Systems for Telephonic Notification of Unsafe Conditions at Highway-Rail and Pathway Grade Crossings, 35164-35197 [2012-13843]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Part 234
[Docket No. FRA–2009–0041, Notice No. 2]
RIN 2130–AC12
Systems for Telephonic Notification of
Unsafe Conditions at Highway-Rail and
Pathway Grade Crossings
Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule requires
certain railroads to establish and
maintain systems that allow members of
the public to call the railroads, using a
toll-free telephone number, and report
an emergency or other unsafe condition
at highway-rail and pathway grade
crossings. The rule refers to such a
system as an ‘‘Emergency Notification
System,’’ and it consists of the following
components: the signs, placed at the
grade crossing, that display the
information necessary for the public to
report an unsafe condition to the
appropriate railroad; the method that
the railroad uses to receive and process
a telephone call reporting the unsafe
condition; the remedial actions that the
appropriate railroad or railroads take to
address the report of the unsafe
conditions; and the related
recordkeeping conducted by the
railroad(s).
DATES: This final rule is effective August
13, 2012. Petitions for reconsideration
must be received on or before August
13, 2012. Petitions for reconsideration
will be posted in the docket for this
proceeding. Comments on any
submitted petition for reconsideration
must be received on or before
September 25, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Petitions for reconsideration
or comments on such petitions: Any
petitions and any comments to petitions
related to Docket No. FRA–2009–0041,
Notice No. 2, may be submitted by any
of the following methods:
• Web Site: Federal eRulemaking
Portal, https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the 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., W12–140,
Washington, DC between 9 a.m. and 5
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SUMMARY:
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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 comments 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
comments or materials.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov at any time 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: Beth
Crawford, Transportation Specialist,
Grade Crossing Safety and Trespass
Prevention, Office of Safety Analysis,
FRA, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Mail
Stop 25, Washington, DC 20590
(telephone: 202–493–6288),
beth.crawford@dot.gov; or Sara
Mahmoud-Davis, Trial Attorney, Office
of Chief Counsel, FRA, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Mail Stop 10, Washington,
DC 20590 (telephone: 202–366–1118),
sara.mahmoud-davis@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
States. Each year since 1997, highwayrail and pathway grade crossing
collisions have caused more railroadrelated deaths than any other single
factor, except for trespassing on railroad
property.
This rule furthers FRA’s efforts to
reduce deaths and injuries at grade
crossings and elsewhere along the
Nation’s railroads, by requiring railroads
to implement a telephonic system,
referred to as an ‘‘Emergency
Notification System’’ or ‘‘ENS,’’ through
which they receive reports of unsafe
conditions at crossings. Specifically,
this rule implements Section 205 (Sec.
205) of the Rail Safety Improvement Act
of 2008 (RSIA), Public Law 110–432,
Division A, which was signed into law
on October 16, 2008, and which is
detailed later in this preamble. This rule
uses experience gained through preexisting voluntary, State, and Federal
programs for systems similar to ENS, as
well as the U.S. DOT National Crossing
Inventory, which began as a voluntary
program, and reflects comments on
FRA’s Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(NPRM) published March 4, 2011 (76 FR
11992). To a certain extent, this rule
also builds on pre-existing regulations
in 49 CFR part 234 that govern a
railroad’s response to certain reports of
a malfunction of a highway-rail grade
crossing signal system and maintenance,
inspection, and testing of highway-rail
grade crossing signal systems.
Table of Contents for Supplementary
Information
1. Telephonic Reporting of Unsafe
Conditions at Crossings
This rule requires each railroad that
dispatches a train, or otherwise provides
the authority for the movement of a
train, through a highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing, to set up and maintain
an ENS by which the railroad is able to
directly receive telephonic reports from
the public of certain unsafe conditions
at the crossing and then take specified
action to respond to those reports. There
are four categories of reportable unsafe
conditions for each highway-rail and
pathway grade crossing. Generally,
these categories are (1) Malfunctions of
signals, crossing gates, and other
devices to promote safety at the grade
crossing; (2) disabled vehicles and other
obstructions blocking railroad tracks at
the crossing; (3) obstructions to the view
of a pedestrian or a vehicle operator for
a reasonable distance in either direction
of a train’s approach to the crossing; and
(4) any other unsafe condition at the
crossing, such as a downed crossbuck
sign or a pot hole in the crossing.
The railroad that dispatches a train
through a crossing is called the
I. Executive Summary
II. Statutory Background
III. History of Accidents Relevant to This
Rulemaking
IV. History of Emergency Notification
Systems (ENS)
A. In General
B. Various ENS Programs in the United
States
C. FRA’s 2006 Report to Congress
V. Section-by-Section Analysis
VI. Regulatory Impact
A. Executive Order 12866 and 13563 and
DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures
B. Regulatory Flexibility Determination
C. Federalism
D. International Trade Impact Assessment
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
F. Compliance With the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995
G. Environmental Assessment
H. Energy Impact
I. Privacy Act
I. Executive Summary
A. In General
There are approximately 211,000
public and private highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings in the United
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B. Overview of Rule Requirements
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‘‘dispatching railroad.’’ The dispatching
railroad may receive these reports by a
variety of methods. The railroad may
have a live person answer the calls
directly, or use a third-party telephone
service. As will be discussed later in
more detail, FRA made revisions to the
proposed rule that permit a railroad to
set up an automated answering system,
which ultimately results in the caller
speaking to a live person, or, under
certain circumstances, the railroad may
use an answering machine to receive
reports.
Sometimes a railroad does not have
the responsibility for maintaining the
particular crossing through which it
dispatches a train. The rule provides
that if the dispatching railroad does not
have maintenance responsibility for the
crossing that is the subject of the report
received through the ENS, and if the
report involves maintenance of the
crossing, then the dispatching railroad
must relay the report to the railroad
responsible for maintaining the crossing
(the maintaining railroad) for
investigation and remedial action.
Accordingly, the maintaining railroad
must set up a telephonic system for
receiving such phone calls from the
dispatching railroad. Depending on the
circumstances, the maintaining railroad
may receive such calls through the use
of an automated answering system,
third-party telephone service, or
answering machine.
It should also be noted that the rule
addresses situations where multiple
railroads dispatch trains through the
same crossing, by requiring those
railroads to identify one primary
dispatching railroad that is responsible
for receiving reports made via the ENS
for the crossing.
2. Remedial Actions To Be Taken by
Railroads
As will be discussed later in more
detail, the receipt of a report made
through the ENS of an unsafe condition
at a crossing triggers certain
responsibilities each for dispatching and
maintaining railroads. The dispatching
railroad upon receiving such a report
and depending on the nature of the
report, is required to contact all trains
authorized to operate through the
crossing to which the report pertains,
inform local law enforcement officers of
the reported unsafe condition so that
they may direct traffic or otherwise
assist in ensuring the safety of the
crossing, and then either investigate the
report itself or request that the railroad
with maintenance responsibility for the
crossing investigate the report. If the
report is substantiated, the railroad with
maintenance responsibility for the
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crossing is required to take certain
actions to remedy the unsafe condition.
3. Characteristics and Number of ENS
Signs To Be Placed and Maintained at
a Crossing
This rule establishes requirements for
the physical characteristics, number,
placement, and maintenance of ENS
signs. In general, each ENS sign must
display a minimum amount of
information, the toll-free telephone
number of the dispatching railroad, an
explanation of the purpose of the sign
(e.g., ‘‘Report emergency or problem to
lll’’), and the U.S. DOT National
Crossing Inventory number assigned to
that crossing.
The ENS signs also must meet certain
color and size requirements.
Furthermore, the signs must be posted
at the crossing in a manner that they are
conspicuous to the roadway or pathway
user, do not obstruct other signs or
traffic control devices, and do not limit
the view of trains approaching the
crossing. The signs also must be
crashworthy if mounted on a post.
In general, an ENS sign must be
placed on each approach to a highwayrail or pathway grade crossing. There
are two exceptions. At a farm grade
crossing, a railroad is required to install
and maintain only one ENS sign.
Additionally, one sign is sufficient at
each vehicular entrance to a certain type
of private industrial facility.
In general, the responsibility for the
placement and maintenance of an ENS
sign at a crossing is the responsibility of
the maintaining railroad. However, it
should also be noted that, where there
are multiple railroads that maintain the
same crossing, the rule requires that
those railroads identify one to be
responsible for the placement and
maintenance of the sign(s) at the
crossing.
4. Compliance Dates
In this rule, FRA extends several of
the compliance dates beyond the dates
proposed in the NPRM, to provide
railroads a longer period of time to
phase in implementation of an ENS.
FRA made several significant changes
from the proposed rule, which will be
discussed later in more detail. For
example, a railroad subject to the rule
that has no type of ENS currently in
place now has until September 1, 2015,
to establish such a system. Additionally,
for a railroad that currently has ENS
signs in place at its crossings, the
requirements for replacing the sign are
as follows: If the sign is 60 square
inches or greater with lettering that
measures at least 3⁄4 inch high, the
railroad is permitted to retain the sign
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for the duration of the sign’s useful life;
if the sign is 60 square inches or greater,
but the lettering measures less than 3⁄4
inch high, the railroad must replace the
sign by September 1, 2017; and if the
sign is smaller than 60 square inches,
regardless of the size of the lettering, the
railroad must replace the sign by
September 1, 2015.
C. Expected Costs and Benefits of the
Rule
FRA has estimated the costs of this
rule, evaluated over a 15-year period
and using a discount rate of 7 percent.
For the 15-year period analyzed, the
estimated quantified cost that will be
imposed on railroads totals $15.6
million, with a present value (PV, 7
percent) of $10.1 million. This rule is
expected to improve railroad safety by
ensuring that all crossings have
adequate signage displaying a telephone
number for reporting unsafe conditions
at the crossing to the railroad. The
primary benefits include heightened
safety at crossings from an earlier
awareness of potential track
obstructions, crossing signal
malfunctions, and other safety issues,
which FRA anticipates will reduce
related crossing accidents and the
associated fatalities, injuries, and
damages. Thus, in general,
implementation of this rule should
decrease railroad accidents at crossings
as well as other railroad accidents, and
associated casualties and damages.
Based on FRA’s analysis, the agency has
found that the expected accidentreduction benefits will exceed the total
cost of this rule. Over a 15-year period,
this analysis concludes that $57.8
million in cost savings will accrue
through casualty prevention and
damage avoidance. The discounted
value of this casualty prevention and
damage avoidance is $31.7 million (PV,
7 percent).
The table below presents the
estimated costs associated with this
rule.
15-YEAR ESTIMATED COSTS OF THE
FINAL RULE
Section 234.303—Toll-Free
Service ..................................
Section 234.306—Multiple Dispatching or Maintaining Railroads .....................................
Section 234.307—Third-Party
Service ..................................
Section 234.309—Signs (Materials) ......................................
Section 234.309—Signs (Installation) ....................................
Section 234.311—Post (Materials) ......................................
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$989,870
9,800
2,881
2,863,448
2,007,754
238,621
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
15-YEAR ESTIMATED COSTS OF THE
FINAL RULE—Continued
Section 234.311—Post (Installation) ....................................
Section 234.313—Initial Recordkeeping ............................
Section 234.313—Remedial
Recordkeeping ......................
3,490,728
...................................................
Total ...................................
....................
10,103,668
200,775
299,790
Dollars are discounted at a present value
rate of 7 percent. Note that numbers may not
add due to rounding.
The table below presents the
estimated benefits associated with this
rule.
15-YEAR ESTIMATED BENEFITS OF THE
FINAL RULE
Fatalities (Prevented) ...............
Injuries (Prevented) ..................
Highway Vehicle Damage
(Avoided) ...............................
Railroad Equipment Damage
(Avoided) ...............................
Track/Structure Damage
(Avoided) ...............................
Other Benefits ...........................
...................................................
Total ...................................
$21,519,783
8,587,839
651,130
327,922
203,988
416,974
....................
$31,707,636
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Dollars are discounted at a present value
rate of 7 percent. Note that numbers may not
add due to rounding.
II. Statutory Background
This final rule is intended specifically
to implement Sec. 205 of the RSIA,
Public Law 110–432, Division A, which
was enacted October 16, 2008, and
generally to increase safety at highwayrail and pathway grade crossings. See 49
U.S.C. 20152, Notification of grade
crossing problems, and definitions in
revised 49 CFR 234.5 and new 49 CFR
234.301. Sec. 205 of the RSIA mandates
that the Secretary of Transportation
(Secretary) require certain railroad
carriers (railroads) to take a series of
specified actions related to setting up
and using systems by which the public
is able to notify the railroad by toll-free
telephone number of safety problems at
its highway-rail and pathway grade
crossings. Such systems are commonly
known as Emergency Notification
Systems (ENS) or ENS programs. This
rule is also being issued under the
authority of a separate statutory
provision, 49 U.S.C. 20103, which gives
the Secretary very broad authority to
prescribe rail safety regulations and
issue rail safety orders pursuant to
notice-and-comment procedures. The
Secretary has delegated the
responsibility to carry out both Sec. 205
of the RSIA and 49 U.S.C. 20103 to the
Administrator of FRA. 49 CFR 1.49(m),
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(oo). Essentially, Sec. 205 of the RSIA
imposes a mandate requiring FRA as the
Secretary’s delegate to prescribe
regulations or orders imposing the
requirements specified in that section;
this final rule implements that statutory
mandate.
In particular, under Sec. 205 of the
RSIA, FRA is to require each railroad to
‘‘establish and maintain a toll-free
telephone service for rights-of-way over
which it dispatches trains’’ through ‘‘the
grade crossing of railroad tracks on
those rights-of-way and public or
private roads,’’ ‘‘to directly receive calls
reporting’’ any of three types of unsafe
conditions at the grade crossing or other
safety-related information involving
such a grade crossing. Under that
section, the three types of reportable
unsafe conditions are as follows: (1)
Malfunctions of warning signals,
crossing gates, and other devices
intended to promote safety at the
highway-rail grade crossing; (2) disabled
vehicles blocking railroad tracks at such
grade crossings; and (3) obstructions to
the view of a pedestrian or a vehicle
operator for a reasonable distance in
either direction of a train’s approach to
such a grade crossing. To the extent that
the requirements of the final rule exceed
the requirements specified by the RSIA,
FRA relies primarily upon its general
safety rulemaking authority under 49
U.S.C. 20103.
In addition to specifying the
requirement that the Secretary must
impose on dispatching railroads to
establish and maintain telephonic
notification systems, the RSIA includes
a series of additional specifications to be
reflected in FRA’s regulation. When a
railroad receives through the ENS a
report of a malfunction of a warning
signal, crossing gate, and/or other
device intended to promote safety at a
grade crossing or a report of a disabled
vehicle blocking a railroad track at a
grade crossing through which the
railroad dispatches a train, the
dispatching railroad must promptly
contact trains operating near the grade
crossing to warn them of the
malfunctioning device or disabled
vehicle. After contacting the trains, the
dispatching railroad must contact
appropriate public safety officials
having jurisdiction over the grade
crossing to provide them with the
information necessary for them to direct
traffic, assist in the removal of the
disabled vehicle, or carry out other
activities. When a railroad receives a
report through the ENS of either an
obstruction to the view of a pedestrian
or a vehicle operator for a reasonable
distance in either direction of a train’s
approach to a grade crossing through
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which it dispatches a train or a report
of another unsafe condition involving
such a grade crossing, the railroad must
timely investigate the report, remove the
obstruction if lawful and feasible to do
so, or correct the unsafe condition if
lawful and feasible to do so, or, if that
railroad does not have maintenance
responsibility for the crossing, ask the
maintaining railroad to do so as
required by the rule.
Further, under the RSIA, FRA must
require that the owner of the track at a
grade crossing ‘‘ensure the placement
* * * of appropriately located signs’’
bearing, at a minimum, ‘‘a toll-free
telephone number to be used for placing
calls’’ to report unsafe conditions at the
crossing to the railroad that dispatches
trains on that right-of-way through the
crossing, ‘‘an explanation of the purpose
of that toll-free telephone number,’’ and
the ‘‘grade crossing number assigned for
that crossing by the’’ U.S. DOT National
Crossing Inventory (Crossing Inventory).
III. History of Accidents Relevant to
This Rulemaking
There are approximately 211,000
public and private at-grade highway-rail
and pathway crossings (highway-rail
and pathway grade crossings) in the
United States. In other words, the
country has approximately 211,000
locations where a collision can occur
between a train and a car, truck, or other
motor vehicle, or a pedestrian at any
one time. Grade crossing collisions are
among the most challenging areas in
FRA’s efforts to reduce deaths and
injuries along the Nation’s railroads. In
fact, since 1997, grade crossing
collisions have caused more railroadrelated fatalities per year than any other
single factor except for trespassing on
railroad property. During the 11-year
period from 1999–2009, 2,306 collisions
occurred at highway-rail and pathway
grade crossings where a vehicle was
stalled or sight obstructions were
reported to FRA. See accident reporting
regulations at 49 CFR part 225 and 49
CFR 234.7.
A train striking a pedestrian can result
in serious injury or death. Further, a
collision between a train and a vehicle
of any size can be catastrophic. Serious
injuries or deaths are far more likely to
occur with a collision between a train
and a vehicle than with a collision
between two vehicles. While significant
improvements in grade crossing safety
have been achieved over the last two
decades, grade crossing collisions still
pose a significant public safety threat,
and one that can spiral beyond the
immediate impact of the vehicle and
train. The derailment of a freight train
as a result of a collision at the grade
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crossing can have a disastrous effect on
the train crew or even on an entire
community, especially if the derailment
results in a release of hazardous
material that necessitates the evacuation
of a neighborhood or the community.
Moreover, if a passenger train derails as
a result of a collision, the risk of injuries
extends beyond the vehicle occupants
and train crew to the passengers of the
train. An example of such an accident
occurred in 1999 in Bourbonnais,
Illinois, when a National Railroad
Passenger Corporation (Amtrak)
passenger train struck a truck loaded
with steel at a highway-rail grade
crossing. Almost the entire train
derailed, resulting in 11 deaths and 131
injuries to the passengers and crew of
the train.
Other vehicles and pedestrians in the
vicinity of a highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing collision can also be at
grave risk. This was the scenario in 1993
when an Amtrak passenger train
collided with a gasoline tanker truck at
a highway-rail grade crossing in Ft.
Lauderdale, Florida. The truck driver
was attempting to cross through a grade
crossing where traffic was congested.
The tanker truck was punctured when it
was struck by the Amtrak train; a fire
erupted and engulfed the truck and nine
other vehicles near the crossing. The fire
killed the driver of the truck and five
occupants of three stopped vehicles
near the grade crossing.
There are ancillary benefits associated
with an ENS beyond its primary
purpose of facilitating the telephonic
reporting of unsafe conditions at
highway-rail or pathway grade crossings
and remedying those unsafe conditions.
Railroads with an ENS also have
received calls from the public reporting
unsafe conditions in the general vicinity
of the crossing, but not immediately at
the crossing. Although not within the
scope of this rule, responsive action by
the railroads to such reports of other
types of unsafe conditions often accrue
significant benefits to the railroad and
surrounding community.
The National Transportation Safety
Board (NTSB) issued a report in March
2012 of a derailment on the Canadian
National Railway Company (CN) that
illustrates the potential benefit of having
an ENS. The accident occurred in
Cherry Valley, Illinois in 2009. The
derailment, which resulted in a fatality,
several injuries, and the evacuation of
600 residents, was caused by a washout
of track near a highway-rail grade
crossing, but not at the crossing. Before
the derailment occurred, several
individuals observed high water
conditions affecting the track. One
individual was familiar with the
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practice of railroads posting emergency
telephone numbers at grade crossings
and attempted to locate such a sign.
There was no sign posted at the
crossing. Several calls were placed to
the local 9111 system to report the
washout and warn of the potential of a
train derailment. The first call was
received by the 911 center 56 minutes
before a train approached, but local
police only first learned of the situation
approximately 20 minutes after that first
call was made to 911. Additionally,
several critical minutes were lost as the
local police attempted to identify the
railroad that owned the track. The NTSB
concluded that ‘‘[h]ad the emergency
contact information been available, the
citizen [i.e., the individual who was
unable to locate the railroad contact
information at the Mulford Road
crossing] would likely have called the
CN instead of 911, or both. Even though
the 911 center was able to identify the
crossing, it was not until 41 minutes
after the initial 911 call that the CN
Police Emergency Call Center in
Montreal was notified of the track
washout.’’
