percent or
more of his or her working time during
the schedule at an effectiveness score
violating the fatigue threshold under the
model used for analysis; that is to say,
at an effectiveness score of 70 or less
determined by FAST, or at an
B. Diary Study of Train Employees on
Commuter and Intercity Passenger
Railroads
To further support this rule, FRA
conducted primary research specifically
directed to train employees of commuter
and intercity passenger railroads (Office
of Management and Budget (OMB)
Control Number 2130–0588).27 The
results of the study provided valuable
evidence of the actual levels of fatigue
experienced by train employees on
commuter and intercity passenger
railroads, because the study allowed
analysis of the actual periods of time
that an employee reports having
worked, slept, or spent in other
activities during the period analyzed,
which may be different from the
assigned schedule and presumed
periods available for sleep.
FRA had previously conducted
similar surveys for signal employees
(OMB Control Number 2130–0558),
maintenance of way employees (OMB
Control Number 2130–0561),
dispatching service employees (OMB
Control Number 2130–0570), and train
employees generally (OMB Control
Number 2130–0577). The purpose of
these studies was to characterize, using
a consistent statistical survey
methodology, the work schedules and
sleep patterns of each unique group of
railroad workers. Because each of these
studies used a random sample of each
worker population, they provide
defensible and definitive data on work/
rest cycle parameters and fatigue for the
99-percent confidence interval. The 99-percent
confidence interval is a range of values with a 0.99
probability of including the true population value
of a variable.
26 See Raslear, supra note 11 for information on
procedures for validating and calibrating a model.
27 https://www.fra.dot.gov/rpd/downloads/
TR_Work_Schedules_and_Sleep_Patterns_final.pdf.
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respective group. The small number of
train employees on commuter and
intercity passenger railroads represented
in the previous study of train employees
generally did not allow for meaningful
conclusions with regard to this
subpopulation of train employees. As a
result, the present study, specifically
focused on this population, was
necessary. The present study of train
employees on commuter and intercity
passenger railroads used the same
methodology as the previous studies.
The primary objectives of this study
were to design and conduct a survey to
collect work schedule and sleep data
from train and engine service (T&E)
employees, and to analyze the data to
characterize the work/sleep patterns and
to identify work schedule-related fatigue
issues. The goal was to characterize
train employees on commuter and
intercity passenger railroads as a group,
not to characterize such employees on a
specific railroad.
The research described in this report
had three phases: preparation; field data
collection; and data analysis. Since no
existing source would provide answers
to the study’s research questions, a
survey of train employees was the only
means to obtain the necessary data. The
preparation phase included securing
approval from the OMB for the
proposed data collection.
Representatives from the Brotherhood of
Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen
(BLET) and the United Transportation
Union (UTU) worked closely with the
researchers throughout the study.
The study used two survey
instruments—a background survey and
a daily log. Survey participants used the
background survey to provide
demographic information, descriptive
data for their type of work, type of
position, work schedule, and a selfassessment of overall health. The daily
log provided the means for survey
participants to record their daily
activities in terms of sleep, personal
time, time spent commuting to and from
work, work time, limbo time, and
periods of interim release. Study
participants also provided selfassessments of the quality of their sleep
and their level of alertness at the start
and end of each work period. This study
used a 14-day data-collection period to
accommodate those train employees
who did not work a regular schedule.
Researchers drew a random sample of
1275 train employees on commuter and
intercity passenger railroads. The size of
the sample from each of the two unions
was proportional to that organization’s
representation in the total number of
eligible participants. Retirees, full-time
union officials, and anyone currently
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holding a railroad management position
were not eligible for the study.
Determination of the sample size
assumed a 95-percent confidence
interval on the estimates for mean sleep
time, an error tolerance of 15 percent,
and a 33-percent response rate.
Mailing of the survey materials
occurred on December 31, 2009. Ten
days later, every potential survey
participant received a postcard, signed
by his or her union president, to
encourage the employee to participate
in the survey. Three weeks after
distribution of the materials, a second
postcard thanked those who had
decided to participate and encouraged
those who had not yet done so to
participate.
The overall response rate for the
survey was 21 percent. Of the 269
complete responses, 13 could not be
part of the analysis because either there
were problems with the respondents’
log books, or the respondents were not
in crafts covered by the survey. (It was
not possible to identify these
individuals from the information
contained in union membership
databases.) The nonresponse-bias study
based on age found no difference
between survey respondents and
nonrespondents.
The results of the study support the
approach that FRA has taken in this
rule. For instance, the results are
consistent with the separate analysis
during the development of this rule of
schedules provided by commuter and
intercity passenger railroads, indicating
that a fairly small percentage of
employee work time (about 1.8 percent)
violates the fatigue threshold. The rule
focuses additional attention and effort
specifically on those schedules
presenting this fatigue risk by requiring
the mitigation of that risk, while
schedules not at risk for fatigue would
not be subject to these additional
requirements.
In addition, when compared to the
results of the previous study that
primarily considered train employees
on freight railroads, the results of the
study of train employees on commuter
and intercity passenger railroads
support a significantly different
approach. Train employees on freight
railroads were found to experience some
level of fatigue (equivalent to an
effectiveness score <90 using the FAST
model) during 73 percent of their work
time, while train employees on
commuter and intercity passenger
railroads experienced this level of
fatigue during only 14 percent of their
work time. The substantive limitations
imposed on train employees on freight
railroads in the RSIA would largely be
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unnecessary for the commuter and
intercity passenger railroad industry, as
well as ineffective to target the specific
areas where there is a fatigue risk.
IV. Railroad Safety Advisory
Committee (RSAC) Process
A. Overview of the RSAC
In March 1996, FRA established
RSAC,28 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 stakeholder
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 (AARPCO);
• American Association of State
Highway and Transportation Officials
(AASHTO);
• American Chemistry Council;
• American Petroleum Institute;
• APTA;
• American Short Line and Regional
Railroad Association (ASLRRA);
• American Train Dispatchers’
Association (ATDA);
• AAR;
• Association of Railway Museums;
• Association of State Rail Safety
Managers (ASRSM);
• BLET;
• Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way
Employees Division (BMWED);
• Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen
(BRS);
• The Chlorine Institute;
• FRA;
• 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);
28 For more information about RSAC activities,
see https://rsac.fra.dot.gov/. Meetings of the full
RSAC are also announced by publication in the
Federal Register.
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• 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
• 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. When 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
plays 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 RSAC
recommendations. 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. However, to
the maximum extent practicable, FRA
utilizes RSAC to provide consensus
recommendations with respect to both
proposed and final agency action. If
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RSAC is unable to reach consensus on
a recommendation for action, the task is
withdrawn and FRA determines the best
course of action. 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. RSAC Proceedings in This
Rulemaking
FRA proposed Task No. 08–06 to the
RSAC on April 2, 2009. The RSAC
accepted the task, and formed the
Passenger Hours of Service Working
Group (Working Group) for the purpose
of developing implementing regulations
for the hours of service of train
employees of commuter and intercity
passenger railroads under the RSIA.
The Working Group is comprised of
members from the following
organizations:
• AASHTO;
• Amtrak;
• APTA;
• ASLRRA;
• ATDA;
• AAR, including members from
BNSF Railway Company (BNSF),
Canadian National Railway Company
(CN), Canadian Pacific Railway, Limited
(CP), CSX Transportation, Inc. (CSXT),
Iowa Interstate Railroad, Ltd. (IAIS),
Kansas City Southern (KCS) railroads,
Metra Electric District, Norfolk Southern
Corporation (NS) railroads, and Union
Pacific Railroad Company (UP);
• BLET;
• BRS;
• FRA;
• FTA;
• IBEW;
• Long Island Rail Road (LIRR);
• Metro-North Commuter Railroad
Company (Metro-North);
• National Association of Railroad
Passengers (NARP);
• National Railroad Construction and
Maintenance Association;
• National Transportation Safety
Board (NTSB);
• Southeastern Pennsylvania
Transportation Authority (SEPTA);
• Tourist Railway Association; and
• UTU.
The Working Group completed its
work after six meetings and several
conference calls. The first meeting of the
Working Group took place on June 24,
2009, in Washington, DC. At that
meeting the group heard several
presentations on fatigue science,
including a report on the diary study
that was to be conducted as described
above. The group discussed the general
approach for the rulemaking, and it was
agreed that analysis of the railroads’
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work schedules would support the
rulemaking. Subsequent meetings were
held on February 3, 2010; March 4,
2010; April 6, 2010; May 20, 2010; and
June 29, 2010. In addition, a Task Force
was formed that met on January 14–15,
2010, March 30–31, 2010, and April 28–
29, 2010.
At the conclusion of the June 29, 2010
meeting, the Working Group voted to
approve a draft of the proposed rule
text, with the exception of two sections,
to which the group had suggested
numerous edits. It was agreed that FRA
would address the remaining issues in
those sections and circulate a revised
draft, on which the group would vote
electronically. After the revised draft
was produced, the Task Force had
several conference calls to discuss the
revised provisions, and FRA also
participated in several calls with task
force members. Ultimately, on
September 22, 2010, the Working Group
voted unanimously to agree to the rule
text presented in the proposed rule. The
group’s recommendation was presented
to the full RSAC on September 23, 2010.
The full RSAC agreed to vote
electronically on the proposed rule text
recommended by the Working Group,
and ultimately accepted its
recommendation. Although only a
majority was required, the vote was
unanimous.29
Following the vote of the Working
Group and the full RSAC, FRA
recognized the need to make two
changes to the recordkeeping and
reporting requirements in 49 CFR
228.11 and 228.19, to accommodate a
new substantive limitation contained in
the proposed rule as approved by the
RSAC. While the RSAC voted in favor
of the proposed substantive
requirements in question, and all other
elements of the proposed rule, the
corresponding amendments to the
recordkeeping and reporting provisions
were not presented to them. After
publication of the proposed rule on
March 22, 2011, and consideration of
public comments, FRA has made
additional changes, as discussed in
Section V of the preamble, below.
Earlier, at the February 3, 2010,
meeting, FRA presented an initial draft
of the rule text, identifying the basic
concepts and direction of the
rulemaking. Based on discussions at
that meeting, a more complete draft was
presented at the March 4, 2010 meeting,
and the text was refined and
supplemented at subsequent meetings.
In addition, during the course of the
29 The rule text voted on by the full RSAC and
recommended to FRA is available on the RSAC Web
site.
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Working Group and Task Force
meetings, a number of significant issues
were discussed that resulted in changes
in the rule text or common
understanding of the intent of specific
provisions that should be explained.
Some such issues will be explained in
this section, while other subjects of
discussion by the Working Group and
the Task Force will be discussed in the
Section-by-Section Analysis at Section
VI of the preamble.
In addition, as discussed below in the
Regulatory Impact and Notices section
of the preamble, Section VII, FRA has
considered the costs and benefits of this
rule. Implementation costs would be
associated with analyzing work
schedules, training, and rest facilities.
However, relative to the ‘‘no regulatory
action’’ alternative in which passenger
railroad train employees would become
subject to the new HSL in effect for
freight train employees, the rule would
result in a cost savings of $57.7 million
(discounted at 7 percent) and $65.2
million (discounted at 3 percent) over a
20-year period. The quantified accident
reduction benefits achieved under both
the ‘‘no regulatory action’’ baseline and
the rule total $1.2 million
(undiscounted), $0.6 million (PV, 7
percent), and $0.9 million (PV, 3
percent). FRA does not expect that the
overall number of casualties and
property damages prevented will differ
under either scenario. Implementation
of the final rule will yield these benefits
at lower cost. While the rule has lower
monetized benefits than costs, when
compared to the current HSL, FRA
believes that there are unquantified
benefits that could close the gap.
C. Significant Task Force Contributions
to the Development of the NPRM
As was noted above, the Working
Group created the Task Force,
comprised of representatives from
BLET, UTU, APTA, AAR, and FRA. The
Task Force met between Working Group
meetings to provide additional input
and advice to the Working Group on the
approach to the rule, specific concerns
as to the rule text, and implementation
of the regulatory requirements.
Although the Task Force was extremely
helpful throughout the development of
the proposed rule in offering
suggestions as to the rule text, its
primary contributions were in the areas
of schedule analysis and the creation of
a fatigue mitigation tool box.
1. Schedule Analysis
The diary study discussed in Section
III.B of the preamble provided valuable
evidence of the actual levels of fatigue
experienced by train employees on
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commuter and intercity passenger
railroads. However, since many of these
employees work scheduled assignments,
it was also valuable to evaluate the
schedules themselves, to get a sense of
the parameters of those assignments that
would result in fatigue violating the
threshold, which informed some of the
provisions of this rule. The Task Force
assisted the Working Group by
evaluating the schedules and presenting
their results to the Working Group.
APTA hired a consultant to analyze
the schedules provided by the railroads
that were worked by their train
employees. The railroads provided all of
their schedules for the month of July
2009. The schedules were analyzed
using the FAST model, including
conservative assumptions about the
sleep that would be obtained by an
employee working that schedule. For
example, the analyses assumed that
employees did not sleep during periods
of interim release.
The analyses that the Task Force
presented to the Working Group
demonstrated that most schedules did
not result in an employee’s violating the
fatigue threshold. This was true even for
schedules in which the employee
reported for duty at 4 a.m. and was
relieved from duty at 8 p.m., for a 16hour duty tour that included a total of
12 hours on duty and a 4-hour interim
release. Most of the problematic
schedules identified through the
analysis presented by the Task Force
involved duty tours in which some time
was spent working during late night
hours. These analyses formed the
parameters for FRA’s definitions of
‘‘Type 1 assignment’’ and ‘‘Type 2
assignment’’ for which different
requirements would apply in this rule.
2. Fatigue Mitigation Tool Box
Because a major aspect of this rule
requires mitigation of the fatigue risks
identified in those schedules that
resulted in an employee’s violating the
applicable fatigue threshold, and
experiencing a level of fatigue at which
safety may be compromised, the Task
Force assisted the Working Group by
developing a fatigue mitigation tool box,
a document that would illustrate the
variety of ways in which a railroad
might seek to address the fatigue risks
in its schedules. (A copy of this
document has been placed in the docket
for this rulemaking.) The tool box itself
is not intended to become a part of the
regulatory text. Instead, it is intended to
provide the variety of methods from
which a railroad may propose, in its
plans submitted to FRA for approval, to
mitigate identified fatigue risks in its
work schedules, to bring them into
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compliance with the regulation. It is
expected that not every tool will be
appropriate for each railroad, or for
individual locations or schedules on a
given railroad, and that the railroads, in
consultation with their labor
organizations, will choose the
mitigation tools most appropriate to
each circumstance, subject to FRA
review and approval. In addition, the
tool box is expected to be a living
document, as the available fatigue
mitigation tools will change over time as
fatigue science continues to develop, or
as railroad operations change, either
generally or as related to specific
properties or schedules. The tool box as
a whole will not be approved by FRA,
nor will it be maintained by FRA as it
evolves. FRA will evaluate the
appropriateness of specific fatigue
mitigation tools as they are submitted to
FRA as part of a railroad’s plan to
mitigate fatigue risks associated with
particular schedules.
This section will describe a
representative sample of the variety of
the tools included in the tool box
developed by the Task Force, which
may be applied to mitigate fatigue risk.
This discussion is not intended to
provide an all-inclusive list of the
possible fatigue mitigation tools. A
railroad is free to use any fatigue
mitigation tool that it believes is
effective in reducing the fatigue risk
found in its schedules, subject to FRA’s
review and approval when the tools are
applied to mitigate fatigue in a
particular work schedule.
Perhaps the easiest mitigation tool to
understand that was identified by the
Task Force is the adoption and
implementation of a napping policy,
and the provision of facilities for
employees to take a nap during interim
releases or other periods between
assignments that may be available for
rest during a duty tour. The addition of
a period of sleep to the employee’s
schedule would have a clear impact on
the employee’s level of fatigue when
working that schedule, and the level of
fatigue that the employee would be
expected to experience throughout the
remainder of the duty tour after a nap,
which might reduce the risk of fatigue
sufficiently to bring the schedule and
the employee’s effectiveness score
within the fatigue threshold.
To use this tool to mitigate fatigue, a
railroad would be required to identify,
in consultation with its labor
organizations or employees, the
facilities that would be available for the
purpose of rest during the duty tour,
that are appropriate to the schedule and
location at issue. This would not always
require a bunk or a quiet room, though
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this might be available at some locations
and in certain situations. However, the
period available for rest would have to
be at least 90 minutes for this mitigation
tool to be applied, as this amount of
time would provide sufficient
opportunity for an employee to get to
his or her napping location and fall
asleep, having enough time for a nap of
sufficient duration to be beneficial to
the employee’s level of fatigue, and then
also allowing the employee time to
become fully awake and ready to
resume the duty tour.
Another mitigation tool, applicable to
railroads and locations using employees
from an extra board, would be the use
of multiple extra boards that are
temporally separated, so that employees
would be scheduled to work morning
assignments or evening assignments,
rather than being subject to calls for
assignments at all times of day. For
example, employees assigned to a
morning extra board might be subject to
being called only for assignments
requiring them to report for duty
between 4 a.m. and 10 a.m., while
employees assigned to an evening extra
board might be subject to being called
only for assignments requiring them to
report for duty between 4 p.m. and 10
p.m. Employees on either extra board
would know that they would not be
called for an assignment requiring them
to report for duty outside the times
established for the employee’s particular
assigned extra board. This would lead to
greater predictability of schedule and
ability to plan rest, while also avoiding
(1) circadian shifts between duty tours
resulting from changes in the time of
day that the employee is awake and (2)
difficulties in adjusting to changing
periods available for sleep.
Call windows (i.e., limited periods of
time during which an employee is
subject to receiving calls from the
railroad to report for duty) are another
mitigation tool in the tool box, which
may be combined with a temporally
separated extra board, but could also be
used even if the extra board were not so
divided. For example, a railroad might
decide to establish a call window that
would reduce or eliminate calls to the
employee during the time from 11 p.m.
and 5 a.m. Open assignments that
would need to be filled from an extra
board of employees who would
otherwise be called for the assignment
during that time would instead be filled
before 11 p.m., which would give the
employees greater predictability and
ability to plan rest, as well as allowing
them more rest during the late night
hours.
Another possible tool would be to
allow employees a period of
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uninterrupted rest, similar to the
requirement that applies to train
employees on freight railroads, which is
found at 49 U.S.C. 21103(e). The
uninterrupted rest could be applied to
an employee’s statutory off-duty period
before or after the employee is to work
a schedule violating the fatigue
threshold. It could also be applied to
periods of interim release within the
duty tour.
Education could also be part of the
tools that a railroad will use to mitigate
fatigue in certain circumstances, and is
also a key component of the other
mitigation tools. The mitigation tools
will not be beneficial if the employees
working the schedules to which they are
applied do not understand the available
tools, and how to properly use them to
reduce their fatigue and increase their
effectiveness. If employees do not take
advantage of the mitigation tools, and
use them properly to increase their rest,
even those mitigation tools most likely
to have the greatest and most tangible
impact on reducing fatigue will not have
the desired effect. FRA has also
recognized the importance of education
as a component of fatigue management
by specifically requiring in this rule that
employees and supervisors receive
training on fatigue and strategies for
reducing it.
Finally, one additional mitigation tool
was discussed by the Task Force that
was extremely well-received and
supported by the Working Group,
including FRA representatives. That
suggestion was to develop software that
would link the railroad’s crew
management resources to both the
employee’s electronic hours of service
records (created and maintained in
compliance with subpart D of 49 CFR
part 228), and a valid biomathematical
model of performance and fatigue.
The idea is that the fatigue model
would be able to look back at previous
duty tours and rest periods to determine
which schedules might have sufficiently
rested employees available to report for
the assignment, not only under the
limitations on time on duty and
consecutive days and the requirement
for minimum time off duty established
by this rule, but also in terms of the
fatigue threshold. The model would
have the benefit of the data from the
previous duty tours to take into account
in determining whether these schedules
would violate the fatigue threshold
during the duty tour, as well as at the
report-for-duty time. If the analysis
revealed that the employees on these
schedules would be too fatigued to
report for the assignment, or would
violate the fatigue threshold during the
duty tour, crew management would be
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alerted that these employees could be at
risk if they work this particular
assignment. Employees would have to
affirm their fitness for duty if asked to
work such assignments and be
empowered to reject the assignments,
because the model is being used to
predict group (average) fatigue from
work schedules that could be worked by
several individuals. Any individual
could be more or less fatigued than the
average or group. Employees have a
responsibility to indicate if they feel fit
to work or not, regardless of the
effectiveness score that a model would
predict. The employer’s responsibility is
to arrange schedules that minimize
fatigue.
While all of the parties to the Working
Group agreed that this idea showed
great promise as an effective fatigue
mitigation tool for the future, it is not
something that the railroads will be able
to apply immediately, for technological
reasons. Most railroads subject to this
rule do not yet create and maintain their
hours of service records electronically
in compliance with subpart D, although
there is interest among those railroads
in developing hours of service
electronic recordkeeping programs. In
addition, software would need to be
developed that would allow the fatigue
model to retrieve data from the
electronic recordkeeping system,
without any possibility of altering or
otherwise affecting the integrity of the
records maintained in the system.
Likewise, software would be needed to
connect the fatigue model to the crew
management system, so that it could
appropriately alert that system and
prevent an employee being placed on an
assignment for which he or she would
be too fatigued. If the necessary systems
and software can be developed,
compliance with the fatigue threshold
would become much easier, and there
would be much less excessive fatigue to
be mitigated.
D. Areas of Working Group and Task
Force Concern During Development of
the NPRM
During the course of the Task Force
and Working Group meetings, a few
issues resulted in significant discussion.
Some issues were related to specific
provisions in the rule text, while other
concerns were about the broader
implications of the rule, as well as its
effects on aspects of railroad operations
or existing collective bargaining
agreements.
1. Proposed Definitions of ‘‘Type 1
Assignment’’ and ‘‘Type 2 Assignment’’
Some members of the Working Group
suggested that there should be a way to
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determine a template for schedules that
would be deemed not to violate the
fatigue threshold. As was discussed
above, the Task Force presented
schedule analyses showing that a
schedule in which an employee began
work at 4 a.m. and was relieved at
8 p.m., resulting in a duty tour with a
total time on duty of 12 hours, with a
4-hour period of interim release, did not
violate the fatigue threshold.
Based on this analysis, FRA initially
defined any assignment beginning no
earlier than 4 a.m. and ending no later
than 8 p.m., assuming at least a 4-hour
period of interim release, as a Type 1
assignment, which would be deemed
not to violate the fatigue threshold.
Assignments that included any period
of time outside the defined time
parameters of a Type 1 assignment
would be considered a Type 2
assignment, which would be subject to
more stringent requirements, including
analysis of the schedule using a
scientifically valid biomathematical
model, and a more restrictive limit on
the number of consecutive days on
which an employee working such an
assignment would be allowed to initiate
an on-duty period.
However, some Task Force members
pointed out that there could be
assignments that include time outside
the time parameters of a Type 1
assignment that would not violate the
fatigue threshold. In some cases these
schedules would only have a small
amount of their overall time outside of
the Type 1 parameters. For example, an
assignment might begin at 4:30 a.m. and
end at 8:30 p.m. In addition, some
assignments might not violate the
threshold because of the short duration
of the duty tour involved, such as,
perhaps, an assignment from 5 p.m.
until 9:30 p.m.
Based on these considerations, FRA
amended the definition of ‘‘Type 2
assignment’’ to indicate that if an
assignment does not include any time
between midnight and 4 a.m., then the
particular time of day or night that an
assignment is to be performed is not the
only determinant of whether an
assignment is considered a Type 2
assignment. In particular, a Type 2
assignment that is analyzed using a
scientifically valid biomathematical
model and is determined not to violate
the fatigue threshold, and that includes
no period of time between midnight and
4 a.m., would be considered a Type 1
assignment.
FRA also added language to the
definitions of both ‘‘Type 1 assignment’’
and ‘‘Type 2 assignment’’ to require
compliance with the substantive
limitations contained in § 228.405. FRA
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expects that railroads would not be
operating schedules that violate these
limitations; most schedules have long
been in effect for the railroads subject to
this rule, and this was an implicit
assumption of the Working Group. For
example, a schedule that requires an
employee to report for duty at 4 a.m.
and to be released from duty at 8 p.m.
would have to include a period of
interim release of at least 4 hours that
is not time on duty, as defined by
§ 228.405(b). However, this language
was added to the definitions to make
clear that the schedule analysis and
fatigue mitigation requirements of this
rule supplement, but do not replace, the
specific limitations, and any schedule
that violated other provisions of this
rule (for example, exceeded 12 hours
total time on duty, or did not allow for
at least 8 hours off duty, or 10 hours off
duty after 12 consecutive hours) could
not be deemed ‘‘approved’’ by FRA and
subject to the less stringent
requirements applicable to Type 1
assignments.
2. Proposed Limitations on Number of
Consecutive Days
In the Working Group, both the
railroads and labor contended that
FAST and/or FAID analysis would
suggest that an employee could work
beyond the limitations in what became
the proposed rule and this final rule
without adversely affecting safety. One
potential requirement about which this
was specifically argued was the
limitation on the number of consecutive
days or days within a prescribed period
that an employee would be permitted to
initiate an on-duty period before the
employee was required to have a 24hour or two-consecutive calendar days
off-duty period at the employee’s home
terminal under this regulation, which
would differ depending on the time of
day that the employee works. See
§ 228.405(a)(3) and (a)(4) of the
proposed rule, and § 228.405(a)(3) of
this final rule. In the Working Group,
the railroads and labor unions presented
fatigue analyses for theoretical
schedules that would have an employee
initiating on-duty periods for numbers
of days that exceeded those permitted
by the contemplated rule. The railroads
and labor also indicated that the current
agreements or practices on their
properties allow for such schedules.
Research shows that work on
successive days without a full day off
exponentially increases the accident
risk as the number of days worked
increases. For instance, after working
four consecutive day shifts, there is a
17-percent increase in risk, and after
working four consecutive night shifts,
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there is a 36-percent increase in risk.30
FRA research on train crew work
schedules and sleep patterns 31 has
shown that train crews average a 10.25hour day (work period, limbo time, and
commute time) and get 6.88 hours of
primary sleep per day. A follow-up
study on passenger train crews found
that workers on split shift assignments
average a 13.75-hour day (work period,
interim release, and commute time) and
get 6.18 hours of primary sleep.
Laboratory studies of restricted sleep 32
show a 5-percent decrease in
performance after 7 days with 7 hours
of sleep per day and a 15-percent
decrease after 7 days with 5 hours of
sleep per day. These studies are
consistent with the previously noted
increase in accident risk with the
number of days worked.
Therefore, FRA reasoned that, even if
an employee were working a schedule
for which the employee’s effectiveness
score did not violate the fatigue
threshold, even when the schedule was
worked for more consecutive days or
days in a 14-day period than the
regulation would permit, at some point
the employee would have to use some
of the time between duty tours (time
that a model would otherwise view as
available for rest) to attend to other
personal activities. This time spent in
activities other than rest would decrease
the time actually available to the
employee for rest, and, therefore, the
employee’s actual effectiveness score.
This circumstance would be particularly
problematic for schedules featuring long
duty tours, such as the maximum 12
hours on duty, including an interim
release, for a total time of 16 hours in
the duty tour, followed by the minimum
of 8 consecutive hours off duty before
reporting for the next duty tour. From
this perspective, FRA believes that,
although the available research does not
identify the exact number of
consecutive days or days in a prescribed
period allowed under this rule as the
maximum that can be safely worked, the
limitations that FRA has established are
reasonable.
FRA remains aware that the
requirements of the final rule may have
30 Folkard, S. and Akerstedt, T., Trends in the
Risk of Accidents and Injuries and Their
Implications for Models of Fatigue and
Performance, Aviat. Space Environ. Med. (2004).
31 Gertler, J., and DiFiore, A. (2009). Work
schedules and sleep patterns of railroad train and
engine service workers (Report No. DOT/FRA/
ORD–09/22). Washington, DC: U.S. Department of
Transportation.
32 Balkin, T., Thorne, D., Sing, H. (2000). Effects
of sleep schedules on commercial driver
performance (Report No. DOT–MC–00–133).
Washington, DC: U.S. Department of
Transportation.
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an impact on the collective bargaining
agreements affecting the railroads and
employees covered by subpart F. For
example, there may be some agreements
that would allow employees to work a
greater number of consecutive days or
days in a 14-day period than would be
allowed by this regulation. FRA also
remains mindful that the law provides
an option that enables the regulated
community to seek waivers to
implement pilot projects in accordance
with the requirements of 49 U.S.C.
21108(a) and encourages members of the
regulated community to consider this
option. Pursuant to 49 CFR part 211,
subpart C, the Railroad Safety Board
will consider whether or not granting
such waivers would be in the public
interest and consistent with railroad
safety. Where warranted, and upon the
necessary showing, FRA may grant
waivers of the requirements of this rule,
including requirements concerning the
maximum number of consecutive days
or days in a 14-day period that an
employee may work, to allow for the
establishment of pilot projects to
demonstrate the possible benefits of
implementing alternatives to the strict
application of the requirements
contained in this rule.
3. Precision of Fatigue Models and
Threshold
There was considerable discussion in
the Working Group of the precision
embodied in the FAST model or the
FAID model, and the appropriateness of
requiring compliance with a specific
fatigue threshold. The railroads argued
that models such as the FAST model
and the FAID model are not
scientifically precise enough to warrant
the adoption of a specific threshold, and
that different types of operations could
safely function at different levels of
fatigue. For example, the railroads
contended that yard switching activities
could safely operate at a different level
of fatigue than passenger operations or
through-freight activities.
The railroads conceded, however, that
the regulatory structure contained in the
proposed regulation, and in provisions
of the final rule that mirror the proposal
would not be problematic for passenger
operations. The railroads’ concern was
that, in the future, someone might argue
for adoption of the same regulatory
structure for freight operations and,
were that to occur, schedules might be
prohibited from use that should, in fact,
be acceptable from a fatigue perspective.
In FRA’s view, a specific threshold is
desirable because it provides regulatory
certainty as to what railroads must do to
be considered in compliance with the
regulations. FRA has based its
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regulation on the best available fatigue
science, including the FAST model and
the FAID model, which are the only
currently validated models, and the
appropriate fatigue thresholds for the
purpose of compliance with this
regulation. As was discussed in Section
III above, FRA has adjusted the FAID
threshold from the level stated in the
preamble of the proposed rule, to
achieve a closer correlation between the
FAST and FAID thresholds for the
purposes of the analyses required by
this regulation. FRA has also left open
the possibility that other models may be
validated, and other thresholds
established in the future, which could
be used for the purpose of compliance
with this regulation.33 In addition, as
new scientific evidence comes to light,
FRA will review this rule as discussed
in Section III, above.
As FRA has determined that use of
these models and their established
thresholds adequately protects safety,
that this rule does not present
significant implementation problems for
passenger service, and that a specific
threshold provides the desired
regulatory certainty, FRA believes that it
is appropriate to include in the
regulations a requirement for a specific
threshold. FRA based this belief on the
understanding that the regulatory
requirements will be satisfied based on
a ‘‘70/20 threshold’’ using the FAST
model (meaning that the fatigue
threshold is violated if an employee’s
effectiveness score is less than 70 for 20
percent or more of the employee’s time
on duty,) or a ‘‘72/20 threshold’’ using
FAID (meaning that the fatigue
threshold is violated if an employee’s
effectiveness score is more than 72 for
20 percent or more of the employee’s
time on duty.)34
In establishing a substantive hours of
service regulation with a specific
threshold for train employees in
passenger service, FRA is not drawing
any conclusion about the suitability of
such a regulatory scheme for freight
operations. There may be substantial
differences between freight railroad
operating and crew schedules and
passenger operating and crew
schedules. Passenger railroads have
analyzed the results of applying the
regulations to their work schedules and
concluded that this regulation is
feasible. Freight railroads have not
undertaken such analysis, nor would
they be required to under the
regulations, except to the extent that
33 See
Raslear, supra note 11.
Hursh, et al., supra note 13, and Tabak and
Raslear, supra note 19.
34 See
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50377
employees of freight railroads may work
in passenger service.
4. Freight Railroad Employees Acting as
Pilots for Commuter or Intercity
Passenger Trains
The Working Group also discussed
the application of requirements of
proposed subpart F, which have now
been adopted, to train employees of
freight railroads who occasionally
provide pilot service to a commuter
railroad or intercity passenger railroad.
FRA’s locomotive engineer certification
regulations require a pilot to assist an
engineer who may not be sufficiently
familiar with the territory over which he
or she is called to operate. See 49 CFR
240.231(b). The railroads indicated that
a request for a pilot may come without
advance notice, so that it would be
difficult to comply with the substantive
hours of service limitations and
recordkeeping requirements of this
regulation, and even more difficult to
adhere to the schedule analysis
requirements, for an employee who did
not otherwise regularly engage in
commuter or intercity rail passenger
transportation.
The Working Group also cited the
safety benefits of having a pilot
available on a route when necessary,
and the potential risk if commuter or
intercity passenger railroads were to
become less likely to request a pilot, or
freight railroads less likely to be able to
make a pilot available when requested,
because of concerns about the
requirements of this regulation, which
has been adopted. FRA acknowledges
these benefits. Therefore, although a
pilot is performing covered service
under the HSL on the assignment on
which the pilot service is provided, FRA
will not consider a train employee
employed by a freight railroad who
serves as a pilot on a train operated by
a commuter railroad or intercity
passenger railroad to be a train
employee who is engaged in commuter
or intercity rail passenger
transportation.
V. Response to Public Comments on the
NPRM
FRA received 10 sets of comments on
the proposed rule. Comments were
received from the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH); the American Academy of
Sleep Medicine (AASM); Port Authority
Trans-Hudson (PATH); Metropolitan
Transportation Authority (MTA);
SEPTA; Strasburg Rail Road Company
(Strasburg); Transportation Trades
Department (TTD), AFL–CIO (American
Federation of Labor and Congress of
Industrial Organizations); BLET and
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UTU, which filed joint comments; AAR
and APTA. Issues raised in the
comments will be addressed in this
section. Some issues arising out of the
comments were also discussed in
Section III, Scientific Background, and
some will be further discussed in
Section VI, Section-by-Section Analysis,
below.
Comments Related to the FAST and
FAID Fatigue Models
AAR and APTA indicate in their
comments that their analysis shows that
passenger train employees’ work
schedules that are acceptable when
analyzed using FAST with a proposed
fatigue threshold of 70, violate a
proposed FAID fatigue threshold of 60.
Consequently, MTA, SEPTA, AAR and
APTA, each recommend using a FAID
threshold of 90, rather than the
threshold of 60 proposed in the NPRM.
AAR and APTA each attach to their
comments, an analysis performed by the
same consultant who performed work
schedule analysis for APTA during the
development of the proposed rule, in
support of their request. MTA, SEPTA,
AAR and APTA also contend that FRA
agreed with a threshold of 90 for FAID
during the Working Group, prior to
FAID’s validation. FRA disagrees both
with a FAID threshold of 90 and with
the analysis submitted in support of it.
FRA did not agree during the Working
Group process that 90 was the
appropriate threshold for FAID, and
indeed recalls little, if any, discussion of
a FAID threshold, as FAID had not been
validated or calibrated at that time. It is
possible that the railroads internally
discussed a threshold of 90, as some
railroads had been using FAID for the
purposes of their own analysis even
before the commencement of this
rulemaking.
The analysis attached to the AAR and
APTA comments looked at 101 work
schedules from ‘‘some of the largest
railroads’’ involved in passenger
service. It is not clear why that number
of schedules was chosen, nor why the
specific schedules were chosen for
analysis. This suggests that the 101
work schedules are a convenience
sample, rather than a random sample of
work schedules, which means that these
schedules may not be representative of
the rail passenger service industry. In
addition, the analysis looked at work
schedules alone, rather than both work
schedules and on-duty accidents in
which those working the schedules
were involved, as had the FAST and
FAID validation studies. The threshold
that FRA is seeking is the point at which
the risk of a human factors accident
involving the person working the
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schedule increases. That is the point, for
the purpose of this regulation, at which
‘‘safety may be compromised’’ and the
rule requires action to be taken to
mitigate fatigue. See § 228.407(a).
Looking at work schedule data only, the
analysis provided by AAR and APTA
has not identified that point. The
analysis that they provided uses
statistics, rather than fatigue science, to
equate a FAST score of 70 with a FAID
score of 90, based on where the
effectiveness scores produced in the
analyzed schedules were clustered. In
validating and calibrating FAID, FRA
used bins to analyze the data in light of
the variation among FAID scores.
Biomathematical models such as FAID
are more accurate when used to predict
population behavior rather than
individual behavior, and the goal is
establishing a fatigue threshold rather
than establishing links between all
FAST scores and FAID scores at an
individual level. Accordingly, FRA does
not believe that the statistical
comparison of individual scores is an
appropriate basis for establishing a
FAID threshold for the purposes of this
rulemaking.
FRA recognizes the concern with
schedules that are acceptable using one
model violating the threshold using
another. In Section III, Scientific
Background, FRA explained its basis for
modifying the FAID threshold, not to
90, as urged by the railroads, but to 72.
This change is achieved by basing the
FAID threshold on the upper limit of the
99-percent confidence interval rather
than the mean. A 99-percent confidence
interval for a FAID threshold of 72
means that there is only a one-percent
chance of a false positive (i.e., a
schedule that will violate the FAID
threshold of 72 while not actually
posing a risk for the level of fatigue
indicated by the threshold). A
confidence interval for the FAID
threshold is appropriate, since it is
calibrated in relation to FAST.
Finally, APTA suggests that FRA
commit to further analysis, including
analysis specifically of passenger data,
which could form the basis for
establishing a FAID threshold other than
90. As noted above, FRA does not
believe that 90 is a scientifically valid
fatigue threshold for FAID. In terms of
APTA’s recommendation that FRA agree
to do further analysis, FRA is certainly
willing to acknowledge that the area of
fatigue science is still developing and
that future developments or analyses
may make it appropriate to revisit the
models, their thresholds, or other
aspects of this rulemaking, as discussed
in Section III.
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Comments Related to Costs of
Compliance With the Proposed Rule
NIOSH questions whether the training
costs included in the NPRM included
costs to train staff on the use of the
models. In the proposed rule, the cost of
training staff to use the models was
included in the cost of the
biomathematical model, which also
includes programming (for product
enhancement) and technical support,
and remains included in the model cost
of the final rule. For purposes of
clarification, FRA is presenting training
related to the models separately.
APTA indicates that the licensing cost
for FAST is approximately $500,000 for
a single railroad, which is far in excess
of the cost estimated by FRA at the
NPRM stage, and that the licensing cost
for FAID is about five percent of the cost
of FAST, or $25,000. FRA clarifies that
its cost estimate was used for conduct
of the regulatory analysis and as such
includes only the cost to ‘‘society,’’
which does not include distributional
effects that may arise through transfer
payments including the revenue
collected through a fee, surcharge in
excess of the cost of services provided.
‘‘Transfer payments are monetary
payments from one group to another
that do not affect total resources
available to society.’’ OMB Circular A–
4, p. 38.35 Thus, the FRA cost estimate
included some programming costs for
the development of certain
enhancements tailored to the passenger
rail industry that included the license
cost, training on use of the model, and
system support. FRA did not include
costs associated with the original model
development or economic rent from the
sale of licenses to passenger railroads.
Administrative costs associated with
using the model to analyze assignments
for purposes of complying with this rule
are included in the FRA cost estimate
separately. The development costs of
the models themselves are considered
‘‘sunk costs’’ incurred prior to the
rulemaking and not attributable to this
rule.
In addition, FRA assumed that
railroads would select the lowest cost
alternative for achieving compliance.
FRA recognizes other factors may
contribute to model selection. While
FRA did not and does not endorse any
particular model or method for use in
complying with this rule, and railroads
are certainly permitted to use more
costly alternatives, for purposes of
conducting regulatory analysis, only the
35 OMB Circular A–4 is available at: https://
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/
omb/circulars/a004/a-4.pdf.
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‘‘opportunity cost’’ 36 is included. Any
additional expense, however, would not
be a cost attributable to this rule. APTA
did not provide a basis for its cost
estimate of $500,000 per railroad for the
FAST model, and based on information
available to FRA, a cost of $500,000
does not reflect the opportunity cost to
society.
In this case the opportunity cost
includes the programming and licensing
cost estimated at $75,000, the training
cost estimated at $50,000, and product
support associated with analyzing
assignments for purposes of complying
with this rule estimated at $7,500
annually. As noted at the NPRM stage,
FRA believes that a significantly lowercost viable alternative for compliance
would be for the railroads to enter into
a cost sharing agreement via a trade
organization, such as APTA and the
Association of Railway Museums
(ARM), to facilitate so that one or few
licenses are purchased for the use of all
member railroads.
On a related note, MTA points out
that early in the Working Group process,
as the NPRM was being developed, FRA
indicated a willingness to explore
funding access to the models.
Unfortunately, FRA is not in a position
to fund access to the models, but, as
discussed above, FRA encourages
relevant organizations to work together,
as there may be ways to provide the
model for a group of members that are
more cost effective than for each
member railroad to secure access
individually.
APTA also contends that the cost of
fatigue training will exceed $1.8 million
for a sample of 5 commuter railroads
subject to this regulation. APTA does
not provide any background or details
related to this stated cost, and it is not
consistent with information provided to
FRA during the development of the
proposed rule. However, it is possible
that these costs are based on providing
formal, classroom training to all of the
employees to be covered by this
regulation. As was explained in the
NPRM, FRA incorporated significant
flexibility into the training requirement,
so that each railroad would be allowed
to tailor the level of complexity and
formality to the needs of its employees.
There are likely railroads, or locations
on a particular railroad, where the
nature of the operations and
assignments do not warrant formal
classroom training and such training
would not be practical or cost-effective.
36 ‘‘The opportunity cost is equal to the net
benefit the resource would have provided in
absence of the requirement.’’ OMB Circular A–4,
p. 19.
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In many cases, there will be lower cost
alternatives that will be more
appropriate and sufficient to comply
with the training requirement.
APTA and MTA both claim costs
related to the hiring of additional
personnel. MTA says that it would have
compliance costs of at least $5 million
per year, including the cost of hiring
additional train and engine employees.
APTA contends that the cost of
additional personnel will exceed $15
million for five sample commuter
railroads, and $12 million for Amtrak.
Neither MTA nor APTA provides any
specific information regarding these
costs, and FRA does not believe that
additional personnel will be required by
the regulation. The rule provides
substantial flexibility in how railroads
may mitigate fatigue in their schedules.
Many of the available fatigue mitigation
tools, such as allowing employees to
take a nap during available periods
within a schedule, would significantly
reduce fatigue without requiring the
railroad to hire additional employees. In
addition, should a railroad be unable to
sufficiently mitigate the risk of fatigue
in one of its schedules, it would also
have the option of submitting a
declaration of operational necessity to
FRA for approval. See
§ 228.407(b)(1)(ii). Although there may
be some circumstances in which a
railroad would choose to hire additional
employees, the regulation does not
require extra hiring, especially not to
the extent of the costs alleged by MTA
and APTA. Finally, addition of new
train crews to perform the same train
operations would result in a decrease in
the hours of service performed by
existing train crews, which in turn
would result in a savings that would in
large part offset the expense associated
with the hours of service performed by
new employees and must be taken into
account. In other words, it would
basically take the same number of total
employee hours to operate trains if the
train schedules are unchanged
regardless of how many train crews
participate in the operation, leaving the
total wage expense largely unchanged
and only impacting the fixed overhead
costs resulting from a larger employee
pool. The Regulatory Impact Analysis
contains a more detailed discussion of
such impacts.
Some of the personnel costs described
by MTA and APTA may be a result of
concerns about the FAID threshold,
proposed as 60 in the NPRM, which
resulted in a greater number of
schedules than expected violating the
fatigue threshold. FRA responded to
comments about the fatigue models
above, and also addressed the issue in
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Section III of this preamble, Scientific
Background. In light of the
modifications made by FRA, the impact
of this issue will be significantly
reduced. In addition, as noted above,
schedules violating the threshold do not
require the hiring of additional
personnel, as there are a variety of ways
to mitigate the fatigue that would not
require the expense of additional hiring.
PATH also indicates that it would
need to hire additional engineers and
conductors ‘‘to mitigate the effects of a
mandatory 48 to 72 consecutive-hour
rest period’’ the cost of which it
estimates at $4 million annually. This
comment appears to refer to the
statutory requirements at 49 U.S.C.
21103(a)(4), which do not apply to train
employees subject to this regulation.
The requirements of this regulation are
imposed instead of, rather than in
addition to, the requirements for train
employees in freight service. If, as
PATH contends, its schedules will pass
any fatigue analysis, its costs resulting
from this regulation should be minimal.
Finally, AAR objects to the cost of
having some employees subject to two
different sets of hours of service
requirements, referring specifically to
those employees working from an extra
board that includes both freight and
passenger assignments. For this reason,
AAR suggests that train employees
employed by freight railroads should be
governed only by the freight hours of
service provisions in 49 U.S.C. 21103.
This comment will be more fully
discussed below, with comments related
to the scope of the rulemaking. From a
cost perspective, however, the cost of
compliance with two separate hours of
service schemes is not a new cost, as
freight railroads have already had to
track their train employees who perform
both freight and passenger service under
the different statutory provisions
currently applicable to both, as freight
and passenger train employees have had
different requirements since the
effective date of the RSIA. In addition,
AAR admits that very few employees
would be affected by being subject to
both freight and passenger
requirements, so any cost would likely
be minimal.
Comments on the Scope of the Proposed
Rule (§ 228.401 and § 228.403)
AASM suggests that FRA should
develop an additional subpart to
establish comparable language for train
employees engaged in transportation
services outside of commuter or
intercity rail passenger transportation.
As was described in the Section II,
Statutory Background and History, prior
to the RSIA, the Secretary had no
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authority to issue regulations governing
the hours of service of train employees.
In the RSIA, Congress amended the
then-existing statutory hours of service
requirements for train employees, but
specifically excluded train employees
providing commuter or intercity rail
passenger transportation from the
application of those provisions for a
period of three years, during which
FRA, as the Secretary’s delegate, was
granted authority to promulgate hours of
service regulations for these train
employees. Other train employees
remain subject to the hours of service
statutory provisions as amended by the
RSIA.
AAR and APTA both suggest that
train employees on freight service extra
boards who occasionally are called to
operate passenger trains should be
subject exclusively to the freight hours
of service statutory requirements, rather
than this final rule, and they suggest
amending § 228.403 to exclude such
employees from the requirements of this
rule. FRA does not believe this
exception would be consistent with the
Congressional authorization, which is to
establish hours of service regulations for
train employees providing commuter or
intercity rail passenger transportation.
Congress recognized that the
transportation of passengers has
different characteristics that make the
requirements established for freight
operations inappropriate, and that
regulations based on fatigue science
would be more appropriate to passenger
operations, regardless of the entity that
employs the train employee providing
this service. In addition, the railroads
would have to track freight and
passenger service separately for
business purposes, to bill the commuter
operator for the employee’s time, even
if the employees were just under the
freight provisions. Finally, if the fact
that an employee could be called on to
perform freight service on an as-needed
basis is enough to exclude them from
the coverage of this rule, this could
result in excluding employees who
perform predominantly passenger
service just for the possibility of their
performing occasional freight service.
AAR also suggests that train
employees of freight railroads who
operate non-scheduled passenger
service such as ‘‘Santa trains’’ or steam
trains should not be subject to this
regulation. AAR contends that these
employees are ‘‘akin to employees
operating work trains’’ who were
specifically proposed for exclusion from
the application of the proposed rule and
who are specifically excluded from the
application of this final rule by a
definition in § 228.403(c). FRA disagrees
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with this analogy, as train employees
operating ‘‘Santa trains’’ or steam trains
are transporting passengers, while train
employees operating work trains are
not. In the NPRM, FRA stated its belief
that Congress intended that these
regulations apply to all railroads
providing rail passenger transportation,
and therefore included tourist, scenic,
excursion and historic railroads within
the scope of this regulation. FRA
likewise believes it was the intent of
Congress to cover operations such as
those described by AAR that also
involve rail passenger transportation.
AAR also suggests that FRA remove
the limit on the number of times a
month that train employees employed
by a freight railroad who may provide
pilot service for a locomotive engineer
of a passenger railroad without being
subject to the schedule analysis and
other requirements of this regulation.
AAR acknowledges that it would be
unlikely that an employee would
provide pilot service more than four
times in a month, but says it should be
permitted if necessary. FRA agrees with
this suggestion for the reasons discussed
above in Section IV.D.4, and has
eliminated the cap on the provision of
pilot service. FRA has also added the
exclusion of freight train employees
providing pilot service from the
coverage of this rule to the rule text, in
§ 228.403(c), rather than just including
it in the preamble, as was done in the
NPRM.
APTA recommends that mechanical
breakdowns, signal failures, switch
failures and similar conditions should
come within the non-application
provision of § 228.403. FRA does not
believe this is appropriate, as these
common operational issues do not
justify a complete exemption from the
provisions of this regulation. This
position is consistent with FRA’s
longstanding interpretation of the
comparable statutory nonapplication
provision at 49 U.S.C. 21102. See 49
CFR part 228, Appendix A. However, as
will be discussed below, to the extent
that such issues delay schedules the
fatigue implications of which a railroad
had previously analyzed and mitigated
as appropriate, FRA will allow
flexibility as to the schedule analysis
requirements and consecutive-days
limitations of this rule, if the schedule
as delayed does not extend past
midnight.
Strasburg suggests that Class III
tourist, scenic, historic, and excursion
railroad operations should be excluded
from the schedule-analysis requirements
of this rule, and specifically excluded
from the definition of ‘‘Type 2
assignment,’’ because of the nature of
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these operations. Strasburg contends
that, even in their busiest periods, these
operations generally operate shorter
assignments than the duration permitted
for a Type 1 assignment under this rule.
In addition, employees rarely work
more than five days in a row, and
schedules begin and end at the same
time and location each day. FRA
acknowledges that the nature of these
operations reduces the risk of
cumulative fatigue experienced by
employees of such railroads.
While FRA does not believe these
operations should be categorically
excluded from the requirements of this
regulation, FRA will delay the
compliance date for tourist, scenic,
historic and excursion railroads until 18
months from the effective date of the
final rule, or a year longer than other
railroads will have to complete their
work schedule analysis and make any
required submission of schedules and
fatigue mitigation tools to FRA.
This extra year to prepare to comply
would allow additional time for such
operations to obtain necessary
resources, but may also allow many
such operations to avoid the necessity of
obtaining access to an approved
biomathematical model and analyzing
schedules, if their only Type 2
assignments had already been approved
by FRA on the submission of another
railroad, or had been modeled by
another railroad and showed that they
could be treated as Type 1. This deferral
of the compliance date is also consistent
with a suggestion in APTA’s comments
that FRA should allow a schedule
approved for one railroad to be used by
others without also having to analyze
the same schedule. FRA will create a
public docket of schedules that it has
approved, but if such a listing is to be
complete, railroads would have to
submit to the docket established for that
purpose those Type 2 schedules that
they analyze and determine do not
violate the fatigue threshold and do not
need to be mitigated or submitted to
FRA for approval and can be treated as
Type 1.