By the time the information was
relayed to the proper railroad officials,
the train derailed, and several of the
cars, carrying flammable liquids,
erupted in flames. As a result, several
motor vehicles that had been stopped at
the crossing waiting for the train to pass
were impacted by the incident. One
motor vehicle passenger was fatally
injured; two other passengers in the
vehicle were seriously injured along
with five occupants of another car. The
incident also resulted in the evacuation
of 600 nearby residents. The NTSB
concluded ‘‘that had the required CN
grade crossing identification and
emergency contact information been
posted at the Mulford Road crossing, the
railroad would likely have been notified
of the track washout earlier, and the
additional time may have been
sufficient for the [rail traffic controllers]
to issue instructions to stop the train
and prevent the accident.’’ Derailment
of CN Freight Train U70691–18 With
Subsequent Hazardous Materials
Release and Fire, Cherry Valley, Illinois,
June 19, 2009, Railroad Accident Report
NTSB/RAR–12/01 (Washington, DC:
National Transportation Safety Board,
February 14, 2012), https://
www.ntsb.gov/doclib/reports/2012/
RAR1201.pdf.
1 The current 911 system in the United States was
designed to provide a universal, easy-to-remember
number, 9–1–1, for people to reach police, fire or
emergency medical assistance from any phone in
any location, without having to look up specific
phone numbers.
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IV. History of Emergency Notification
Systems (ENS)
A. In General
The existence of an effective system
by which a member of the public is
provided with a telephone number that
may be used to alert the appropriate
railroad promptly to an emergency
situation or other unsafe condition at a
specific, identified highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing enables the
railroad and local public safety officials
to respond to the crossing hazard earlier
than they would otherwise be able to do
so. Therefore, the railroad is provided
with more time to take steps to avert an
accident at the crossing before it
happens or, in any event, to mitigate its
consequences. Currently, all Class I
railroads have put in place some sort of
means by which they can receive
prompt telephonic notification from the
public of any emergency or other unsafe
condition at most of their highway-rail
grade crossings, whereas many regional
and short line railroads do not have any
such kind of notification system in
place. The rule requires certain railroads
to implement such a communication
system, which this rule also calls an
Emergency Notification System or ENS,
covering public and private highwayrail and pathway grade crossings.
B. Various ENS Programs in the United
States
In 1983, the State of Texas established
the first toll-free call-in program in the
United States that enabled the public to
notify a State call center by telephone of
problems at the State’s public highwayrail grade crossings equipped with
automated warning devices. As the
current Texas ENS program is organized
today, after receiving such a call, the
Texas call center, operated by the Texas
Department of Public Safety, in turn
notifies the railroad involved. The callin system also requires that a sign be
posted at the highway-rail grade
crossing with the crossing’s unique
identifying number from the Crossing
Inventory, as well as a toll-free
telephone number. Texas’s call center
has a dedicated computer with a
modified inventory database that
facilitates the identification of the
relevant crossing and railroad. The
Center operator then calls the
appropriate railroad and relays the
report of the problem. At last report, the
Texas system handles more than 1,200
calls per month for the State’s public
crossings, even though only those
crossings equipped with active warning
devices are equipped with the signs
containing the Center’s toll-free
telephone number. It should be noted
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that under this final rule, railroads using
State programs for notification of unsafe
conditions at grade crossings, such as
Texas’s program, may no longer comply
with the regulation. However, a State
would be allowed to operate as a ‘‘thirdparty telephone service’’ as described in
the rule, as long as the program
complies with all the conditions
specified.
Following the successful
establishment of this ENS program in
Texas, and in part at the urging of FRA
and the NTSB, virtually all of the
Nation’s major railroads have
voluntarily adopted similar systems for
the majority of their highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings, sometimes
including all grade crossings, i.e.,
systems not limited only to public
highway-rail grade crossings or only to
those equipped with active warning
devices. Unfortunately, more than
72,000 public and private highway-rail
and pathway grade crossings belonging
to the Nation’s short line and regional
railroads are not included. Many of
these railroads do not have 24-hour
operations and do not have the
resources to establish such a call-in
program.
The 1994 Rail-Highway Crossing
Safety Action Plan Support Proposals
issued by DOT recommended an
automated, computer-based system to
‘‘receive, catalogue and forward
telephone calls from the concerned’’
public regarding signal malfunctions
and other safety-related problems at
highway-rail grade crossings. RailHighway Crossing Safety Action Plan
Support Proposals, 17 (Washington, DC:
FRA, June 13, 1994). However, the
automated system that was envisioned
in 1994 was a type of automated
answering and message forwarding
system that relied on the caller to enter
the required information. Once entered,
this information would then be
forwarded to the appropriate railroad.
Unlike the automated answering system
prescribed in this rule, the caller would
not have been directed to speak to a live
operator. In FRA’s experience fully
automated systems have proven to be
unworkable, whereas staffed systems
have been successful.
In 1994, Congress directed FRA to
conduct pilot projects in at least two
States to demonstrate the efficiency of
such ‘‘emergency notification system’’
programs covering highway-rail grade
crossings and to report to Congress on
the results of the pilot projects. Section
301, ‘‘Emergency Notification of Grade
Crossing Problems,’’ of Public Law 103–
440, November 2, 1994 (108 Stat. 4626).
Also, in 1996, Congress appropriated
funds for the development of software
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and hardware to support the
demonstration of a toll-free ENS to
report emergencies and other safety
problems at crossings.
Initially, FRA joined in a cooperative
effort with the Texas Department of
Emergency Management to evaluate the
Texas notification system. Texas was
designated one of the pilot States, and
an extensive array of software,
hardware, and operating improvements
was developed. FRA prepared and
implemented new software on an
upgraded system in 1999. Based on
comments and suggestions, further
improvements were implemented in
2001 when the Texas call center
operation was transferred to the Texas
Department of Public Safety.
This 2001 version of the software was
modified for use by a ‘‘9–1–1’’ center in
Clinton County, Pennsylvania, with the
participation of eight short line
railroads. A 30-month demonstration
program was initiated in November
2001. See Project Plan: 1–800 Toll-Free
Emergency Notification System for
Shortline Railroad Highway-Rail
Crossings in the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania (Washington, DC: Federal
Railroad Administration, September 20,
2000), https://www.fra.dot.gov/
downloads/safety/
emergency_notification_system.pdf.
In 2002, an agreement was reached
with the Paducah & Louisville Railway,
Inc. (PAL) to conduct an additional pilot
project (the third). At the time PAL was
a regional railroad with 24-hour
operations and approximately 400 grade
crossings. FRA modified the program
software to accommodate the railroad’s
needs.
As a result of these pilot programs,
FRA continued to modify its software
for use by States and railroads. The
software enables the timely reporting of
emergencies, malfunctions, and other
unsafe conditions at grade crossings.
Call center operators can log the
reported problem, access the Crossing
Inventory files to look up the proper
crossing number, and notify the correct
railroad dispatch center and other
emergency responders. FRA makes this
software freely available to railroads and
emergency response centers.
Furthermore, FRA strongly encourages
railroads and States with ENS programs
to keep their crossing inventory
information current, as required by Sec.
204 of the RSIA (codified at 49 U.S.C.
20160 and 21301(a), with respect to
railroads, and 23 U.S.C. 130, with
respect to States). A key component of
an effective ENS is to be able to
correctly and quickly identify the
crossing number upon receiving a report
of an unsafe condition at a crossing.
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C. FRA’s 2006 Report to Congress
In May 2006, as mandated by
Congress in Section 301, ‘‘Emergency
Notification of Grade Crossing
Problems,’’ of Public Law 103–440, FRA
published a report to Congress outlining
the development of ENS programs
(Report). Pilot Programs for Emergency
Notification Systems at Highway-Rail
Grade Crossings, (Washington, DC:
Federal Railroad Administration, May
2006), https://www.fra.dot.gov/
downloads/safety/1_800_report.pdf. The
Report covered, among other things, the
Texas ENS program, the Pennsylvania
ENS program, Congressional action,
NTSB recommendations, and FRA
actions. Based on the findings of the
Report, FRA made certain
recommendations, to Congress. These
recommendations were as follows: (1)
Class I railroads should continue to
implement, augment, and review the
ENS programs that they have initiated;
(2) smaller railroads, including
commuter railroads, should work
cooperatively through The American
Short Line and Regional Railroad
Association (ASLRRA), or another
suitable organization or organizations,
to establish ENS programs serving
member railroads; (3) signs installed or
replaced at highway-rail grade crossings
should be displayed prominently to
crossing users (e.g., mounted on signal
masts where practicable) and should
conform to the Federal Highway
Administration’s (FHWA) Manual on
Uniform Traffic Control Devices
(MUTCD) guidance; and (4) any
program that does not currently include
passive highway-rail grade crossings be
expanded to include, at minimum, all
such public crossings where it is
practicable to do so.
The Report concluded that the pilot
ENS programs in both Texas and
Pennsylvania afforded the general
public a quick and easy means of
alerting appropriate railroad officials to
safety-related problems. Additionally,
the Report concluded that the Texas
ENS likely resulted in the prevention of
numerous accidents and injuries, and
Pennsylvania’s ENS, albeit on a smaller
scale than Texas’s, demonstrated that it
is possible to create emergency call
systems through the development of
agreements with multiple railroads.
Finally, the Report emphasized that the
Pennsylvania ENS also showed the
value of including all highway-rail
grade crossings, not just those with
train-activated warning devices.
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V. Section-by-Section Analysis
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Section 234.1 Scope
FRA is expanding this part to include
new subpart E, Emergency Notification
Systems for Telephonic Reporting of
Unsafe Conditions at Highway-Rail and
Pathway Grade Crossings. For this
reason, FRA is amending the
description of the scope of the part,
§ 234.1, by converting it into two
paragraphs, dividing the first paragraph
into four enumerated subparagraphs,
and inserting in new § 234.1(a)(4) the
following reference to new subpart E:
‘‘Requirements that certain railroads
establish systems for receiving toll-free
telephone calls reporting various unsafe
conditions at highway-rail grade
crossings and at pathway grade
crossings, and for taking certain actions
in response to those calls.’’ Further, for
improved readability of the section,
FRA is designating the last sentence of
the current § 234.1 as paragraph (b) of
revised § 234.1.
Section 234.3 Application and
Responsibility for Compliance
This section is being adopted as
proposed in the NPRM, with the
exception of minor typographical
revisions. FRA received public
comment on this section from three
commenters—an individual, the
California Public Utilities Commission
(CPUC), and the ASLRRA.
The individual commenter noted that
even though the NPRM clearly stated
that proposed part 234, subpart E,
requires a railroad that dispatches or
otherwise provides the authority for the
movement of one or more trains through
a highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing to establish and maintain an
ENS,2 some small railroads may be
confused by the language in the rule.
The commenter claimed that some small
railroads may incorrectly interpret the
meaning of ‘‘dispatch’’ in a narrow
sense, such as only a railroad that
employs an individual in a ‘‘dispatcher’’
position as actually ‘‘dispatching’’
trains. In the final rule, FRA’s
definitions in § 234.301 of ‘‘dispatching
railroad,’’ ‘‘dispatches a train or
dispatches trains,’’ and ‘‘maintaining
railroad,’’ and the associated duties and
obligations for these railroads described
in the rule clearly explain which
railroads are subject to subpart E.
Despite the commenter’s concerns,
railroads have the burden of complying
2 E.g., the proposed rule, defined ‘‘[d]ispatching
railroad’’ to mean ‘‘a railroad that dispatches or
otherwise provides the authority for the movement
of one or more trains through a highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing.’’ 76 FR 11992, 12009
(March 4, 2011).
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with FRA regulations, requiring them to
carefully read the final rule in its
entirety and thoroughly understand
their duties and obligations as stated in
the rule. For this reason, FRA sees no
need, as the commenter recommended,
to contact small railroads to inform
them of their responsibilities pursuant
to this final rule.
The CPUC recommended that all
public highway-rail grade crossings be
covered by this rule, to include those
through which a ‘‘plant railroad’’
dispatches trains. In § 234.3(a)(1), a
‘‘plant railroad’’ is excepted from part
234. CPUC expressed concern that a
‘‘plant railroad,’’ as defined in § 234.5,
might dispatch trains through a public
highway-rail grade crossing, yet still not
be required by subpart E to establish
and maintain an ENS. CPUC may be
correct that a small number of plant
railroads may dispatch trains through
public highway-rail grade crossings and
not be required to establish an ENS
because a ‘‘plant railroad’’ is excepted
from part 234. However, FRA
historically has not regulated plant
railroads. By their very nature, most
plant railroads operate at very low
speed, which allows them to avoid
collisions. Furthermore, the low speed
would reduce the severity of any
collision that does occur. Additionally,
since the public crossing is actually
within the confines of the plant, the
owner of the crossing would be very
evident to any user of the public
crossing. Consequently, the user of the
crossing is better positioned to report
signal malfunctions, poor sight distance,
or other unsafe conditions to the plant.
Finally, plant railroads would be free to
implement their own ENS if they choose
to do so.
ASLRRA recommended that the rule
not apply to Class II and Class III
railroads that operate at restricted speed
for their primary operating practice, in
order to relieve those railroads of the
rule’s financial burden. FRA is not in a
position to make such an exception
since the RSIA statutorily mandates that
each railroad ‘‘establish and maintain a
toll-free telephone service for rights-ofway over which it dispatches trains.’’
However, FRA has carefully considered
the various monitoring and sign
placement costs that the rule imposes
on small railroads and has made several
changes with respect to these costs in
the final rule to lessen the financial
burden. These changes are described in
more detail in the section-by-section
analysis of §§ 234.303 and 234.311.
Section 234.5 Definitions
FRA received no public comments
related specifically to the definitions in
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this section. This section is being
adopted as proposed in the NPRM, with
the exception of minor typographical
and stylistic changes, and a new
definition. First, FRA is adding
clarification to the defined term
‘‘Credible report of warning system
malfunction,’’ by also calling it a
‘‘credible report of warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade
crossing.’’ Second, this section now
defines the term ‘‘Warning system
malfunction’’ or ‘‘warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade
crossing.’’ ‘‘Warning system
malfunction’’ or ‘‘warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade
crossing’’ means an activation failure, a
partial activation, or a false activation of
a highway-rail grade crossing warning
system.
Subpart E—Emergency Notification
Systems for Telephonic Reporting of
Unsafe Conditions at Highway-Rail and
Pathway Grade Crossings
As proposed in the NPRM, FRA is
amending part 234 by adding new
subpart E, which includes §§ 234.301–
234.317. In the final rule, FRA is
revising the title of the subpart to read—
Emergency Notification Systems for
Telephonic Reporting of Unsafe
Conditions at Highway-Rail and
Pathway Grade Crossings.
Section 234.301 Definitions
Unless otherwise stated here, FRA is
adopting the definitions for new subpart
E as proposed in the NPRM. FRA
received public comments regarding
several of the proposed definitions in
this section. The organization Crossing
Call recommended that the proposed
definition in the NPRM of ‘‘Automated
answering service’’ be amended to
permit incoming calls to be answered by
an initial recorded announcement so
long as thereafter the call is handled by
a live operator. Many of the Class I
railroads already have similar
emergency notification systems in place
that respond to reports of emergencies
and other unsafe conditions at crossings
in a timely manner and effectively route
callers to an automated menu of options
before reaching a live operator. FRA
agrees with this recommendation, and is
changing the term ‘‘Automated
answering service’’ to ‘‘Automated
answering system,’’ and revising the
definition, accordingly, to mean a type
of answering system that directs a
telephone caller to a single menu of
options, where the caller has the choice
to select one of the available options to
report an unsafe condition at a highwayrail or pathway grade crossing; and
immediately after selecting one of the
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available menu options, the caller must
be transferred to a live telephone
operator.
Separately, in this final rule, FRA is
adding the term ‘‘Answering machine,’’
which means either a device or a
voicemail system that allows a
telephone caller to leave a recorded
message to report an unsafe condition at
a highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing, and the railroad is able to
retrieve the recorded message either
remotely or on-site. In this final rule,
§ 234.303(b) permits the use of an
answering machine by certain
dispatching railroads under certain
circumstances to receive reports of
unsafe conditions at crossings through
which they dispatch trains.
Additionally, § 234.305(h)(2) permits a
maintaining railroad under certain
circumstances to use an answering
machine to receive from a dispatching
railroad reports of unsafe conditions at
crossings that it maintains.
In the NPRM, FRA solicited
comments with respect to setting a
maximum amount of time a caller must
wait before the call is answered by the
railroad. FRA received responses from a
handful of industry associations, two
State agencies, and individuals.
Advocates for a maximum wait time
included the Brotherhood of Railroad
Signalmen (BRS), the CPUC, the Illinois
Commerce Commission (ILCC), and the
American Association for Justice (AAJ),
in addition to a few individuals. These
organizations and individuals
recommended that the maximum wait
time experienced by a caller be between
one and two minutes. The AAJ also
suggested that the railroads have an
automated system to inform a caller of
how long the wait time will be to speak
to a live operator. However, the Angels
on Track Foundation commented that
public calls reporting unsafe conditions
at grade crossings should receive
immediate attention and that a caller
should not experience any waiting time.
Separately, at the public hearing held
by FRA on September 29, 2011, FRA
asked the Association of American
Railroads (AAR) to consider a standard
for the time that it takes for a live
operator to answer a call concerning a
problem at a crossing. AAR submitted
supplemental comments that address
this issue. AAR argued that it is
impossible to establish a meaningful
performance standard for the time that
it takes to contact a live operator
through toll-free numbers posted at
crossings. Furthermore, AAR stated that
calls to railroad telephone systems are
typically answered ‘‘expeditiously.’’
AAR also stated that, from the time a
caller selects a telephone menu option
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for ‘‘emergency’’ or ‘‘malfunctioning
signal device,’’ on average it is no more
than one minute before a live person
answers. Crossing Call suggested that if
FRA promulgated standards for
answering calls, those standards should
conform to the metrics tracked by
answering services (e.g., percent of calls
answered within a certain time period).
FRA recognizes that the more
promptly a railroad routes a caller to a
live operator, the sooner the railroad can
avert a potential accident or remedy a
problem at a crossing. FRA encourages
all railroads to promptly route grade
crossing emergency phone calls to a live
operator; but, at this time, FRA assesses
that there is little additional safety
benefit to be derived from imposing a
maximum call wait time in light of the
final rule’s requirements in § 234.303.
There were two commenters who took
issue with the use of the term
‘‘dispatching railroad.’’ The NPRM
proposed to define the term to mean, ‘‘a
railroad that dispatches or otherwise
provides the authority for the movement
of one or more trains through a
highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing.’’ The Everett Railroad
Company recommended that FRA apply
a narrow meaning to the term so as to
make this final rule applicable only to
rail operations that employ a dispatcher
and have controlled trackage. FRA
disagrees with this recommendation as
contrary to the statutory mandate for the
rulemaking. Section 205 of the RSIA
states, in part, that
the Secretary of Transportation shall require
each railroad carrier to—(1) establish and
maintain a toll-free telephone service for
rights of way over which it dispatches trains,
to directly receive calls reporting—(A)
malfunctions of * * * devices to promote
safety at the grade crossing of railroad tracks
on those rights-of-way and public or private
roads; (B) disabled vehicles blocking railroad
tracks at such grade crossings; (c)
obstructions to the view of a pedestrian or a
vehicle operator for a reasonable distance in
either direction of a train’s approach; or (d)
other safety information involving such grade
crossings.
Section 205 of the RSIA does not
define the word ‘‘dispatches’’ nor does
it limit the scope of this rule only to
those railroads that have a position of a
dispatcher or have controlled trackage.