Comments on Consecutive-Days
Provisions (§ 228.405(a)(3) and (a)(4))
BLET/UTU and TTD contend that
FRA has not made a sufficient case for
imposing the limitation on employees
working only Type 1 assignments
included in the proposed rule, which
would require that if an employee had
not had at least two calendar days in
which he or she had not initiated an onduty period in a period of 14
consecutive calendar days, that
employee must have two consecutive
calendar days off duty at his or her
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home terminal (unless the fourteenth
day ended at his or her away-from-home
terminal, in which case the employee
would be permitted to work a fifteenth
day to return to his or her home
terminal and then would be required to
have two consecutive calendar days off
duty at his or her home terminal). BLET
and UTU note that schedule analysis
conducted during the RSAC process did
not support a limitation on Type 1
assignments, and they argue that the
proposed limitation was therefore not
based on science but was a subjective
requirement. FRA does not dispute the
assertion that the work schedule
analysis did not suggest the specific
limitation proposed and adopted in the
final rule. However, as FRA stated in the
NPRM, even a Type 1 schedule that
allowed the minimum rest required by
this regulation would eventually result
in an employee using time for other life
activities (such as commuting, eating,
grooming, personal errands, etc.) that
the approved models assume to be
available for sleep, if the employee is
not at some point required to have a day
off. FRA also notes that fatigue science
indicates that individuals may require
more than one recovery day to recover
from sleep restriction.37
In contrast to the position of BLET/
UTU, NIOSH says it may be premature
to say that an employee working even
Type 1 schedules will get sufficient rest,
noting that if an employee has only the
required minimum 8 hours off duty
between duty tours, this will not allow
the employee to get 8 hours of rest.
Likewise, AASM suggests that the
required minimum off-duty period
under the regulation should be
sufficient to allow for an 8-hour sleep
period. FRA is comfortable with the
limitations included in the rule, because
of the nature of the operations in
question, and the fact that the diary
study of passenger train employees
indicated that these employees are
usually getting appropriate amounts of
sleep, and most are not subjected to
fatigue that would violate a threshold
established in this regulation. However,
FRA believes that the support of the
scientific community for even more
stringent limitations indicates that the
limitations included in this regulation
are quite reasonable.
Many comments asked for further
clarification and examples to aid in the
37 See, e.g., Balkin, T.J. et al. ‘‘Effects of Sleep
Schedules on Commercial Motor Vehicle Driver
Performance,’’ FMCSA Technical Report No. DOT–
MC–00–133, U.S. Department of Transportation,
(2000); Belenky et al., ‘‘Patterns of performance
degradation and restoration during sleep restriction
and subsequent recovery: A sleep dose-response
study,’’ Journal of Sleep Research, 12, 1–12, (2003).
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discussion of the limitation on Type 1
assignments, and these clarifications
have been made throughout the final
rule in the many references to this
provision, and rule text has been added
to clarify the application of these
limitations. See § 228.405(a)(3) and the
discussion of the provision in Section V,
Section-by-Section Analysis.
For example, in the NPRM, FRA
stated that if an employee worked only
Type 1 assignments for a period of more
than 6 consecutive calendar days but
less than 14 consecutive calendar days,
and then initiated an on-duty period
involving a Type 2 assignment, the
employee would be required to have the
Type 2 assignment’s rest period of 24
consecutive hours at the employee’s
home terminal, and then start the count
over with regard to consecutive days or
total days worked in a 14-day period. In
response, MTA asks in its comment
what would happen if an employee
worked Type 1 assignments on 13
consecutive days, and then a Type 2
assignment on day 14. If the assignment
on the 14th consecutive day had been a
Type 1 assignment, the employee would
have to have two consecutive calendar
days off. It does not make sense to
require only 24 consecutive hours off
after a more fatiguing Type 2 assignment
at that point. FRA has revised the rule
text in § 228.405(a)(3) to clarify this
issue, and other questions related to the
application of these provisions.
Comments on Definitions of ‘‘Type 1
Assignment’’ and ‘‘Type 2 Assignment’’
(§ 228.5)
SEPTA, AAR and APTA each argue
that the definition of ‘‘Type 2
assignment’’ should be modified to
cover any assignment with time
between midnight and 3 a.m., rather
than 4 a.m., and that Type 1
assignments should be allowed to begin
at 3 a.m. They point to a citation in the
NPRM to the FAST validation study,
which indicated a 20-percent increase
in the risk of a human factors accident
by working between the hours of
midnight and 3 a.m. This causes AAR
to conclude that 4 a.m. is an arbitrary
threshold. However, 3 a.m. is actually
the absolute low point for circadian
rhythm, so it is actually the worst
possible time to begin a shift, especially
since to do so would require being
awake in the period before that, in order
to report for duty at 3 a.m. Indeed,
NIOSH points out that even the 4 a.m.
start time can have the same effect as an
overnight shift because the employee
must wake up earlier to report for duty
at 4 a.m. Therefore, FRA has not
modified the definitions as requested.
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SEPTA and MTA suggest that Type 1
assignments that are delayed such that
they extend past the Type 1 hours, or
Type 2 assignments that model as Type
1 and are delayed, should still be treated
as Type 1 assignments. This seems
reasonable to FRA, as it does not seem
appropriate for a schedule to have to be
modeled every day if it runs a few
minutes late. However, if the delay
results in the employee’s working in the
midnight-to-4-am time period that is
always to be considered a Type 2
assignment, the assignment must be
considered Type 2 for that day, and the
employee who worked it will have
worked a Type 2 assignment for the
purposes of the consecutive-days
limitation. FRA has added rule text to
clarify this issue. See § 228.5.
Comments About Nap Policies and
Sleep Facilities (§ 228.409)
MTA suggests reducing the minimum
nap period to be eligible for fatigue
mitigation to 60 minutes instead of 90
minutes. The FRA-proposed 90-minute
minimum nap period was the subject of
significant Working Group discussion,
and FRA does not see a significant
reason to change it at this time. FRA
notes that the Commercial
Transportation Operator Fatigue
Management Reference indicates that
naps should not exceed 45 minutes and
that 15–30 minutes should be allowed
to fully wake up. If 15 minutes are
added to allow time to fall asleep, the
total is 75 minutes to 90 minutes.
MTA also suggests allowing railroads
to decide on nap policies and sleep
facilities unilaterally. FRA believes that
the collaboration of labor and
management on fatigue mitigation
efforts is important to ensure successful
fatigue mitigation, and FRA therefore
declines to modify these provisions.
Comments About Training (§ 228.411)
Comments about training were
centered on the timing of both initial
training of existing employees subject to
the subpart and immediate supervisors
of those employees, and initial training
of new employees. The NPRM proposed
initial training of such existing
employees and supervisors ‘‘as soon as
practicable.’’ This description of the
deadline was deemed too uncertain.
NIOSH suggested initial training should
be provided to existing employees and
supervisors within 90 days of the
effective date of the final rule, while
SEPTA recommended delaying the
deadline for compliance with the initial
training requirement for existing
employees and supervisors until
December 2012, so that it could be
aligned with other railroad training
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schedules. FRA believes that SEPTA’s
proposal is reasonable, has the benefit of
certainty, and is consistent with the
period for providing training in certain
other FRA rules. Consequently, FRA has
amended the training provision to
require initial training of existing
employees and supervisors no later than
December 31, 2012.
With regard to initial training of new
employees, which FRA proposed to
require within 90 days of an employee’s
working an assignment that would be
subject to this rule, AAR commented
that this time frame will not allow
employees to be trained within the
railroads’ normal training schedules.
FRA has revised the time period in
which new employees must be trained
to be consistent with the latest version
of FRA’s forthcoming training
standards, which was discussed in the
Working Group as a standard with
which it was agreed that the training
provision in this regulation should be
consistent. Therefore, new employees
will have to be trained prior to
December 31, 2012 or before they begin
work, whichever is later.
Other Comments
BLET/UTU and TTD request that FRA
require a ‘‘10-hour call’’ prior to an
assignment (i.e., notification of the time
to report 10 hours in advance of the
time at which the employee is requested
to report for duty). While FRA agrees
that such a requirement would provide
predictability as to when an employee
will be called to work, adopting a 10hour call requirement is not possible at
this time, as it was not a part of the
proposed rule. FRA notes, however, that
a 10-hour call is one of the fatigue
mitigation tools that was discussed. The
regulation requires labor involvement in
the determination of fatigue mitigation
tools to be applied, so there may be
opportunities to voluntarily make use of
this scheduling practice.
SEPTA suggested that the rule should
place responsibility on the employee
not to violate the regulation. FRA agrees
that in some circumstances the
employee may bear some responsibility,
but the railroad bears responsibility for
scheduling, so it will also bear some
responsibility for scheduling an
employee for an assignment that would
violate the regulation. The applicable
civil penalty provision (49 CFR 228.21)
includes a reference to the liability of
individuals for civil penalties for
violating a requirement or causing the
violation of any requirement of part 228,
and the penalty schedule for part 228
includes a footnote, common to the
penalty schedules of many FRA
regulations, providing for the possibility
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of individual liability for a civil penalty
for a willful violation.
Finally, NIOSH says this regulation
should be part of a comprehensive
fatigue management plan. FRA agrees,
and notes that the fatigue mitigation
plans applied to particular schedules
found to violate the fatigue threshold
will be part of overall fatigue
management. Appendix D to this rule
provides guidance on fatigue
management plans. Additional
requirements will likely result from
other ongoing FRA rulemaking projects.
VI. Section-by-Section Analysis
Subpart A—General
Section 228.1 Scope
FRA is revising this section by adding
paragraph (c), which indicates that the
regulation prescribes substantive hours
of service requirements for train
employees engaged in commuter or
intercity rail passenger transportation.
Section 228.3 Application
Existing paragraph (a) of this section
states that part 228 applies to any
railroad or contractor or subcontractor
to a railroad except as provided in
paragraph (b) of the section.
Paragraph (b) of this section excludes
from the scope of this part railroads or
a contractor or subcontractor of a
railroad that operates only on track
inside an installation which is not part
of the general railroad system of
transportation. This provision would
exclude from the coverage of subpart F
some tourist, scenic, excursion or
historic railroads because they operate
off the general system. FRA has
otherwise specifically included these
operations within the coverage of this
regulation, as provided by § 228.401,
because if they are not covered by this
regulation, their train employees would
be subject to the statutory freight hours
of service requirements of 49 U.S.C.
21103. As is explained in more detail in
the discussion below of § 228.401, FRA
believes that Congress intended these
operations to be subject to this
regulation, rather than the statutory
requirements, and FRA does not believe
the statutory requirements are
appropriate for these operations.
Accordingly, FRA is revising paragraph
(b) of this section to refer to § 228.401,
which is the specific applicability
provision for new subpart F.
Paragraph (b) of § 228.3 also excludes
from the application of part 228 rapid
transit operations in an urban area that
are not connected with the general
railroad system of transportation.
Section 228.401 contains an exclusion
for these operations.
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Section 228.5 Definitions
FRA is amending this section to add
definitions of ‘‘Associate
Administrator’’ and ‘‘FRA’’ as used in
this part. Section 101 of the RSIA refers
to FRA’s ‘‘Associate Administrator for
Railroad Safety’’ and emphasizes that
the Associate Administrator is the Chief
Safety Officer. Thus, in this final rule
‘‘Associate Administrator’’ means FRA’s
Associate Administrator for Railroad
Safety/Chief Safety Officer.
FRA is also adding definitions of the
terms ‘‘Type 1 assignment’’ and ‘‘Type
2 assignment.’’ As was previously
discussed in Section IV, above, these
definitions were the subject of
significant discussion in the Task Force
and the Working Group, particularly
because of the implications of a
particular schedule’s status as a Type 1
assignment or a Type 2 assignment for
determining the application of the
limitations on consecutive days in
§ 228.405 and the requirements for
analysis of schedules and submission of
schedules to FRA for approval in
§ 228.407. FRA believes that the
definitions accommodate the concerns
expressed in the Working Group
regarding schedules outside the time
parameters for a Type 1 assignment that
may still present very little risk of an
effectiveness score that would violate
the fatigue threshold and compromise
safety. At the same time, however, the
definitions recognize the increased risk
of fatigue associated with working late
night and very early morning hours,
which justifies the application of the
more stringent requirements.
FRA added language to these
definitions as they appeared in the
NPRM to make clear that if an
assignment is delayed so that the
assignment that an employee actually
worked includes any period of time
between midnight and 4 a.m., the
assignment must be treated as a Type 2
assignment for that employee for
purposes of the consecutive days
limitations and corresponding rest
requirements in section 228.405. As was
discussed in Section V, Responses to
Public Comments on the NPRM, some
commenters suggest that Type 1
assignments, or assignments having
some time within the definition of a
Type 2 assignment but that modeled
acceptably to be treated as Type 1
assignments, should continue to be
treated as Type 1 assignments even if
delayed.
In most circumstances, this makes
sense to FRA, in that railroads should
not be expected to model assignments
on a daily basis if they extend a few
minutes past the 8 p.m. limits of a Type
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1 assignment, or past the scheduled end
time of a Type 2 assignment that was
acceptable to be treated as Type 1.
However, if the assignment as delayed
includes time between midnight and 4
a.m., such an assignment is always
considered Type 2, and an employee
working that assignment should have
Type 2 consecutive-days limitations and
corresponding rest requirements.
FRA has added these terms to this
general definitions section for part 228,
rather than the definitions specific to
subpart F, because these terms are also
used in the recordkeeping provisions of
subpart B, as amended by this rule.
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Subpart B—Records and Reporting
Section 228.11 Hours of Duty Records
Paragraph (c) of this section indicates
that paragraphs (b)(13) through (b)(16)
do not apply to the records of train
employees providing commuter or
intercity passenger rail transportation.
Paragraphs (b)(13) through (b)(16) relate
to substantive provisions of the HSL for
train employees, added by the RSIA. As
was described above in Section II, these
requirements were not extended to train
employees on commuter and intercity
passenger railroads. The requirements
referred to in paragraphs (b)(13) through
(b)(16) are not required by this rule and
therefore would continue not to apply to
train employees providing commuter
and intercity rail passenger
transportation.
Paragraph (c) of this section now also
requires two additional pieces of
information, relating to the provisions of
§ 228.405(a)(3). First, paragraph (c)(1)
requires that the record must note the
date that begins the series of at most 14
consecutive calendar days that includes
the duty tour being recorded. Second,
paragraph (c)(2) requires that the record
note the date, if any, of a calendar day
on which the employee did not initiate
an on-duty period prior to the current
duty tour in the current series of at most
14 consecutive calendar days. This
information will allow the railroad and
FRA to determine compliance with the
limitations established by paragraph
(a)(3), both with respect to calendar
days on which the employee did not
initiate an on-duty period and
consecutive days including one or more
Type 2 assignments.
FRA recognizes that most railroads
and employees subject to this subpart
are currently keeping their hours of
service records manually, and it may be
burdensome for an employee to be
required to keep track of his or her
series of at most 14 consecutive days
and mark its starting date on the hours
of service record each day, as well as
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indicating whether there had been a
prior day off during the series. However,
the railroad will have to have some way
to track this information. Therefore, if a
railroad wishes to keep this information
centrally for all of its employees, this
will be considered sufficient to satisfy
the requirements that the hours of
service record include the start date of
the at-most 14-day series and the date,
if any, that the employee did not initiate
an on-duty period during the at-most
14-day series, provided this information
is made available to FRA upon request.
Section 228.19 Monthly Reports of
Excess Service
FRA is revising paragraph (c) of this
section to require railroads to report to
FRA instances of excess service related
to new substantive limitations
contained in § 228.405(a)(3) of this rule.
That paragraph limits the number of
consecutive days or total days within a
series of at most 14 consecutive
calendar days that train employees
engaged in commuter or intercity
passenger railroad transportation may
initiate an on-duty period, and requires
a minimum amount of time off duty or
not initiating an on-duty period after an
employee has reached the maximum
number of consecutive or total days
within the prescribed period, before the
employee may return to duty, with
different requirements depending on the
time of day of the employee’s
assignments.
Excess service under
§ 228.405(a)(3)(ii) occurs when an
employee has initiated on-duty periods
on six consecutive days, including one
or more Type 2 assignments, and then
initiates a new on-duty period without
having had the required 24 consecutive
hours off at the home terminal.
Paragraph (c)(5) addresses this excess
service in the situation when the
employee is at his or her home terminal
at the end of the duty tour that triggers
the rest requirement. Paragraph (c)(6)
addresses this excess service, including
the exception for an additional
initiation of an on-duty period when the
employee is not at his or her home
terminal at the end of the duty tour that
triggers the rest requirement.
Excess service under
§ 228.405(a)(3)(iii) occurs when an
employee has not had two consecutive
calendar days in which the employee
has not initiated an on-duty period
during the series of 14 consecutive
calendar days, and initiates a new onduty period without having had the
required two consecutive calendar days
without initiating an on-duty period at
the home terminal. Paragraph (c)(7)
addresses this excess service in the
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50383
situation when the employee is at his or
her home terminal at the end of the duty
tour that triggers the rest requirement.
Paragraph (c)(8) addresses this excess
service, including the exception for an
additional initiation of an on-duty
period when the employee is not at his
or her home terminal at the end of the
duty tour that triggers the rest
requirement.
In the final rule, FRA has revised this
section to reflect the consolidation of
the revised consecutive-day provisions
into § 228.405(a)(3). These issues were
discussed in detail in Section V,
Responses to Public Comments on the
NPRM, and are further discussed in the
section-by-section analysis of these
provisions in § 228.405 below.
Subpart F—Substantive Hours of
Service Requirements for Train
Employees Engaged in Commuter or
Intercity Rail Passenger Transportation
Section 228.401 Applicability
This section would establish the
specific applicability of new subpart F,
which differs somewhat from that of
existing subparts in this part. Paragraph
(a) of this section provides that the
requirements of subpart F apply to
railroads and their officers and agents,
only with respect to their train
employees engaged in commuter or
intercity rail passenger transportation.
Subpart F does not apply to contractors
or subcontractors to railroads, unlike the
rest of part 228. See § 228.3(a).
For purposes of subpart F, FRA
interprets ‘‘commuter or intercity rail
passenger transportation’’ to include rail
passenger transportation by tourist,
scenic, excursion, and historic railroads
(referred to collectively for the purposes
of this discussion as tourist railroads).
FRA believes that in the RSIA Congress
intended that these regulations apply to
all railroads providing rail passenger
transportation, and that Congress did
not intend to apply the amended
statutory provision at 49 U.S.C. 21103 to
tourist railroads because tourist railroad
operations are more similar to the other
passenger service than they are to
freight service. The provisions of the
HSL that apply to train employees on
freight railroads are not as appropriate,
therefore, for train employees on tourist
railroads. For fatigue purposes, the most
salient difference between passenger
and freight operations is that most
passenger operations tend to be
scheduled, whereas freight operations
tend to be unscheduled. Virtually all
passenger crew assignments have
scheduled on-duty and off-duty times,
and the vast majority of passenger crew
assignments are to report in the morning
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and go off duty in the late afternoon or
early evening, thereby reducing the
likelihood of on-duty fatigue. Like
typical intercity and commuter rail
operations, tourist rail operations tend
to be scheduled and to occur during the
daytime or early evening.
Paragraph (b) of this section provides
that this subpart does not apply to urban
rapid transit operations not connected
with the general railroad system of
transportation.
Section 228.403 Nonapplication,
Exemption, and Definitions
This section would establish the
situations in which this subpart does
not apply, provide circumstances in
which a railroad may seek an exemption
from the provisions of this subpart, and
provide key definitions specifically
applicable to this subpart.
Paragraph (a) of this section would
establish the situations in which this
subpart does not apply, such as an act
of God. This paragraph is substantively
identical to the nonapplication
provision of the HSL (49 U.S.C.
21102(a)), which was unchanged by the
RSIA. The provisions of this rule would
therefore not apply to train employees
engaged in commuter or intercity
passenger service in the same situations
as the statutory hours of service
requirements would not apply to other
train employees, (or to signal employees
or dispatching service employees).
Paragraph (b) of this section would
provide the possibility of an exemption
from the requirements of this subpart for
a railroad having not more than a total
of 15 train employees, signal employees,
and dispatching service employees. This
paragraph is substantively identical to
the exemption provision of the HSL at
49 U.S.C. 21102(b), which was
unchanged by the RSIA. It would
provide the same opportunity for a
railroad to seek an exemption from the
requirements of this subpart as a
railroad would have to seek an
exemption from the statutory
requirements applicable to its other
employees.
Paragraph (c) of this section defines
several key terms specifically applicable
to this subpart. It defines ‘‘commuter or
intercity rail passenger transportation’’
as the terms ‘‘commuter rail passenger
transportation’’ and ‘‘intercity rail
passenger transportation’’ have been
defined at 49 U.S.C. 24102. This
definition is consistent with FRA’s
authority to issue this rule, as Section
108(e) of the RSIA defined these terms
as they are defined at 49 U.S.C. 24102.
This paragraph also defines ‘‘train
employee who is engaged in commuter
or intercity rail passenger
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transportation’’ to establish that the
term includes any train employee
performing that function, regardless of
whether the train employee is employed
by a commuter or intercity passenger
railroad, or another type of railroad or
other entity. The term also includes all
train employees employed by a
commuter or intercity passenger
railroad. The term excludes a train
employee employed by another type of
railroad or entity who is engaged in
work train service. In this final rule,
FRA has added language to the
proposed definition. As FRA discussed
above in Section IV, the RSAC Working
Group discussed the application of
subpart F to train employees of freight
railroads who provide pilot service on
trains operated by commuter railroads
or intercity passenger railroads, and
FRA included preamble language in the
NPRM excluding such pilot service from
coverage under this rule, provided that
an employee does not serve as a pilot
more than four times in a calendar
month, or engage in any other commuter
or intercity rail passenger
transportation. In response to comments
on the scope of the rulemaking,
discussed further in Section V,
Responses to Public Comments on the
NPRM, above, FRA has eliminated the
cap on the amount of pilot service that
may be performed, and has clarified the
issue by specifically excluding pilot
service from the definition of ‘‘train
employee who is engaged in commuter
or intercity rail passenger
transportation.’’ See § 228.3.
Section 228.405 Limitations on Duty
Hours of Train Employees Engaged in
Commuter or Intercity Rail Passenger
Transportation
This section provides the substantive
limitations on the duty hours of train
employees subject to this subpart.
Paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this
section establish the maximum time on
duty in a duty tour and the required
minimum time off duty in a 24-hour
period. These limitations are
substantively identical to the statutory
requirements of 49 U.S.C. 21103(a)(1)
and (a)(2) as they existed prior to July
16, 2009, the effective date of the
amendments to that section made by the
RSIA, which requirements currently
still apply to train employees engaged in
commuter or intercity rail passenger
transportation, until the effective date of
this regulation. As these provisions are
substantively identical to their parallel
provisions in old section 21103, FRA’s
prior interpretations of these provisions,
as established in FRA’s technical
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bulletins, will continue to apply.38 FRA
retains these limitations as a ‘‘floor’’
because there is limited evidence of
fatigue-related accidents in operations
subject to this rule. Furthermore, an
analysis sampling the schedules of train
employees now subject to this rule
indicates that many of the schedules are
not likely to be at risk for producing a
level of fatigue at which safety may be
compromised. However, FRA is
imposing additional requirements to
address work schedules that are likely
to result in fatigued employees and rest
requirements that will minimize
cumulative fatigue.
In order to address cumulative
fatigue, new requirements are added in
paragraph (a)(3) restricting the number
of consecutive days or total days in a
prescribed period on which an
employee may initiate an on-duty
period, as discussed below. The changes
from the proposed rule to the final rule
do not significantly change the time off
duty previously proposed to be required
by proposed paragraphs (a)(3) and (a)(4),
but resolve issues previously identified
by FRA and further discussed by a
commenter. In the NPRM, paragraphs
(a)(3) and (a)(4) of § 228.405 proposed
limitations on the number of days that
an employee may work, with paragraph
(a)(3) providing the limitation for an
employee who works one or more Type
2 assignments, and paragraph (a)(4)
providing a less stringent, but more
complex limitation for an employee
who works only Type 1 assignments.
Paragraph (a)(3) in the NRPM proposed
that an employee who initiates an onduty period on 6 consecutive calendar
days including one or more Type 2
assignments must have at least 24
consecutive hours off duty at the
employee’s home terminal. Paragraph
(a)(4) in the NRPM proposed that after
an employee has initiated on-duty
periods in a period of 14 consecutive
calendar days and has not had a total of
at least two calendar days within that
14-day period in which the employee
has not initiated an on-duty period, the
employee must have two consecutive
calendar days without initiating an onduty period at the employee’s home
terminal.
Recognizing the potential interaction
between the proposed paragraphs (a)(3)
and (a)(4), FRA provided an example in
the NPRM of how the consecutive-days
provisions would apply if an employee
initiated a Type 2 assignment after
38 Similarly, paragraphs (b) and (c) of the rule are
substantively identical to their parallel provisions,
paragraphs (b) and (c) of the old section 21103. As
with paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2), FRA’s prior
interpretations of these provisions continue to
apply.
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having initiated only Type 1
assignments in a period of more than 6
but less than 14 consecutive calendar
days. FRA indicated that if an employee
initiated only Type 1 assignments for a
period of more than 6 consecutive
calendar days but fewer than 14
consecutive calendar days on which the
employee has initiated an on-duty
period, and then initiated a Type 2
assignment—for example, a Type 2
assignment on the eighth consecutive
day after having worked Type 1
assignments on the previous 7 days—
the ‘‘Type 2’’ limitation will apply at
that time, and the employee must have
24 consecutive hours off duty following
the Type 2 assignment (or work or
deadhead to the home terminal the next
day and then have 24 hours off duty at
the home terminal) and then begin a
new period of consecutive days upon
returning to duty.