So in developing the final rule, FRA
considered the plain meaning of the
word and the definition of ‘‘dispatches’’
in the final rule is consistent with this
plain meaning. The other commenter
noted that smaller railroads may be
confused by the language in § 234.305(a)
of the NPRM, and may interpret the
language in the narrowest sense,
meaning that only railroads that
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‘‘dispatch’’ trains using a dispatcher
would be considered a ‘‘dispatching
railroad,’’ and required to comply with
Part 234. The final rule also defines
‘‘dispatching railroad’’ to mean, ‘‘a
railroad that dispatches or otherwise
provides the authority for the movement
of one or more trains through a
highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing.’’ The definition makes clear
that this rule applies to both railroads
that dispatch in the traditional sense, or
by other means control train movement
through highway-rail or pathway grade
crossings. Furthermore, to clarify the
meaning of the use of the verb ‘‘to
dispatch,’’ in the final rule, FRA is
adding the definition of the phrase
‘‘Dispatches a train’’ or ‘‘dispatches
trains’’ to mean dispatches or otherwise
provides the authority for the movement
of the train or trains through a highwayrail or pathway grade crossing.
To properly receive notification of
unsafe conditions at grade crossings, a
railroad or group of railroads is required
to implement a system that consists of
multiple components. To refer to the
entire set of these various components,
the term ‘‘Emergency Notification
System’’ or its abbreviation (‘‘ENS’’) is
used. In the final rule, FRA adopted the
definition of ‘‘Emergency Notification
System’’ as proposed in the NPRM, with
the exception of minor typographical
and stylistic changes. As explained
previously in the NPRM, although the
word ‘‘emergency’’ is part of the term
‘‘Emergency Notification System,’’ FRA
does not intend to imply that all
reportable unsafe conditions are
emergencies, i.e., conditions that create
an imminent hazard of death or injury
to an individual or damage to property.
In other words, some reportable unsafe
conditions are not emergencies. The
term ‘‘Emergency Notification System’’
is used in part because of its use in the
1994 legislation and its use colloquially
by persons managing or working with
the already existing ENS programs.
In the final rule, FRA is adding the
term ‘‘farm grade crossing’’ to explain
that farm grade crossings are a subset of
highway-rail grade crossings that are on
private roadways and that are used for
the movement of farm motor vehicles,
farm machinery, or livestock in
connection with agricultural pursuits,
forestry, or other land-productive
purposes. In consideration of public
comments on the number of signs that
would be required at crossings, the final
rule in § 234.311 permits farm grade
crossings to have just one ENS sign.
This revision is discussed more
thoroughly in the section-by-section
analysis of § 234.311.
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As mentioned previously in the
NPRM, the railroad that dispatches a
train through a highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing and the railroad that
maintains the crossing may not
necessarily be the same entity. To
address this scenario, FRA proposed a
definition for ‘‘maintaining railroad.’’ In
response to public comments, FRA is
revising the definition of ‘‘Maintaining
railroad’’ to clarify the responsibilities
of a maintaining railroad and to account
not only for an owner of the track, but
also for a lessee of the track.
‘‘Maintaining railroad’’ now means the
entity (e.g., track owner or lessee) that
is responsible for maintenance of the
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing
warning device or other aspects of safety
maintenance at the crossing. If the
maintenance responsibility is handled
by a contractor, such as maintaining a
warning system or track structure at the
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing,
then the contractor is considered the
‘‘maintaining railroad’’ for the purposes
of this subpart.
The Kansas City Southern Railway
Company (KCS) found the proposed
definition of ‘‘Pathway grade crossing’’
to be unclear and recommended that the
phrase ‘‘explicitly authorized’’ be
further explained to ensure that FRA’s
enforcement of the rule is consistent.
KCS suggested that for a public
authority to ‘‘explicitly authorize’’ a
pathway grade crossing that public
entity needs to have taken some
affirmative act that is memorialized in
its records. Furthermore, KCS stated
that for a railroad to have ‘‘explicitly
authorized’’ a pathway grade crossing,
there should at a minimum be a written
agreement between the railroad and
some other entity allowing for public
use of a pathway across the railroad’s
tracks. KCS argued that ‘‘continued use’’
alone is insufficient to establish a
pathway grade crossing as ‘‘explicitly
authorized.’’ FRA agrees with KCS on
this point. Continuous use of a pathway
grade crossing would constitute only
one of several elements of either an
easement by prescription or by
implication. By their very nature,
neither prescriptive nor implied
easements are explicitly authorized. In
the NPRM, FRA’s definition of
‘‘Pathway grade crossing’’ was taken
from Section 2 of the RSIA, which
defines ‘‘crossing,’’ as used in the RSIA,
as a location, other than a location
where one or more railroad tracks cross
one or more railroad tracks at-grade,
where—
(B) a pathway explicitly authorized by a
public authority or a railroad carrier that is
dedicated for the use of nonvehicular traffic,
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including pedestrians, bicyclists, and others,
that is not associated with a public highway,
road, or street, or a private roadway, crosses
one or more railroad tracks either at grade or
grade-separated.
122 Stat. 4848, 4849–50.
After careful consideration of the
comment by KCS, FRA decided not to
revise the proposed definition of
‘‘pathway grade crossing.’’ There are a
number of ways that a pathway could be
‘‘explicitly authorized,’’ to include but
not limited to, by easement stated in a
deed, will, or other written instrument,
by public ordinance, or by written
agreement with a railroad or a public
authority. In other words, there must be
a clear understanding between the
interested parties that the existence of
the pathway is authorized.
In the final rule, FRA is adding the
term ‘‘Public report of warning system
malfunction,’’ or ‘‘Public report of
warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing,’’ to
distinguish between the two types of
reports that may be received by a
dispatching railroad of a warning
system malfunction at a highway-rail
grade crossing. The first type of report,
a ‘‘public report of warning system
malfunction,’’ originates from a member
of the general public, that is, not a
railroad employee, law enforcement
officer, highway traffic official, or other
employee of a public agency acting in
an official capacity. In contrast, a
‘‘credible report of warning system
malfunction’’ is supplied by a railroad
employee, law enforcement officer,
highway traffic official, or other
employee of a public agency acting in
an official capacity. The receipt of a
credible report of warning system
malfunction triggers the duty to comply
with subpart C. Subpart C does not
apply to public reports of warning
system malfunction.
In the final rule, FRA is also adding
the term ‘‘third-party telephone
service,’’ to describe the use of a thirdparty service by a dispatching or
maintaining railroad, pursuant to
§ 234.307, to receive telephonic reports
of unsafe conditions at highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings. This term is
described in more detail in the sectionby-section analysis for § 234.307.
FRA is also adding the term ‘‘warning
system failure at a pathway grade
crossing’’ to mean a failure of an active
pathway grade crossing warning system
to perform as intended. The term would
include, but not be limited to, such
problems as the failure of the device to
activate as a train approaches the
pathway crossing, a false activation of
the device when no train is approaching
the pathway crossing, or a burnt out
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35171
light on the device. This definition is
being added to explain the term, which
appears in § 234.305, Remedial actions
in response to reports of unsafe
conditions at highway-rail and pathway
grade crossings. Note that a ‘‘warning
system failure at a pathway grade
crossing’’ does not trigger the remedial
action requirements of subpart C. The
term ‘‘warning system failure at a
pathway grade crossing’’ is being added
to differentiate it from the terms
‘‘warning system malfunction’’ and
‘‘warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing,’’ which
describe the various activation failures
that may occur at a highway-rail grade
crossing and that if the subject of a
credible report of warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade
crossing do trigger the remedial action
requirements of subpart C.
Section 234.303 Emergency
Notification Systems for Telephonic
Reporting of Unsafe Conditions at
Highway-Rail and Pathway Grade
Crossings
Section 234.303(a) requires each
railroad that dispatches a train, or
otherwise provides the authority for the
movement of a train, through a
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing,
to set up a system to directly and
promptly receive telephonic notification
of certain unsafe conditions at the
crossing. In particular, § 234.303(a)
requires these dispatching railroads to
establish and maintain a toll-free
telephone service by which the railroad
can directly receive calls reporting any
of the unsafe conditions listed in
paragraph (c) (with respect to highwayrail grade crossings) and paragraph (d)
(with respect to pathway grade
crossings).
Further, § 234.303(a) specifically
requires that the railroad either have a
live person answer the calls directly and
promptly, or else use an automated
answering system or a third-party
telephone service for answering the
calls, except as provided in paragraph
(b).
One of the comments expressed
concern that this rule would conflict
with the hours of service laws (49 U.S.C.
ch. 211). FRA disagrees that this rule
presents a conflict with the hours of
service laws. One of the many
provisions in the current hours of
service laws mandates that a railroad
dispatching service employee, such as
an operator, train dispatcher, or any
other employee who by use of an
electrical or mechanical device
dispatches, reports, transmits, receives,
or delivers orders related to or affecting
train movements, may not remain or go
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on duty for more than 9 or 12 hours in
a 24-hour period, depending on the
number of shifts employed at the tower,
office, station, or place that the
employee is on duty. (49 U.S.C. 21105).
This final rule does not stipulate which
employees would be assigned to receive
and respond to emergency notification
calls as required by subpart E. It is the
railroad’s responsibility to divide
employees’ duties in a way that would
not violate the hours of service laws,
and/or hire additional employees, if
necessary. FRA recognizes that some of
the small railroads may operate with
fewer employees and would have less
flexibility in scheduling staff to receive
and respond to incoming calls. To that
end, FRA has made several changes in
the final rule to address such concerns.
These changes are discussed in the
relevant sections that follow.
Several of the comments that FRA
received noted that either local law
enforcement or 911 systems are capable
of handling emergency calls for unsafe
conditions at grade crossings. FRA
disagrees. A system in which a
telephone call gets routed directly to the
dispatching railroad is more efficient
than one that relies on local law
enforcement agencies or 911 systems.
While some local law enforcement
agencies may be familiar with the
railroad’s contact information in the
event of an emergency, FRA believes
that many local law enforcement
agencies and 911 systems lack the
knowledge or information to properly
notify the railroad in these kinds of
situations. For example, some local law
enforcement agencies and 911 systems
may incorrectly contact the wrong
railroad or identify the crossing by its
street name rather than the Crossing
Inventory number. Furthermore, some
local law enforcement agencies may
have neither the capacity nor the
capabilities to promptly route this
information to the dispatching railroad.
It is imperative for improved crossing
safety that the dispatching railroad
receives precise information so that it
can act quickly to take the steps
necessary to attempt to prevent a
collision or other crossing incident and
any resulting casualties and, in any
event, to mitigate their severity.
A dispatching railroad must be able to
directly receive calls through the tollfree telephone service, unless the
railroad is permitted to use a non-tollfree number as provided in paragraph
(e) of this section. ‘‘Directly’’ does not
necessarily mean that the railroad must
be the first entity that receives the
telephone call when the toll-free service
is used. In the NPRM, FRA proposed
that only one entity may exist between
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the caller and the railroad. In the final
rule, ‘‘directly’’ does mean that only one
entity—a third-party telephone
service—may be placed between the
caller reporting the unsafe condition(s)
at the grade crossing and the
dispatching railroad. The rationale for
the use of a third-party telephone
service is addressed further in the
discussion of § 234.307. Regardless if an
additional entity is used, the
dispatching railroad ultimately remains
responsible for setting up and using a
system by which it can receive
notification of unsafe conditions at a
grade crossing and take the appropriate
action in response to such notification.
This responsibility is placed on the
dispatching railroad because it is in the
best position to immediately contact
and warn the affected train crew(s) of
the reported unsafe condition(s) prior to
each train’s arrival at the crossing to
which the report pertains.
One comment noted that placing signs
at private highway-rail grade crossings
(i.e., a highway-rail grade crossing on a
private roadway) and pathway grade
crossings would not result in a benefit
to the public. FRA believes that
providing a mechanism to report an
unsafe condition is vital, regardless of
the type of crossing. Incidents such as
a downed tree, or a recreational vehicle
hung up on the crossing can and do
happen at all types of highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings, both public
and private. Furthermore, as FRA stated
in the NPRM, the frequency with which
a highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing is used does not determine
whether it is included in the system
established pursuant to § 234.303(a).
FRA believes that it is important to
provide an immediate means to
communicate a notice of an unsafe
condition even at such grade crossings
traversed infrequently. Imagine, for
example, the driver of a logging truck
stuck at a seldom-used private highwayrail grade crossing in the Rocky
Mountains with no knowledge of what
actions to take or whom to contact. FRA
agrees that some private highway-rail
grade crossings, such as farm grade
crossings, have characteristics that lend
themselves to a modification of the
requirement to have a sign on each
approach to the crossing. Farm grade
crossings are discussed in more detail in
the analysis of § 234.311.
In the final rule, FRA is creating a
new paragraph (b) in § 234.303 to
provide exceptions to § 234.303(a) that
allow certain railroads under certain
conditions to use an answering
machine, as defined in § 234.301, to
receive reports of unsafe conditions at
highway-rail and pathway grade
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crossings through which they dispatch
trains. The exceptions in § 234.303(b)
reduce the economic burden placed on
smaller railroads, allowing many of
these railroads to use an existing phone
line to receive ENS reports and, thereby
avoiding any additional expense for a
toll-free service.
Paragraph (b)(1) permits a railroad
that dispatches trains each of which is
authorized to travel through a highwayrail or pathway grade crossing at speeds
not greater than 20 miles per hour (mph)
to use an answering machine to receive
calls regarding unsafe conditions at the
crossing. If the railroad uses an
answering machine under these
circumstances, the railroad must
retrieve its messages immediately prior
to the start of its operations for the day
to ensure that a report of an unsafe
condition does not come in after the
answering machine has been checked,
but before the first train of the day
departs. FRA’s rationale for this
exception is that at speeds of 20 mph or
less the train engineer would have a
greater ability to stop the train in
advance of a crossing that has an unsafe
condition, and thereby have a greater
opportunity to avert an accident at the
crossing, than would a train traveling at
higher speeds.
Paragraph (b)(2) permits a railroad
that dispatches one or more trains
through a highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing on a seasonal or
intermittent basis (e.g., a tourist,
biweekly, or non-24-hour service), and
any of the trains is authorized to travel
through the crossing at speeds greater
than 20mph to use an answering
machine, but only during hours of nonoperation. During periods of nonoperation, the railroad is required to
retrieve its messages once daily.
However, the railroad must retrieve its
messages immediately prior to the start
of its operations for the day, to ensure
that a report of an unsafe condition does
not come in after the answering
machine has been checked, but before
the first train of the day departs. During
hours of operation, the railroad must
comply with § 234.303(a) by either
having a live person answer calls
directly and promptly, using an
automated answering system, or
employing a third-party telephone
service to receive reports of unsafe
conditions at crossings through which it
dispatches such trains.
The four types of unsafe conditions at
highway-rail grade crossings that are to
be reportable through the ENS are set
forth in § 234.303(c). In the final rule,
FRA is adopting this paragraph as
proposed in the NPRM, with the
exception of typographical and stylistic
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changes. The first type of reportable
unsafe condition at a highway-rail grade
crossing is a warning system
malfunction at the crossing.
The second type of reportable unsafe
condition at a highway-rail grade
crossing is a disabled vehicle or other
obstruction blocking a railroad track at
the crossing. As mentioned in Section II
of this preamble, a significant number of
collisions between a train and a vehicle
have occurred at highway-rail grade
crossings due to a vehicle blocking the
railroad tracks at the crossing, with
many of these collisions resulting in
injuries and fatalities. While FRA
acknowledges that not all of these
incidents may have been prevented by
the presence of an ENS, such a system
increases the likelihood that the
dispatching railroad will learn of the
disabled vehicle in time to alert the
train crew(s) prior to each train’s arrival
at the crossing, thus potentially averting
a collision and any resulting casualties.
Other obstructions, aside from a
disabled vehicle, also may block the
tracks at a crossing and create an unsafe
condition that needs to be reported to
the railroad. For instance, as a result of
a severe storm, a large tree may fall onto
the tracks at a highway-rail grade
crossing, and if a railroad is not alerted
about this unsafe condition, a train that
is authorized to operate through that
crossing could collide with the downed
tree, thus potentially causing a
derailment. Under Sec. 205 of the RSIA,
the second category of unsafe conditions
is a disabled vehicle blocking the tracks
at a grade crossing. To the extent that
FRA’s final rule requires more than Sec.
205 of the RSIA would have it require,
the agency relies on its general safety
rulemaking authority.
The third type of a reportable unsafe
condition at a highway-rail crossing is
an obstruction to the view of a
pedestrian or a vehicle operator for a
reasonable distance in either direction
of a train’s approach to the crossing.
FRA’s Track Safety Standards provide
that ‘‘vegetation on railroad property
which is on or immediately adjacent to
the roadbed shall be controlled so that
it does not [o]bstruct visibility of
railroad signs and signals [a]t highwayrail grade crossings.’’ 49 CFR 213.7(b)(1)
(§ 213.7(b)(1)). Section 234.303(c)(3)
allows a member of the public to inform
the railroad of conditions at highwayrail grade crossings that may not fall
under § 213.7(b)(1), but that, in the
individual’s opinion, present an unsafe
condition involving a sight obstruction
at the crossing. In the NPRM, FRA
solicited comments regarding what is a
‘‘reasonable distance’’ to determine
whether an obstruction to a pedestrian
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or vehicle operator’s view of a train’s
approach to a highway-rail grade
crossing presents an unsafe condition at
the grade crossing. Amtrak in its
comments noted that the regulation
does not define ‘‘reasonable distance,’’
which depends on the particular facts of
the situation and makes it a very
subjective standard. AAR remarked that
there can be legitimate disagreements
over whether an obstruction even poses
an unsafe condition. The AAJ
commented that no one sight distance
should apply to all crossings, and thus,
all reports of sight distance obstruction
should be investigated. Several of the
comments, including AAJ suggested
using the Federal Highway
Administration’s Railroad-Highway
Grade Crossing Handbook to determine
appropriate minimum sight distances.
After careful consideration, FRA is not
qualifying the meaning of ‘‘reasonable’’
in this final rule. Since a crossing user
is unlikely to have knowledge of this
specific FRA regulation, the individual
will report an unsafe condition based on
their personal judgment and perspective
of the situation, and the particular
conditions at the crossing at the time.
What actions, if any, the railroad must
take in response to such reports is
discussed in § 234.305.
The final type of reportable unsafe
condition at a highway-rail grade
crossing is described in § 234.303(c)(4)
as any condition at the crossing that
may be considered unsafe and is not
covered by § 234.303(c)(1)–(3). This
catch-all provision is intended to
provide the public with the opportunity
to report other types of unsafe
conditions that are not covered by
§ 234.303(c)(1)–(3). In the NPRM, FRA
explained that a downed or missing
crossbuck sign illustrates the type of
condition at a highway-rail grade
crossing that may be deemed unsafe
and, therefore, should be reported to the
railroad, but does not fall into one of the
three other categories. The CPUC in its
comments provided a few other
examples of unsafe conditions that do
not fall into one of the three other
categories, such as ‘‘rough pavement or
broken track paneling.’’ These are
merely some examples of the various
conditions that may be considered
unsafe under this catch-all provision.
The four types of reportable unsafe
conditions at pathway grade crossings
as opposed to highway-rail grade
crossings are set forth in § 234.303(d). In
the final rule, FRA is adopting this
paragraph as proposed in the NPRM,
with the exception of typographical and
stylistic changes. The four types of
reportable unsafe conditions at pathway
grade crossings are, essentially, the
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same as those for highway-rail grade
crossings, but, as detailed below, the
four types of reportable unsafe
conditions at pathway grade crossings
are not described in the exact same
words, and unlike the first type of report
for a highway-rail grade crossing, the
first type of report for a pathway grade
crossing does not trigger the duty to
address the report in the manner
prescribed by existing subpart C.
The first type of reportable condition
for a pathway grade crossing is a failure
of the active warning system at the
pathway grade crossing to perform as
intended. Section 234.303(c)(1) does not
use the term ‘‘warning system
malfunction’’ to refer to a failure of an
active warning system at a pathway
grade crossing because, as defined in
§ 234.5, a ‘‘warning system
malfunction’’ is an activation failure,
partial activation, or false activation of
the active warning system at a highwayrail grade crossing, not a pathway grade
crossing. Further, ‘‘activation failure,’’
‘‘partial activation,’’ and ‘‘false
activation’’ are all defined in § 234.5
and only apply to highway-rail grade
crossings. In the final rule, FRA does
not establish specific standards
regarding the maintenance and repair of
active warning systems at pathway
grade crossings. However, the final rule
does require a railroad to provide the
public with a means to report when the
active warning system at a pathway
grade crossing through which it
dispatches a train is not performing as
intended and is creating an unsafe
condition at the crossing.