However, as was discussed above in
Section V, Response to Public
Comments on the NPRM, FRA received
a comment pointing out that if an
employee had initiated an on-duty
period in a Type 1 assignments each day
for 13 consecutive days, and then
initiated a Type 2 assignment on the
14th day, it would not make sense for
the employee to have only 24 hours off
duty, when 2 consecutive calendar days
without initiating an on-duty period
would have been required had the
employee worked a less fatiguing Type
1 assignment on the 14th day. The
consolidation of proposed paragraphs
(a)(3) and (a)(4) into new paragraph
(a)(3) addresses this concern by
including the restriction on more than
six consecutive days including a Type 2
assignment in the same at-most 14-day
period applicable to Type 1
assignments, as discussed in more detail
below. FRA has also rephrased the
requirements into a positive statement
of when additional time off duty is
required, rather than negatively
expressing when an employee may not
work. FRA also clarified the nature of
the ‘‘14-day period.’’ For the vast
majority of circumstances considered by
FRA, the rest required under the
consolidated paragraph (a)(3) will not
differ from the rest required under the
proposed paragraphs (a)(3) and (a)(4).
By including the limitation on
consecutive assignments including at
least one Type 2 assignment within the
broader limitation of the at-most 14-day
period, the consolidation provides a
clearer set of rules to govern how much
time off duty is required when an
employee works a Type 2 assignment
after having worked a series of Type 1
assignments late in the at-most 14-day
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period. The revisions will also relieve
railroads and employees from having to
determine, on a daily basis, how many
days have elapsed since the beginning
of the at-most 14-day period in order to
determine how much time off duty is
required if a Type 2 assignment is
worked on that day.
As a general rule, the application of
the cumulative-fatigue provisions has
not changed from the NRPM. As
proposed in the NPRM and as adopted
in the final rule, if an employee initiates
an on-duty period each day for 14
consecutive calendar days, or 13 days
out of the 14 consecutive calendar days,
even if all of those assignments are Type
1 assignments, that employee must have
at least 2 consecutive calendar days on
which he or she does not initiate an onduty period at his or her home terminal.
As proposed in the NRPM and as
adopted in the final rule, if an employee
initiates an on-duty period for 6
consecutive calendar days, including
one or more Type 2 assignments, that
employee must have at least 24
consecutive hours off duty at his or her
home terminal. Similarly, in both the
proposed and the final versions of the
cumulative-fatigue provisions,
flexibility is provided to allow the
employee to return to his or her home
terminal, if necessary, before taking the
required rest. The only clarifying change
that the final rule makes is that both the
24-hour and 2 consecutive calendar day
off-duty periods can be applicable
within a series of at most 14 consecutive
calendar days; when this occurs, to the
extent that the rest periods overlap, they
do so concurrently, rather than
consecutively.
Paragraph (a)(3) of the final rule now
provides a series of at most 14
consecutive calendar days as the frame
of reference regardless of whether the
employee initiates Type 1 assignments,
Type 2 assignments, or some
combination thereof. As was implied in
the NRPM, the final rule’s paragraph
(a)(3)(i) now makes explicit that the first
series of at most 14 consecutive
calendar days begins at a fixed date: the
first calendar day on or after the
compliance date, as specified in section
228.413, for paragraph (a)(3) that the
employee initiates an on-duty period. A
series of at most 14 consecutive
calendar days ends either (1) after the
employee has had two calendar days
without initiating an on-duty period or
(2) after the 14th consecutive day,
whichever comes first. When a series of
at most 14 consecutive calendar days
ends, the next series of at most 14
consecutive calendar days begins when
the employee next initiates an on-duty
period. Once a new series has begun, it
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is not necessary to look back at a prior
series to find a day on which an on-duty
period was not initiated. For instance, if
an employee begins a series of at most
14 consecutive calendar days on May 1,
and he or she does not initiate an onduty period on May 4 and May 9, the
series beginning on May 1 ends on May
9. If the employee next initiates an onduty period on May 10, a new series
begins on May 10, potentially extending
as far as May 23. The series beginning
May 10 will not end before May 23
unless the employee has two days in the
period between May 10 and May 23 on
which the employee does not initiate an
on-duty period.
If the employee, at any point in the atmost 14-day period, works six
consecutive calendar days including a
Type 2 assignment, paragraph (a)(3)(ii)
requires the employee to have 24 hours
off duty before the employee may return
to initiate another on-duty period.
If an employee reaches the end of the
14th consecutive day of the at-most 14
day period without having two calendar
days on which he or she did not initiate
an on-duty period, paragraph (a)(3)(iii)
requires the employee to have two
consecutive calendar days on which he
or she does not initiate an on-duty
period before the employee may return
to initiate another on-duty period.
Paragraph (a)(3)(iv) establishes that
this time off be at the home terminal,
and that the employee not be available
for any service for any railroad during
the time off duty required by paragraph
(a)(3). Paragraph (a)(3)(v) provides
flexibility to railroads, allowing an
employee to receive deadhead
transportation to his or her home
terminal or to work an additional
assignment to the employee’s home
terminal prior to receiving the required
rest.
Some examples may help to illustrate
the cumulative-fatigue provisions of
paragraph (a)(3) of this section as
applied to employees working only
Type 1 assignments under paragraph
(a)(3)(iii). An employee who initiates an
on-duty period each day on 14
consecutive calendar days must have
two consecutive calendar days on which
he or she does not initiate an on-duty
period. Likewise, an employee who
initiates an on-duty period on any
combination of calendar days during an
at-most 14-day period that does not
include a total of at least two calendar
days when he or she did not initiate an
on-duty period within the period (e.g.,
if the employee had no days or only one
day in which he or she did not initiate
an on-duty period in the at-most 14-day
series), must also have two consecutive
calendar days without initiating an on-
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duty period. If an employee initiated an
on-duty period each day on 6
consecutive calendar days, had one
calendar day without initiating an onduty period, and then initiated an onduty period for the next 7 consecutive
calendar days, finishing the last of these
on-duty periods on the 14th or 15th
consecutive calendar day, that employee
would not have had at least two
calendar days in the 14-day period in
which he or she did not initiate an onduty period, and that employee would
have to have at least two consecutive
calendar days in which he or she does
not initiate an on-duty period, before
the employee could initiate another onduty period. However, if an employee
initiated an on-duty period for 4
consecutive calendar days, had a
calendar day in which he or she did not
initiate an on-duty period, then initiated
an on-duty period on 3 consecutive
calendar days and had another calendar
day without initiating an on-duty
period, that employee would have had
a total of 2 calendar days on which the
employee did not initiate an on-duty
period in the 14-day period, ending the
at-most 14-day period. Because the
employee has had two calendar days on
which he or she has not initiated an onduty period in the at-most 14-day
period, a new period of at-most 14 days
will begin for that employee when he or
she next initiates an on-duty period. If
that same employee, starting on the next
calendar day, initiated an on-duty
period for 4 more consecutive calendar
days, followed by a calendar day in
which the employee does not initiate an
on-duty period, the employee has had
only 1 calendar day without initiating
an on-duty period in the current at-most
14-day period, because calendar days
prior to the start of the 14-day period are
not counted.
The new paragraph (a)(3)(ii) addresses
the time off duty that is required when
an employee works a Type 2 assignment
at any point in a series of at most 14
consecutive calendar days; the
employee is required to have 24
consecutive hours of time off duty at the
employee’s home terminal after any
sequence of six consecutive calendar
days each day of which the employee
initiates an on-duty period including at
least one Type 2 assignment, regardless
of when this period of six or more
consecutive days falls within the larger
at-most 14-day period. This 24 hours off
duty under paragraph (a)(3)(ii) must run
concurrently with the two consecutive
calendar days of not initiating an onduty period required by paragraph
(a)(3)(iii) if an employee also has not
had two calendar days on which he or
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she did not initiate an on-duty period in
the fully realized series of 14
consecutive calendar days. In the
example provided in the comment on
the NRPM discussed above, an
employee who initiated an on-duty
period in Type 1 assignments each day
for 13 consecutive calendar days, and
then initiated a Type 2 assignment on
the 14th day will be required to have 24
consecutive hours of time off duty
before initiating an on-duty period again
(as required by paragraph (a)(3)(ii)
because the employee has initiated an
on-duty period for six or more
consecutive days), as well as not initiate
an on-duty period for two consecutive
calendar days before initiating an onduty period again (as required by
paragraph (a)(3)(iii) because the
employee has not had two calendar days
without initiating an on-duty period
during the 14-day period). To the extent
that the required rest periods overlap,
they run concurrently, not
consecutively.
Although many train employees
engaged in commuter or intercity
passenger service regularly end their
duty tour at their home terminal, FRA
recognizes that this will not be the case
for all employees, and all railroads,
subject to this subpart. The language of
paragraph (a)(3)(v) allows the railroad
the flexibility to get the employee back
to his or her home terminal, while at the
same time ensuring that the employee
will observe the required rest period at
the home terminal. Note that although
rest periods of 24 consecutive hours and
of two consecutive calendar days
without initiating an on-duty period
must be at the employee’s home
terminal, by contrast, a calendar day
during the at-most 14-day period ‘‘on
which the employee has not initiated an
on-duty period’’ under paragraphs
(a)(3)(i)–(a)(3)(iii) does not have to be at
the home terminal.
As was discussed above in Section IV,
members of the Working Group
expressed concern about these
requirements, because the schedule
analysis done by the Task Force had
indicated a number of situations in
which employees who worked
consecutive days beyond the limitations
proposed by FRA would not exceed the
fatigue threshold. However, as also
stated above, FRA still believed the
limitations were appropriate, based on
accepted fatigue science indicating that
work on successive days increases the
risk of accidents as the number of
successive days of work increases, and
because of the likelihood that an
employee working an indefinite number
of consecutive days will eventually
attend to other activities during time
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that a fatigue model would consider
available for rest.
FRA accommodated the concerns of
Working Group members in revising the
draft proposed definition of ‘‘Type 2
assignments’’ as discussed above. In
addition, the cumulative-fatigue
provisions of paragraph (a)(3) as they
apply to employees working only Type
1 assignments allow employees to work
two consecutive hold downs (allowing
the employee to exercise seniority to
select and work the full cycle of two
separate 6-day or 7-day schedules for
which the incumbent employee is on
vacation or otherwise unavailable),
before being required to have two
consecutive days at the employee’s
home terminal without initiating an onduty period. This flexibility eliminates
some potential conflict with existing
operations and agreements.
At the same time, an employee who
does not initiate an on-duty period each
day for the maximum number of
consecutive days will be able to restart
the series of 14 consecutive days after
having accumulated two calendar days
in which the employee does not initiate
an on-duty period, as provided in
paragraph (a)(3)(i). This language
eliminates a concern that the railroad
and the employee would have to look
back each day during any series of 14
consecutive calendar days and find that
the employee has had two calendar days
without initiating an on-duty period
during each of those previous 14-day
periods to be in compliance.
Paragraph (b) of this section describes
how various periods of time are counted
for the purpose of determining total
time on duty. This paragraph is
substantively identical to the provisions
for determining time on duty in 49
U.S.C. 21103(b), which were unchanged
by the RSIA. Therefore, these provisions
are currently in effect for train
employees of commuter and intercity
passenger railroads, as well as for other
train employees. FRA recognizes that
any change in these provisions would
require significant changes for the
industry in operations and
recordkeeping. FRA does not believe
that there is any reason to change these
provisions at the present time.
Paragraph (c) of this section allows a
train employee to work additional hours
in emergency situations. This paragraph
is substantively identical to the
‘‘emergency’’ provision of 49 U.S.C.
21103(c), which was unchanged by the
RSIA.
As provided by § 228.413, paragraphs
(a)(1), (a)(2), (b), and (c) are effective on
and after October 15, 2011. The
limitations provided by paragraph (a)(3)
are generally effective beginning on the
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date that is 180 days after the effective
date of this final rule, to give railroads
time to complete their analysis of their
work schedules. See discussion under
§ 228.407. A further delayed compliance
date of 545 days after the effective date
of this final rule is provided for
railroads engaged in tourist, scenic,
historic, or excursion rail passenger
transportation, as discussed above in
Section V, Response to Public
Comments on the NPRM.
Section 228.407 Analysis of Work
Schedules; Submissions; FRA Review
and Approval of Submissions; Fatigue
Mitigation Plans
This section requires a railroad
subject to this subpart to analyze the
schedules that the railroad intends its
employees subject to this subpart to
work, to identify those schedules at risk
for fatigue violating the fatigue
threshold, and to report to FRA in
certain circumstances.
Paragraph (a) requires the railroads to
analyze one work cycle, of each
schedule, using a valid biomathematical
model of performance and fatigue, to
determine whether the fatigue risk
posed by the schedule violates the
fatigue threshold. A work cycle is the
cycle within which the schedule
repeats. For example, if a schedule
called for an employee to work Monday
through Friday from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m.,
with Saturday and Sunday off, and then
report again Monday at 8 a.m., the work
cycle is the Monday to Sunday schedule
that then repeats. Other schedules on
some railroads may operate over a twoweek period, with certain days off
within the two-week cycle. Some
schedules do not require analysis, as
provided by paragraph (g), discussed
below.
Based on this analysis, the railroad is
required to identify those schedules at
risk for resulting in a level of fatigue
that would violate the fatigue threshold.
To the extent possible, the railroad is
required to apply fatigue mitigation
tools identified in the railroad’s fatigue
mitigation plan (including, but not
limited to, those tools described in
Section IV above) to mitigate the fatigue
risk in those schedules to a level that
does not violate the fatigue threshold. If
the railroad is unable to mitigate the risk
for fatigue presented by a particular
schedule to the point that it no longer
violates the fatigue threshold, and the
schedule cannot be modified to reduce
the fatigue risk sufficiently, then the
railroad must make a determination that
the fatigue risk cannot be sufficiently
mitigated to bring it within the fatigue
threshold, but that the schedule is
operationally necessary. Any schedule
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that has been identified as having a risk
for fatigue that violates the fatigue
threshold must be reported to FRA
within 180 days after the effective date
of the final rule, with an extension to
545 days after the effective of the final
rule for tourist, scenic, historic, and
excursion railroads, as specified by
§ 228.413.
Paragraph (b) of this section provides
further details as to the requirements
and procedures for submission of
schedules and other information to FRA
for review by the applicable compliance
date.
A railroad must submit to FRA those
schedules for which it has mitigated the
fatigue risk so that it no longer violates
the fatigue threshold, along with the
fatigue mitigation tools it applied to
each particular schedule to reduce the
fatigue risk.
A railroad must also submit to FRA
those schedules for which it is unable
to mitigate the fatigue risk to a level that
does not violate the fatigue threshold,
but which the railroad has determined
are operationally necessary. A railroad
must also submit the fatigue mitigation
tools that the railroad applied to each
schedule, if any, to reduce its fatigue
risk even if it could not be reduced to
the point that it no longer violated the
fatigue threshold. Finally, a railroad
must submit the basis for its
determination that each schedule is
operationally necessary.
If a railroad performs the required
analysis of its schedules and determines
that none of its schedules presents a risk
for a level of fatigue that violates the
fatigue threshold and requires
transmittal to FRA, the railroad must
submit a declaration that it has
performed the required analysis and
determined that none of its schedules
violate the fatigue threshold, and
therefore none are required to be
submitted.
FRA will review the submissions, and
will notify the railroad if the agency
takes any exception to the submitted
information within 120 days of FRA’s
receipt of the submission. Railroads are
required to correct any deficiencies
identified within the time frame
specified by FRA. FRA expects that it
will work with a railroad to address any
concerns with the schedules, mitigation
tools, or determinations of operational
necessity, and does not intend to dictate
how a schedule must be modified.
FRA will also audit each railroad’s
work schedules and mitigation tools
every two years to ensure compliance
with the requirements of this section.
Paragraph (c) of this section provides
a railroad’s options with regard to the
use of a biomathematical model of
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performance and fatigue. Paragraph
(c)(1) provides that a railroad may
submit to FRA’s Associate
Administrator for approval evidence of
the scientific validation of any
biomathematical model of performance
and fatigue that it wishes to use for the
analysis required by this section.
Decisions of the Associate
Administrator regarding the validity of
a model are subject to review as
provided by 49 CFR 211.55.
Paragraph (c)(2) provides that a
railroad may use a model that has
already been approved, and further
provides that FRA has approved the use
of both the FAST model and the FAID
model, both of which are discussed in
Section III above, for the analysis
required by this section. FRA has added
language to this paragraph to specify the
thresholds for FAST and FAID for the
purposes of compliance with this
regulation. In addition, the paragraph
now indicates that versions of FAST
and FAID besides those specifically
identified in the paragraph must be
submitted to FRA for approval prior to
use, under the procedures provided by
paragraph (c)(1) for approval of a new
model.
Paragraph (c)(3) has also been added
to this section, to provide that if a new
model is submitted to FRA for approval,
pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of this
section, FRA will publish notice of the
submission in the Federal Register, and
will provide an opportunity for
comment, before the Associate
Administrator makes a final
determination as to its approval or
disapproval. If the Associate
Administrator approves a new model as
having been validated and calibrated, so
that it can be used for schedule analysis
in compliance with this regulation, FRA
will also publish notice of this
determination in the Federal Register.
Paragraph (d) of this section requires
a railroad that changes its schedules to
analyze certain of those schedules and
submit them to FRA for approval.
Paragraph (d)(1)(i) requires a railroad
to analyze and submit for approval any
schedule that has been changed such
that it would differ from the parameters
of any schedule that had been
previously analyzed and approved. In
other words, a railroad does not have to
submit a revised schedule to FRA if it
is the same as any of its schedules that
had been previously approved, or if it is
a schedule that would not have had to
be analyzed or submitted if it were an
original schedule.
Specifically, if a schedule is revised
so that it is now the same as another
schedule that has previously been
submitted to and approved by FRA, that
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schedule does not have to be analyzed
or submitted. A railroad also does not
have to analyze or submit any schedule
that, as revised, is wholly within the
hours of 4 a.m. to 8 p.m. (a Type 1
schedule, which FRA considers per se
to present an acceptable level of risk for
fatigue that does not violate the fatigue
threshold). A railroad is also not
required to submit a schedule that, as
revised, is now the same as another
schedule that includes time outside the
4 a.m. to 8 p.m. hours, but that the
railroad analyzed and found not to
violate the fatigue threshold, and that
does not include any time between
midnight and 4 a.m. (because such a
schedule would qualify for treatment as
a Type 1 assignment).
However, any revised schedule that
includes time outside the hours of 4
a.m. to 8 p.m. that is not either the same
as a schedule previously approved, or
the same as a schedule previously
analyzed and found not to violate the
fatigue threshold and not including any
time between midnight and 4 a.m., has
to be analyzed by the railroad. Further,
a railroad must submit to FRA any
revised schedules that, when analyzed,
are found to violate the fatigue
threshold, along with the fatigue
mitigation tools that the railroad has
applied to mitigate the fatigue risk in
those schedules to a level that does not
violate the fatigue threshold. In
addition, if the railroad analyzes a
revised schedule and finds that it
cannot be mitigated so that the risk for
fatigue does not violate the fatigue
threshold, but is operationally
necessary, the railroad must submit the
schedule, along with any fatigue
mitigation tools that have been applied,
and the railroad’s determination of the
operational necessity of the schedule
and the basis for that determination.
Paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section
requires a railroad to analyze any
revised schedule that has been altered to
an extent that employees working the
schedule may be at risk of experiencing
a level of fatigue that violates the fatigue
threshold. This means that the railroad
must analyze a schedule that previously
was not at risk of violating the fatigue
threshold but that may be at risk as
revised. If such a revised schedule is in
fact found to violate the fatigue
threshold, the fatigue risk must be
mitigated or the schedule determined to
be operationally necessary, just as in the
initial analysis required by paragraph (a)
of this section.
In addition, any schedules that were
previously found to violate the fatigue
threshold and either mitigated or found
to be operationally necessary also have
to be analyzed when those schedules are
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changed, and submitted to FRA for
approval if the revised schedule violates
the fatigue threshold. Even though the
schedule was already known to present
a fatigue risk, the level of risk presented
by the schedule as revised could
increase or decrease, and different
mitigations may be warranted, or the
determination of operational necessity
could be different, depending on the
level of fatigue risk, as that
determination is based on balancing the
necessity with the risk. Therefore, FRA
review of these revised schedules, along
with the relevant fatigue mitigation
tools or determinations of operational
necessity, is required.
Paragraph (d)(2) of this section
requires that revised schedules and
supporting documentation that are
required to be submitted to FRA must be
submitted as provided by paragraph (b)
of this section, as soon as practicable
prior to the use of the new schedule.
Some railroads expressed the concern
that work schedule changes are
sometimes not finalized until shortly
before the schedules are to begin
operation, and the FRA approval
process could delay work schedule
implementation and published
timetable changes. However, the
regulatory language does not require
FRA approval before a new schedule
may begin operation, just that it be
submitted as soon as practicable prior to
use. In addition, given the limited
nature of the schedules that require FRA
review, FRA would expect some degree
of advance planning for those kinds of
schedules, so that the fatigue
implications of the revised schedules
can be fully understood by the railroad,
as well as by FRA. FRA has added
paragraph (d)(3) to provide that FRA
will respond to any submissions of
revised schedules as soon as practicable,
depending on the number and
complexity of the revisions submitted,
and that railroads are required to correct
any deficiencies identified by FRA
within the time frame specified by FRA
in its response. FRA expects to work
with the railroad to resolve any
concerns about schedules, mitigation
tools and determinations of operational
necessity, and does not intend to dictate
how a schedule must be modified.
In addition, some APTA members
also expressed concern about
compliance with the requirements of
this paragraph for special trains that
they are sometimes called upon to
operate. Many special events require
advance notification and planning. For
those events of which the railroad does
not have advance notice, FRA will
address those situations and work with
the railroad on a case-by-case basis.
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Paragraph (e) of this section requires
a railroad to have and comply with a
written fatigue mitigation plan, to
mitigate the potential for fatigue in its
work schedules, identified through the
analysis required by paragraphs (a) and
(d) of this section. The railroad is
required to review the plan every two
years and update it as necessary.
Paragraph (f) of this section requires
a railroad to consult in good faith with
its directly affected employees and any
labor organization representing them, on
the analysis of work schedules,
selection of mitigation tools, and any
submissions to FRA required by this
section. If the railroad and its affected
employees or their labor organization
cannot reach consensus on any of those
items, the employees or labor
organizations may file a statement with
FRA’s Associate Administrator,
explaining their views on any issue on
which consensus was not reached. Any
such statements will be considered by
FRA during the review and approval of
any submissions required by this
section.
Paragraph (g) of this section allows a
railroad not to analyze certain schedules
that categorically do not present an
unacceptable level of risk for fatigue
that violates the fatigue threshold. FRA
considers a Type 1 assignment to
present an acceptable level of risk for
fatigue that does not violate the fatigue
threshold. Therefore, such schedules do
not have to be analyzed according to
paragraph (g)(1). In addition, FRA also
considers it acceptable for railroads to
make an indirect determination that a
Type 2 assignment presents an
acceptable level of risk for fatigue that
does not violate the fatigue threshold if
it is no longer in duration than, and
fully contained within, the schedule of
another Type 2 assignment that has
already been analyzed and determined
to present an acceptable level of risk for
fatigue that does not violate the fatigue
threshold. As a result, these schedules
would not require further analysis. The
daily schedule of such an indirectly
analyzed assignment must be fully
contained or ‘‘nested’’ within the same
daily schedule of the previously
analyzed assignment. If any mitigations
were applied to the previously analyzed
schedule to make this determination,
the same or more effective mitigations
must also be applied to the indirectly
analyzed schedule to ensure that it is at
least as safe. In other words, FRA will
accept the results of an analysis
performed of a schedule with identical
or greater risk for fatigue that does not
violate the fatigue threshold. For
instance, if a tourist railroad operated a
train from 11 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. with an
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hour and a half break, and that schedule
did not pose an unacceptable level of
risk for fatigue and does not violate the
fatigue threshold, a similar schedule
operating from 1 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
would also be deemed to present an
acceptable level of risk for fatigue that
does not violate the fatigue threshold,
provided that if any mitigations were
applied to the first schedule to make
this determination, the same or more
effective mitigations were applied to the
second. FRA believes that this added
flexibility will allow railroads to make
determinations of whether schedules are
acceptable in a more timely and costeffective manner.
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Section 228.409 Requirements for
Railroad-Provided Employee Sleeping
Quarters During Interim Releases and
Other Periods Available for Rest Within
a Duty Tour
This section provides that any rest
facilities provided by a railroad for the
use of its employees during periods of
interim release or other periods during
a duty tour must be ‘‘clean, safe, and
sanitary,’’ and give the employee ‘‘an
opportunity for rest free from the
interruptions caused by noise under the
control of the’’ railroad. This section is
consistent with statutory language for
sleeping quarters at 49 U.S.C. 21106,
including sleeping quarters provided for
the use of employees during the
required minimum off-duty period.
Paragraph (b) of this section provides
that if the facilities are proposed as a
fatigue mitigation tool, for the purpose
of mitigating fatigue identified by the
schedule analysis required by § 228.407,
then those facilities are subject to the
requirement in § 228.407(f), that the
railroad consult with affected
employees and labor organizations.
Section 228.411 Training
This section establishes training
requirements for this rule. FRA believes
this provision is especially important
because the schedule analysis and
fatigue mitigation required by other
sections of this rule have little meaning
if employees are not aware of the level
of fatigue predicted to occur as a result
of their work schedule, and the
mitigation tools available to the
employee to reduce the fatigue risk. For
example, suppose that a railroad
submits a schedule to FRA for approval
that violates the fatigue threshold, but as
a mitigation tool, the railroad indicates
that it will provide facilities and allow
employees working that schedule to
take a nap during a two-hour break
between scheduled trains, and that the
insertion of a nap at that point decreases
the fatigue level so that the threshold is
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no longer violated. If the employee
working that schedule does not realize
that his or her work schedule violates
the fatigue threshold (which is a level of
fatigue at which, according to the
model, safety may be compromised), or
is unaware of facilities and policies
allowing the employee to take a nap, or
is unaware of the beneficial effect of the
nap on the predicted fatigue level, then
the employee will not take advantage of
the mitigation tool purported to reduce
the fatigue risk in that schedule, and the
risk will not actually be reduced.