While the term ‘‘failure of the active
warning system at the pathway grade
crossing to perform as intended’’ as
used in § 234.303(d)(1) is not
specifically defined, FRA believes that
the term sufficiently addresses the
scenarios in which an active warning
system at a pathway grade crossing
malfunctions and poses a significant
safety risk to a pathway grade crossing
user. The term includes, but is not
limited to, such problems as the failure
of the device to activate as a train
approaches the pathway crossing, a false
activation of the device when no train
is approaching the pathway crossing, or
a burnt out light on the device.
Although FRA solicited comments
regarding the types of failures of an
active warning system at a pathway
grade crossing that may differ from
failures of active warning systems at
highway-rail grade crossings, there were
no public comments received on this
issue. Additionally, FRA sought
comments regarding how the
maintenance and repair of an active
warning system at a pathway grade
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crossing differ from the required
maintenance and repair of an active
warning system at a highway-rail grade
crossing. The ILCC replied that there
should be no difference in the testing,
maintenance, and repair of an active
warning system whether it be at a
highway-rail grade crossing or a
pathway grade crossing. In fact, FRA
notes that pathway grade crossing
warning systems typically have different
designs than those of traditional grade
crossing warning systems.
The second type of reportable unsafe
condition at a pathway grade crossing is
an obstruction blocking a railroad track
at the crossing. To avoid confusion, the
term ‘‘disabled vehicle’’ is purposely
omitted from § 234.303(d)(2), though it
is used in § 234.303(c)(2), because, as
defined in § 234.301, a ‘‘pathway grade
crossing’’ is, among other things,
dedicated for the use of nonvehicular
traffic; thus, by the definition, a vehicle
should not be using a pathway grade
crossing. However, to ensure that all
possible scenarios in which an
obstruction could be blocking the tracks
at a pathway grade crossing, including
certain disabled vehicles that may be
using the pathway (such as all-terrain
vehicles, golf carts, maintenance
vehicles, or snowmobiles),
§ 234.303(d)(2) uses the broad term
‘‘obstruction.’’
The third type of reportable unsafe
condition at a pathway grade crossing is
an obstruction to the view of a pathway
user for a reasonable distance in either
direction of a train’s approach to the
crossing. See discussion above of
§ 234.303(c)(3).
The final type of reportable unsafe
condition at a pathway grade crossing is
any condition at the crossing that may
be considered unsafe and is not covered
by § 234.303(d)(1)–(3). See discussion
above of § 234.303(c)(4).
FRA believes that there may be
certain scenarios in which a caller
would be discouraged from reporting an
unsafe condition at a grade crossing
because the use of a non-toll-free
number would impose an additional
cost on the caller as opposed to if a tollfree number was used. Yet, the
requirement for the number to be tollfree may be overly burdensome to a
short line or other small railroad. To
avoid these types of situations, FRA
adopts § 234.303(e) in this final rule (as
proposed in the NPRM), which states
that if a railroad classified by the
Surface Transportation Board (STB) as a
Class II or Class III rail carrier
dispatches trains within an area in
which the use of a non-toll-free number
would incur no additional fees for the
caller than if a toll-free number were
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used, then that railroad may use that
non-toll-free number to receive calls
pursuant to § 234.303(a) regarding each
grade crossing in that area.
FRA adopts as paragraph (f) in this
section, the text proposed as paragraph
(e) of § 234.303 in the NPRM. Paragraph
(f) provides that if a report of an unsafe
condition at a highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing was not made through
the telephone service described in
§ 234.303(a), then subpart E does not
apply to the report. Subpart E only sets
forth the requirements for the
establishment and use of an ENS within
the meaning of subpart E, and the
response to a report of an unsafe
condition received through a required
ENS. A report that is not received
through a required ENS falls outside the
scope of the requirements of subpart E
and, therefore, does not trigger the duty
to comply with the requirements of
subpart E.
Section 234.305 Remedial Actions in
Response to Reports of Unsafe
Conditions at Highway-Rail and
Pathway Grade Crossings
Section 234.305 addresses the actions
that a railroad must take in response to
an ENS-generated report of an unsafe
condition at a highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing. In the final rule, FRA
adopts the majority of this section as
proposed in the NPRM. Specific
changes that were made in the final rule
are explained in detail below.
In response to the NPRM, the AAR
commented that the words ‘‘promptly’’
and ‘‘immediately’’ are used in an
inconsistent manner throughout the
proposed section with respect to the
railroad’s response to reports of unsafe
conditions at highway-rail and pathway
grade crossings. The term ‘‘promptly’’ is
already used in subpart C, so in the final
rule, where it was appropriate, FRA
replaced ‘‘immediately’’ with
‘‘promptly’’ to correspond with subpart
C.
Additionally, AAR recommended that
FRA amend the language proposed in
the NPRM, requiring a railroad to
‘‘immediately contact all trains that are
authorized to operate through the
highway-rail grade crossing [or pathway
grade crossing] and warn the trains of
the reported malfunction [or failure].’’
AAR suggested incorporating the phrase
‘‘prior to the trains’ arrival at the
crossing,’’ which is similar to language
already used in subpart C, § 234.105 and
§ 234.107. To remain consistent with
current regulations and to enhance
clarity in this final rule, FRA is
changing the text from that proposed in
the NPRM to require in the final rule
that a railroad promptly contact all
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trains that are authorized to operate
through the highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing, in an effort to notify the
train crews of the reported malfunction
or failure prior to each train’s arrival at
the crossing.
Paragraph (a) of this section is the
general rule on response to ENSgenerated credible reports of warning
system malfunctions at highway-rail
grade crossings. If a railroad receives an
ENS-generated report of a warning
system malfunction that is a credible
report of warning system malfunction
and the railroad has maintenance
responsibility for the warning system at
the highway-rail grade crossing to
which the report pertains, the railroad is
required to take the action required by
subpart C. As defined in § 234.5, a
‘‘credible report of warning system
malfunction’’ is ‘‘a report that contains
specific information regarding a
malfunction of a highway-rail grade
crossing warning system at an identified
highway-rail grade crossing, supplied by
a railroad employee, law enforcement
officer, highway traffic official, or other
employee of a public agency acting in
an official capacity.’’ If a report of a
warning system malfunction is not
provided by one of the four specific
types of people listed, then the report is
not a credible report of warning system
malfunction within the meaning of
either subpart C or subpart E, and
subpart C does not require any remedial
action in response to those reports. It
should be noted that the term ‘‘credible
report of warning system malfunction’’
only applies to highway-rail grade
crossings and does not include pathway
grade crossings. Thus, for these
technical reasons, regardless of who
reports a warning system malfunction at
a pathway grade crossing, the report is
not considered a ‘‘credible report of
warning system malfunction’’ within
the meaning of either subpart C or
subpart E.
Several of the comments that FRA
received in response to the NPRM
indicated that FRA’s use of the term
‘‘credible report of a warning system
malfunction’’ may need some
clarification. The term, as used in part
234, is simply a technical term.
‘‘Credible report of warning system
malfunction’’ refers to reports of signal
malfunctions by a specific class of
public officials and railroad personnel
acting in an official capacity. These
regulations have been in existence for
many years. The use of the word
‘‘credible’’ in that term does not go to
the accuracy or truthfulness of the
report; rather, the term simply denotes
the type of report the receipt of which
is the precondition that triggers the duty
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for a railroad to perform certain actions,
pursuant to subpart C. In other words,
when a credible report of warning
system malfunction at a highway-rail
grade crossing is received from one of
the four specific types of people listed,
as opposed to reports received from a
member of the general public, the
railroad having maintenance
responsibility for the warning system
must promptly take the actions
prescribed by subpart C. Just because a
report originates from a member of the
general public and, therefore, is not
classified as a ‘‘credible report of
warning system malfunction’’ as defined
by § 234.5, does not mean that the report
is any less accurate or truthful.
In consideration of the many
comments received on this issue, FRA
decided in the final rule to refrain from
the use of the phrase ‘‘not a credible
report,’’ so as not, however
inadvertently, to disparage or
undermine the legitimacy of reports that
originate from the general public.
Instead, FRA created the new, defined
term, ‘‘public report of warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade
crossing,’’ which means a report that
contains specific information regarding
a warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing that is
supplied to a railroad via the ENS by a
member of the public who does not
belong to one of the categories of
individuals listed in the definition of
‘‘Credible report of warning system
malfunction’’ in § 234.5. In other words,
public report of warning system
malfunction means a report that
contains specific information regarding
a warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing that is
supplied to a railroad via the ENS by
someone who is not a railroad
employee, law enforcement officer,
highway traffic official, or other
employee of a public agency acting in
an official capacity. The term ‘‘public
report of warning system malfunction at
a highway-rail grade crossing’’ only
applies to warning system malfunctions
that occur at highway-rail grade
crossings. If a report is neither a
‘‘credible report of warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade
crossing’’ nor a ‘‘public report of
warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing,’’ then it is
just referred to in the final rule as a
‘‘report’’ of another type of unsafe
condition, e.g., ‘‘report of warning
system failure at a pathway grade
crossing.’’
Paragraph (a) of § 234.305 explains
that if the report is a credible report of
warning system malfunction, but the
railroad that initially receives the report
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is not the railroad that has maintenance
responsibility for the warning system at
the highway-rail grade crossing to
which the report pertains, that railroad
is already responsible for contacting the
trains that are authorized to operate
through the highway-rail grade crossing
and warn the trains of the reported
malfunction under subpart C. After
warning the trains, the railroad must
then contact the railroad that has
maintenance responsibility for the
warning system at the highway-rail
grade crossing, which will then be
responsible for taking the appropriate
remedial action under subpart C. FRA
recognizes that in some instances the
railroad that initially receives the report
may not be the railroad that has
maintenance responsibility over the
warning system at that crossing.
Therefore, to ensure that the
responsibility to take the appropriate
remedial action as required by subpart
C falls on the appropriate railroad,
§ 234.305(a)(2) requires the railroad
with maintenance responsibility to take
the appropriate remedial action under
subpart C, except for promptly
contacting the trains operating through
the crossing and the law enforcement
agency with jurisdiction for the
crossing; these responsibilities remain
with the dispatching railroad.
Paragraph (b) of § 234.305 is the
general rule on response to an ENSgenerated public report of a warning
system malfunction at a highway-rail
grade crossing, and requires that
railroads take certain specified remedial
action in response to such a report. In
other words, § 234.305(b) addresses
ENS-generated reports of warning
system malfunctions that do not fall
within the amended definition of
‘‘credible report of warning system
malfunction’’ in § 234.5 because the
report is made by someone who is not
a railroad employee, law enforcement
officer, highway traffic official, or other
employee of a public agency acting in
an official capacity. In particular, if a
railroad receives such a public report of
a warning system malfunction and that
railroad has maintenance responsibility
for the warning system at the crossing,
the railroad must promptly contact all
trains that are authorized to operate
through the grade crossing about which
the report pertains, in an effort to notify
the train crews of the reported
malfunction prior to each train’s arrival
at the crossing. The railroad must then
promptly contact the law enforcement
agency that has jurisdiction over the
crossing and provide the necessary
information for the law enforcement
agency to direct traffic or carry out other
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activities to maintain safety at the grade
crossing. Further, the railroad must
promptly investigate the report and
determine the nature of the malfunction
and, if necessary, take appropriate
action as required by a provision of
existing 49 CFR part 234, subpart D, i.e.,
§ 234.207(a), which requires that
‘‘[w]hen any essential component of a
highway-rail grade crossing warning
system fails to perform its intended
function, the cause shall be determined
and the faulty component adjusted,
repaired, or replaced without undue
delay.’’
If a railroad receives a public report
of a warning system malfunction and
that railroad does not have maintenance
responsibility for the warning system at
the highway-rail grade crossing, the
railroad must promptly contact the train
crews of all trains that are authorized to
operate through the grade crossing to
which the report pertains, in an effort to
notify the train crews of the reported
malfunction prior to each train’s arrival
at the crossing. The railroad must then
promptly contact the law enforcement
agency that has jurisdiction over the
grade crossing and provide the
necessary information for the law
enforcement agency to direct traffic or
carry out other activities to maintain
safety at the grade crossing. The railroad
must then promptly contact the railroad
that has maintenance responsibility for
the warning system and inform that
railroad of the reported malfunction.
The railroad having maintenance
responsibility must promptly investigate
the report, determine the nature of the
malfunction, and take the appropriate
action as required by 49 CFR 234.207(a)
if necessary.
Paragraph (c) of § 234.305 is the
general rule on response to a report of
a warning system failure at a pathway
grade crossing. If the dispatching
railroad for the pathway crossing
receives a report pursuant to
§ 234.303(c)(1) and that railroad also has
maintenance responsibility for the
active warning system at the pathway
grade crossing, the railroad shall
promptly contact all trains that are
authorized to operate through the
pathway grade crossings to which the
report pertains, in an effort to notify the
train crews of the reported failure prior
to each train’s arrival at the crossing.
The railroad shall then promptly contact
the law enforcement agency having
jurisdiction over the pathway grade
crossing and provide the necessary
information to the law enforcement
agency to direct traffic or carry out other
activities to maintain safety at the
pathway grade crossing. Finally, the
railroad shall then promptly investigate
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the report, determine the nature of the
reported failure, and without undue
delay repair the active warning system
if necessary.
If the dispatching railroad receives a
report of a warning system failure at a
pathway grade crossing and that
dispatching railroad does not have
maintenance responsibility for the
warning system at the pathway grade
crossing, the dispatching railroad must
promptly contact all trains that are
authorized to operate through the
pathway grade crossing to which the
report pertains, in an effort to notify the
train crews of the reported failure prior
to each train’s arrival at the crossing.
The dispatching railroad must then
promptly contact the law enforcement
agency that has jurisdiction over the
pathway grade crossing and provide the
necessary information for the law
enforcement agency to direct traffic or
carry out other activities to maintain
safety at the pathway grade crossing.
The dispatching railroad must then
promptly contact the railroad that has
maintenance responsibility for the
warning system at the pathway grade
crossing and inform that railroad of the
reported failure. The railroad having
maintenance responsibility shall then
promptly investigate the report,
determine the nature of the reported
failure, and without undue delay repair
the warning system if necessary.
Paragraph (d) of § 234.305 is the
general rule on response to a report of
a disabled vehicle or other obstruction
blocking a railroad track at a highwayrail or pathway grade crossing, pursuant
to § 234.303(c)(3) or (d)(2), respectively.
If the dispatching railroad receives a
report of a disabled vehicle or
obstruction blocking a railroad track at
a grade crossing, and that railroad also
has maintenance responsibility for the
crossing, the railroad must promptly
contact all trains that are authorized to
operate through the grade crossing to
which the report pertains, in an effort to
notify the train crews of the reported
disabled vehicle or obstruction prior to
each train’s arrival at the crossing. The
railroad must then contact the law
enforcement agency having jurisdiction
over the grade crossing to provide that
agency with the information necessary
to assist in the removal of the disabled
vehicle or other obstruction, or to carry
out other activities to maintain safety at
the crossing. In the NPRM, FRA
solicited comments on whether to
require the railroad that receives the
report (i.e., dispatching railroad) to
contact the maintaining railroad if the
obstruction is anything other than a
disabled vehicle, stating that ‘‘[t]he
maintaining railroad would then be
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responsible for contacting the law
enforcement agency and any other
entities to assist in directing traffic (if
necessary) and removing the
obstruction.’’ AAR commented that the
obstruction could be something beyond
the power of the maintaining railroad to
address and that requiring the
maintaining railroad to be notified in
such circumstances serves no purpose.
FRA disagrees. In the final rule,
paragraph (d)(2) of this section requires
that, if the dispatching and maintaining
railroad are not the same entity, after the
dispatching railroad promptly contacts
the appropriate trains and law
enforcement agency, it must then
promptly contact the maintaining
railroad to inform it of the obstruction
blocking the track. FRA has determined
that the quickest way to contact the law
enforcement agency is to have the
dispatching railroad make the contact.
Because the obstruction is blocking the
railroad track it has to be removed in
order for train operations to be resumed,
and this action is the responsibility of
the maintaining railroad. Once informed
of the obstruction, the maintaining
railroad shall then promptly investigate
the report, determine the nature of the
obstruction, and without undue delay
take the necessary action to have the
obstruction removed.
Paragraph (e) of § 234.305 is the
special rule on contacting a train that is
not required to have communication
equipment. Section 220.9 of FRA’s
regulations on railroad communications
sets forth communication equipment
standards for trains. 49 CFR 220.9.
These standards vary according to
specific criteria set forth in § 220.9.
According to § 220.9(b), no
communication equipment is required
on a train if that train does not transport
passengers or hazardous material and
does not engage in joint operations or
operate at a speed greater than 25 miles
per hour. See 63 FR 47188 (Sept. 4,
1998); § 220.9(b)(1)–(4). However, in
subpart E, upon receipt of a credible
report of warning system malfunction at
a highway-rail grade crossing, a public
report of warning system malfunction at
a highway-rail grade crossing, a report
of warning system failure at a pathway
grade crossing, or a report of disabled
vehicle or other obstruction blocking a
track, a railroad will be required to
promptly contact all trains authorized to
operate through the highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing to which the
report pertains, to notify the train crews
of the reported unsafe condition prior to
each train’s arrival at the crossing. If
that train is not required by § 220.9 to
have any communications equipment,
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the railroad must contact that train by
the quickest means available. Currently,
railroad employees are required by 49
CFR 220.13(a) to immediately report
certain emergencies by the quickest
means available. To maintain
consistency among FRA regulations,
§ 234.305(e) requires that the quickest
means used to contact a train upon
receipt of a report of a warning system
malfunction, warning system failure, or
disabled vehicle or other obstruction
blocking a track at the crossing is
consistent with the quickest means that
an employee would use to report an
emergency pursuant to § 220.13(a).
Paragraph (f) of § 234.305 is the
general rule on response to a report of
an obstruction to the view of a
pedestrian or a vehicle operator for a
reasonable distance in either direction
of a train’s approach to the highway-rail
or pathway grade crossing (i.e., visual
obstruction). When the dispatching
railroad receives a report of a visual
obstruction and the railroad also has
maintenance responsibility for the
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing,
the railroad shall timely investigate the
report and remove the visual
obstruction if it is lawful and feasible to
do so. If the dispatching railroad does
not have maintenance responsibility for
the highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing, the dispatching railroad shall
promptly contact the railroad having
maintenance responsibility for the
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing,
which shall timely investigate the report
and remove the visual obstruction, if it
is lawful and feasible to do so. FRA
recognizes that in certain instances it
may not be possible to remove a visual
obstruction, such as a natural visual
obstruction due to the steepness of the
road or path approaching the crossing or
a visual obstruction due to the curvature
of the track, or it may not be lawful to
do so. Therefore, § 234.305(f) imposes a
duty on the maintaining railroad to
remove the visual obstruction only if it
is lawful and feasible to do so.
In the NPRM, FRA solicited
comments on what types of visual
obstructions are not feasible to remove.
AAR responded that ‘‘not all
obstructions are within the control of
the railroads and can be cleared.’’ Other
commenters expressed similar concerns,
to include the ILCC, which cited
topographical features, appurtenances,
and structures required by local
conditions, such as retaining walls, and
drainage structures, as types of
obstructions that may not be feasible for
the railroad to correct or remove. FRA
recognizes that not all obstructions to
view are feasible to correct, or within
the legal right of the railroad to do so.
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Additionally, some commenters noted
that the use of the words ‘‘obstruction’’
and ‘‘feasible’’ are vague concepts. FRA
intentionally chose to use such
ambiguous terms. Individuals who use a
crossing may have varying degrees of
perspective on what constitutes an
unsafe obstruction. Furthermore, it is
the responsibility of the railroad, once a
report of this type is received, to
investigate and make its own
determination as to whether it is lawful
and feasible to correct the situation.