Employees who are not currently
working assignments that violate the
fatigue threshold will also benefit from
the training required by this section, as
it may raise awareness of, and provide
strategies for addressing, other
circumstances in their lives that
contribute to their actual level of fatigue
that are not accounted for in work
schedule analysis. The training
requirements in this rule were the
subject of extensive discussion within
the Working Group, and members of the
Working Group recommended the
content of training, as well as the
training interval.
Paragraph (a) of this section requires,
as a general rule, that railroads subject
to this subpart provide training to
employees subject to this subpart and
their immediate supervisors. Paragraph
(b) of this section lists the minimum
subjects that must be covered in
training, based on the most current
available scientific and medical research
and literature. Although the subjects to
be covered are quite broad, the specific
information to be covered may change
over time based on scientific
developments or changes in a railroad’s
operations that may make additional
topics appropriate. The format of the
required training is not prescribed, as
FRA specifically intends to allow each
railroad the flexibility to provide
training at a level of formality and
complexity that is appropriate to its
operations and the needs of its
employees. Options include, but are not
limited to, classroom training,
computer-based training, review of
written materials, and oral job briefings.
Railroads may also combine this
training with other training provided to
their employees.
Paragraph (c) of this section requires
that training be provided to existing
affected employees no later than
December 31, 2012. Based on comments
received, this is a change from the
NPRM, which had proposed to require
training as soon as practicable. The
revised deadline for initial training
provides greater certainty, and allows
railroads to schedule the training in
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50389
their normal cycle. Training is required
to be provided to new employees hired
after December 31, 2012, before they
first work a schedule for the railroad
that is subject to analysis under this
subpart. Although the NPRM had
proposed to require that new employees
receive training within 90 days after
they work a schedule subject to
analysis, the provision has been revised
in the final rule to be consistent with
the latest version of FRA’s forthcoming
training standards (a separate
rulemaking), as members of the Working
Group requested that the interval in this
rule be consistent with the training
standards.
Paragraph (d) of this section requires
refresher training at least every three
years, and when significant changes are
made to the railroad’s fatigue mitigation
plan or to the available fatigue
mitigation tools applied to an
employee’s assignment or to
assignments at the location where the
employee works. Railroads also have the
flexibility to select an appropriate
method of providing refresher training,
which will likely be less detailed, and
could also be less formal, than the
initial training provided to an employee,
depending on the extent of any new
information to be presented.
Paragraph (e) of this section requires
a railroad to keep records of each
employee provided training and to
retain these records for three years.
Paragraph (f) of this section provides
an opportunity for tourist, scenic,
historic, and excursion railroads to be
excluded from the duty to comply with
this section. The exclusion is available
to such a railroad if its train employees
subject to this rule are assigned to work
only schedules that are wholly between
the hours of 4 a.m. and 8 p.m. on the
same calendar day, and that comply
with the provisions of § 228.405, if the
railroad provides written notice to FRA.
Such a notice is required to help FRA
ensure that the exclusion is exercised
only by those railroads eligible for it in
fact and not by inadvertence. FRA
expects that most tourist, scenic,
historic and excursion railroads will
have schedules that do not violate the
fatigue threshold and do not have to be
mitigated, and that these railroads will
submit a declaration of such to FRA
pursuant to § 228.407(b)(2).
Unfortunately, that declaration does not
serve the same purpose as a declaration
under this paragraph, because the
former could include schedules having
time outside the hours of 4 a.m. and 8
p.m. that have been analyzed and do not
violate the fatigue threshold. Railroads
operating schedules outside those hours
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are not eligible for the conditional
exclusion provided by this paragraph.
Section 228.413 Compliance Date for
Regulations; Exemption From
Compliance With Statute.
This section provides, that, in general,
the railroads subject to this subpart
must comply with this subpart and
associated recordkeeping requirements,
with respect to their train employees
who are engaged in commuter or
intercity rail passenger transportation,
beginning April 12, 2012. However,
some provisions governing the hours of
service of these employees go into effect
for all railroads subject to this subpart
on October 15, 2011, specifically
§§ 228.401, 228.403, 228.405(a)(1)–(2),
(b), and (c), and 228.409 (a).
As an exception to this general
principle, all railroads providing tourist,
scenic, historic, or excursion rail
passenger transportation subject to this
subpart are not required to comply with
the provisions of the subpart with
which they would otherwise be required
to comply on and after April 12, 2012
until April 13, 2013. As was discussed
in Section V, Response to Public
Comments on the NRPM, FRA has
added this approximately one-year
delay of the compliance date to address
the concerns of a commenter.
This section also provides that
railroads subject to this subpart are
exempt from complying with the
statutory hours of service requirements
currently in effect for them, which are
the requirements of 49 U.S.C. 21103 as
it was in effect the day before the
enactment of the RSIA, and are also
exempt from complying with new
section 21103, which is 49 U.S.C. 21103
as it was amended by the RSIA effective
July 16, 2009. See 49 U.S.C. 21102(c).
VII. Regulatory Impact and Notices
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A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
and DOT Regulatory Policies and
Procedures
This rule has been evaluated in
accordance with existing policies and
procedures under Executive Orders
12866 and 13563 as well as DOT
policies and procedures. The economic
impacts of the rule are well under $100
million. FRA has prepared and placed
in the docket a regulatory impact
analysis (RIA) addressing the economic
impact of this rule over a 20-year
period. This section summarizes the
impacts of the rule.
This regulation is intended to
promote safe railroad operations by
limiting the hours of service for
passenger railroad train employees, and
ensuring that they receive adequate
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opportunities for rest in the course of
performing their duties. The main goal
of this rulemaking is to identify and
reduce fatigue for passenger train
employees.
FRA is establishing substantive hours
of service regulations, including
maximum on-duty periods, minimum
off-duty periods, and other
requirements, for train employees of
passenger railroads. The regulations
require that passenger railroads analyze
and mitigate the risks for fatigue in the
schedules worked by their train
employees, and that the railroads
submit to FRA the relevant schedules
and fatigue mitigation plans for
approval. The RSIA established a limit
of 276 hours each calendar month for
train employees on service performed
for a railroad, and a limit of 30 hours on
time spent in or waiting for deadhead
transportation to a point of final release;
increased the quantity of the statutory
minimum off-duty period after being on
duty for 12 hours in broken service from
8 hours of rest to 10 hours of rest;
prohibited communication with train or
signal employees during certain
minimum statutory rest periods; and
established mandatory time off duty for
train employees of 48 hours after
initiating an on-duty period on 6
consecutive days, or 72 hours after
initiating an on-duty period on 7
consecutive days. In absence of a final
rule effective before October 16, 2011,
passenger railroad train employees
would be subject to the more stringent
freight hours of service laws described
above. Until then, passenger railroads
will continue to operate under the hours
of service laws in effect in effect prior
to the enactment of the RSIA. Thus,
issuance of this regulation relieves
railroads covered by this rule from
becoming covered by the stricter
statutory hours of service laws
governing freight railroads and their
train crews.
The RSIA mandated that in issuing
regulations FRA ‘‘consider scientific
and medical research related to fatigue
and fatigue abatement, railroad
scheduling and operating practices that
improve safety and reduce employee
fatigue, a railroad’s use of new or novel
technology intended to reduce or
eliminate human error, the variations in
freight and passenger railroad
scheduling practices and operating
conditions, the variations in duties and
operating conditions for employees, a
railroad’s required or voluntary use of
fatigue management plans * * *, and
any other relevant factors.’’ 49 U.S.C.
21109(c). FRA adhered to this mandate.
In addition, FRA relied on its RSAC to
make recommendations with respect to
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this rulemaking and this rule reflects the
recommendations of this committee.
FRA has analyzed the economic
impacts of this rule against a ‘‘no
regulatory action’’ baseline that reflects
what would happen in absence of this
rulemaking (i.e., the freight hours of
service laws are applied to passenger
railroads) as well as a ‘‘status quo’’
baseline that reflects present conditions
(i.e., primarily, the statutory hours of
service provisions (specifically, old
section 21103 and, secondarily, the
applicable hours of service
recordkeeping and reporting
regulations) that have and will continue
to apply to passenger railroads until
they become subject to either the freight
hours of service laws on October 16,
2011 or this rule prior to that). With
respect to the ‘‘no regulatory action’’
baseline, this rule represents a
substantially more cost-effective
alternative for achieving the goal of
identifying and mitigating unacceptable
fatigue risk levels and thus ensuring the
safety of passenger train operations.
Over the 20-year period analyzed, the
undiscounted costs associated with the
‘‘no regulatory action’’ alternative total
$75.5 million compared to $2.1 million
for the FRA proposal. Similarly, when
discounted at 7 percent, the costs
associated with the ‘‘no regulatory
action’’ alternative total $59.0 million
compared to $1.3 million for this rule
and when discounted at 3 percent, the
costs associated with the ‘‘no regulatory
action’’ alternative total $66.8 million
compared to $1.6 million for this rule.
The quantified accident reduction
benefits achieved under both the ‘‘no
regulatory action’’ baseline and this rule
total $1.2 million (undiscounted), $0.6
million (PV, 7 percent), and $0.9 million
(PV, 3 percent). FRA does not expect
that the overall number of casualties
and property damages prevented will
differ under either scenario.
Implementation of this rule would yield
these benefits at lower cost. However,
there are significant additional potential
safety enhancement benefits that may
result from the FRA approach. FRA
believes that the safety of passenger
train operations will be enhanced under
this rule as a result of subjecting every
crew assignment to a biomathematical
analysis either via the analyses
conducted while developing the RSAC
recommendation or the analyses that
will be performed by railroads in the
years ahead. The information that
railroads will have as a result of this
rule regarding fatigue, its causes and
symptoms, and its impact on safety will
allow them to make crew assignments
that take this into consideration and
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minimize fatigue beyond the
requirements of this rule. FRA is
confident that, overall, fatigue
awareness training will result in a
stronger safety culture that will extend
beyond railroad operations, which is a
benefit that extends beyond what would
result under the freight hours of service
law. For instance, safety and health
benefits will accrue from the transfer of
knowledge to employees, their families,
friends and others with whom they may
share the fatigue knowledge that they
acquire from the required fatigue
awareness training programs. This
fatigue awareness will result in more
optimal decisions regarding rest and
sleep, leading to less fatigue and
improved safety outside of passenger
train operations during the course of
daily activities that may include the
operation of motor vehicles or other
heavy machinery. This fatigue
awareness will also result in proper
identification and treatment, if
necessary, of fatigue symptoms.
With respect to the ‘‘status-quo’’
baseline, this rule would impose costs
that are higher than the safety benefits
that were quantified. Costs compared to
the ‘‘status quo’’ baseline total $2.1
million (undiscounted), $1.3 million
(PV, 7 percent), and $1.6 million (PV, 3
percent). Quantified benefits compared
to the ‘‘status quo’’ baseline total $1.2
million (undiscounted), $0.6 million
(PV, 7 percent), and $0.9 million (PV, 3
percent). However, there are additional
benefits that have not been quantified,
but should be considered when
comparing the overall costs and
benefits. For instance, as noted above,
FRA believes that the safety of
passenger train operations will be
enhanced under this rule as a result of
subjecting every crew assignment to a
biomathematical analysis either via the
analyses conducted while developing
the RSAC recommendation or the
analyses that will be performed by
railroads in the years ahead. The
information that railroads will have as
a result of this rule regarding fatigue, its
causes and symptoms, and its impact on
safety will allow them to make crew
assignments that take this into
consideration and minimize fatigue
beyond the requirements of this rule.
FRA is confident that, overall, fatigue
awareness training will result in a
stronger safety culture that will extend
beyond railroad operations from the
transfer of knowledge to employees,
their families, friends and others with
whom they may share the fatigue
knowledge that they acquire from the
required fatigue awareness training
programs. This fatigue awareness will
result in more optimal decisions
regarding rest and sleep, leading to less
fatigue and improved safety outside of
passenger train operations during the
course of daily activities that may
include the operation of motor vehicles
or other heavy machinery. This fatigue
awareness will also result in proper
identification and treatment, if
necessary, of fatigue symptoms.
Separately, accident avoidance will
result in fewer unplanned delays to
passengers and freight commodities
impacted by passenger train accident
and incidents that result in blocking one
or more tracks for prolonged periods.
These costs can be very substantial
given the need to investigate accidents
and often clear wreckage. Finally, there
is the non-quantified benefit of ensuring
that passenger railroads do not
unknowingly require train employees to
work schedules with unacceptable highfatigue risk levels. It is not unreasonable
to expect that the unquantified benefits
will raise the benefits to a level quite
comparable to the costs.
FRA notes that, in addition to the
quantified safety benefits that would
result from the rule, there are additional
unquantified benefits which may result
from the implementation of the rule, as
discussed above. FRA expects these
unquantified benefits to prevent several
serious injuries, which may or may not
be related to the operation of trains, over
the next twenty years; when these
benefits are combined with the
quantified safety benefits, the benefits
are comparable to the quantified costs of
the rule.
The table below presents the costs
associated with both the ‘‘no regulatory
action’’ alternative and this regulation.
No regulatory action alternative
FRA final rule
Cost description
Undiscounted
New Engineer Training, Initial (20%
New Hires).
New Engineer Training, Refresher
(20% New Hires).
New Conductor Training, Initial (20%
New Hires).
New Conductor Training, Refresher
(20% New Hires).
Work Schedule Analysis (No-Reg Action)/Initial Analysis of Work Schedules + Follow-up Analysis and Fatigue Mitigation Plan Review.
Indirect Determination that Type 2
Schedules
are
Acceptable
(‘‘Nested’’ Schedules Reduction.
Biomathematical Model of Fatigue
Software.
Use of Rest Facilities .........................
Fatigue Training .................................
Fatigue Training (Tourist & Excursion)
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Total (rounded) ............................
PV@7%
Undiscounted
PV@7%
$31,237,549
$26,299,825
$28,705,081
0 ...................................
0 ...............................
0.
$4,599,050
$2,278,431
$3,327,802
0 ...................................
0 ...............................
0.
$30,847,974
$25,942,971
$28,330,908
0 ...................................
0 ...............................
0.
$8,636,745
$4,278,146
$6,249,071.15
0 ...................................
0 ...............................
0.
$189,723
$177,312
$184,198
($126,482 + $240,316)
= $366,799.
($118,208 +
$122,175) =
$240,382.
($122,798 +
$175,894) =
$298,692.
......................
......................
..............................
¥$91,700 .....................
¥$60,096 .................
¥$74,673.
0
0
0
$417,500 ......................
$268,723 ..................
$337,240.
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
$30,988 ........................
$1,312,920 ...................
$20,000 ........................
$28,961 ....................
$782,634 ..................
$12,000 ....................
$30,086.
$1,025,158.
$16,000.
$75,511,041
$58,976,685
$66,797,059
$2,056,507 ...................
$1,272,605 ...............
$1,632,502.
FRA estimates that the recordkeeping
and reporting costs per employee record
under the no-action alternative and this
rule will be practically the same. Under
the ‘‘no regulatory action’’ alternative,
costs for recordkeeping and reporting
employee hours of service are reflected
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17:08 Aug 11, 2011
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PV@3%
in the New Engineer and New
Conductor training requirements and
the Work Schedule Analysis burden.
Under this rule, the costs associated
with the recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for the substantive hours
of service changes are reflected in
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PV@3%
Fatigue Training as well as the Initial
and Follow-up Analysis and Fatigue
Mitigation Plan Review.
The estimated benefits of the rule
relative to the ‘‘status quo’’ baseline,
based on the above calculations of
potentially prevented accident damages,
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injuries, and fatalities, over a 20-year
period of analysis are presented below.
INTERCITY PASSENGER, COMMUTER, TOURIST AND EXCURSION RAILROADS
[All track types]
VSL = $6 M
undiscounted
benefits
Accident reduction benefits
VSL = $6 M
discounted
PV@ 7%
VSL = $6 M
discounted
PV@ 3%
Property Damage .........................................................................................................................
Injuries .........................................................................................................................................
Fatalities .......................................................................................................................................
$685,915
94,861
407,634
$348,713
48,227
207,237
$502,039
69,431
298,358
Total (rounded) .....................................................................................................................
1,188,410
604,177
869,828
FRA does not expect that the overall
number of casualties prevented will
differ under this rule or the ‘‘no
regulatory action’’ baseline in which the
freight hours of service law would apply
to passenger train crews.
After careful consideration of
comments received in response to the
NPRM, FRA has made modifications to
its proposal in the final rule that reduce
the overall burden by approximately
$100,000 due in equal part to
flexibilities added by extending the
deadline for fatigue awareness training
and the expanded ability to rely on the
findings of analyses conducted for other
assignments. Nevertheless, since this
would not greatly impact the overall
conclusions, FRA has not adjusted its
quantified cost and benefit estimates for
use in this final rule.
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B. Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132, ‘‘Federalism’’
(64 FR 43255 (Aug. 10, 1999)), requires
FRA to develop an accountable process
to ensure ‘‘meaningful and timely input
by State and local officials in the
development of regulatory policies that
have federalism implications.’’ ‘‘Policies
that have federalism implications’’ are
defined in the Executive Order to
include regulations that have
‘‘substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.’’ Under Executive
Order 13132, the agency may not issue
a regulation with federalism
implications that imposes substantial
direct compliance costs and that is not
required by statute, unless the Federal
government provides the funds
necessary to pay the direct compliance
costs incurred by State and local
governments, the agency consults with
State and local governments, or the
agency consults with State and local
government officials early in the process
of developing the regulation. Where a
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regulation has federalism implications
and preempts State law, the agency
seeks to consult with State and local
officials in the process of developing the
regulation.
This rule has been analyzed in
accordance with the principles and
criteria contained in Executive Order
13132. This rule would not have
substantial effect on the States or their
political subdivisions; it would not
impose any compliance costs; and it
would not affect the relationships
between the Federal government and
the States or their political subdivisions,
or the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Therefore, the
consultation and funding requirements
of Executive Order 13132 do not apply.
Nevertheless, State and local officials
were involved in developing this rule.
The RSAC, which was used to assist in
the development of this rule, has as
permanent members, the AASHTO and
the ASRSM.
However, this rule could have
preemptive effect by operation of law
under a provision of the former Federal
Railroad Safety Act of 1970 (FRSA) (49
U.S.C. 20106 (Section 20106)) and the
HSL. See Public Law 103–272 (1994)
repealing the Federal Railroad Safety
Act of 1970 and the HSL and revising
and enacting their provisions as positive
law in title 49 U.S. Code. The FRSA
provides that States may not adopt or
continue in effect any law, regulation, or
order related to railroad safety or
security that covers the subject matter of
a regulation prescribed or order issued
by the Secretary of Transportation (with
respect to railroad safety matters) or the
Secretary of Homeland Security (with
respect to railroad security matters),
except when the State law, regulation,
or order qualifies under the ‘‘essentially
local safety or security hazard’’
exception to Section 20106. Moreover,
the HSL have been interpreted by the
Supreme Court as totally preempting the
field of the hours of labor of railroad
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employees. Erie RR. Co. v. New York,
233 U.S. 671 (1914).
C. Executive Order 13175
FRA analyzed this rule in accordance
with the principles and criteria
contained in Executive Order 13175
(‘‘Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments’’). Because
this rule does not significantly or
uniquely affect tribes and does not
impose substantial and direct
compliance costs on Indian tribal
governments, the funding and
consultation requirements of Executive
Order 13175 do not apply, and a tribal
summary impact statement is not
required.
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act and
Executive Order 13272
To ensure that the potential impact of
this rulemaking on small entities is
properly considered, FRA developed
this rule in accordance with Executive
Order 13272 (‘‘Proper Consideration of
Small Entities in Agency Rulemaking’’)
and DOT’s policies and procedures to
promote compliance with the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601
et seq.).
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
requires an agency to review regulations
to assess their impact on small entities.
An agency must conduct a regulatory
flexibility analysis unless it determines
and certifies that a rule is not expected
to have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.
As discussed in earlier sections of this
preamble, FRA is establishing hours of
service regulations, including maximum
on-duty periods, minimum off-duty
periods, and other requirements, for
train employees providing commuter
and intercity rail passenger
transportation. The regulations require
that commuter and intercity passenger
railroads analyze and mitigate the risks
for fatigue in the schedules worked by
their train employees, and that the
railroads submit to FRA for its approval
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the relevant schedules and fatigue
mitigation plans. This rule also applies
to train employees of tourist, scenic,
excursion, and historic railroads (tourist
and excursion railroads) as well.
Issuance of these regulations relieves
railroads covered by this rule from being
covered by the more strict hours of
service laws governing freight train
crews.
This regulation is authorized by
Section 108(e) of the RSIA (49 U.S.C.
21109(b)) and is intended to promote
safe railroad operations by limiting the
hours of service for passenger railroad
train employees and ensuring that they
receive adequate opportunities for rest
in the course of performing their duties.
The main goal of this rulemaking is to
identify and reduce fatigue for the
employees covered by the final rule. As
described in Section II of this preamble,
FRA has based the regulation on
scientific research related to fatigue and
fatigue abatement, as applied to railroad
scheduling practices and operating
conditions for train employees of
commuter and intercity passenger
railroads. FRA is also making
conforming changes to existing hours of
service recordkeeping requirements.
Federal laws governing railroad
employees’ hours of service date back to
1907 with the enactment of the Hours of
Service Act. Railroads have been subject
to the provisions of this Act or successor
Federal hours of service laws since it
was first enacted. Currently, railroads
are subject to the version of 49 U.S.C.
21103 that was in effect the day before
the enactment of the RSIA, with respect
to their train employees who are
engaged in intercity or commuter rail
transportation, including tourist and
excursion rail operations.
In the NPRM, FRA certified that its
proposal would result in ‘‘no significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.’’ FRA received
one response to the NPRM from a small
entity directly impacted by its proposal.
Strasburg expressed concern regarding a
‘‘Dinner Train’’ schedule operated by
one of its train crews with an
assignment from 11 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.,
including a 1.5-hour break. Strasburg
notes that it ‘‘believes that the analysis
required to determine the tranquil
nature of these assignments is rooted in
common sense and should not require
yet an additional regulatory expense of
human performance modeling.’’
Strasburg further states that it therefore
‘‘believes that it should be exempt from
§ 228.407 work schedule analysis and
that its dinner train assignments should
be specifically exempted from the
§ 228.5 [sic] Definitions of a Type 2
assignment.’’ For purposes of assessing
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the impacts of this final rule on this
schedule, FRA analyzed this assignment
using the FAST model and found that
this Type 2 assignment could be
considered a Type 1 assignment and not
require any adjustment or mitigation. In
fact, based on this analysis, other
identical or shorter assignments ending
at 8:30 p.m. could also be considered
Type 1 assignments and not require any
adjustment or mitigation.
To alleviate the impact on small
railroads in general, FRA is also
extending the effective date of the final
rule for all tourist, scenic, historic, and
excursion railroads by one year relative
to other intercity and passenger
railroads. This should allow such
railroads more time to perform any
necessary analysis of assignments and
in some cases to take advantage of any
analyses that will have already been
performed by larger railroads, to the
extent that these are available. This
additional time will also allow small
railroads to implement any assignment
adjustments or other mitigating
measures. In addition, FRA is providing
an opportunity for tourist, scenic,
historic, and excursion railroads to be
excluded from the training provisions of
this rule. The exclusion is available to
such railroads if their train employees
subject to this rule only work schedules
wholly between the hours of 4 a.m. and
8 p.m. and they provide written notice
to FRA. This exclusion should further
reduce the burden on small railroads.
FRA is certifying that this rule will
result in ‘‘no significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.’’ The following section explains
the reasons for this certification.
1. Description of Regulated Entities and
Impacts
The ‘‘universe’’ of the entities under
consideration includes only those small
entities that can reasonably be expected
to be directly affected by the provisions
of this rule. In this case, the ‘‘universe’’
comprises Class III freight railroads that
provide train crews for commuter
operations and tourist, scenic, historic
and excursion railroads.
‘‘Small entity’’ is defined in 5 U.S.C.
601 (Section 601). Section 601(3)
defines a ‘‘small entity’’ as having the
same meaning as ‘‘small business
concern’’ under Section 3 of the Small
Business Act. This includes any small
business concern that is independently
owned and operated, and is not
dominant in its field of operation.
Section 601(4), likewise includes within
the definition of ‘‘small entities’’ notfor-profit enterprises that are
independently owned and operated, and
are not dominant in their fields of
PO 00000
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50393
operation. Additionally, Section 601(5)
defines as ‘‘small entities’’ governments
of cities, counties, towns, townships,
villages, school districts, or special
districts with populations less than
50,000.
The U.S. Small Business
Administration (SBA) stipulates ‘‘size
standards’’ for small entities. It provides
that the largest a for-profit railroad
business firm may be and still classify
as a ‘‘small entity’’ is 1,500 employees
for ‘‘Line-Haul Operating’’ railroads,
and 500 employees for ‘‘Short-Line
Operating’’ railroads.39
Federal agencies may adopt their own
size standards for small entities in
consultation with SBA and in
conjunction with public comment.
Pursuant to the authority provided to it
by SBA, FRA has published a final
policy that formally establishes small
entities as railroads that meet the line
haulage revenue requirements of a Class
III railroad.40 Currently, the revenue
requirement is $20 million or less in
annual operating revenue, adjusted
annually for inflation ($30.3 million for
2009). This threshold is based on the
Surface Transportation Board’s (STB)
threshold of a Class III railroad carrier,
which is adjusted by applying the
railroad revenue deflator adjustment.41
FRA is using the STB’s threshold in its
definition of ‘‘small entities’’ for this
rule.
This regulation applies to railroads
with respect to their train employees
engaged in commuter or intercity rail
passenger transportation as well as train
employees of tourist and excursion
railroads. Intercity passenger railroads
include Amtrak and the Alaska
Railroad, both of which employ their
own train crews and neither of which is
considered a small entity. Amtrak is a
Class I railroad, and the Alaska Railroad
is a Class II railroad. The Alaska
Railroad is owned by the State of
Alaska, which has a population well in
excess of 50,000.
All commuter railroads in operation
in the U.S. serve major metropolitan
areas with populations higher than
50,000. Although some commuter
railroads contract with Amtrak or other
entities to operate some or all of their
trains, most employ their own train
crews.
Train employees of only two small
entities that operate trains under
39 ‘‘Table of Size Standards,’’ U.S. Small Business
Administration, January 31, 1996, 13 CFR part 121.
See also NAICS Codes 482111 and 482112.
40 See 68 FR 24891 (May 9, 2003); 49 CFR part
209, app. C.
41 For further information on the calculation of
the specific dollar limit, please see 49 CFR part
1201.
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 156 / Friday, August 12, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
contract for commuter railroads would
be covered by this rule, and they are not
expected to be impacted significantly.
One of these Class III freight railroads
with commuter rail train crew schedules
will likely modify its schedule by a few
minutes each day so that all of its
schedules will be considered Type 1
assignments as defined by this rule and
thus be determined not to violate the
fatigue threshold, thus excluding the
railroad from the requirement to analyze
those work schedules. Their current
train crew assignments would be
allowed to continue with a less than 5
minute change. The other Class III
freight railroad with commuter train
crew schedules would have to evaluate
one or two schedules directly using a
biomathematical model or indirectly by
relying on the determination from
another railroad that the same schedule,
or a schedule within which it can nest,
does not violate the fatigue threshold.
Given the small size of the commuter
operation, the burden of analysis and
training would be small in absolute
magnitude and in proportion to the size
of their operation. Although this rule
imposes some additional recordkeeping
burden on these entities for tracking
days of consecutive service, the increase
would be nominal and proportionate to
the extent of their passenger train
service, which is quite limited. These
train crews are also subject to initial and
refresher training no less frequently
than every three years. This training
must cover the following topics: (1)
Physiological and human factors that
affect fatigue, as well as strategies to
reduce or mitigate the effects of fatigue;
(2) opportunities for identification,
diagnosis, and treatment of any medical
condition that may affect alertness or
fatigue, including sleep disorders; (3)
alertness strategies, such as policies on
napping, to address acute drowsiness
and fatigue while an employee is on
duty; (4) opportunities to obtain restful
sleep at lodging facilities, including
employee sleeping quarters provided by
the railroad; and (5) the effects of abrupt
changes in rest cycles for employees.
There is flexibility with respect to how
the training is delivered (e.g., computerbased training, job briefings, pamphlets,
as well as in class instruction). Such
training could be accomplished in about
one hour initially and 15 minutes
triennially per train employee. Small
freight railroads operating commuter
trains could recoup any costs associated
with this rulemaking from the
commuter authorities with which they
contract.
The requirements of this rule that
apply to tourist and excursion railroads
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are those contained in subpart F,
Substantive Hours of Service
Requirements for Train Employees
Engaged in Commuter or Intercity Rail
Passenger Transportation, as well as the
conforming changes to the
recordkeeping requirements in subpart
B. These railroads benefit from a
delayed compliance date for the
portions of this rule requiring the
analysis of schedules and associated
recordkeeping requirements. FRA
regulates approximately 140 tourist and
excursion railroads nationwide.
Approximately 130 of these railroads
have 15 or fewer covered employees and
thus are eligible to be considered for
exemption from the limitations that
would be imposed under § 228.403. As
noted earlier, this particular exemption
is substantively identical to the
exemption provision of the HSL at 49
U.S.C. 21102(b), which was unchanged
by the RSIA, and § 228.403 provides the
same opportunity for a railroad to seek
an exemption from the requirements of
this subpart as a railroad has to seek an
exemption from the statutory
requirements applicable to its other
employees. Additionally, tourist, scenic,
historic, and excursion railroads,
regardless of size, may be excluded from
the requirement to provide training, so
long as their schedules are wholly
within the hours of 4 a.m. and 8 p.m.
Tourist, scenic, historic, and
excursion railroads by virtue of their
train service schedules generally have
only Type 1 assignments, which
categorically do not violate the fatigue
threshold, thus excluding the railroads
from the requirement to analyze or
mitigate most of their schedules.
Scheduled assignments that include
‘‘Dinner Train’’ operations may be the
only schedules impacted by the
requirement for analysis or mitigation.
Information available regarding train
schedules for these railroads indicates
that trains do not operate for more than
12 hours on any day, with virtually all
train service starting at 10 a.m. or
afterward. Dinner trains operate until no
later than 10 p.m. and are not in
operation every day of the week. They
generally operate once a week and in no
case more than three days a week. Thus
the impact of crew assignment
limitations would be minimal. Impacted
railroads are likely to be able to rely on
the analysis of another railroad due to
the delayed compliance date for tourist,
scenic, historic, and excursion railroads,
as many of their schedules will either be
the same as those analyzed by another
railroad, or will nest within a longer
schedule analyzed by another railroad.
In the rare instances where new analysis
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Frm 00036
Fmt 4701
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is required, the railroads may conduct
the analysis in-house or contract it out
for a nominal fee. Given the similarity
of the assignments, the tourist, scenic,
historic, and excursion railroads
impacted may decide to address the
assignments that include ‘‘Dinner
Trains’’ jointly, either under the
auspices of the Tourist Railway
Association, Inc. or otherwise. The
consecutive-day limitations will likely
not impact these railroads since they
already accommodate time off for their
train crews. Given the very limited train
service and the need to accommodate
time off now, crew schedules should
allow for the proposed time off allowing
the consecutive days of service
requirements to be met. Since ‘‘Dinner
Trains’’ are not included in most
assignments, the majority of current
scheduled train crew assignments
would run no later than 6:30 p.m. and
thus be considered Type 1 assignments
and be unaffected, assuming the
consecutive-day limitations do not
affect them. Although the modifications
to existing recordkeeping requirements
will impose some additional net burden
on these entities, the increase is
nominal and proportionate to the size of
their passenger service, which is quite
limited. Where these entities are not
able to take advantage of the exclusion
from the training requirements due to
the operation of trains past 8 p.m., they
will be required to train their employees
as discussed above. The impact of the
training requirements will vary in
proportion to the size of each operation.
Note, however, that the training cost
associated with this rule is lower than
that associated with complying with the
training requirements for the freight
hours of service laws.
The limitations on service afford
significantly more flexibility to
passenger train employees than those
imposed by the RSIA on freight train
employees. Given that, in absence of a
final rule effective by October 16, 2011,
passenger train employees would be
subject to the more stringent freight
hours of service laws (49 U.S.C. 21103),
issuance of this rule creates a cost
savings for small entities impacted. In
addition, the more stringent
requirements for schedules of
employees who operate trains during
the late night hours, in which the
fatigue risk is greatest, probably do not
affect any tourist and excursion
railroads because they do not operate
during late night hours.
No shippers, contractors, or small
governmental jurisdictions will be
directly impacted by this proposal.
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2. Certification
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility
Act, 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the FRA
Administrator certifies that this rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection
requirements in this final rule have been
submitted for approval under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq. The sections that
contain the current information
50395
collection requirements, which affect
both passenger and freight railroads,
and new information collection
requirements and the estimated time to
fulfill each requirement are as follows:
49 CFR section or statutory provision
Respondent universe
Total annual
responses
Average time
per response
228.11—Hours of Duty Records (Current Requirement) .............................
768 railroads/signal contractors .......
150 Dispatch Offices ........................
2 min./5 min./
10 min.
3 hours ...........
2,856,125
228.17—Dispatcher’s Record of Train Movements (Current Requirement)
228.19—Monthly Reports of Excess Service (Current Requirement But
Now includes consecutive days on duty).
228.103—Construction of Employee Sleeping Quarters—Petitions to allow
construction near work areas (Current Requirement).
228.203—Program Components (Current Requirements)—Electronic Recordkeeping—Modifications for Daylight Savings Time.
—System Security/Individual User Identification/Program Logic Capabilities/Search Capabilities.
228.205—Access to Electronic Records—(Current Requirement)—System
Access Procedures for Inspectors.
300 railroads .....................................
27,429,750
records.
200,750
records.
2,670 reports ..
2 hours ...........
5,340
50 railroads .......................................
1 petition ........
16 hours .........
16
9 railroads .........................................
5 modifications
120 hours .......
60
9 railroads .........................................
720 Hours ......
720
30 minutes .....
50
228.207—Training in Use of Electronic System—(Current Requirements)—Initial Training.
—Refresher Training ....................................................................................
768 railroads/signal contractors .......
1 hour .............
47,000
1 hour .............
2,200
49 U.S.C. 21102(b)—The Federal hours of service laws—Petitions for Exemption from Laws (Current Requirement).
228.403—Exemption requests from passenger/commuter railroads—(New
Requirements).
—Initial exemption requests from tourist/excursion railroads ......................
10 railroads .......................................
1 program w/
security/etc.
100 electronic
records access procedures.
47,000 tr. employees.
2,200 tr. employees.
2 petitions .......
10 hours .........
20
8 hours ...........
40
140 railroads .....................................
2 hours ...........
20
—Renewal exemption requests from tourist/excursion railroads .................
140 railroads .....................................
30 minutes .....
3
228.407—Analysis of Work Schedules Submissions (New Requirements)
—Reports to FRA of Work Schedules that Violate Fatigue Threshold ........
—Fatigue Mitigation Plans Submitted to FRA ..............................................
—Submission of Work Schedules Using Validation Model Violating
Threshold that can be mitigated by tools.
168
168
168
168
80 hours .........
2 hours ...........
4 hours ...........
4 hours ...........
2,240
40
60
60
—Submission of Work Schedules Using Validation Model Violating
Threshold that cannot be mitigated by tools.
168 railroads .....................................
4 hours ...........
20
—RR Determinations of necessary schedules .............................................
—RR Declaration that no work schedule needs to be submitted to FRA
for violating fatigue threshold.
—Corrected work schedules, etc .................................................................
—Submission of follow-up analysis by RR due to work schedule change ..
—Corrected work schedules, etc. ................................................................
—Updated fatigue mitigation plans ..............................................................
—RR consultations w/employees .................................................................
—Filed statements w/FRA by employees and employee organizations unable to reach consensus w/RR on work schedules or mitigation tools/
RR submissions to FRA.
228.411—Training Programs (New Requirements) .....................................
—Employee Initial Training ...........................................................................
168 railroads .....................................
168 railroads .....................................
2 hours ...........
1 hour .............
40
148
168 railroads .....................................
168 railroads .....................................
168 railroads .....................................
168 railroads .....................................
168 railroads .....................................
RR Employees/Employee Organizations.
2
4
2
4
4
2
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
...........
4
112
4
112
112
10
20 hours .........
1 hour .............
580
10,200
—Initial Training—New Employees ..............................................................
168 railroads .....................................
1 hour .............
150
n/a ..................
5 minutes .......
60 minutes .....
n/a
863
100
15 hours .........
60
Employees 42
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
—Triennial Refresher Training of
..........................................
—Records of Training ...................................................................................
—Written Declaration by Tourist Railroads for Exclusion from this Section’s Requirements.
Appendix D: Guidance on Fatigue Management Plans—(New Option) ......
All estimates include the time for
reviewing instructions; searching
existing data sources; gathering or
maintaining the needed data; and
reviewing the information. For
information or a copy of the paperwork
package submitted to OMB, contact Mr.
Robert Brogan at 202–493–6292 or Ms.
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768 railroads/signal contractors .......
768 railroads/signal contractors .......
28 railroads .......................................
railroads
railroads
railroads
railroads
.....................................
.....................................
.....................................
.....................................
168 railroads .....................................
168 railroads .....................................
168 railroads .....................................
168 railroads .....................................
140 railroads .....................................
168 railroads .....................................
Kimberly Toone at 202–493–6132 or via
e-mail at the following addresses:
Robert.Brogan@dot.gov;
Kimberly.Toone@dot.gov.
PO 00000
5 exemption
requests.
10 exempt requests.
5 renewal exemption requests.
28 analyses ....
20 reports .......
15 plans .........
15 work schedule submissions.
5 work schedule submissions.
20 decisions ...
148 written
declarations.
2 documents ..
28 analyses ....
2 documents ..
28 plans .........
28 plans .........
5 statements ..
29 programs ...
10,200 tr. employees.
150 trained
employees.
n/a ..................
10,350 records
100 written
declarations.
4 plans ...........
hours
hours
hours
hours
hours
hours
Total annual
burden hours
602,250
Organizations and individuals
desiring to submit comments on the
42 The burden associated with this requirement
occurs outside the scope of this information
collection submission. This burden will occur in
the fourth year following the effective date in the
Continued
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 156 / Friday, August 12, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
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collection of information requirements
should direct them to the Office of
Management and Budget, Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs, 725
17th St., NW., Washington, DC 20503,
attn: FRA Desk Officer. Comments may
also be sent via e-mail to OMB at the
following address: oira_
submission@omb.eop.gov.
OMB is required to make a decision
concerning the collection of information
requirements contained in this final 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.
FRA is not authorized to impose a
penalty on persons for violating
information collection requirements that
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 this final rule. The OMB control
number, when assigned, will be
announced by separate notice in the
Federal Register.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Pursuant to Section 201 of the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(Pub. L. 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 that ‘‘before
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 (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’’ detailing the effect
on State, local, and tribal governments
and the private sector. For the year
2010, this monetary amount of
$100,000,000 has been adjusted to
$140,800,000 to account for inflation.
This rule will not result in the
expenditure, in the aggregate, of
$140,800,000 in any one year, and thus
rule, which will be addressed in the renewal
submission for this information collection.
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preparation of such a statement is not
required.
G. Environmental Assessment
The National Environmental Policy
Act, 42 U.S.C. 4321–4375, requires that
Federal agencies analyze actions to
determine whether the action will have
a significant impact on the human
environment. This rule will not have a
significant impact on the human
environment.
H. Privacy Act
Anyone is able to search the
electronic form of all comments
received into any agency docket 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).
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 228
Administrative practice and
procedures, Buildings and facilities,
Hazardous materials transportation,
Noise control, Penalties, Railroad
employees, Railroad safety, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
The Rule
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, FRA amends part 228 of
chapter II, subtitle B, title 49 of the Code
of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 228—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 228
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 20103, 20107, 21101–
21109; Sec. 108, Div. A, Pub. L. 110–432, 122
Stat. 4860–4866; 49 U.S.C. 21301, 21303,
21304, 21311; 28 U.S.C. 2461, note; 49 U.S.C.
103; and 49 CFR 1.49.
2. Section 228.1 is amended by
removing the word ‘‘and’’ at the end of
paragraph (a), removing the period and
adding a semicolon in its place at the
end of paragraph (b), adding and
reserving paragraph (c), and adding
paragraph (d) to read as follows:
■
§ 228.1
Scope.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Prescribes substantive hours of
service requirements for train
employees engaged in commuter or
intercity rail passenger transportation.
■ 3. Section 228.3 is amended by
revising paragraph (b) introductory text
to read as follows:
§ 228.3
*
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*
Application.
*
Frm 00038
*
Fmt 4701
*
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(b) Except as provided in § 228.401 of
this part, this part does not apply to:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. Section 228.5 is amended by adding
definitions of Associate Administrator,
FRA, Type 1 assignment, and Type 2
assignment in alphabetical order to read
as follows:
§ 228.5
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Associate Administrator means the
Associate Administrator for Railroad
Safety/Chief Safety Officer, Office of
Railroad Safety, Federal Railroad
Administration, or any person to whom
he or she has delegated authority in the
matter concerned.
*
*
*
*
*
FRA means the Federal Railroad
Administration.
*
*
*
*
*
Type 1 assignment means an
assignment to be worked by a train
employee who is engaged in commuter
or intercity rail passenger transportation
that requires the employee to report for
duty no earlier than 4 a.m. on a calendar
day and be released from duty no later
than 8 p.m. on the same calendar day,
and that complies with the provisions of
§ 228.405. For the purposes of this part,
FRA considers a Type 1 assignment to
present an acceptable level of risk for
fatigue that does not violate the defined
fatigue threshold under a scientifically
valid, biomathematical model of human
performance and fatigue specified by
FRA at § 228.407(c)(1) or approved by
FRA under the procedures at
§ 228.407(c)(2). However, a Type 1
assignment that is delayed such that the
schedule actually worked includes any
period of time between midnight and 4
a.m. is considered a Type 2 assignment
for the purposes of compliance with
§ 228.405.
Type 2 assignment. (1) Type 2
assignment means an assignment to be
worked by a train employee who is
engaged in commuter or intercity rail
passenger transportation that requires
the employee to be on duty for any
period of time between 8:01 p.m. on a
calendar day and 3:59 a.m. on the next
calendar day, or that otherwise fails to
qualify as a Type 1 assignment. A Type
2 assignment is considered a Type 1
assignment if—
(i) It does not violate the defined
fatigue threshold under a scientifically
valid biomathematical model of human
performance and fatigue specified by
FRA at 228.407(c)(2) or approved by
FRA under the procedures at
§ 228.407(c)(1);
(ii) It complies with the provisions of
§ 228.405; and
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(iii) It does not require the employee
to be on duty for any period of time
between midnight and 4 a.m.
(2) If a Type 2 assignment that would
normally qualify to be treated as a Type
1 assignment is delayed so that the
schedule actually worked includes any
period of time between midnight and 4
a.m., the assignment is considered a
Type 2 assignment for the purposes of
compliance with § 228.405.
■ 5. Section 228.11 is amended by
revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 228.11
Hours of duty records.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Exceptions to requirements for
train employees. Paragraphs (b)(13)
through (b)(16) of this section do not
apply to the hours of duty records of
train employees providing commuter
rail passenger transportation or intercity
rail passenger transportation. In
addition to the information required by
paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(12) of this
section, each hours of duty record for a
train employee providing commuter rail
passenger transportation or intercity rail
passenger transportation shall include
the following information:
(1) For train employees providing
commuter rail passenger transportation
or intercity rail passenger
transportation, the date on which the
series of at most 14 consecutive
calendar days began for the duty tour.
(2) For train employees providing
commuter rail passenger transportation
or intercity rail passenger
transportation, any date prior to the
duty tour and during the series of at
most 14 consecutive calendar days on
which the employee did not initiate an
on-duty period, if any.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 6. Section 228.19 is amended by
adding paragraphs (c)(5) through (8) to
read as follows:
§ 228.19
service.
Monthly reports of excess
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(5) A train employee, after first
initiating an on-duty period each day for
6 or more consecutive calendar days
including one or more Type 2
assignments, the last on-duty period of
which ended at the employee’s home
terminal, initiates an on-duty period
without having had 24 consecutive
hours off duty at the employee’s home
terminal.
(6) A train employee, after first
initiating an on-duty period each day for
6 or more consecutive days including
one or more Type 2 assignments,
initiates two or more on-duty periods
without having had 24 consecutive
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hours off duty at the employee’s home
terminal.
(7) A train employee, after initiating
on-duty periods on 13 or more calendar
days during a series of at most 14
consecutive calendar days as defined in
§ 228.405(a)(3)(i), the last of which
ended at the employee’s home terminal,
then initiates an on-duty period without
having had at least two consecutive
calendar days off duty at the employee’s
home terminal.
(8) A train employee, after initiating
an on-duty periods on 13 or more
calendar days during a series of at most
14 consecutive calendar days as defined
in § 228.405(a)(3)(i), then initiates two
or more on-duty periods without having
had at least two consecutive calendar
days off duty at the employee’s home
terminal.
*
*
*
*
*
Subpart E—[Added and reserved]
7. Subpart E to part 228 is added and
reserved.
■ 8. Subpart F to part 228 is added to
read as follows:
■
Subpart F—Substantive Hours of Service
Requirements for Train Employees
Engaged in Commuter or Intercity Rail
Passenger Transportation
Sec.
228.401 Applicability.
228.403 Nonapplication, exemption, and
definitions.
228.405 Limitations on duty hours of train
employees engaged in commuter or
intercity rail passenger transportation.
228.407 Analysis of work schedules;
submissions; FRA review and approval
of submissions; fatigue mitigation plans.
228.409 Requirements for railroad-provided
employee sleeping quarters during
interim releases and other periods
available for rest within a duty tour.
228.411 Training.
228.413 Compliance date for regulations;
exemption from compliance with statute.
Subpart F—Substantive Hours of
Service Requirements for Train
Employees Engaged in Commuter or
Intercity Rail Passenger Transportation
§ 228.401
Applicability.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(b) of this section, the requirements of
this subpart apply to railroads and their
officers and agents, with respect to their
train employees who are engaged in
commuter or intercity rail passenger
transportation, including train
employees who are engaged in tourist,
scenic, historic, or excursion rail
passenger transportation.
(b) This subpart does not apply to
rapid transit operations in an urban area
that are not connected with the general
railroad system of transportation.
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§ 228.403 Nonapplication, exemption, and
definitions.
(a) General. This subpart does not
apply to a situation involving any of the
following:
(1) A casualty;
(2) An unavoidable accident;
(3) An act of God; or
(4) A delay resulting from a cause
unknown and unforeseeable to a
railroad or its officer or agent in charge
of the employee when the employee left
a terminal.
(b) Exemption. The Administrator
may exempt a railroad having not more
than a total of 15 train employees, signal
employees, and dispatching service
employees from the limitations imposed
by this subpart on the railroad’s train
employees who are engaged in
commuter or intercity rail passenger
transportation. The Administrator may
allow the exemption from this subpart
after a full hearing, for good cause
shown, and on deciding that the
exemption is in the public interest and
will not affect safety adversely. The
exemption shall be for a specific period
of time and is subject to review at least
annually. The exemption may not
authorize a railroad to require or allow
its train employees to be on duty more
than a total of 16 hours in a 24-hour
period.
(c) Definitions. In this subpart—
Commuter or intercity rail passenger
transportation has the meaning assigned
by section 24102 of title 49, United
States Code, to the terms ‘‘commuter rail
passenger transportation’’ or ‘‘intercity
rail passenger transportation.’’
Train employee who is engaged in
commuter or intercity rail passenger
transportation includes a train
employee who is engaged in commuter
or intercity rail passenger transportation
regardless of the nature of the entity by
whom the employee is employed and
any other train employee who is
employed by a commuter railroad or an
intercity passenger railroad. The term
excludes a train employee of another
type of railroad who is engaged in work
train service even though that work
train service might be related to
providing commuter or intercity rail
passenger transportation, and a train
employee of another type of railroad
who serves as a pilot on a train operated
by a commuter railroad or intercity
passenger railroad.
§ 228.405 Limitations on duty hours of
train employees engaged in commuter or
intercity rail passenger transportation.
(a) General. Except as provided in
paragraph (c) of this section, a railroad
and its officers and agents may not
require or allow a train employee
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engaged in commuter or intercity rail
passenger transportation to remain or go
on duty—
(1) Unless that employee has had at
least 8 consecutive hours off duty
during the prior 24 hours; or
(2) After that employee has been on
duty for 12 consecutive hours, until that
employee has had at least 10
consecutive hours off duty; or
(3) In a series of at most 14
consecutive calendar days, in excess of
the following limitations:
(i) That employee’s first series of at
most 14 consecutive calendar days
begins on the first calendar day that the
employee initiates an on-duty period on
or after the compliance date for this
paragraph (a)(3), as specified in
§ 228.413. A series of at most 14
consecutive calendar days either ends
on the 14th consecutive day or may last
for less than 14 days if an employee has
accumulated a total of two calendar
days on which the employee has not
initiated an on-duty period before the
beginning of the 14th day of the series.
After the employee has accumulated a
total of two calendar days on which the
employee has not initiated an on-duty
period, including at least 24 consecutive
hours off duty as required by paragraph
(a)(3)(ii) or two consecutive calendar
days without initiating an on-duty
period as required by paragraph
(a)(3)(iii) of this section, during the
employee’s current series of at most 14
consecutive calendar days, a new series
of at most 14 consecutive calendar days
begins on the calendar day in which the
employee next initiates an on-duty
period. Only calendar days after the
starting date of a series are counted
toward the accumulation of a total of
two calendar days on which the
employee did not initiate an on-duty
period. A calendar day on which an onduty period was not initiated that
occurred prior to the start of the new
series, does not count toward refreshing
the new series.
(ii) If the employee initiates an onduty period each day on any six or more
consecutive calendar days during the
series of at most 14 consecutive
calendar days, and at least one of the
on-duty periods is defined as a Type 2
assignment, that employee must have at
least 24 consecutive hours off duty prior
to next initiating an on-duty period,
except as provided in paragraph (a)(3)(v)
of this section.
(iii) If the employee has initiated an
on-duty period each day on 13 or more
calendar days in the series of at most 14
consecutive calendar days, that
employee must have at least two
consecutive calendar days on which the
employee does not initiate an on-duty
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period prior to next initiating an onduty period, except as provided in
paragraph (a)(3)(v) of this section.
(iv) The minimum time off duty
required by paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of this
section and the at least two consecutive
calendar days in which the employee
does not initiate an on-duty period
required by paragraph (a)(3)(iii) of this
section must be at the employee’s home
terminal, and during such periods, the
employee shall be unavailable for any
service for any railroad.