Additionally, the ILCC urged FRA to
refrain from categorically excluding
certain types of reports of visual
obstructions from the reports that a
railroad would be required to
investigate. FRA agreed with the ILCC’s
suggestion, and the final rule does not
limit the types of obstructions to view
that a railroad would be required to
investigate and correct, if lawful and
feasible to do so.
Paragraph (g) of § 234.305 is the
general rule on response to a report of
other unsafe conditions at a highwayrail or pathway grade crossing. In the
final rule, FRA combined proposed
(g)(1) and (g)(2) into one paragraph. If
the dispatching railroad receives a
report related to a safety device at a
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing,
such as a downed crossbuck or other
similar grade crossing device, or a report
of any other unsafe condition, such as
a pothole in the crossing, that is not
covered by paragraphs (a), (b), or (c) of
this section, and the railroad has
maintenance responsibility for the
crossing, the railroad must timely
investigate the report, and if the railroad
finds that the unsafe condition exists,
the railroad must timely correct it if it
is lawful and feasible to do so. However,
if the dispatching railroad that receives
the report does not also have
maintenance responsibility for the
crossing, upon receipt of the report, the
railroad must timely inform the
maintaining railroad of the reported
unsafe condition. The maintaining
railroad must then timely investigate the
report, and if it finds that the unsafe
condition exists, it must timely correct
it if it is lawful and feasible to do so.
In the NPRM, FRA solicited comments
on what types of other unsafe
conditions are not feasible to correct.
AAR noted that the failure of nearby
highway signals to properly coordinate
timing with crossing signals may not be
feasible to correct. FRA agrees that
improperly programmed highway
signals are beyond the ability of the
railroad to correct. However, when such
hazards are reported to the railroad, the
railroad is encouraged to report the
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condition to the appropriate highway
authority.
In the final rule, FRA clarifies the
purpose of paragraph (h), by renaming
it the general rule on a maintaining
railroad’s responsibilities for receiving
reports of unsafe conditions at highwayrail and pathway grade crossings. If the
dispatching railroad is not the same as
the maintaining railroad, the
maintaining railroad shall provide the
dispatching railroad with sufficient
contact information by which the
dispatching railroad may timely contact
the maintaining railroad upon receipt of
a report, as required. Furthermore, to
receive calls from the dispatching
railroad of reports of unsafe conditions,
the maintaining railroad must have
either a live person answer calls directly
and promptly, or use an automated
answering system, unless it is permitted
by the exceptions in § 234.305(h)(2) to
use an answering machine or a thirdparty telephone service. If a maintaining
railroad uses a third-party telephone
service it must do so in accordance with
§ 234.307. The exceptions in paragraph
(h)(2) of this section provide, in
particular, smaller maintaining railroads
a less costly option for receiving
telephonic reports of unsafe conditions
from dispatching railroads. These
exceptions are similar to those extended
to dispatching railroads in § 234.303(b).
Section 234.306 Multiple Dispatching
or Maintaining Railroads With Respect
to the Same Highway-Rail or Pathway
Grade Crossing; Appointment of
Responsible Railroad
In the NPRM, under the section-bysection analysis for §§ 234.303 and
234.311, FRA solicited comments on
how to handle a highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing where there are
multiple railroads dispatching trains on
one or more tracks through the crossing,
and possibly, multiple maintaining
railroads each responsible for various
maintenance responsibilities at the same
crossing.
FRA recognizes that there are some
situations where there are multiple
tracks at a grade crossing where each
railroad dispatches trains over its own
track. Under these circumstances, FRA
believes it would create confusion if
each railroad posts a sign with its own
emergency telephone number. Having
more than one emergency number
posted at such crossings would not only
be more confusing for the users of the
crossing and an unnecessary cost for the
multiple railroads, but also a less
effective method of responding to
reports of unsafe conditions.
AAR and CPUC suggested that under
circumstances where there are multiple
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railroads that dispatch trains through
the same crossing, the railroads should
coordinate among themselves to
delineate their individual
responsibilities. AAR also stated that in
such situations the railroads should
‘‘make arrangements as to whose
telephone number will be displayed on
the sign.’’ FRA agrees that one point of
contact for the crossing is the most
efficient and safest means to address a
situation where multiple railroads
dispatch trains through the same
crossing.
Separately, AAR also suggested that
FRA include in its Crossing Inventory
database an indicator of where multiple
railroads dispatch through the same
crossing. FRA will not be doing this
since it is outside of the scope of this
rule. The recommendation by AAR does
not enhance the effectiveness of the
rule.
In this final rule, FRA is creating
§ 234.306 to address the situation of
multiple railroads that dispatch trains
through the same crossing, and the
possibility that multiple railroads have
maintenance responsibilities for the
same crossing. FRA notes that with
respect to the requirements of this
section, the railroads are free to work
out a cost-sharing agreement among
themselves.
Paragraph (a) of § 234.306 requires
that where multiple railroads dispatch
trains through the same crossing, the
railroads must appoint one of their
number to be the primary dispatching
railroad for the crossing and, as such, to
receive reports of unsafe conditions
pursuant to § 234.303. The emergency
phone number of the primary
dispatching railroad for the crossing
shall be displayed on the ENS sign(s) at
the crossing. Furthermore, when the
primary dispatching railroad receives a
report of an unsafe condition at the
crossing, it is responsible for promptly
contacting all the other railroads that
dispatch trains through the crossing to
notify them of the report. Each of these
other dispatching railroads to which the
report pertains must carry out the
appropriate remedial action as required
by § 234.305 and recordkeeping as
required by § 234.313.
The primary dispatching railroad for
the crossing is also responsible for
notifying each railroad that has
maintenance responsibility for the
crossing of a reported unsafe condition,
if the maintaining railroad is a different
entity from the dispatching railroad
already contacted. Finally, in response
to reports of unsafe conditions, the
primary dispatching railroad, as a
railroad that also dispatches trains
through the crossing, must otherwise
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carry out its own duties as a dispatching
railroad under this subpart.
Paragraph (b) of this section, similarly
requires that if there is more than one
maintaining railroad for the same
crossing, the maintaining railroads must
appoint one of their number to be
responsible for placing and maintaining
the ENS sign(s) at the crossing as
required by §§ 234.309 and 234.311. The
railroad appointed under this paragraph
must post the emergency telephone
number of the dispatching railroad, or if
applicable, that of the primary
dispatching railroad, for the crossing on
the ENS sign(s) at the crossing.
Additionally, after receiving a report of
an unsafe condition at the crossing from
the dispatching railroad, each of the
maintaining railroads to which the
report pertains must carry out the
appropriate remedial action as required
by § 234.305 and recordkeeping as
required by § 234.313.
Where there are multiple maintaining
railroads for a crossing, paragraph (c) of
this section imposes a duty on a
dispatching railroad, or if applicable,
the primary dispatching railroad, to
promptly contact and inform the
appropriate maintaining railroad(s) of a
reported problem at that crossing. After
being informed of a report of an unsafe
condition that pertains to the
maintaining railroad’s maintenance
responsibilities for the crossing, the
railroad must carry out the appropriate
remedial action as required by § 234.305
and recordkeeping as required by
§ 234.313.
Section 234.307 Use of Third-Party
Telephone Service by Dispatching and
Maintaining Railroads
Section 234.307 addresses the option
for a dispatching railroad to use a thirdparty telephone service to receive
reports concerning an unsafe condition
at a highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing pursuant to § 234.303. This
section also describes the duties of
maintaining railroads with respect to
their use of a third-party telephone
service as permitted by § 234.305(h)(2).
In response to the NPRM, the Angels
on Track Foundation objected to the use
of a third-party telephone service,
asserting that it would compromise
safety because railroads would not be
receiving calls ‘‘directly.’’ FRA does not
believe that this method of receiving
reports of unsafe conditions at highwayrail and pathway grade crossings would
compromise safety. All of the Class I
railroads currently have telephone
systems in place by which they receive
reports of unsafe conditions at highwayrail and pathway grade crossings. As a
result, Class I railroads are unlikely to
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employ a third-party telephone service.
Permitting the use of a third-party
telephone service provides smaller
railroads with a more economical and
less burdensome option, without
compromising safety. As previously
stated in the NPRM, FRA recognizes
that many regional and short line
railroads may not have the capability
and resources to set up and operate a
24-hour system to receive and respond
to reports of unsafe conditions at
highway-rail and pathway grade
crossings. Indeed, requiring such a
system could divert limited resources
from more vital safety projects. The
results of the pilot project that FRA
conducted with eight short line
railroads in Pennsylvania from October
15, 2001 through May 31, 2003, proved
to be extremely successful and
demonstrated that a third-party
telephone service is a reasonable
approach when considered from both a
safety and economic perspective.
In the NPRM, FRA stated that for a
railroad to ‘‘directly’’ receive calls
reporting unsafe conditions at a crossing
as required by § 234.303, one entity
should be the maximum number of
entities that may exist between (1) a
caller reporting an unsafe condition at a
grade crossing and (2) the railroad. FRA
believes that allowing more than one
entity in between could potentially
delay the railroad’s receipt of the report
and therefore delay its response to the
unsafe condition, to the extent that the
ENS would not be effective. On review
of § 234.307, the BRS suggested in its
comments that FRA revise § 234.307 to
ensure that the third-party telephone
service is the only entity allowed
between a caller reporting an unsafe
condition at a grade crossing and the
railroad. In the final rule, FRA created
a defined term for ‘‘third-party
telephone service’’ in § 234.301, which
stipulates that the third-party telephone
service is the only entity between a
caller who is reporting an unsafe
condition at a highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing and the transmission of
the report to the dispatching railroad.
The definition also stipulates that a
third-party telephone service that
receives reports from a dispatching
railroad, on behalf of a maintaining
railroad, is the only entity between the
receipt of the report and the
transmission of the report to the
maintaining railroad. FRA also revised
the language in § 234.307 to permit the
third-party telephone service to utilize
an automated answering system, as
defined in § 234.301, to receive reports
of unsafe conditions at highway-rail or
pathway grade crossings.
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Paragraphs (a) and (b) of § 234.307
permit a dispatching railroad and a
maintaining railroad to use a third-party
telephone service to receive reports
pursuant to §§ 234.303 and
234.305(h)(2), respectively. FRA
believes that it may be in the railroad’s
interest to use a third-party telephone
service that is in the business of
receiving and processing calls from the
public or from dispatching railroads
because that is the third party telephone
service’s specialty. However, even if the
railroad uses a third-party telephone
service, the railroad ultimately remains
responsible for receiving the report
initially received by the third party
telephone service, and the railroad is
responsible for taking the appropriate
remedial action as required by § 234.305
and complying with the proper
recordkeeping requirements in
§ 234.313. The third-party telephone
service is merely an extension of the
railroad.
In response to the NPRM, several
commenters suggested that the thirdparty telephone service should perform
the function of notifying the train crews
and public safety officials when it
receives reports of unsafe conditions at
highway-rail and pathway grade
crossings, asserting that this would
result in faster transmission of the
information to the appropriate parties.
FRA disagrees. The dispatching railroad
is the only entity that has the authority
to control train movements through a
crossing, and the dispatching railroad is
the only entity with the practical ability
to notify train crews in the event of an
emergency or any other unsafe
condition. Police do not dispatch or
otherwise authorize movement of trains.
One of the only means available to the
police to warn a train of an emergency
would be to flag the train down with the
use of fusees, which in most cases is
neither efficient nor practical when
compared to the railroad’s ability to
notify its train crews. Furthermore, to
allow the third-party telephone service
to directly communicate with train
crews, as some commenters suggested,
would in effect alter train movements
and create a conflict with other train
movements being controlled by the
dispatching railroad. Third-party
telephone services do not have the
knowledge, training, or authority to
control train movements.
With respect to dispatching railroads,
the role of the third-party telephone
service is intended to be limited to
receiving calls from the public of an
unsafe condition, recording the
information, and relaying that
information to the dispatching railroad
that has contracted for the third-party
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telephone service. As previously stated,
the railroad then is required to take the
appropriate action as prescribed in the
rule, to include, if applicable, contacting
the train crews, the local public safety
officials, and the maintaining railroad (if
the maintaining railroad is a separate
entity from the dispatching railroad)
depending on the nature of the report.
Similarly, with respect to maintaining
railroads, the role of the third-party
telephone service is intended to be
limited to receiving calls from the
dispatching railroad of an unsafe
condition, recording the information,
and relaying that information to the
maintaining railroad that has contracted
for the third-party telephone service.
Paragraph (a) also requires that the
third-party telephone service is reached
directly and promptly by the telephone
number displayed on the sign pursuant
to § 234.309. In the final rule, FRA
decided to permit the third-party
telephone service to receive calls using
an automated answering system, as
defined in § 234.301, which has a single
menu of options for a caller to select to
report an unsafe condition at a crossing
immediately prior to the caller being
transferred to a live person.
Paragraph (c) sets forth the duties of
the third-party telephone service. The
third-party telephone service is required
to contact the railroad immediately
when it receives a report pursuant to
§§ 234.303 or 234.305. The third-party
telephone service must then provide the
railroad with a minimum amount of
information. First, the third-party
telephone service must provide the
nature of the reported unsafe condition.
The nature of the reported unsafe
condition must fall into one of the
categories listed in § 234.303(c)(1)–(4) or
(d)(1)–(4) so that the dispatching
railroad can take the appropriate
remedial action as required by
§ 234.305. Second, the third-party
telephone service must provide
information on the location of the
unsafe condition, which includes
providing the Crossing Inventory
number for the crossing. Third, the
third-party telephone service must
inform the railroad whether or not the
person reporting the unsafe condition is
a railroad employee, law enforcement
officer, highway traffic official, or other
employee of a public agency acting in
an official capacity. The third-party
telephone service is required to provide
this information so that the dispatching
railroad can determine whether the
report is a credible report of warning
system malfunction and, if it is, the
railroad must take the appropriate
remedial action required by § 234.305
and existing subpart C. Additionally,
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the third-party telephone service must
provide the railroad with the date and
time that the report was received by the
third-party telephone service—this
requirement was added to the final rule
and is consistent with the recordkeeping
duties in § 234.313. Finally, the thirdparty telephone service must provide
the railroad with any additional
information provided by the caller that
may be useful to restore the crossing to
a safe condition.
Paragraph (d) requires a railroad that
uses a third-party telephone service to
provide the service with sufficient
contact information so that when the
third-party service receives a report of
an unsafe condition at a grade crossing,
it can immediately contact the railroad.
In the final rule, FRA requires the
railroad to have a live person answer
calls directly from the third-party
telephone service, unless the railroad is
permitted pursuant to either
§ 234.303(b) or § 234.305(h)(2) to use an
answering machine. There may be an
unsafe condition for which immediate
action by the railroad is necessary, such
as a disabled vehicle blocking a track at
the crossing; therefore, the contact
information that the railroad provides
the third-party telephone service must
be sufficient to the extent that when the
third-party telephone service contacts
the railroad, a railroad employee
answers the call and takes the
appropriate action necessary under
§ 234.305. The responsibility of the
third-party telephone service is solely to
receive reports and relay those reports
to the railroad; any remedial action that
is necessary to correct the unsafe
condition is the responsibility of the
railroad.
Paragraph (d) also requires a railroad
to inform FRA in writing of its intent to
use a third-party telephone service to
receive reports before the
implementation of such a service. The
railroad must also provide FRA with the
contact information of the third-party
telephone service that the railroad
intends to use. Further, the railroad
must provide FRA with a list identifying
the grade crossings about which the
third-party service will be receiving
reports. In the final rule, FRA is adding
a requirement that the railroad must
inform FRA in writing within 30 days
following any changes in the use or
discontinuance of a third-party
telephone service. All of this
information that the railroad provides to
FRA will allow FRA to evaluate the
impact that the use of a third-party
telephone service has on a railroad’s
ability to comply with the provisions of
this subpart. Finally, paragraph (d)
reaffirms the requirement that once a
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railroad receives a report of an unsafe
condition at a grade crossing, the
railroad must take the remedial action
required by § 234.305.
In response to the NPRM, the
organization Crossing Call commented
that proposed § 234.307(d) put an undue
burden on the third-party telephone
service by requiring it to comply with
all of subpart E because proposed
paragraph (d) stated that ‘‘A third-party
service is responsible for complying
with this subpart.’’ FRA did not intend
to hold a third-party telephone service
responsible for compliance with all of
subpart E. Accordingly, in the final rule,
FRA in paragraph (e) of this section,
clarifies that the third-party telephone
service is responsible only for carrying
out the duties of § 234.307, in addition
to the recordkeeping duties under
§ 234.313, and, if applicable, § 234.315.
Furthermore, the railroad is responsible
for any acts or omissions of the thirdparty telephone service under the
contract that violate these specified
sections of subpart E.
FRA recognizes that future advances
in technology may provide
opportunities for call-in systems that are
not specifically described in this rule.
FRA is willing to review any new
technology and consider its
applicability to the regulation, or
consider amending the regulation in the
future if warranted. FRA welcomes the
opportunity to review any such
technologies that meet the requirements
of the regulation.
Section 234.309 ENS Signs in General
Section 234.309 specifies the color,
minimum content and size
requirements, and other aspects of the
signs that § 234.311 requires to be
placed and maintained at highway-rail
and pathway grade crossings as part of
an ENS. A minimum amount of
information must be displayed on the
sign so that the unsafe condition may be
properly reported and remedied.
Paragraph (a) of this section requires
that if the dispatching railroad and the
maintaining railroad(s) are not the same
entity, the dispatching railroad for the
crossing must provide to the
maintaining railroad the telephone
number that is to be displayed on the
ENS sign at the crossing, not later than
180 calendar days before the
implementation of an ENS is required.
In this final rule, FRA is increasing the
amount of time from 30 days as
proposed to 180 days to provide the
maintaining railroad with sufficient
time to notify the sign manufacturer of
the phone number to be displayed on
the signs, to allow for the production of
the signs, and then for the installation
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of the signs at the crossings by the
maintaining railroad.
Paragraph (b) describes the minimum
information that is to be displayed on an
ENS sign, which includes the following:
the toll-free number established to
receive reports pursuant to § 234.303(a)
(or non-toll-free number as provided for
in § 234.303(e)); an explanation of the
purpose of the sign (e.g., ‘‘Report
emergency or problem to
llllll’’); and the U.S. DOT
National Crossing Inventory number
assigned to the crossing.
To maintain a certain amount of
consistency among the signs so that a
grade crossing user may be able to easily
identify and understand them,
paragraph (c) requires the signs to meet
the following requirements: measure at
least 12 inches wide by 9 inches high;
be retroreflective; have legible text, i.e.,
lettering and numerals, with a minimum
character height of 1 inch for the
information required in paragraph (b) of
this section; and the sign must have
white text set on a blue background
with a white border, except that the
Crossing Inventory number may be
black text set on a white rectangular
background.
In the NPRM, FRA solicited
comments regarding which standards
and guidance provided in the FHWA’s
MUTCD or Standard Highway Signs and
Markings book (SHSM) should be
adopted in the final rule as the
requirements for the signs placed at
crossings pursuant to §§ 234.309 and
234.311. The majority of commenters
supported using the MUTCD as the
standard sign design.
The MUTCD defines the standards
used by road managers nationwide to
install and maintain traffic control
devices on all public streets, highways,
and bikeways, and on private roads
open to public traffic. The MUTCD is
approved by the FHWA and recognized
as the national standard for traffic
control on all public roads. It is
incorporated by reference into the Code
of Federal Regulations at 23 CFR part
655.
MUTCD specifications include the
shapes, colors, and fonts used in road
markings and signs. In the United
States, all traffic control devices must
generally conform to these standards.
The manual is used by State and local
agencies as well as private construction
firms to ensure that the traffic control
devices they use conform to the national
standard. While some State agencies
have developed their own sets of
standards, including their own
MUTCDs, these must substantially
conform to the Federal MUTCD.
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Section 8B.18 of the MUTCD 3
provides both guidance and a technical
standard for emergency notification
signs. Specifically, the guidance states
that—
Emergency Notification signs [see Figure 1]
should be installed at all highway-rail grade
crossings * * * to provide information to
road users so that they can notify the railroad
company * * * about emergencies or
malfunctioning traffic control devices.
Specifically, the standard includes the
following—
• When Emergency Notification signs are
used at a highway-rail grade crossing, they
shall, at a minimum, include the U.S. DOT
grade crossing inventory number and the
emergency contact telephone number.