(v) Paragraphs (a)(3)(ii)–(iii) of this
section notwithstanding, if the
employee is not at the employee’s home
terminal when time off duty is required
by paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of this section or
calendar days in which the employee
does not initiate an on-duty period are
required by paragraph (a)(3)(iii) of this
section, the employee may either
deadhead to the point of final release at
the employee’s home terminal or initiate
an on-duty period in order to return to
the employee’s home terminal either on
the same calendar day or the next
consecutive calendar day after the
completion of the duty tour triggering
the requirements of paragraph (a)(3)(ii)
or paragraph (a)(3)(iii) of this section.
(vi) If the employee is required to
have at least 24 consecutive hours off
duty under paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of this
section and not to initiate an on-duty
period for at least two consecutive
calendar days under paragraph (a)(3)(iii)
of this section, both requirements shall
be observed. The required periods run
concurrently, to the extent that they
overlap.
(b) Determining time on duty. In
determining under paragraph (a) of this
section the time that a train employee
subject to this subpart is on or off duty,
the following rules apply:
(1) Time on duty begins when the
employee reports for duty and ends
when the employee is finally released
from duty;
(2) Time the employee is engaged in
or connected with the movement of a
train is time on duty;
(3) Time spent performing any other
service for the railroad during a 24-hour
period in which the employee is
engaged in or connected with the
movement of a train is time on duty;
(4) Time spent in deadhead
transportation to a duty assignment is
time on duty, but time spent in
deadhead transportation from a duty
assignment to the place of final release
is neither time on duty nor time off
duty;
(5) An interim period available for
rest at a place other than a designated
terminal is time on duty;
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(6) An interim period available for
less than four hours rest at a designated
terminal is time on duty; and
(7) An interim period available for at
least four hours rest at a place with
suitable facilities for food and lodging is
not time on duty when the employee is
prevented from getting to the
employee’s designated terminal by any
of the following:
(i) A casualty;
(ii) A track obstruction;
(iii) An act of God; or
(iv) A derailment or major equipment
failure resulting from a cause that was
unknown and unforeseeable to the
railroad or its officer or agent in charge
of that employee when that employee
left the designated terminal.
(c) Emergencies. A train employee
subject to this subpart who is on the
crew of a wreck or relief train may be
allowed to remain or go on duty for not
more than four additional hours in any
period of 24 consecutive hours when an
emergency exists and the work of the
crew is related to the emergency. In this
paragraph, an emergency ends when the
track is cleared and the railroad line is
open for traffic.
§ 228.407 Analysis of work schedules;
submissions; FRA review and approval of
submissions; fatigue mitigation plans.
(a) Analysis of work schedules. Each
railroad subject to this subpart must
perform an analysis of one cycle of the
work schedules (the period within
which the work schedule repeats) of its
train employees engaged in commuter
or intercity rail passenger transportation
and identify those work schedules
intended to be assigned to its train
employees, that, if worked by such a
train employee, put the train employee
at risk for a level of fatigue at which
safety may be compromised. Schedules
identified in paragraph (g) of this
section do not have to be analyzed. A
level of fatigue at which safety may be
compromised, hereafter called ‘‘the
fatigue threshold,’’ shall be determined
by procedures that use a scientifically
valid, biomathematical model of human
performance and fatigue that has been
approved by the Associate
Administrator pursuant to paragraph
(c)(1) of this section, or previously
accepted pursuant to paragraph (c)(2) of
this section. Each work schedule that
violates the fatigue threshold must be—
(1) Reported to the Associate
Administrator as provided in paragraph
(b) of this section, no later than April
12, 2012;
(2) Either—
(i) Mitigated by action in compliance
with the railroad’s fatigue mitigation
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plan that has been approved by the
Associate Administrator as specified in
paragraph (b) of this section, no later
than April 12, 2012; or
(ii) Supported by a determination that
the schedule is operationally necessary,
and that the fatigue risk cannot be
sufficiently mitigated by the use of
fatigue mitigation tools to reduce the
risk for fatigue to a level that does not
violate the fatigue threshold, no later
than April 12, 2012; or
(iii) Both, no later than April 12, 2012;
and
(3) Approved by FRA for use in
accordance with paragraph (b) of this
section.
(b) Submissions of certain work
schedules and any fatigue mitigation
plans and determinations of operational
necessity or declarations; FRA review
and approval. (1) No later than April 12,
2012, the railroad shall submit for
approval to the Associate Administrator
the work schedules described in
paragraph (b)(1)(i) and (ii) of this
section. The railroad shall identify and
group the work schedules as follows:
(i) Work schedules that the railroad
has found, using a validated model (as
specified in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section or approved by FRA in
accordance with paragraph (c)(2) of this
section) to present a risk for a level of
fatigue that violates the applicable
fatigue threshold, but that the railroad
has determined can be mitigated by the
use of fatigue mitigation tools so as to
present a risk for a level of fatigue that
does not violate the applicable fatigue
threshold. The fatigue mitigation tools
that will be used to mitigate the fatigue
risk presented by the schedule must also
be submitted.
(ii) Work schedules that the railroad
has found, using a validated model (as
specified in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section or approved by FRA in
accordance with paragraph (c)(2) of this
section), to present a risk for a level of
fatigue that violates the applicable
fatigue threshold, but that the railroad
has determined cannot be mitigated so
as to present a risk for a level of fatigue
that does not violate the applicable
fatigue threshold by the use of fatigue
mitigation tools, and that the railroad
has determined are operationally
necessary. The basis for the
determination must also be submitted.
(2) If a railroad performs the analysis
of its schedules required by paragraph
(a) of this section, and determines that
none of them violates the applicable
fatigue threshold, and therefore none of
them presents a risk for fatigue that
requires it to be submitted to the
Associate Administrator pursuant to
this paragraph, that railroad shall, no
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later than April 12, 2012, submit to the
Associate Administrator a written
declaration, signed by an officer of the
railroad, that the railroad has performed
the required analysis and determined
that it has no schedule that is required
to be submitted.
(3) FRA will review submitted work
schedules, proposed fatigue mitigation
tools, and determinations of operational
necessity. If FRA identifies any
exceptions to the submitted
information, the agency will notify the
railroad within 120 days of receipt of
the railroad’s submission. Railroads are
required to correct any deficiencies
identified by FRA within the time frame
specified by FRA.
(4) FRA will audit railroad work
schedules and fatigue mitigation tools
every two years to ensure compliance
with this section.
(c) Submission of models for FRA
approval; validated models already
accepted by FRA. (1) If a railroad subject
to this subpart wishes to use a model of
human performance and fatigue, not
previously approved by FRA, for the
purpose of making part or all of the
analysis required by paragraph (a) or (d)
of this section, the railroad shall submit
the model and evidence in support of its
scientific validation, for the approval of
the Associate Administrator. Decisions
of the Associate Administrator regarding
the validity of a model are subject to
review under § 211.55 of this chapter.
(2) A railroad may use a model that
is already accepted by FRA. FRA has
approved the Fatigue Avoidance
Scheduling ToolTM (FAST) issued on
July 15, 2009, by Fatigue Science, Inc.
(with a fatigue threshold for the purpose
of this regulation less than or equal to
70 for 20 percent or more of the time
worked in a duty tour), and Fatigue
Audit InterDyneTM (FAID) version 2,
issued in September 2007 by
InterDynamics Pty Ltd. (Australian
Company Number (ACN) 057 037 635)
(with a fatigue threshold for the purpose
of this regulation greater than or equal
to 72 for 20 percent or more of the time
worked in a duty tour) as scientifically
valid, biomathematical models of
human performance and fatigue for the
purpose of making the analysis required
by paragraph (a) or (d) of this section.
Other versions of the models identified
in this paragraph must be submitted to
FRA for approval prior to use as
provided by paragraph (c)(1) of this
section.
(3) If a new model is submitted to
FRA for approval, pursuant to paragraph
(c)(1) of this section, FRA will publish
notice of the submission in the Federal
Register, and will provide an
opportunity for comment, prior to the
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50399
Associate Administrator’s making a
final determination as to its disposition.
If the Associate Administrator approves
a new model as having been validated
and calibrated, so that it can be used for
schedule analysis in compliance with
this regulation, FRA will also publish
notice of this determination in the
Federal Register.
(d) Analysis of certain later changes
in work schedules. (1) Additional
follow-up analysis must be performed
each time that the railroad changes one
of its work schedules in a manner—
(i) That would differ from the FRAapproved parameters for hours of duty
of any work schedule previously
analyzed pursuant to paragraph (a) of
this section; or
(ii) That would alter the work
schedule to the extent that train
employees who work the schedule may
be at risk of experiencing a level of
fatigue that violates the FRA-approved
fatigue threshold established by
paragraph (a) of this section.
(2) Such additional follow-up analysis
must be submitted for FRA approval as
provided under paragraph (b) of this
section, as soon as practicable, prior to
the use of the new schedule for an
employee subject to this subpart. FRA
approval is not necessary before a new
schedule may be used; however, a
schedule that has been disapproved by
FRA may not be used.
(3) FRA will review submitted revised
work schedules, and any accompanying
fatigue mitigation tools, and
determinations of operational necessity.
If FRA identifies any exceptions to the
submitted information, the agency will
notify the railroad as soon as possible.
Railroads are required to correct any
deficiencies identified by FRA within
the time frame specified by FRA.
(e) Fatigue mitigation plans. A written
plan must be developed and adopted by
the railroad to mitigate the potential for
fatigue for any work schedule identified
through the analysis required by
paragraph (a) or (d) of this section as at
risk, including potential fatigue caused
by unscheduled work assignments.
Compliance with the fatigue mitigation
plan is mandatory. The railroad shall
review and, if necessary, update the
plan at least once every two years after
adopting the plan.
(f) Consultation. (1) Each railroad
subject to this subpart shall consult
with, employ good faith, and use its best
efforts to reach agreement with, all of its
directly affected employees, including
any nonprofit employee labor
organization representing a class or craft
of directly affected employees of the
railroad, on the following subjects:
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(i) The railroad’s review of work
schedules found to be at risk for a level
of fatigue at which safety may be
compromised (as described by
paragraph (a) of this section;
(ii) The railroad’s selection of
appropriate fatigue mitigation tools; and
(iii) All submissions by the railroad to
the Associate Administrator for
approval that are required by this
section.
(2) For purposes of this section, the
term ‘‘directly affected employee’’
means an employee to whom one of the
work schedules applies or would apply
if approved.
(3) If the railroad and its directly
affected employees, including any
nonprofit employee labor organization
representing a class or craft of directly
affected employees of the railroad,
cannot reach consensus on any area
described in paragraph (f)(1) of this
section, then directly affected
employees and any such organization
may file a statement with the Associate
Administrator explaining their views on
any issue on which consensus was not
reached. The Associate Administrator
shall consider such views during review
and approval of items required by this
section.
(g) Schedules not requiring analysis.
The types of schedules described in
paragraphs (1) and (2) of this paragraph
do not require the analysis described in
paragraphs (a) or (d) of this section.
(1) Schedules consisting solely of
Type 1 assignments do not have to be
analyzed.
(2) Schedules containing Type 2
assignments do not have be analyzed
if—
(i) The Type 2 assignment is no longer
in duration than, and fully contained
within, the schedule of another Type 2
assignment that has already been
determined to present an acceptable
level of risk for fatigue that does not
violate the fatigue threshold; and
(ii) If the longer Type 2 schedule
within which another Type 2 schedule
is contained requires mitigations to be
applied in order to achieve an
acceptable level of risk for fatigue that
does not violate the fatigue threshold,
the same or more effective mitigations
must be applied to the shorter Type 2
schedule that is fully contained within
the already acceptable Type 2 schedule.
§ 228.409 Requirements for railroadprovided employee sleeping quarters
during interim releases and other periods
available for rest within a duty tour.
(a) If a railroad subject to this subpart
provides sleeping quarters for the use of
a train employee subject to this subpart
during interim periods of release as a
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method of mitigating fatigue identified
by the analysis of work schedules
required by § 228.407(a) and (d), such
sleeping quarters must be ‘‘clean, safe,
and sanitary,’’ and give the employee
‘‘an opportunity for rest free from the
interruptions caused by noise under the
control of the’’ railroad within the
meaning of section 21106(a)(1) of title
49 of the United States Code.
(b) Any sleeping quarters provided by
a railroad that are proposed as a fatigue
mitigation tool pursuant to
§ 228.407(b)(1)(i), are subject to the
requirements of § 228.407(f),
Consultation.
§ 228.411
Training.
(a) Individuals to be trained. Except as
provided by paragraph (f) of this
section, each railroad subject to this
subpart shall provide training for its
employees subject to this subpart, and
the immediate supervisors of its
employees subject to this subpart.
(b) Subjects to be covered. The
training shall provide, at a minimum,
information on the following subjects
that is based on the most current
available scientific and medical research
literature:
(1) Physiological and human factors
that affect fatigue, as well as strategies
to reduce or mitigate the effects of
fatigue;
(2) Opportunities for identification,
diagnosis, and treatment of any medical
condition that may affect alertness or
fatigue, including sleep disorders;
(3) Alertness strategies, such as
policies on napping, to address acute
drowsiness and fatigue while an
employee is on duty;
(4) Opportunities to obtain restful
sleep at lodging facilities, including
employee sleeping quarters provided by
the railroad; and
(5) The effects of abrupt changes in
rest cycles for employees.
(c) Timing of initial training. Initial
training shall be provided to affected
current employees not later than
December 31, 2012, and to new
employees subject to this subpart before
the employee first works a schedule
subject to analysis under this subpart, or
not later than December 31, 2012,
whichever occurs later.
(d) Timing of refresher training. (1) At
a minimum, refresher training shall be
provided every three calendar years.
(2) Additional refresher training shall
also be provided when significant
changes are made to the railroad’s
fatigue mitigation plan or to the
available fatigue mitigation tools
applied to an employee’s assignment or
assignments at the location where he or
she works.
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(e) Records of training. A railroad
shall maintain a record of each
employee provided training in
compliance with this section and shall
retain these records for three years.
(f) Conditional exclusion. A railroad
engaged in tourist, scenic, historic, or
excursion rail passenger transportation,
may be excluded from the requirements
of this section, if its train employees
subject to this rule are assigned to work
only schedules wholly within the hours
of 4 a.m. and 8 p.m. on the same
calendar day that comply with the
provisions of § 228.405, upon that
railroad’s submission to the Associate
Administrator of a written declaration,
signed by an officer of the railroad,
indicating that the railroad meets the
limitations established in this
paragraph.
§ 228.413 Compliance date for regulations;
exemption from compliance with statute.
(a) General. Except as provided by
paragraph (d) of this section or as
provided in § 228.411, on and after
April 12, 2012, railroads subject to this
subpart shall comply with this subpart
and §§ 228.11(c)(1)–(2) and
228.19(c)(5)–(c)(8) with respect to their
train employees who are engaged in
commuter or intercity rail passenger
transportation.
(b) Exemption from compliance with
statute. On and after October 15, 2011,
railroads subject to this subpart or any
provision of this subpart shall be
exempt from complying with the
provisions of old section 21103 and new
section 21103 for such employees.
(c) Definitions. In this section—
(1) The term ‘‘new section 21103’’
means section 21103 of title 49, United
States Code, as amended by the Rail
Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (RSIA)
effective July 16, 2009.
(2) The term ‘‘old section 21103’’
means section 21103 of title 49, United
States Code, as it was in effect on the
day before the enactment of the RSIA.
(d) Exceptions. (1) On and after
October 15, 2011, railroads subject to
this subpart shall comply with
§§ 228.401, 228.403, 228.405(a)(1),
(a)(2), (b), and (c), and 228.409(a).
(2) Railroads engaged in tourist,
scenic, historic, or excursion rail
passenger transportation, subject to this
subpart, must comply with the sections
listed in paragraph (d)(1) of this section
on and after October 15, 2011, but are
not required to comply with the other
provisions of this subpart and
§§ 228.11(c)(1)–(2) and 228.19(c)(5)–
(c)(8) until April 12, 2013.
■ 9. Add Appendix D to Part 228 to read
as follows:
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Appendix D to Part 228—Guidance on
Fatigue Management Plans
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(a) Railroads subject to subpart F of this
part, Substantive Hours of Service
Requirements for Train Employees Engaged
in Commuter or Intercity Rail Passenger
Transportation, may wish to consider
adopting a written fatigue management plan
that is designed to reduce the fatigue
experienced by their train employees subject
to that subpart and to reduce the likelihood
of accidents, incidents, injuries, and fatalities
caused by the fatigue of these employees. If
a railroad is required to have a fatigue
mitigation plan under § 228.407 (containing
the fatigue mitigation tools that the railroad
has determined will mitigate the risk posed
by a particular work schedule for a level of
fatigue at or above the fatigue threshold),
then the railroad’s fatigue management plan
could include the railroad’s written fatigue
mitigation plan, designated as such to
distinguish it from the part of the plan that
is optional, or could be a separate document.
As provided in § 228.407(a)(2) and (e),
compliance with the fatigue mitigation plan
itself is mandatory.
(b) A good fatigue management plan
contains targeted fatigue countermeasures for
the particular railroad. In other words, the
plan takes into account varying
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circumstances of operations by the railroad
on different parts of its system, and should
prescribe appropriate fatigue
countermeasures to address those varying
circumstances. In addition, the plan
addresses each of the following items, as
applicable:
(1) Employee education and training on the
physiological and human factors that affect
fatigue, as well as strategies to reduce or
mitigate the effects of fatigue, based on the
most current scientific and medical research
and literature;
(2) Opportunities for identification,
diagnosis, and treatment of any medical
condition that may affect alertness or fatigue,
including sleep disorders;
(3) Effects on employee fatigue of an
employee’s short-term or sustained response
to emergency situations, such as derailments
and natural disasters, or engagement in other
intensive working conditions;
(4) Scheduling practices for employees,
including innovative scheduling practices,
on-duty call practices, work and rest cycles,
increased consecutive days off for employees,
changes in shift patterns, appropriate
scheduling practices for varying types of
work, and other aspects of employee
scheduling that would reduce employee
fatigue and cumulative sleep loss;
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
50401
(5) Methods to minimize accidents and
incidents that occur as a result of working at
times when scientific and medical research
has shown that increased fatigue disrupts
employees’ circadian rhythm;
(6) Alertness strategies, such as policies on
napping, to address acute drowsiness and
fatigue while an employee is on duty;
(7) Opportunities to obtain restful sleep at
lodging facilities, including employee
sleeping quarters provided by the railroad;
(8) The increase of the number of
consecutive hours of off-duty rest, during
which an employee receives no
communication from the employing railroad
or its managers, supervisors, officers, or
agents; and
(9) Avoidance of abrupt changes in rest
cycles for employees.
(c) Finally, if a railroad chooses to adopt
a fatigue management plan, FRA suggests
that the railroad review the plan and update
it periodically as the railroad sees fit if
changes are warranted.
Joseph C. Szabo,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2011–20290 Filed 8–11–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–06–P
E:\FR\FM\12AUR2.SGM
12AUR2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 156 (Friday, August 12, 2011)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 50360-50401]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-20290]
[[Page 50359]]
Vol. 76
Friday,
No. 156
August 12, 2011
Part III
Department of Transportation
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Federal Railroad Administration
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49 CFR Part 228
Hours of Service of Railroad Employees; Substantive Regulations for
Train Employees Providing Commuter and Intercity Rail Passenger
Transportation; Conforming Amendments to Recordkeeping Requirements;
Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 76 , No. 156 / Friday, August 12, 2011 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 50360]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Part 228
[Docket No. FRA-2009-0043, Notice No. 2]
RIN 2130-AC15
Hours of Service of Railroad Employees; Substantive Regulations
for Train Employees Providing Commuter and Intercity Rail Passenger
Transportation; Conforming Amendments to Recordkeeping Requirements
AGENCY: Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: FRA is amending its hours of service recordkeeping
regulations, to add substantive hours of service regulations, including
maximum on-duty periods, minimum off-duty periods, and other
limitations, for train employees (e.g., locomotive engineers and
conductors) providing commuter and intercity rail passenger
transportation. The new substantive regulations require that railroads
employing such train employees analyze and mitigate the risks for
fatigue in the schedules worked by these train employees, and that the
railroads submit to FRA for its approval the relevant schedules and
fatigue mitigation plans. This final rule also makes corresponding
changes to FRA's hours of service recordkeeping regulation, to require
railroads to keep hours of service records and report excess service to
FRA in a manner consistent with the new substantive requirements. This
regulation is authorized by the Rail Safety Improvement Act of 2008.
DATES: Effective Date: This final rule is effective October 15, 2011.
Petitions for reconsideration must be received on or before October 5,
2011.
ADDRESSES: Petitions for reconsideration: Any petitions for
reconsideration related to Docket No. FRA-2009-0043, Notice No. 2, may
be submitted by any of the following methods:
Web site: The Federal eRulemaking Portal, https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the Web site's online instructions for
submitting comments.
Fax: 202-493-2251.
Mail: Docket Management Facility, U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., W12-140, Washington, DC
20590.
Hand Delivery: Room W12-140 on the Ground level of the
West Building, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., Washington, DC, between 9
a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Instructions: All submissions must include the agency name and
docket number or Regulatory Identification Number (RIN) for this
rulemaking. Note that all petitions received will be posted without
change to https://www.regulations.gov including any personal
information. Please see the Privacy Act heading in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section of this document for Privacy Act information
related to any submitted petitions, comments, or materials.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
comments received, go to https://www.regulations.gov or to Room W12-140
on the Ground level of the West Building, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mark H. McKeon, Special Assistant to
the Associate Administrator for Railroad Safety/Chief Safety Officer,
FRA, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., RRS-1, Mail Stop 25, Washington, DC
20590 (telephone: 202-493-6350); Dr. Thomas G. Raslear, Staff Director,
Human Factors Research Program, Office of Research and Development,
FRA, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., RPD-321, Mail Stop 20, Washington, DC
20590 (telephone 202-493-6356); Colleen A. Brennan, Trial Attorney,
Office of Chief Counsel, FRA, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., RCC-12, Mail
Stop 10, Washington, DC 20590 (telephone 202-493-6028 or 202-493-6052);
or Matthew T. Prince, Trial Attorney, Office of Chief Counsel, FRA,
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., RCC-12, Mail Stop 10, Washington, DC 20590
(telephone 202-493-6146 or 202-493-6052).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents for Supplementary Information
I. Executive Summary
II. Statutory Background and History
III. Scientific Background
A. Validated and Calibrated Fatigue Models
1. Fatigue Avoidance Scheduling Tool\TM\ Model
2. Fatigue Audit InterDyne\TM\ Model
B. Diary Study of Train Employees on Commuter and Intercity
Passenger Railroads
IV. Railroad Safety Advisory Committee Process
A. Overview of the RSAC
B. RSAC Proceedings in this Rulemaking
C. Significant Task Force Contributions to the Development of
the NPRM
1. Schedule Analysis
2. Fatigue Mitigation Tool Box
D. Areas of Working Group and Task Force Concern During
Development of the NPRM
1. Proposed Definitions of ``Type 1 Assignment'' and ``Type 2
Assignment''
2. Proposed Limitations on Number of Consecutive Days
3. Precision of Fatigue Models and Threshold
4. Freight Railroad Employees Acting as Pilots for Commuter or
Intercity Passenger Trains
V. Response to Public Comments on the NPRM
VI. Section-by-Section Analysis
VII. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866 and 13563 and DOT Regulatory Policies
and Procedures
B. Executive Order 13132
C. Executive Order 13175
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive Order 13272
1. Description of Regulated Entities and Impacts
2. Certification
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
G. Environmental Assessment
H. Privacy Act
I. Executive Summary
Having considered public comments in response to FRA's March 22,
2011 proposed rule in this rulemaking (76 FR 16200), FRA issues this
final rule establishing substantive hours of service regulations for
train employees who provide commuter or intercity rail passenger
transportation (passenger train employees).
Federal laws governing railroad employees' hours of service date
back to 1907 with the enactment of the Hours of Service Act (Pub. L.
59-274, 34 Stat. 1415), and FRA, under delegations from the Secretary
of Transportation (Secretary), has long administered statutory hours of
service requirements for the three groups of employees now covered
under the statute, namely employees performing the functions of train
employees, signal employees, and dispatching service employees, as
those terms are defined at 49 U.S.C. 21101. See 49 CFR 1.49; 49 U.S.C.
21101-21109, 21303.
These requirements have been amended several times over the years,
most recently in the Rail Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Pub. L. 110-
432, Div. A) (RSIA). The RSIA substantially amended the requirements of
49 U.S.C. 21103, applicable to train employees, defined as
``individual[s] engaged in or connected with the movement of a train,
including a hostler.'' 49 U.S.C. 21101(5). However, the RSIA also
granted the Secretary
[[Page 50361]]
authority to prescribe regulations governing the hours of service of
passenger train employees. 49 U.S.C. 21109(b)-(c). As will be discussed
below, FRA interprets commuter or intercity rail passenger
transportation to include rail passenger transportation by tourist,
scenic, excursion, and historic railroads. The RSIA provided that this
particular subset of train employees (i.e., passenger train employees)
would continue to be governed by 49 U.S.C. 21103 as it existed prior to
the enactment of the RSIA (old Section 21103), until the earlier of,
the effective date of final regulations prescribed by the Secretary, or
the date that is three years from the date of enactment of the RSIA. 49
U.S.C. 21102(c). In the absence of a final rule in effect governing
this group of train employees, the requirements of the RSIA currently
in effect for other train employees (new Section 21103) would go into
effect for passenger train employees on October 16, 2011. 49 U.S.C.
21102(c).
As will be discussed further below, FRA reviewed the applicable
fatigue science, and sought input from FRA's Railroad Safety Advisory
Committee (RSAC). Based on FRA's understanding of current fatigue
science, and information received through RSAC, FRA determined that the
requirements imposed on train employees by the RSIA were not
appropriate for passenger train employees. The chart below compares and
contrasts (1) the hours of service requirements in 49 U.S.C. 21103 as
amended by the RSIA, (2) the statutory hours of service requirements
applicable to all train employees immediately prior to the RSIA, which
are currently still applicable to passenger train employees until the
effective date of this final rule, and (3) the requirements of this
final rule that applies to passenger train employees from the effective
date of the rule, with the compliance date of some provisions delayed
for a period of 180 or 545 days from the effective date.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Train employee
statutory provisions
immediately prior to
Freight train employee the RSIA and currently FRA passenger train
statute applicable only to employee final rule
passenger train
employees
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Citation............................. 49 U.S.C. 21103 (as 49 U.S.C. 21103 as it 49 CFR part 228,
amended by the RSIA existed prior to the subpart F.
effective July 16, October 16, 2008,
2009) (new section enactment of the RSIA
21103) (Applies to (old section 21103)
train employees on (Train employees
freight railroads. providing commuter and
Will apply to train intercity rail
employees on commuter passenger
and intercity transportation are
passenger railroads if currently covered by
no regulations are in these provisions
effect by October 16, pursuant to 49 U.S.C.
2011). 21102(c).).
Use of Fatigue Science............... None................... None................... This final rule
requires passenger
train employees' work
schedules to be
analyzed under an FRA-
approved validated
biomathematical
fatigue model such as
the specified version
of the Fatigue
Avoidance Scheduling
ToolTM or Fatigue
Audit InterDyneTM,
with the exception of
certain schedules
(completely within the
hours of 4 a.m. and 8
p.m., or nested within
other schedules that
have been previously
modeled and shown to
present an acceptable
level of risk for
fatigue, and otherwise
in compliance with the
limitations in the
regulation) deemed as
categorically
presenting an
acceptable level of
risk for fatigue that
does not violate the
defined fatigue
threshold. Analysis
must be complete 180
days from the
effective date of the
final rule, except
that tourist, scenic,
historic and excursion
railroads have 545
days from the
effective date of the
final rule to complete
their analysis.
Limitations on Time on Duty in a 12 consecutive hours of 12 consecutive hours of 12 consecutive hours of
Single Tour. time on duty or 12 time on duty or 12 time on duty or 12
nonconsecutive hours nonconsecutive hours nonconsecutive hours
on duty if broken by on duty if broken by on duty if broken by
an interim release of an interim release of an interim release of
at least 4 consecutive at least 4 consecutive at least 4 consecutive
hours uninterrupted by hours, in a 24-hour hours, in a 24-hour
communication from the period that begins at period that begins at
railroad likely to the beginning of the the beginning of the
disturb rest, in a 24- duty tour. duty tour. This is
hour period that effective on the
begins at the effective date of the
beginning of the duty final rule.
tour.
[[Page 50362]]
Limitations on Consecutive Duty Tours May not be on duty as a None................... If employee initiates
or Total Duty Tours in Set Period. train employee after an on-duty period each
initiating an on-duty day for six
period on six consecutive calendar
consecutive days days including at
without receiving 48 least one ``Type 2''
consecutive hours off assignment (generally,
duty free from any those including time
service for any on duty between 8 p.m.
railroad carrier at and 4 a.m.) employee
the employee's home must have 24
terminal. Employees consecutive hours off
are permitted to duty at the employee's
initiate a seventh home terminal. If an
consecutive day when employee initiates an
the employee ends the on-duty period on 13
sixth consecutive day or more calendar days
at the away-from-home of a period of 14
terminal, as part of a consecutive days then
pilot project, or as must have 2
part of a consecutive calendar
grandfathered days without
collectively bargained initiating an on-duty
arrangement. Employees period at the
performing service on employee's home
this additional day terminal. Employees
must receive 72 may be permitted to
consecutive hours free perform service on an
from any service for additional day to
any railroad carrier facilitate their
at their home terminal return to their home
before going on duty terminal. These
again as a train limitations are
employee. effective 180 days
from the effective
date of the final
rule, except that they
become effective for
tourist, scenic,
historic and excursion
railroads 545 days
from the effective
date of the final
rule.
Cumulative Limits on Time on Duty.... Limited to 276 hours of None................... None.
time on duty, in
deadhead
transportation to a
point of final
release, or any other
mandatory activity for
the railroad carrier.
Limited to 30 hours of
time spent on duty and
waiting for or in
deadhead
transportation to a
point of final release
after reaching 12
hours of time on duty
and waiting for or in
deadhead
transportation to a
point of final release.
Mandatory Off-Duty Periods........... 10 consecutive hours of 8 consecutive hours (10 8 consecutive hours (10
time off duty free consecutive hours if consecutive hours if
from any communication time on duty reaches time on duty reaches
from the railroad 12 consecutive hours). 12 consecutive hours).
likely to disturb This is effective on
rest, with additional the effective date of
time off duty if on- the final rule.
duty time plus time in
or awaiting deadhead
transportation to
final release exceeds
12 hours.
48 consecutive hours
off duty, free from
any service for any
railroad carrier,
after initiating an on-
duty period for 6
consecutive days. If 7
consecutive days are
permitted, mandatory
off-duty period
extended to 72
consecutive hours.
[[Page 50363]]
Specific Rules for Nighttime None................... None................... Schedules that include
Operations. any time on duty
between 8 p.m. and 4
a.m. must be analyzed
using a validated
biomathematical model
of human performance
and fatigue approved
by FRA. Schedules with
excess risk of fatigue
must be mitigated or
supported by a
determination that
mitigation is not
possible and the
schedule is
operationally
necessary and approved
by FRA. Analysis must
be complete and
required submissions
must be made 180 days
from the effective
date of the final
rule, except that
tourist, scenic,
historic and excursion
railroads have 545
days from the
effective date of the
final rule to complete
their analysis and any
required submission.
Specific Rules for Unscheduled None................... None................... The potential for
Assignments. fatigue presented by
unscheduled work
assignments must be
mitigated as part of a
railroad's FRA-
approved fatigue
mitigation plan. Plans
must be submitted for
FRA review and
approval along with
the associated
schedules requiring
mitigation, 180 days
from the effective
date of the final
rule, except that
tourist, scenic,
historic and excursion
railroads have 545
days from the
effective date of the
final rule to complete
their analysis and any
required submission.
Recordkeeping requirements........... Record for each duty Record for each duty Record for each duty
tour must contain 15 tour must contain the tour must contain the
elements specified in first 12 elements first 12 elements
49 CFR 228.11(b). specified in 49 CFR specified in 49 CFR
228.11(b), as items 13 228.11(b). Record must
through 16 relate to also indicate the date
RSIA requirements not on which the series of
applicable to train at most 14 consecutive
employees providing calendar days begins,
commuter or intercity as well as the date of
rail passenger any calendar day on
transportation. which the employee did
not initiate an on-
duty period during the
series. These
recordkeeping
requirements go into
effect at the same
time as the
substantive provisions
being tracked by them,
which is 180 days from
the effective date of
the final rule, except
that those provisions
go into effect for
tourist, scenic,
historic and excursion
railroads 545 days
from the effective
date of the final
rule, as would the
associated
recordkeeping
requirements.
[[Page 50364]]
Excess Service Reporting Requirements Requires reporting of Requires reporting of Requires reporting of
any of 10 different any of 4 different any of 8 different
ways in which hours of ways in which hours of ways in which hours of
service limitations service limitations service limitations
may be exceeded. may be exceeded. may be exceeded
(reflecting various
ways of violating new
consecutive-days
requirements). These
recordkeeping
requirements go into
effect at the same
time as the
substantive provisions
being tracked by them,
which is 180 days from
the effective date of
the final rule, except
that those provisions
go into effect for
tourist, scenic,
historic and excursion
railroads 545 days
from the effective
date of the final
rule, as would the
associated
recordkeeping
requirements.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This rule mirrors the existing limitations set by old section 21103
on the maximum number of hours in a duty tour and minimum number of
hours in a statutory off-duty period. Additional limitations are added
on the number of consecutive days or total days within a prescribed
period that a passenger train employee may work, depending on the time
of day of the assignment. This differentiation takes into account the
fact that work during nighttime hours may present a greater risk for
fatigue. (For ease of reference, these provisions of this regulation
are collectively referred to as ``consecutive-days limitations'').
Conforming changes are also made to the recordkeeping and reporting
requirements to accommodate the consecutive-days limitations.
The limitations on maximum hours worked, minimum hours of rest, and
consecutive days or total days within a prescribed period provide a
``floor,'' a minimum set of limitations, within which the rule requires
railroads subject to this rule to analyze the work schedules of their
passenger train employees using a validated and calibrated
biomathematical model of human performance and fatigue, and to mitigate
any fatigue identified that violates the fatigue threshold for the
model.\1\ The fatigue threshold is a level of fatigue at which safety
may be compromised. As will be discussed below, especially under
Section III.A, there are two models that currently have been validated
and calibrated using data from freight railroads, that have been
approved by FRA to be used for the analysis required by this rule. The
rule also allows for the development of new models. It discusses
procedures for validating and calibrating a model, and provides that
evidence of a new model's validation and calibration may be submitted
to FRA for approval.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ In the NPRM, FRA referred to ``exceeding'' the fatigue
threshold. The two currently approved models differ in how their
thresholds are expressed, with FAST requiring an effectiveness score
greater than or equal to its threshold, and FAID requiring a score
less than or equal to its threshold, so FRA realized there could be
confusion as to what it meant to ``exceed'' the threshold depending
which model is being used, while it is equally applicable to say the
threshold is violated, however that threshold is expressed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The rule defines as a ``Type 1 assignment'' any assignment that
requires an employee to report for duty no earlier than 4 a.m. and be
released from duty no later than 8 p.m. Based on analysis conducted
during the formulation of this rule, such assignments are subjected to
a less restrictive consecutive-days limitation, and such schedules are
deemed to present an acceptable level of fatigue when otherwise in
compliance with the limitations established in this rule. Thus, these
schedules are not required to be submitted to FRA for approval, nor is
the application of fatigue mitigation tools to these schedules
required.
A ``Type 2 assignment'' is any assignment having any period of time
during a calendar day before 4 a.m. or after 8 p.m. Within 180 days of
the effective date of this regulation, railroads are required to
analyze the fatigue risk of assignments that they make to their
passenger train employees using an FRA-approved fatigue model. If the
analysis shows that a schedule does not violate the fatigue threshold,
and the schedule is otherwise in compliance with the limitations of the
rule and does not require the employee to be on duty for any period of
time between midnight and 4 a.m., the rule allows that schedule to be
treated as a Type 1 assignment for the purposes of the consecutive-days
limitation, and there is no requirement to submit the schedule to FRA
or to mitigate fatigue in that schedule. However, for those schedules
that the analysis indicates have a level of risk for fatigue violating
the fatigue threshold, the railroad is required to mitigate the
fatigue. Railroads are also required to complete their analysis and
submit any schedules with a risk violating the fatigue threshold, and
the mitigation tools the railroad applied to mitigate the fatigue risk
in those schedules to FRA for approval. In addition, any schedule, the
fatigue risk of which could not be sufficiently mitigated so that it no
longer violates the fatigue threshold, but which the railroad deems
operationally necessary, must also be submitted for FRA approval, along
with a declaration of operational necessity for FRA approval.
The rule also requires railroads to submit any schedule changes
that result in a schedule that would have been required to be submitted
if it were an original schedule, unless the new schedule is the same as
another schedule that has previously been analyzed and approved.
Within 120 days of any railroad submission, FRA will notify the
railroad of any exceptions taken to its submission and the time frame
within which the railroad must correct the exceptions. While the rule
requires FRA approval of the schedules and fatigue mitigation tools,
FRA expects that it will work with a railroad to make necessary
modifications to schedules or mitigation tools to minimize fatigue to
the greatest extent possible.
[[Page 50365]]
Railroads are required to consult with affected employees and
applicable labor organizations regarding the analysis of work
schedules, fatigue mitigation tools, and submissions to FRA. Should the
employees or labor organizations disagree with the railroad, they have
the opportunity to file a statement for FRA's consideration in
reviewing the submission and determining whether to approve it.
Finally, the rule requires initial fatigue training, addressing a
list of subjects, and refresher training every three years. This
training may be combined with other training that the railroads are
providing to their employees.
FRA analyzed the economic impacts of this rule against two
baselines. One is a ``status quo'' baseline that reflects present
conditions (i.e., primarily, the statutory hours of service provisions
(specifically, old section 21103) and, secondarily, the hours of
service recordkeeping and reporting regulations) that have applied, and
will continue to apply to passenger railroads, with respect to their
train employees, until this final rule becomes effective. The other
baseline is a ``no regulatory action'' baseline that reflects what
would have happened in the absence of this rulemaking (i.e., the
freight hours of service laws would have been applied to passenger
railroads with respect to their train employees).
With respect to the ``no regulatory action'' baseline, this rule
represents a substantially more cost-effective alternative for
achieving the goal of identifying and mitigating unacceptable fatigue
risk levels and thus ensuring the safety of passenger train operations.
The following table presents the costs of the final rule compared to
the ``no regulatory action'' alternative.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No regulatory action alternative-- Final rule
freight HSL -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost description ------------------------------------------
Undiscounted PV@7% PV@3% Undiscounted PV@7% PV@3%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
New Engineer Training, Initial (20% $31,237,549 $26,299,825 $28,705,081 0...................... 0...................... 0.
New Hires).
New Engineer Training, Refresher $4,599,050 $2,278,431 $3,327,802 0...................... 0...................... 0.
(20% New Hires).
New Conductor Training, Initial (20% $30,847,974 $25,942,971 $28,330,908 0...................... 0...................... 0.
New Hires).
New Conductor Training, Refresher $8,636,745 $4,278,146 $6,249,071 0...................... 0...................... 0.
(20% New Hires).
Work Schedule Analysis (No-Reg $189,723 $177,312 $184,198 ($126,482 + $240,316) = ($118,208 + $122,175) = ($122,798 + $175,894)
Action)/Initial Analysis of Work $366,799. $240,382. = $298,692.
Schedules + Follow-up Analysis and
Fatigue Mitigation Plan Review (FRA
rule).
Indirect Determination that Type 2 ............ ............ ............ -$91,700............... -$60,096............... -$74,673.
Schedules are Acceptable
(``Nested'' Schedules Reduction).
Biomathematical Model of Fatigue 0 0 0 $417,500 (includes $268,723 (includes $337,240 (includes
Software (Training on model use). $192,500 for training $119,175 for training $152,843 for training
on model use). on model use). on model use).
Use of Rest Facilities.............. 0 0 0 $30,988................ $28,961................ $30,086.
Fatigue Training.................... 0 0 0 $1,312,920............. $782,634............... $1,025,158.
Fatigue Training (Tourist & 0 0 0 $20,000................ $12,000................ $16,000.
Excursion).
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total (rounded)................. $75,511,041 $58,976,685 $66,797,059 $2,056,507............. $1,272,605............. $1,632,502.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FRA estimates that the recordkeeping and reporting costs per employee
record under the no-regulatory action alternative and this rule will be
practically the same.
The estimated accident reduction benefits of the rule relative to
the statutory hours of service requirements currently in place include
prevented accident damages, injuries, and fatalities. The table below
presents the estimates for the 20-year period of analysis for the
benefits of this rule, which FRA estimates to be the same as the
benefits of the no-regulatory action alternative.
Intercity Passenger, Commuter, Tourist and Excursion Railroads
[All track types]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VSL = $6 M VSL = $6 M VSL = $6 M
Accident reduction benefits undiscounted discounted discounted
benefits PV@7% PV@3%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Property Damage................................................. $685,915 $348,713 $502,039
Injuries........................................................ 94,861 48,227 69,431
Fatalities...................................................... 407,634 207,237 298,358
-----------------------------------------------
Total (rounded)............................................. 1,188,410 604,177 869,828
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FRA does not expect that the overall number of casualties and
property damages attributable to the rule will differ from those that
would be prevented under the statutory freight hours of service
requirements. However, as noted above, there are significant additional
potential safety enhancement benefits that may result from the FRA
approach. FRA believes that the safety of passenger train operations
will be enhanced under this rule as a result of subjecting every crew
assignment to a biomathematical analysis either via the analyses
conducted while developing the RSAC recommendation or the analyses that
will be performed by railroads in the years ahead. The information that
railroads will have as a result of this rule regarding fatigue, its
causes and symptoms, and its impact on
[[Page 50366]]
safety, will allow them to make crew assignments that take this into
consideration and minimize fatigue beyond the requirements of this
rule. Based on its literature review, FRA is confident that, overall,
fatigue awareness training will positively contribute to a stronger
safety culture that will extend beyond railroad operations, which is a
benefit that extends beyond what would result under the freight hours
of service law. For instance, safety and health benefits may accrue
from the transfer of knowledge to employees, their families, friends,
and others with whom they may share the fatigue knowledge that they
acquire from the required fatigue awareness training programs. This
fatigue awareness may result in more optimal decisions regarding rest
and sleep, leading to less fatigue and improved safety outside of
passenger train operations during the course of daily activities that
may also include the operation of motor vehicles or other heavy
machinery. This fatigue awareness may also result in proper
identification and treatment, if necessary, of fatigue symptoms.
Although FRA has not identified research on the effectiveness of the
specific types of fatigue training programs required under this rule,
many studies have indicated health training programs in general produce
meaningful behavioral performance improvements.
With respect to the ``status-quo'' baseline, this rule imposes
costs that are higher than the safety benefits FRA was able to
quantify. Costs compared to the ``status quo'' baseline total $2.1
million (undiscounted), $1.3 million (PV, 7 percent), and $1.6 million
(PV, 3 percent). Quantified benefits compared to the ``status quo''
baseline total $1.2 million (undiscounted), $0.6 million (PV, 7
percent), and $0.9 million (PV, 3 percent). However, there are
additional benefits that have not been quantified, but should be
considered when comparing the overall costs and benefits. As when
compared to the ``no-regulatory action'' baseline, FRA believes that
the safety of passenger train operations will be enhanced under this
rule as a result of a stronger safety culture that may extend beyond
railroad operations, which would be a benefit that extends beyond what
would result under the freight hours of service law. Separately,
accident avoidance will result in fewer unplanned delays to passengers
and freight commodities impacted by passenger train accidents and
incidents that result in blocking one or more tracks for prolonged
periods. These costs can be very substantial given the need to
investigate accidents and often clear wreckage. It is not unreasonable
to expect that the unquantified benefits will raise the benefits to a
level quite comparable to the costs. FRA also believes that the
unquantified benefits coupled with the quantified safety benefits are
comparable to the costs associated with meeting the intent of the
statutory mandate.
After careful consideration of comments received in response to the
NPRM, FRA has made modifications to its proposal in the final rule that
reduce the overall burden by approximately $100,000 due in equal part
to flexibilities added by extending the deadline for fatigue awareness
training and the expanded ability to rely on the findings of analyses
conducted for other assignments.
II. Statutory Background and History
Federal laws governing railroad employees' hours of service date
back to 1907 with the enactment of the Hours of Service Act. These
laws, codified as amended primarily at 49 U.S.C. 21101-21109, are
intended to promote safe railroad operations by limiting the hours of
service of certain railroad employees and ensuring that they receive
adequate opportunities for rest in the course of performing their
duties. Public Law 103-272 (1994). The Secretary is charged with the
administration of those laws, collectively referred to in this document
as the hours of service laws (HSL). This function has been delegated to
the FRA Administrator. 49 U.S.C. 103(c); 49 CFR 1.49(d).
Congress substantially amended the HSL on three occasions. The
first significant amendments occurred in 1969. Public Law 91-169, 83
Stat. 463. The 1969 amendments reduced the maximum time on duty for
train employees \2\ from 16 hours to 14 hours effective immediately,
with a further reduction to 12 hours automatically taking effect two
years later. Congress also established provisions for determining, in
the case of a train employee, whether a period of time is to be counted
as time on duty. 49 U.S.C. 21103(b). In so doing, Congress also
addressed the issue of deadhead transportation \3\ time, providing that
``[t]ime spent in deadhead transportation to a duty assignment'' is
counted as time on duty. Although time spent in deadhead transportation
from a duty assignment to the point of final release is not included
within any of the categories of time on duty, Congress further provided
that it shall be counted as neither time on duty nor time off duty. 49
U.S.C. 21103(b)(4). This provision effectively created a third category
of time, known commonly as ``limbo time.''
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\2\ A ``train employee'' is defined at 49 U.S.C. 21101(5) and 49
CFR 228.5 as an individual engaged in or connected with the movement
of a train, including a hostler. FRA also interpreted this statutory
term in published interpretations in 49 CFR part 228, appendix A,
providing: ``Train or engine service refers to the actual assembling
or operation of trains. Employees who perform this type of service
commonly include locomotive engineers, firemen, conductors,
trainmen, switchmen, switchtenders (unless their duties come under
the provisions of section 3 [49 U.S.C. 21105]) and hostlers.'' Other
employees, such as food service providers or sleeping car
attendants, who may work on passenger trains, but have no
responsibility for assembling or operating the train, are not within
the definition of a train employee, and are, as such, not generally
covered by this rule, or any other hours of service limitations, but
they would be covered if they performed functions related to
assembling or operating the train, regardless of the employee's job
title.
\3\ ``Deadheading'' is defined at 49 CFR 228.5 as the physical
relocation of a train employee from one point to another as a result
of a railroad-issued verbal or written directive.
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In 1976, Congress again amended the HSL in several important
respects. Most significantly, Congress expanded the coverage of the
laws, by including hostlers within the definition of employees now
termed ``train employees,'' and adding the section providing hours of
service requirements for ``signal employees,'' now codified at 49
U.S.C. 21104. Congress also added a provision that prohibited a
railroad from providing sleeping quarters that are not free from
interruptions of rest caused by noise under the control of the
railroad, and that are not clean, safe, and sanitary, and prohibited
beginning construction or reconstruction of sleeping quarters in an
area or in the immediate vicinity of an area in which humping or
switching operations are performed after July 7, 1996. See Public Law
94-348, 90 Stat. 818 (1976).
Section 108 of the RSIA also amended the HSL in a number of
significant ways, most of which became effective July 16, 2009. See
Section 108 of Public Law 110-432, Div. A, and FRA Interim Statement of
Agency Policy and Interpretation at 74 FR 30665 (June 26, 2009). The
RSIA established a limit of 276 hours per calendar month for train
employees on service performed for a railroad and on time spent in or
waiting for deadhead transportation to a point of final release,
increased the quantity of the statutory minimum off-duty period after
being on duty for 12 hours in broken service from 8 hours of rest to 10
hours of rest, prohibited communication with train or signal employees
during certain minimum statutory rest periods, and established
mandatory time off duty
[[Page 50367]]
for train employees of 48 hours after initiating an on-duty period on
six consecutive days, or 72 hours after initiating an on-duty period on
seven consecutive days. 49 U.S.C. 21103-21104. The RSIA also revised
the definition of ``signal employee'' to include contractors who
perform the work of a signal employee within the scope of the statute.
49 U.S.C. 21101(4).
However, Section 108(d) of the RSIA, which became effective on
October 16, 2008, provided that the requirements described above for
train employees would not go into effect on July 16, 2009, for train
employees when providing commuter or intercity rail passenger
transportation. 49 U.S.C. 21102(c). Section 108(d) further provided
that these train employees, who provide commuter or intercity passenger
rail service, would continue to be governed by the old HSL (as they
existed immediately prior to the enactment of the RSIA, at 49 U.S.C.
21103 prior to its 2008 amendment), until the effective date of
regulations promulgated by the Secretary. 49 U.S.C. 21102(c). However,
if no new regulations are in effect before October 16, 2011, the
provisions of Section 108(b), which applied to train employees, would
be extended to these employees at that time. Id.
Section 108(e) of the RSIA specifically provides the Secretary with
the authority to issue hours of service rules and orders applicable to
train employees engaged in commuter rail passenger transportation and
intercity rail passenger transportation (as defined in 49 U.S.C.
24102), that may be different from the statute applied to other train
employees. 49 U.S.C. 21109(b). Section 108(e) of the RSIA further
provides that such regulations and orders may address railroad
operating and scheduling practices, including unscheduled duty calls,
communications during time off duty, and time spent waiting for
deadhead transportation or in deadhead transportation from a duty
assignment to the place of final release, that could affect employee
fatigue and railroad safety. Id.
Section 108(e) of the RSIA also provides--
[i]n issuing regulations under subsection (a) the Secretary shall
consider scientific and medical research related to fatigue and
fatigue abatement, railroad scheduling and operating practices that
improve safety or reduce employee fatigue, a railroad's use of new
or novel technology intended to reduce or eliminate human error, the
variations in freight and passenger railroad scheduling practices
and operating conditions, the variations in duties and operating
conditions for employees subject to this chapter, a railroad's
required or voluntary use of fatigue management plans covering
employees subject to this chapter, and any other relevant factors.
49 U.S.C. 21109(c). Section 21109(a) of title 49 of the U.S. Code
refers to other regulatory authority granted to FRA, as the Secretary's
delegate related to the HSL, which is not relevant to this rule. One of
the goals of the present rulemaking is to identify and reduce
unacceptable fatigue for the employees who will be covered by the final
rule. Therefore, as will be described below, FRA has based these
regulations on scientific research related to fatigue and fatigue
abatement, as applied to railroad scheduling practices and operating
conditions for train employees providing commuter and intercity rail
passenger transportation. Section III below will describe the primary
scientific foundation and support for the requirements contained in
this rule. In addition, scientific considerations will also be
addressed in discussion of various elements of the rule, including in
the discussion of specific provisions in Section VI, Section-by-Section
Analysis, below.
III. Scientific Background
Most mammals, including human beings, have an approximately 24-hour
sleep-wake cycle known as a ``circadian rhythm.'' Rapid changes in the
circadian pattern of sleep and wakefulness disrupt many physiological
functions such as hormone releases, digestion, and temperature
regulation. Physiological functions can be affected, performance may be
impaired, and a general feeling of fatigue and debility may occur until
reali