• Emergency Notification [s]igns shall
have a white legend and border on a blue
background.
• The Emergency Notification signs shall
be positioned so as to not obstruct any traffic
control devices or limit the view of rail traffic
approaching the grade crossing.
Section 8B.18 of the MUTCD provides
the following additional guidance for
emergency notification signs, which
specifically states—
• Emergency Notification signs should be
retroreflective.
• Emergency Notification signs should be
oriented so as to face highway vehicles
stopped on or at the grade crossing or on the
traveled way near the grade crossing.
• At station crossings, Emergency
Notification signs or information should be
posted in a conspicuous location.
• Emergency Notification signs mounted
on Crossbuck Assemblies or signal masts
should only be large enough to provide the
necessary contact information. Use of larger
signs that might obstruct the view of rail
traffic or other highway vehicles should be
avoided.
After consideration of the public
comments in support of the MUTCD,
the final rule establishes broad
requirements relating to the physical
sign characteristics in § 234.309 and the
placement of the sign in § 234.311 that
are similar to the standards and
guidance contained in the MUTCD for
emergency notification signs. However,
FRA chose not to include a specific
requirement that ENS signs conform to
the MUTCD. Rather, FRA believes that
the broad requirements contained in
this section and in § 234.311 are
sufficient. Because the requirements in
§§ 234.309 and 234.311 are quite similar
to the standards and guidance on
emergency notification signs in the
MUTCD, FRA will refer to the MUTCD
as a guide to inform its enforcement of
the provisions in §§ 234.309 and
3 Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices for
Streets and Highways, 762–63 (Washington DC:
Federal Highway Administration, December 2009).
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234.311. Moreover, if a railroad follows
the standards and guidance in the
MUTCD, FRA will find the railroad in
compliance with §§ 234.309 and 311.
Figure 1 below is an example of an
emergency notification sign provided in
the MUTCD. Figure 2 is an example of
an alternate design that, like Figure 1,
also would meet the requirements of
§ 234.309.
The ILCC commented that the sign
dimensions and letter size proposed in
the NPRM, and adopted in the final
rule, may be too small for a motorist to
read. FRA believes that the minimum
required size of the sign and its lettering
reflects the attributes of many highway
signs that are currently in use, and that
the size of both is sufficiently large
enough for a user of a highway rail or
pathway grade crossing to read. The
ILCC also suggested that the Crossing
Inventory number assigned to that
crossing be highlighted on the sign.
Paragraph (c) of this section provides
the option to highlight the Crossing
Inventory number by displaying the
number using black-colored text set on
a white rectangular background.
Separately, FRA acknowledges that each
crossing may have different geometric
characteristics that can pose challenges
when positioning a sign. As a result,
§ 234.309 sets minimum design
requirements to allow railroads the
flexibility to install signs appropriate to
the individual environment of the
crossing. The final rule does not
prohibit a railroad from using larger
dimensions, for example, or adding
certain stylistic features, so long as they
do not conflict with § 234.309.
One commenter expressed concern
about the use of the term ‘‘emergency’’
on the sign, believing that most people
are accustomed to dialing 911 and may
call the railroad regarding emergencies
not related to the highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing. The final rule
does not require the use of the term
‘‘emergency’’ on the sign, only that the
sign convey the purpose of the sign
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this
section. FRA recognizes that the use of
the term ‘‘emergency’’ is one acceptable
method of explaining the purpose of the
sign. In the many ENS-style systems that
are in place today, from Class I railroads
to the pilot programs in Pennsylvania
and Kentucky, FRA is not aware that
calls of this nature have been an issue,
and believes the term ‘‘emergency’’
appropriately conveys the intent of the
sign.
Comments submitted by the Everett
Railroad Company expressed concern
that posting of an emergency number
could lead to nuisance calls and false
reports of emergencies, placing an
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Section 234.311 requires signs of the
type specified by § 234.309 to be placed
and maintained at highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings. The
maintaining railroad for the crossing
would be responsible for the proper
placement and maintenance of the sign.
The dispatching railroad for the crossing
would be responsible for providing the
telephone number posted on the sign to
the maintaining railroad, if the two are
not the same railroad.
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[a] properly functioning warning systems
[sic] promotes a public perception that the
warning ought to be heeded * * *. An
Emergency Notification System facilitates
prompt attention to malfunctioning
equipment and fosters the perception that
railroads are concerned that equipment
operates as intended.
FRA agrees. Although railroads have
previously been obligated to take certain
actions as required by subpart C if a
report of a crossing system malfunction
was reported by a person belonging to
one of the categories defined in
‘‘credible report of warning system
malfunction’’ in § 234.5, this rule
expands the duty of the railroad to take
certain actions when reports are
received from the general public.
that this exception is warranted because
farm grade crossings generally have less
vehicular traffic and people who
traverse these crossings typically are
more familiar with the crossings and
likely will have prior knowledge of the
presence and location of the ENS sign,
if they need to report an unsafe
condition.
Another exception is provided in
paragraph (a)(2)(ii), which was not
proposed in the NPRM and which
allows for one sign to be placed and
maintained at each vehicular entrance
to a railroad yard, port or dock facility,
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ER12JN12.008
FRA received comments from a
handful of railroads and industry
associations, two State agencies, and
some individuals with respect to the
placement and maintenance of ENS
signs. Paragraph (a) of this section
requires ENS signs to be placed and
maintained on each approach at all
public and private highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings. An exception
is provided in paragraph (a)(2)(i), which
was not proposed in the NPRM, that
allows for only one sign to be placed
and maintained at farm grade crossings,
as defined in § 234.301. FRA believes
In order for the public to have an
effective means to report warning
system malfunctions and other unsafe
conditions, a sign(s) must be located at
the crossing with the pertinent
information in order to contact the
appropriate railroad and provide the
railroad with sufficient information to
correct the unsafe condition. The
organization Crossing Call commented
that while collisions on smaller
railroads with reduced speeds may pose
less of a hazard, there are additional
benefits to an ENS other than reporting
a stalled vehicle at the crossing.
Crossing Call noted that—
ER12JN12.007
[t]he preponderance of calls have reported
broken or malfunctioning warning devices,
but other calls have reported trains blocking
crossings, rough roadway surfaces,
obstructions on tracks (often vehicles that are
stuck), fires, vandalism, trespassers, etc.
Trains have been slowed or stopped to avoid
obstructions. Warning devices have been
repaired more quickly because railroads have
been provided more timely notifications that
problems existed.
Section 234.311 ENS Sign Placement
and Maintenance
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
excessive burden on small railroads.
History has proven this concern to be
unwarranted for the most part. As
railroads began to adopt various forms
of emergency notification systems, the
expectation of nuisance calls was a
concern, but did not materialize. This
fact was supported by the pilot projects,
discussed previously, that FRA
conducted in the State of Kentucky, the
State of Texas, and with several short
line railroads in the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania. See Pilot Programs for
Emergency Notification Systems at
Highway-Rail Grade Crossings
(Washington, DC: Federal Railroad
Administration, May 2006), https://
www.fra.dot.gov/downloads/safety/
1_800_report.pdf. The pilot programs
did not find that false reports, or
nuisance calls were an issue. In fact, the
report concluded that railroads and the
public overwhelmingly benefit from
emergency call-in systems, noting,
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or a private industrial facility that does
not meet the definition of a ‘‘plant
railroad’’ in § 234.5, rather than signs at
each crossing within the yard, port or
dock facility or private industrial
facility.
As mentioned previously in the
NPRM, FRA considered whether to
expand subpart E to cover all public
highway-rail grade crossings located
within a port or dock facility, railroad
yard, or private industrial facility and to
make such a facility or yard subject to
part 234. The ILCC recommended
expanding subpart E to cover all public
highway-rail grade crossings located
within a port or dock facility. The CPUC
made a similar recommendation.
However, these facilities are typically
not open to the general public. FRA
believes that a sign located at each
vehicular entrance sufficiently provides
an invitee with the telephone number of
the dispatching railroad if necessary to
report an unsafe condition.
Furthermore, these facilities often have
a significant number of crossings
located within a small area, and FRA
believes that it is impracticable to
consider each crossing within these
areas as a separate grade crossing, and
posting a sign at every crossing may not
be possible. Additionally, railroads
typically operate in these facilities at
very low speed and thus the hazards of
a collision are reduced. Furthermore,
treating all the public highway-rail
grade crossings within these facilities/
yards as one public highway-rail grade
crossing is consistent with the Crossing
Inventory, Policy, Procedures and
Instructions for States and Railroads
(Washington, DC: Federal Railroad
Administration, August 2007), https://
www.fra.dot.gov/downloads/safety/
RXIPolicyInstructions0807.pdf.
A couple of commenters suggested
that there be no requirement to have
ENS signs placed and maintained at
private highway-rail and pathway grade
crossings because these private
crossings typically are not accessible
from public roads and many of them do
not have crossbucks. FRA disagrees
with this suggestion because probable
invitees that use private crossings will
not be familiar with the crossings nor
have prior knowledge of the presence
and/or location of the ENS signs. The
presence of two signs—one on each
approach—will enhance an invitee’s
awareness and ability to utilize ENS. A
collision that is caused by a vehicle that
is stalled on a private grade crossing and
is struck by a train has the same
consequences as a similar collision that
occurs on a public grade crossing. The
users of a private grade crossing should
have the same opportunity to utilize
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ENS, and thus FRA has determined that
two signs are appropriate at private
grade crossings.
Furthermore, one commenter
recommended that the private party that
operates over the private crossing
should be responsible for the
installation and maintenance of the ENS
sign at the crossing, as opposed to the
railroad. FRA believes that it is a
maintaining railroad’s responsibility to
install and maintain the ENS sign;
however, this final rule puts no
restrictions on a railroad’s authority to
make a private crossing agreement to
that effect, if so desired.
In the NPRM, FRA proposed general
requirements regarding the placement of
the sign so that the sign may be easily
seen and does not obstruct any other
sign or traffic control devices at the
crossing. FRA sought public comment
on ‘‘sign placement so the appropriate
placement for optimal visual
effectiveness of the sign may be
determined.’’ AAR was the only
commenter opposed to what is now
paragraph (b) of § 234.311. FRA made
several changes to proposed paragraph
(b) in this final rule. The paragraph now
identifies four requisite characteristics
related to the placement of an ENS
sign—that it is conspicuous; does not
obstruct other signs or traffic control
devices at the crossing; does not limit
the view of a train; and, if mounted on
a post, it has supports that are
crashworthy.
AAR contended that paragraph (b) as
it was proposed in the NPRM should be
deleted from this section because the
MUTCD already addresses the
placement of ENS signs. Additionally,
AAR asserted that some of the
requirements proposed in the NPRM
were ambiguous, and therefore would
result in compliance and enforcement
problems. FRA believes that the revised
requirements contained in paragraph (b)
of this final rule are more
understandable than those proposed in
the NPRM. As stated previously, in the
discussion of § 234.309, FRA prefers to
set its own standards for sign placement
and maintenance rather than
incorporate the MUTCD by reference.
Several other commenters made
suggestions regarding the location and
orientation of the signs. The BRS
suggested that signs be placed in a
location where a stopped motorist is not
required to exit the vehicle to read the
sign. FRA believes that the requirement
in paragraph (b)(i) for an ENS sign to be
conspicuous to roadway and pathway
users by day and night, combined with
the size and letter requirements in
§ 234.309(c), will limit the times that
motorists need to exit their vehicles to
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read a sign and obtain the telephone
number to report unsafe conditions at a
crossing. With regard to ENS signs
placed on signal bungalows, FRA stated
in the NPRM that ‘‘[i]t is difficult to
envision a scenario in which placing the
sign on the signal bungalow would
satisfy all of the [proposed]
requirements [particularly those that
require] a sign to be placed at a grade
crossing so that it is conspicuous to the
users of the roadway or pathway.’’ The
CPUC and ILCC advocated that signs be
placed directly at the crossing for each
direction of traffic, and acknowledged
that ENS signs placed solely on signal
bungalows would be too distant from a
crossing to be conspicuous to roadway
and pathway users. Yet, Amtrak and
New Jersey Transit Rail Operations
(NJTR) each asserted that their signs
currently placed on signal bungalows
are sufficiently conspicuous since they
are approximately four times larger than
the minimum size required in the final
rule, and the height of the lettering is
two to three times greater than that
required in the final rule. Although
Amtrak’s and NJTR’s signs are much
larger than the specifications required in
the final rule, FRA believes that because
they are not located at the crossing
itself, but rather on the signal bungalow,
the signs are less conspicuous to the
roadway or pathway user who is at the
crossing and needs to report an
emergency or other unsafe condition.
Signal bungalows vary widely in their
distance from a crossing, so even though
the dimensions and lettering of the signs
may be considerably larger than
required by § 234.309, it still may be
difficult for a user of a highway-rail
grade crossing to read the sign.
Accordingly, the final rule does not
prohibit the placement of a sign on the
signal bungalow, but a sign placed on
the signal bungalow, but nowhere else
at the crossing, does not comply with
§ 234.311. Railroads, like NJTR, that
currently have ENS signs that are only
located on the signal bungalow will
have until September 1, 2017, for their
signs to conform to the placement
requirements in § 234.311, pursuant to
§ 234.317.
In the NPRM, FRA solicited
comments on other locations at grade
crossings, besides signal bungalows,
where the placement of the ENS sign
would not satisfy proposed § 234.311.
CPUC suggested that, in addition to the
signal bungalow, it would not be
appropriate to place an ENS sign facing
the track, unless there is also a sign for
each direction of traffic; outside of the
crossing area; within a heavily fenced
enclosure that would obscure the sign;
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immediately behind another sign; or
more than 10 feet outside the public
right of way unless supplemented by
additional signs at the crossing. For the
final rule, FRA determined that the
requirement in § 234.311(b)(i) that the
ENS sign be conspicuous to users of the
roadway or pathway by day and night,
adequately ensures that ENS signs
placed in such locations would not
comply.
In the final rule, a sign at a grade
crossing is not required to be mounted
on a post, but rather may be mounted
anywhere at the crossing that is
consistent with its being conspicuous to
users of the roadway or pathway by day
and night, as well as consistent with the
other placement requirements in
§ 234.311. FRA did not require a
specific location at a crossing where a
sign must be placed because such a
specific location may not exist at every
crossing. A few of the places suggested
by commenters that would comply with
§ 234.311 include mounting the sign
below the crossbuck, on the signal mast,
below the gate mechanism, or on a post
to the side of the crossbuck. NJTR is the
only railroad that commented that there
is not sufficient space on the crossing
gate masts at their crossings to install
ENS signs that meet the minimum sign
size specified in § 234.309(c) of at least
12 inches wide by 9 inches high. FRA
notes that signs of this size have been
installed on crossing gate masts by other
railroads so that they do not interfere
with the operation of the automatic
warning systems. Furthermore, the
railroad may display the ENS sign on a
separate post, if necessary.
Section 234.313 Recordkeeping
Section 234.313 sets forth the
recordkeeping requirements for this
subpart that apply to each railroad
subject to this subpart. Paragraph (a) of
this section requires each railroad to
keep certain records pertaining to its
compliance with this subpart. Records
may be kept on paper forms generated
by the railroad or kept electronically in
a manner that conforms with § 234.315.
In this final rule, FRA mainly adopts
paragraph (a) as it was proposed in the
NPRM, with the exception of stylistic
changes and one addition. In addition to
the recordkeeping requirements already
enumerated in the NPRM, paragraph (a)
now also requires that a railroad retain
information regarding the reason why
no remedial action was taken by it. In
the NPRM, FRA solicited comments on
what other information the railroad
should be required to record. The CPUC
recommended requiring information
about why a railroad found a reported
problem infeasible or unlawful to
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remedy. FRA believes that the new
requirement in paragraph (a) addresses
the issue raised by CPUC. The ILCC also
suggested that weather conditions at the
crossing location be recorded when a
caller makes a report of an unsafe
condition. While this may be helpful
information for some remedial actions
undertaken by the railroad, FRA is not
requiring that weather conditions be
recorded. The recordkeeping
requirements mandated by this section
are minimum requirements; railroads
are permitted to record additional
information if they choose to do so.
Subpart C at 49 CFR 234.109
(§ 234.109) already has specific
recordkeeping requirements for a
railroad that receives a credible report of
warning system malfunction; therefore,
paragraph (b) of § 234.313 states there is
no separate recordkeeping requirement
in subpart E for credible reports of
warning system malfunction.
In the final rule, FRA adds paragraphs
(c) to this section to address the
recordkeeping requirements associated
with new § 234.306. In § 234.306, where
multiple railroads dispatch trains
through the same highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing, the railroads
are required to appoint one of their
number to receive telephonic reports.
Similarly, in § 234.306, where multiple
railroads have maintenance
responsibilities for the same crossing,
the railroads are required to appoint one
of their number to install and maintain
the ENS sign(s) at the crossing.
Paragraph (c) of § 234.313 requires that
these appointments be recorded in
writing and a copy of the document
retained by each railroad for the
duration of the appointment.
Paragraph (e) of this section requires
that each railroad retain for at least one
year (from the latest date of railroad
activity in response to a report received
under this subpart) all records that it
makes that are required by this section.
Records required to be kept must be
made available to FRA as provided by
statute (49 U.S.C. 20107). Some public
comments received by FRA indicated
that one year is not a sufficient period
of time for the railroads to retain the
records required by this section.
However, a one-year period for retention
of records is consistent with other FRA
regulations in part 234.
In the NPRM, FRA solicited
comments on whether to require the
railroad to record the caller’s name and
contact information so that the railroad
could follow up with the caller if
necessary. A few commenters, including
the ILCC and the organization Crossing
Call, supported obtaining the caller’s
name and contact information.
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35183
However, the AAR recommended
against this proposal, stating that the
caller’s identifying information is not
necessary for enforcement purposes and
that not all callers would be willing to
provide such information. In light of
these comments, FRA has decided not
to require a dispatching railroad to
record a caller’s name or contact
information in this final rule.
Dispatching and maintaining railroads
are required to take remedial actions
pursuant to § 234.305, regardless of
whether or not they know the identity
of the caller. A railroad’s knowledge of
a caller’s name and contact information
would add little or no benefit to a
railroad’s remedial efforts. Moreover,
some callers reporting an unsafe
condition may be deterred from making
a report if required to provide their
name and contact information.
The Angels on Track Foundation
recommended that railroads be required
to provide State agencies that are
responsible for selecting crossings for
upgrades and enforcing regulations at
crossings with documentation of the
reports of unsafe conditions received
through ENS. FRA believes this
recommendation is outside the scope of
this rule; however, railroads are at
liberty to provide such information to
State agencies.
Finally, Amtrak requested that FRA
protect any documentation and data
prepared, compiled, or collected under
subpart E from discovery or admission
into evidence or otherwise used for any
other purpose in a Federal or State court
proceeding for damages involving
personal injury or wrongful death
against a railroad. Specifically, Amtrak
references 23 U.S.C. 409, which
Congress enacted pursuant to an FHWA
proposal to shield information provided
to FHWA by State and local
governments to further highway
transportation safety. Congress in Sec.
205 of the RSIA did not provide a
similar protection against the discovery
or admission into evidence of certain
information in a Federal or State court
proceeding in any action for damages
arising from information or data
obtained as a result of this final rule.
Without an express Congressional
mandate, it is outside FRA’s authority to
provide the protections sought by
Amtrak.
Section 234.315 Electronic
Recordkeeping
Section 234.315 addresses the keeping
of records required by subpart E
electronically. This section applies to
railroads that choose to conduct
electronic recordkeeping under subpart
E. These electronic recordkeeping
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requirements are modeled after the
requirements set forth in FRA’s Railroad
Operating Rules at 49 CFR 217.9(g)
(§ 217.9(g)). The final rule adopts
§ 234.315 as proposed in the NPRM,
with the exception of typographical and
stylistic changes and clarification that
the section applies only to records
required by subpart E and not to records
required by part 234 in general. FRA
received no public comments in
response to this proposed section.
If a railroad chooses to conduct
electronic recordkeeping of records
required by subpart E, the railroad must
provide adequate security measures to
limit employee access to its electronic
data processing system and must
prescribe who is allowed to create,
modify, or delete data from the
database. Although FRA does not
identify the management position
authorized to institute changes in the
database, the railroad must indicate the
source authorized to make such
changes. The railroad must have a
computer and a facsimile or printer
connected to the computer to retrieve
and produce records for immediate
review by FRA representatives. Section
217.9(g) requires the computer to be a
desktop computer. However, FRA
recognizes that all railroads may not
necessarily maintain their records on a
desktop computer, so rather than
adopting this requirement from
§ 217.9(g), FRA is allowing railroads the
flexibility to maintain their records on
other types of computers, such as
laptops. It should be noted that,
regardless of the type of computer on
which the railroad maintains its
electronic records, it must be possible
for a facsimile or printer to be connected
to the computer to retrieve and produce
records for immediate review by FRA
representatives. The documents must be
made available for FRA inspection
during ‘‘normal business hours,’’ which
FRA interprets as the time, any day of
the week, when railroads conduct their
regular business transactions.
Nevertheless, FRA reserves the right
to review and examine the documents
prepared in accordance with the
applicable section of subpart E, at any
reasonable time if situations warrant it.
Each railroad must also designate who
is authorized to authenticate the hard
copies produced from the electronic
format. In short, each railroad electing
to retain its records electronically must
ensure the integrity of the information
and prevent possible tampering with
data, enabling FRA to fully execute its
enforcement responsibilities.
Furthermore, if an electronic record
kept by the railroad pursuant to this
subpart does not comply with paragraph
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(a) of § 234.315, then the record must be
kept on paper.
Section 234.317
Compliance Dates
Section 234.317 provides the date by
which each of various groups of
railroads must comply with this
subpart. In response to the compliance
dates proposed in the NPRM, FRA
received several comments from
railroads and other groups and
individuals in the railroad industry.
With respect to railroads that currently
do not have an ENS of any kind in
place, the ILCC recommended that these
railroads have 12 months to implement
a system that conforms to the subpart.
The organization Crossing Call stated
that the proposal in the NPRM to allow
railroads without an ENS to implement
one within 18 months (after the effective
date of subpart E), as proposed in the
NPRM, was an overly generous amount
of time, and recommended allowing
only 9 months to conform to the
subpart. One individual commented
that the compliance dates proposed in
the NPRM failed to instill a sense of
urgency and all railroads should be
allowed somewhere between six and
twelve months to conform to the
subpart. After careful consideration of
these comments, as well as comments
from smaller railroads regarding the
financial burden that the rule will place
on their business operations (see
Regulatory Evaluation for this final
rule), FRA decided in the final rule to
extend the implementation period for
railroads that currently do not have any
sort of ENS in place from 18 months, as
proposed in the NPRM, to
approximately three years after the
effective date of the final rule, i.e.,
September 1, 2015. This additional time
provides smaller railroads the
opportunity to phase-in implementation
of an ENS in stages, thus spreading out
the costs of implementation.
Paragraph (a) of this section applies to
railroads that do not have anything in
place that could be considered an ENS
as defined in § 234.301. However, if a
railroad has a system in place, but some
or all of the components do not conform
to this subpart, the amount of time the
railroad has to bring it into compliance
depends on which component is
noncompliant.
In paragraph (b) of § 234.317, if a
railroad already has its own ENS
telephone service or is using a thirdparty telephone service, but that
telephone service does not comply with
the requirements in § 234.303 or
§ 243.307, respectively, the railroad
must bring the ENS telephone service
into compliance by March 1, 2014—as
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opposed to the six months proposed in
the NPRM.
In paragraph (c)(1) of § 234.317, if a
railroad already has ENS signs in place,
but those signs do not comply with the
requirements set forth in § 234.309, the
railroad’s ENS signs must conform to
§ 234.309 within certain time periods as
required in paragraph (c)(1)(i)–(iii) of
§ 234.317.
In response to the NPRM, both the
AAR and KCS recommended that all
existing ENS signs be permitted to
remain in place for their normal useful
life. In consideration of these comments,
in the final rule, FRA is allowing certain
signs to remain in place for the lifecycle
of the sign. Specifically, paragraph
(c)(1)(i) permits a railroad to keep an
ENS sign that is in place for its useful
life if the sign size is greater than or
equal to 60 square inches, and the
height of the lettering on the sign is
greater than or equal to 3⁄4 inch for the
information required in § 234.309(b).
FRA assesses that the useful life of a
sign is approximately 15 years. This
modification in the final rule decreased
the estimated costs initially assessed in
the NPRM by $3.0 million over a 15year period. At present, the majority of
Class 1 railroad signs located at
crossings meet the size and lettering
requirements in paragraph (c)(1)(i).
However, AAR also advocated for
railroads being allowed to use their
existing inventory of signs if they
contain the telephone number and
Crossing Inventory number. FRA
disagrees. Once a railroad replaces a
sign, the new sign must conform to
§ 234.309, so that within a reasonable
amount of time there is uniformity to
the signs at crossings throughout the
United States.
Paragraph (c)(1)(ii) requires that if a
railroad has an ENS sign in place that
is greater than or equal to 60 square
inches, but the height of the lettering on
the sign is less than 3⁄4 inch for the
information required in § 234.309(b), the
railroad must replace the sign with a
compliant sign by September 1, 2017.
Paragraph (c)(1)(iii) requires that if a
railroad has an ENS sign in place that
is less than 60 square inches, regardless
of the height of the lettering for the
information required in § 234.309(b), the
railroad must replace the sign with a
compliant sign by September 1, 2015.
Paragraph (c)(2) of this section
stipulates that if the railroad replaces a
non-conforming sign before the
expiration of the time periods in
paragraph(c)(1)(i)–(iii), the railroad must
replace the sign with one that conforms
to § 234.309.
Under paragraph (d) of § 234.317, if a
railroad already has ENS signs in place,
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but the placement of those signs does
not comply with the requirements set
forth in § 234.311, the placement of the
signs must conform to § 234.311 by
September 1, 2017. If the railroad
changes the placement of the sign before
the expiration of the five-year period,
the placement of the sign must conform
to § 234.311. Furthermore, if a railroad
replaces a sign before September 1, 2017
so that the sign conforms to § 234.309
and the placement of the sign does not
conform to § 234.311, the railroad must
also change the placement of the sign so
that it conforms to § 234.311.
In the NPRM, FRA solicited
comments on whether to reduce the
amount of time that the railroad would
have to bring the placement of the sign
into compliance if the only sign at the
crossing is placed on the signal
bungalow. FRA received several
comments on this issue. The BRS, the
CPUC, and the ILCC all supported
reducing the implementation period
from 5 years to 18 months or less for
signs placed on signal bungalows.
However, to provide economic relief to
railroads, FRA decided in the final rule
to grant railroads until September 1,
2017, allotting the same amount of time
as proposed in the NPRM.
Finally, paragraph (e) requires that if
a railroad already conducts
recordkeeping as part of its ENS, but the
recordkeeping does not conform to
§ 234.313 or § 234.315, the railroad’s
recordkeeping must conform to
§ 234.313 or, as applicable, § 234.315, by
September 1, 2013.
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V. Regulatory Impact
A. Executive Order 12866 and 13563
and DOT Regulatory Policies and
Procedures
This final rule has been evaluated in
accordance with existing policies and
procedures and determined to be nonsignificant under both Executive Order
12866 and 13563 and DOT policies and
procedures. See 44 FR 11034 (February
26, 1979). FRA has prepared and placed
in the docket a regulatory evaluation
addressing the economic impact of this
final rule. FRA has met with and made
presentations to those who are likely to
be affected by this rule in order to seek
their views on the rule.
As part of the regulatory evaluation,
FRA has assessed quantitative
measurements of the cost streams
expected to result from the
implementation of this final rule. For
the 15-year period analyzed, the
estimated quantified cost that will be
imposed on industry totals $15.6
million with a present value (PV, 7
percent) of $10.1 million. The
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requirements that are expected to
impose the largest burdens relate to
recordkeeping and the purchase and
installation of signs at grade crossings.
The table below presents the estimated
costs associated with this final rule.
15-YEAR ESTIMATED COSTS OF THE
FINAL RULE
Section 234.303—Toll-Free
Service ..............................
Section 234.306—Multiple
Dispatching or Maintaining
Railroads ...........................
Section 234.307—ThirdParty Service .....................
Section 234.309—Signs (Materials) ...............................
Section 234.309—Signs (Installation) ...........................
Section 234.311—Post (Materials) ...............................
Section 234.311—Post (Installation) ...........................
Section 234.313—Initial Recordkeeping ........................
Section 234.313—Remedial
Recordkeeping ..................
$989,870
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analysis finds that $57.8 million in cost
savings will accrue through casualty
prevention, damage avoidance, and
other benefits. The discounted value of
this is $31.7 million (PV, 7 percent). The
table below presents the estimated
benefits associated with this final rule.
15-YEAR ESTIMATED BENEFITS OF THE
FINAL RULE
2,881
2,863,448
$21,519,783
8,587,839
Total ......................................
9,800
Fatalities (Prevented) ...........
Injuries (Prevented) ..............
Highway Vehicle Damage
(Avoided) ...........................
Railroad Equipment Damage
(Avoided) ...........................
Track/Structure Damage
(Avoided) ...........................
Other Benefits .......................
$31,707,636
651,130
327,922
203,988
416,974
2,007,754
238,621
200,775
Dollars are discounted at a present value
rate of 7 percent. Note that numbers may not
add due to rounding.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and
Executive Order 13272
3,490,728
To ensure potential impacts of rules
Total ...............................
$10,103,668 on small entities are properly
considered, FRA has developed this
Dollars are discounted at a present value final rule in accordance with Executive
rate of 7 percent. Note that numbers may not
Order 13272 (‘‘Proper Consideration of
add due to rounding.
Small Entities in Agency Rulemaking’’)
As part of the regulatory evaluation,
and DOT’s procedures and policies to
FRA has explained what the likely
promote compliance with the
benefits for this final rule will be, and
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601
provided numerical assessments of the
et seq.).
potential value of such benefits. This
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
final rule is expected to improve
requires an agency to review regulations
railroad safety by ensuring that all
to assess their impact on small entities.
highway-rail and pathway grade
An agency must conduct a regulatory
crossings have adequate signage to
flexibility analysis unless it determines
enable the public to inform the railroad
and certifies that a rule is not expected
of emergencies and other unsafe
to have a significant economic impact
conditions. The primary benefits
on a substantial number of small
include a heightened safety
entities.
environment in grade crossing areas and
As discussed earlier, FRA has
potential avoidance of casualties,
initiated this rulemaking as a
fatalities, and damage through earlier
requirement of the RSIA. This final rule
awareness of track obstructions,
requires each railroad to establish and
including stalled highway vehicles, and maintain a toll-free telephone service to
other safety hazards. Thus, in general,
directly receive calls from the public
the final rule should decrease grade
reporting an emergency or other unsafe
crossing accidents and incidents and
condition at its grade crossings, and to
associated casualties and damages.
remedy those unsafe conditions, as
Other than the reduction of accidents,
appropriate. As part of these duties, a
fatalities, injuries, and associated
railroad is required to install and
damages, FRA is aware of several other
maintain signs at its grade crossings that
benefits that will occur when accidents
display its emergency telephone
are prevented. Savings have been
number.
(1) Description of Regulated Entities
estimated for avoiding train delay,
and Impacts. The ‘‘universe’’ of the
highway delay, emergency personnel
entities under consideration includes
responding, vehicle towing, and
accident clean-up associated with grade only those small entities that can
reasonably be expected to be directly
crossing accidents.
Based on its analysis, FRA has found
affected by the provisions of this rule.
that the expected accident reduction
For the rule there is only one type of
benefits will exceed the total cost of this small entity that is affected: small
final rule. Over a 15-year period, this
railroads.
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‘‘Small entity’’ is defined in 5 U.S.C.
601 (Section 601). Section 601(3)
defines the term ‘‘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 entity’’ a notfor-profit enterprise that is
independently owned and operated, and
not dominant in its field of operations.
The U.S. Small Business
Administration (SBA) stipulates in its
‘‘Size Standards’’ that the largest a
railroad business firm that is ‘‘forprofit’’ may be, and still be classified as
a ‘‘small entity,’’ is 1,500 employees for
‘‘Line Haul Operating Railroads’’ and
500 employees for ‘‘Switching and
Terminal Establishments.’’ See ‘‘Size
Eligibility Provisions and Standards,’’
13 CFR part 121 subpart A.
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, which formally establishes small
entities as railroads that meet the line
haulage revenue requirements of a Class
III railroad. See 68 FR 24891 (May 9,
2003), codified at Appendix C to 49 CFR
part 209. Currently, the revenue
requirements are $20 million or less in
annual operating revenue, adjusted
annually for inflation. The $20 million
limit (adjusted annually for inflation) is
based on the STB’s threshold for a Class
III railroad, which is adjusted by
applying the railroad revenue deflator
adjustment. For further information on
the calculation of the specific dollar
limit, see 49 CFR part 1201. FRA is
using the STB’s threshold in its
definition of ‘‘small entities’’ for this
rule.
Included in the entities impacted by
this final rule are governmental
jurisdictions or transit authorities—
none of which are small for purposes of
the SBA (i.e., no entity serves a locality
with a population less than 50,000).
Commuter railroads are part of larger
transit organizations that receive
Federal funds. Therefore, they are not
included in this analysis. Additionally,
this final rule is expected to indirectly
impact sign and post manufacturers, but
only to the extent that the demand
increases for products and services they
supply. Such impact, however, will
likely be both small and favorable to
those small businesses.
Railroads. FRA estimates that there
are 710 Class III freight and passenger
(excluding commuter and intercity)
railroads in the United States. Certain
provisions of this final rule will apply
to all railroads that dispatch trains
through highway-rail or pathway grade
crossings. Out of the 710 Class III
railroads, FRA estimates that there are
153 small freight and passenger
(excluding commuter and intercity)
railroads that do not have a dispatching
function as part of their operations; and
therefore, would not be affected by these
certain provisions of this final rule.
Thus, FRA has concluded that 557 small
railroads will be affected by those
provisions of this final rule. Hence, FRA
has concluded that a substantial number
of small entities will be impacted.
However, as explained below, the
impact on these small railroads will not
be significant.
The small railroads affected by this
final rule are defined as Class III
railroads with grade crossings. FRA
estimates that Class III railroads
dispatch trains over 59,845 grade
crossings. To evaluate the impact on
these railroads, it is helpful to separate
them into three groups by number of
employees. Thus, FRA subdivided these
railroads into small railroads, very small
railroads, and extremely small railroads.
Small railroads are Class III railroads
with 15 or more employees. Very small
railroads are those with fewer than 15
employees, but more than 2 employees.
Extremely small railroads are those with
2 or fewer employees. The table below
shows the average annualized cost per
small railroad, by category:
Number of
railroads
Class III affected entities
Small ............................................................................................................................................
Very Small ...................................................................................................................................
Extremely Small ...........................................................................................................................
203
217
137
Average
number of
crossings per
railroad
199
69
32
Average
annualized
cost per
railroad per
year
$2,461
944
312
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Source: Federal Railroad Administration 2009 data, compiled on September 1, 2010.
The cost to comply with this final rule
largely depends upon the number of
crossings that a railroad maintains.
Throughout the regulatory evaluation,
FRA has split the small railroads into
three categories and analyzed the costs
and benefits separately for each of these
categories. The burden placed on the
very small and extremely small Class III
railroads is generally proportionately
less because they usually maintain
fewer crossings.
FRA estimates there are 203 small
railroads with 15 or more employees.
This group of railroads has 40,363 grade
crossings; an average of approximately
199 crossings per railroad. FRA
estimates the average total cost for small
railroads to comply with this final rule
is approximately $4,304 per railroad for
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each of the first 3 years, and $1,037 per
railroad per year for each of the
following 12 years.
FRA estimates there are 217 very
small railroads; those with less than 15
employees but more than 2 employees.
This group of very small railroads has
15,074 grade crossings, an average of
approximately 69 crossings per railroad.
The average total cost for very small
railroads is approximately $1,567 per
railroad for each of the first 3 years, and
$428 per railroad per year for each of
the following 12 years.
Extremely small railroads are those
with two or fewer employees. There are
137 railroads in this category,
accounting for 4,408 grade crossings.
Extremely small railroads have an
average of approximately 32 grade
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crossings. The average total cost for
extremely small railroads is
approximately $646 per railroad for
each of the first 3 years, and $104 per
railroad per year for each of the
following 12 years. Using the average
annualized cost of $312 per railroad per
year, and an average of 32 crossings per
railroad, FRA estimates the cost to these
extremely small railroads to comply
with this final rule is about $10 per
crossing per year over the 15-year
analysis. Railroads with just a few
crossings will incur very minimal costs
to comply with this final rule. Thus, this
final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on extremely small
railroads.
Many small railroads are subsidiaries
of large short line holding companies
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with the expertise and resources
comparable to larger railroads. The
requirement to install two new signs per
crossing and provide a toll-free
telephone number in case of
emergencies will not have a significant
economic impact on these railroads.
Short line railroads affected by this final
rule might collaborate with other small
railroads to implement its requirements,
which would lower the burden on these
small railroads.
FRA received several comments
related to the impact on small entities
and tourist railroads, regarding the
regulatory flexibility analysis, and
compliance with Executive Order
13272. FRA considered these comments
and, accordingly, in this final rule, FRA
examined the impact on small
businesses, made cost-reducing changes,
and re-evaluated the costs and benefits.
Several comments on the NPRM
requested that FRA adjust the
monitoring and signage requirements to
give consideration to small entities. The
changes to the final rule made since the
NPRM will reduce the burden on small
railroads. FRA revised the monitoring
requirements for railroads that dispatch
trains authorized to operate at speeds
less than or equal to 20 mph through
crossings. Also, those railroads that
operate at seasonally or intermittently
and at speeds greater than 20 mph
through crossings are not required to
have live monitoring during hours of
non-operation. Farm grade crossings are
now only required to have one sign per
crossing; this reduces the number of
signs for Class III railroads by 13,510.
These changes have moderately
decreased the annual and total costs for
small entities. Based on changes made
in the regulatory requirements since the
NPRM, FRA is even more confident that
the impact on small entities will not be
significant.
Previously, FRA sampled small
railroads and found that revenue
averaged approximately $4.7 million
(not discounted) in 2006. One percent of
average annual revenue per small
railroad, or $47,000, is far more than the
average annual cost that these railroads
will incur because of this final rule.
Very small and extremely small
railroads likely do have smaller
revenues than larger Class III railroads.
However, FRA believes that this average
provides a good representation of the
small railroads, in general. If a railroad
has annual average revenue greater than
$134,122, the annual cost per railroad
will be less than 1 percent of revenue.
FRA concludes that the final rule will
not have a noticeable economic impact
on the competitive position of small
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entities, or on the small entity segment
of the railroad industry as a whole.
(2) Certification. Pursuant to the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
605(b)), FRA certifies that this final rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. Although a substantial number
of small railroads will be affected by the
final rule, none of these entities will be
significantly impacted.
C. Federalism
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
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 final rule has been analyzed in
accordance with the principles and
criteria contained in Executive Order
13132. The rule will not have a
substantial effect on the States or their
political subdivisions; it will not impose
any compliance costs; and it will 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.
This final rule amends part 234,
which contains FRA’s principal
regulations regarding grade crossing
safety. Although the final rule on Statespecific highway-rail grade crossing
action plans published June 28, 2010
(75 FR 36552) removed the preemptive
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effect provision in part 234, part 234
still could have preemptive effect by
operation of law under a provision of
the former Federal Railroad Safety Act
of 1970 (former FRSA), which was
repealed and recodified at 49 U.S.C.
20106 (Section 20106). Section 20106
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.
FRA believes that Section 20106
sufficiently addresses the preemptive
effect of FRA’s regulations. Providing a
separate Federal regulatory provision in
this final rule, as suggested by some
public comments on the proposed rule,
concerning the regulation’s preemptive
effect is duplicative and unnecessary.
In sum, FRA has analyzed this final
rule in accordance with the principles
and criteria contained in Executive
Order 13132. As explained above, FRA
has determined that this final rule has
no federalism implications, other than
the possible preemption of State laws
under Federal railroad safety statutes,
specifically 49 U.S.C. 20106.
Accordingly, FRA has determined that
preparation of a federalism summary
impact statement for this final rule is
not required.
D. International Trade Impact
Assessment
The Trade Agreement Act of 1979
prohibits Federal agencies from
engaging in any standards or related
activities that create unnecessary
obstacles to the foreign commerce of the
United States. Legitimate domestic
objectives, such as safety, are not
considered unnecessary obstacles. The
statute also requires consideration of
international standards and where
appropriate, that they be the basis for
U.S. standards. This rulemaking is
purely domestic in nature and is not
expected to affect trade opportunities
for U.S. firms doing business overseas or
for foreign firms doing business in the
United States.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection
requirements in this final rule are being
submitted for approval to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. The sections of
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the final rule that contain the new
information collection requirements and
the estimated time to fulfill each
requirement are as follows:
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
CFR Section/Subject
Respondent universe
Total annual responses
Average time per
response
234.303(b)—Receipt by Dispatching RR of Report of Unsafe Condition at Highway-Rail
Grade Crossing.
234.303(d)—Receipt by Dispatching RR of Report of Unsafe Condition at Pathway Grade
Crossing.
234.305 (a)(2)—Immediate Contact by Dispatching RR Not Having Maintenance Responsibility of All Trains Authorized to Operate through That Crossing in Response to
Credible Report of Warning System Malfunction at Highway-Rail Grade Crossing.
—(a)(2) Contact of Crossing Maintenance
RR by Dispatching RR Not Having Maintenance Responsibility in Response to
Credible Report of Warning System Malfunction at Highway-Rail Grade Crossing.
—(b)(1) In Response to Public Report of
Warning System Malfunction at HighwayRail Grade Crossing Immediate Contact
by Dispatching RR Having Maintenance
Duty for Crossing of All Trains Authorized
to Operate Through That Crossing.
—Dispatching RR Having Maintenance Duty for
Crossing Contact of Appropriate Law Enforcement Authority with Necessary Information regarding Reported Malfunction.
—234.305 (b)(2) In Response to Public Report of Warning System Malfunction at
Highway-Rail Grade Crossing Immediate
Contact by Dispatching RR Not Having
Maintenance Duty for that Crossing of All
Trains Authorized to Operate Through
That Crossing.
—Dispatching RR Contact of Law Enforcement Authority to Direct Traffic/Maintain
Safety.
—Dispatching RR Contact of Maintaining
RR re: Reported Malfunction and Maintaining RR Record of Unsafe Condition.
234.305(c)(1)—In Response to Report of
Warning System Failure at Pathway
Grade Crossing Dispatching RR Having
Maintenance Duty Contact of All Trains
Authorized to Operate Thru It & Record
of Unsafe Condition.
—In Response to Report of Warning System Failure at Pathway Grade Crossing
Dispatching RR Having Maintenance
Duty Contact of Law Enforcement Agencies to Direct Traffic & Maintain Safety.
—234.305(d)(1) Upon Receiving Report of
Disabled Vehicle or Other Obstruction
Dispatching RR Having Maintenance
Duty Contact of All Trains Authorized to
Operate Through Highway-Rail or Pathway Grade Crossing & Record of Unsafe
Condition.
—Dispatching RR Having Maintenance
Duty Contact of Law Enforcement Authority Upon Receiving Report of Disabled Vehicle or Other Obstruction.
—(d)(2) Dispatching RR Not Having Maintenance Duty Contact of All Trains Authorized to Operate through Highway-Rail
or Pathway Grade Crossing After Report
of Disabled Vehicle or Other Unsafe
Condition.
594 railroads ................
63,891 reports .............
1 minute .......................
1,065
594 railroads ................
1,860 reports/1,860
records.
1 minute + 1 minute ....
62
594 railroads ................
465 contacts ................
1 minute .......................
8
594 railroads ................
465 contacts + 465
records.
1 minute + 1 minute ....
16
594 railroads ................
925 contacts + 925
records.
1 minute + 1 minute ....
30
594 railroads ................
925 contacts ................
1 minute .......................
15
594 railroads ................
920 contacts ................
1 minute .......................
15
594 railroads ................
920 contacts ................
1 minute .......................
15
594 railroads ................
920 contacts + 920
records.
1 minute + 1 minute ....
30
594 railroads ................
2 contacts + 2 records
1 minute + 1 minute ....
.06666
594 railroads ................
2 contacts ....................
1 minute .......................
.03333
594 railroads ................
7,440 contact + 7,440
reds..
1 minute + 1 minute ....
248
594 railroads ................
7,440 contacts .............
1 minute .......................
124
594 railroads ................
2,556 contacts .............
1 minute .......................
43
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Total annual
burden hours
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
35189
Respondent universe
Total annual responses
Average time per
response
Total annual
burden hours
—Dispatching RR Not Having Maintenance
Responsibility Contact of Law Enforcement Authority regarding Disabled Vehicle/Unsafe Condition.
—Dispatching RR Contact of Maintaining
RR regarding Unsafe Condition at Crossing & Record of Unsafe Condition.
234.305(h)—Provision of Contact Information by Maintaining RR to Dispatching
RR in Order to Be Contacted regarding
Reports of Unsafe Conditions at Highway-Rail and Pathway Grade Crossings.
234.306(a)—Appointment of One Dispatching RR as Primary Dispatching RR
Where Multiple RRs Dispatch Trains
through Same Highway-Rail or Pathway
Grade Crossing to Provide Info. for ENS
Sign.
(b)—Appointment of One Maintaining RR
As Primary Maintaining RR Where Multiple RRs Maintain Same Highway-Rail or
Pathway Grade Crossing for Placement
and Maintenance of ENS Sign.
234.307(b)—3rd Party Telephone Service
Report of Unsafe Conditions at HighwayRail or Pathway Grade Crossings to
Maintaining Railroad and Maintaining RR
Record of Unsafe Condition.
(c)—3rd Party Telephone Service Report to
Dispatching RR of Unsafe Condition.
(d)(1)—Provision of Contact Information to
3rd Party Telephone Service by Dispatching RR or Maintaining RR Using
That Service to Receive Reports of Unsafe Conditions at Highway-Rail or Pathway Grade Crossings.
(d)(2)—Written Notice to FRA by Railroad
of Intent to Use 3rd Party Svc.
(d)(3)—Railroad Written Notification to FRA
of Any Changes in Use or Discontinuance of 3rd Party Service.
234.309(a)—ENS Signs—General—Provision of ENS Telephone Number to Maintaining RR by Dispatching RR If Two
RRs Are Not the Same.
—(b) ENS Signs Located at Highway-Rail
or Pathway Grade Crossings as required
by § 234.311 with Necessary Information
to Receive Reports Required under
§ 234.303.
234.313—Recordkeeping—Records of Reported
Unsafe Conditions Pursuant to § 234.303.
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
CFR Section/Subject
594 railroads ................
2,556 contacts .............
1 minute .......................
43
594 railroads ................
2,556 contacts + 2,556
records.
1 minute + 1 minute ....
86
594 railroads ................
10 info contacts ...........
1 minute .......................
594 railroads ................
50 appointments &
records.
60 minutes ...................
50
594 railroads ................
50 appointment &
records.
60 minutes ...................
50
594 railroads ................
50 reports + 50 records
1 minute + 1 minute ....
2
594 railroads ................
50 reports ....................
1 minute .......................
1
594 railroads ................
17 contact calls ............
15 minutes ...................
4
594 railroads ................
17 letters ......................
60 minutes ...................
17
594 railroads ................
5 letters ........................
60 minutes ...................
5
594 railroads ................
10 contacts ..................
30 minutes ...................
5
594 railroads ................
81,948 signs ................
30 minutes ...................
40,974
594 railroads ................
186,000 records ...........
4 minutes .....................
12,400
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.
Kimberly Toone at 202–493–6132 or via
email at the following addresses:
Robert.Brogan@dot.gov;
Kimberly.Toone@dot.gov.
Organizations and individuals
desiring to submit comments on the
collection of information requirements
should direct them to the Office of
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Management and Budget, Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Washington, D. C. 20503, Attention:
FRA Desk Officer. Comments may also
be sent via email to OMB at the
following address:
oira_submissions@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.
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.1667
FRA is not permitted to impose a
penalty on persons for violating
information collection requirements
which do not display a current OMB
control number, if required. FRA
intends to obtain current OMB control
numbers for any new information
collection requirements resulting from
this rulemaking action prior to the
effective date of this final rule. The
OMB control number, when assigned,
will be announced by separate notice in
the Federal Register.
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
F. Environmental Assessment
FRA has evaluated this final rule in
accordance with its ‘‘Procedures for
Considering Environmental Impacts’’
(FRA’s Procedures) (64 FR 28545, May
26, 1999) as required by the National
Environmental Policy Act (42 U.S.C.
4321 et seq.), other environmental
statutes, Executive Orders, and related
regulatory requirements. FRA has
determined that this final rule is not a
major FRA action (requiring the
preparation of an environmental impact
statement or environmental assessment)
because it is categorically excluded from
detailed environmental review pursuant
to section 4(c)(20) of FRA’s Procedures.
(See 64 FR 28547, May 26, 1999.)
Section 4(c)(20) reads as follows:
‘‘Actions categorically excluded. Certain
classes of FRA actions have been
determined to be categorically excluded
from the requirements of these
Procedures as they do not individually
or cumulatively have a significant effect
on the human environment. * * * The
following classes of FRA actions are
categorically excluded: * * *
Promulgation of railroad safety rules
and policy statements that do not result
in significantly increased emissions or
air or water pollutants or noise or
increased traffic congestion in any mode
of transportation.’’
In accordance with section 4(c) and
(e) of FRA’s Procedures, the agency has
further concluded that no extraordinary
circumstances exist with respect to this
regulation that might trigger the need for
a more detailed environmental review.
As a result, FRA finds that this final rule
is not a major Federal action
significantly affecting the quality of the
human environment.
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
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 million or more (adjusted annually
for inflation) [$140,800,000 or more in
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2010] in any one 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. This final rule
will not result in the expenditure, in the
aggregate, of more than $140,800,000 or
more in any one year, and thus
preparation of such a statement is not
required.
H. Energy Impact
Executive Order 13211 requires
Federal agencies to prepare a Statement
of Energy Effects for any ‘‘significant
energy action.’’ 66 FR 28355 (May 22,
2001). Under the Executive Order, a
‘‘significant energy action’’ is defined as
any action by an agency (normally
published in the Federal Register) that
promulgates, or is expected to lead to
the promulgation of, a final rule or
regulation, including notices of inquiry,
advance notices of proposed
rulemaking, and notices of proposed
rulemaking: (1)(i) That is a significant
regulatory action under Executive Order
12866 or any successor order, and (ii) is
likely to have a significant adverse effect
on the supply, distribution, or use of
energy; or (2) is designated by the
Administrator of the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs as a
significant energy action. FRA has
evaluated this final rule in accordance
with Executive Order 13211. FRA has
determined that this final rule will not
have a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy.
Consequently, FRA has determined that
this regulatory action is not a
‘‘significant energy action’’ within the
meaning of Executive Order 13211.
I. Privacy Act Statement
Interested parties should be aware
that 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 (Volume
65, Number 70; Pages 19477–78), or you
may visit https://www.regulations.gov.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 234
Highway safety, Penalties, Railroad
safety, and Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, State and local
governments.
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The Final Rule
In consideration of the foregoing, FRA
amends part 234 of chapter II, subtitle
B of title 49, Code of Federal
Regulations, as follows:
PART 234—GRADE CROSSING
SAFETY, INCLUDING SIGNAL
SYSTEMS, STATE ACTION PLANS,
AND EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION
SYSTEMS
1. The authority citation for part 234
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 20103, 20107, 20152,
21301, 21304, 21311, 22501 note; Pub. L.
110–432, Div. A, Secs. 202, 205; 28 U.S.C.
2461, note; and 49 CFR 1.49.
2. The heading for part 234 is revised
to read as set forth above.
■ 3. Section 234.1 is revised to read as
follows:
■
§ 234.1
Scope.
(a) This part prescribes minimum—
(1) Maintenance, inspection, and
testing standards for highway-rail grade
crossing warning systems;
(2) Standards for the reporting of
failures of highway-rail grade crossing
warning systems and for the actions that
railroads must take when such systems
malfunction;
(3) Requirements for particular
identified States to develop State
highway-rail grade crossing action
plans; and
(4) Requirements that certain railroads
establish systems for receiving toll-free
telephone calls reporting various unsafe
conditions at highway-rail grade
crossings and pathway grade crossings,
and for taking certain actions in
response to those calls.
(b) This part does not restrict a
railroad from adopting and enforcing
additional or more stringent
requirements not inconsistent with this
part.
■ 4. Section 234.3 is revised to read as
follows:
§ 234.3 Application and responsibility for
compliance.
(a) With the exception of § 234.11,
this part applies to all railroads except
the following:
(1) Operations of a plant railroad as
defined in § 234.5;
(2) Rapid transit operations in an
urban area that are not connected to the
general railroad system of
transportation; or
(3) Tourist, scenic, historic, or
excursion operations conducted only on
track used exclusively for that purpose
(i.e., there is no freight, intercity
passenger, or commuter passenger
railroad operation on the track) and only
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
on track inside an installation that is
insular; i.e., the operations are limited
to a separate enclave in such a way that
there is no reasonable expectation that
the safety of the public—except a
business guest, a licensee of the railroad
or an affiliated entity, or a trespasser—
would be affected by the operation. An
operation will not be considered insular
if one or more of the following exists on
its line:
(i) A public highway-rail crossing that
is in use;
(ii) An at-grade rail crossing that is in
use;
(iii) A bridge over a public road or
waters used for commercial navigation;
or
(iv) A common corridor with a
railroad, i.e., its operations are within
30 feet of those of any railroad.
(b) Although the duties imposed by
this part are generally stated in terms of
the duty of a railroad, each person,
including a contractor or subcontractor
for a railroad, who performs any task
covered by this part, shall perform that
task in accordance with this part.
■ 5. Section 234.5 is amended as
follows:
■ a. Remove the definition of ‘‘Credible
report of system malfunction’’ and add
a definition of ‘‘Credible report of
warning system malfunction or credible
report of warning system malfunction at
a highway-rail grade crossing’’ in its
place.
■ b. Add definitions of ‘‘FRA’’ and
‘‘Plant railroad’’ in alphabetical order.
■ c. Remove the definition of ‘‘Warning
system malfunction’’ and add a
definition of ‘‘Warning system
malfunction or warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade
crossing’’ in its place.
The additions read as follows:
§ 234.5
Definitions.
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
*
*
*
*
*
Credible report of warning system
malfunction or credible report of
warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing means a
report that contains specific information
regarding a malfunction of a highwayrail grade crossing warning system at an
identified highway-rail grade crossing,
supplied by a railroad employee, law
enforcement officer, highway traffic
official, or other employee of a public
agency acting in an official capacity.
*
*
*
*
*
FRA means the Office of Railroad
Safety, Federal Railroad Administration,
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590.
*
*
*
*
*
Plant railroad means a plant or
installation that owns or leases a
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locomotive, uses that locomotive to
switch cars throughout the plant or
installation, and is moving goods solely
for use in the facility’s own industrial
processes. The plant or installation
could include track immediately
adjacent to the plant or installation if
the plant railroad leases the track from
the general system railroad and the lease
provides for (and actual practice entails)
the exclusive use of that trackage by the
plant railroad and the general system
railroad for purposes of moving only
cars shipped to or from the plant. A
plant or installation that operates a
locomotive to switch or move cars for
other entities, even if solely within the
confines of the plant or installation,
rather than for its own purposes or
industrial processes, will not be
considered a plant railroad because the
performance of such activity makes the
operation part of the general railroad
system of transportation.
*
*
*
*
*
Warning system malfunction or
warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing means an
activation failure, a partial activation, or
a false activation of a highway-rail grade
crossing warning system.
6. The heading for subpart C of part
234 is revised to read as follows:
■
Subpart C—Response to Credible
Reports of Warning System
Malfunction at Highway-Rail Grade
Crossings
7. A new subpart E to part 234 is
added to read as follows:
■
Subpart E—Emergency Notification
Systems for Telephonic Reporting of
Unsafe Conditions at Highway-Rail and
Pathway Grade Crossings
Sec.
234.301 Definitions.
234.303 Emergency notification systems for
telephonic reporting of unsafe conditions
at highway-rail and pathway grade
crossings.
234.305 Remedial actions in response to
reports of unsafe conditions at highwayrail and pathway grade crossings.
234.306 Multiple dispatching or
maintaining railroads with respect to the
same highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing; appointment of responsible
railroad.
234.307 Use of third-party telephone
service by dispatching and maintaining
railroads.
234.309 ENS signs in general.
234.311 ENS sign placement and
maintenance.
234.313 Recordkeeping.
234.315 Electronic recordkeeping.
234.317 Compliance dates.
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35191
Subpart E—Emergency Notification
Systems for Telephonic Reporting of
Unsafe Conditions at Highway-Rail and
Pathway Grade Crossings
§ 234.301
Definitions.
As used in this subpart—
Answering machine means either a
device or a voicemail system that allows
a telephone caller to leave a recorded
message to report an unsafe condition at
a highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing, as described in § 234.303(c)
and (d), and the railroad is able to
retrieve the recorded message either
remotely or on-site.
Automated answering system means a
type of answering system that directs a
telephone caller to a single menu of
options, where the caller has the choice
to select one of the available options to
report an unsafe condition at a highwayrail or pathway grade crossing, as
described in § 234.303(c) and (d), and
immediately after selecting one of the
available menu options, the caller is
transferred to a live telephone operator.
Class II and Class III have the
meaning assigned by regulations of the
Surface Transportation Board (49 CFR
part 1201; General Instructions 1–1), as
those regulations may be revised and
applied by order of the Board (including
modifications in class threshold based
on revenue deflator adjustments).
Dispatches a train or dispatches
trains means dispatches or otherwise
provides the authority for the movement
of the train or trains through a highwayrail or pathway grade crossing.
Dispatching railroad means a railroad
that dispatches or otherwise provides
the authority for the movement of one
or more trains through a highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing.
Emergency Notification System means
a system in place by which a railroad
receives, processes, and responds to
telephonic reports of an unsafe
condition at a highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing. An Emergency
Notification System includes the
following components:
(1) The signs, placed and maintained
at the grade crossings that display the
information necessary for the public to
report an unsafe condition at the grade
crossing to the dispatching railroad by
telephone;
(2) The method that the railroad uses
to receive and process a telephone call
reporting the unsafe condition;
(3) The remedial actions that a
railroad takes to address the report of
the unsafe condition; and
(4) The recordkeeping conducted by a
railroad in response to the report of the
unsafe condition at the grade crossing.
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ENS means Emergency Notification
System as defined in this section.
Farm grade crossing means a type of
highway-rail grade crossing where a
private roadway used for the movement
of farm motor vehicles, farm machinery,
or livestock in connection with
agricultural pursuits, forestry, or other
land-productive purposes crosses one or
more railroad tracks at grade.
Highway-rail and pathway grade
crossing means a highway-rail grade
crossing and a pathway grade crossing.
Highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing means either a highway-rail
grade crossing or a pathway grade
crossing.
Maintaining railroad means the entity
(e.g., track owner or lessee) that is
responsible for maintenance of the
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing
warning device, or for maintenance of
other aspects of the highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing. If the
maintenance responsibility is handled
by a contractor, such as maintaining a
grade crossing warning system or track
structure at the highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing, then the contractor is
considered the ‘‘maintaining railroad’’
for the purposes of this subpart.
Pathway grade crossing means a
pathway that crosses one or more
railroad tracks at grade and that is—
(1) Explicitly authorized by a public
authority or a railroad;
(2) Dedicated for the use of nonvehicular traffic, including pedestrians,
bicyclists, and others; and
(3) Not associated with a public
highway, road, or street, or a private
roadway.
Public report of warning system
malfunction or public report of warning
system malfunction at a highway-rail
grade crossing means a report that
contains specific information regarding
a warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing that is
supplied to a railroad via the ENS by a
member of the public who does not
belong to one of the categories of
individuals listed in the definition of
Credible report of warning system
malfunction or credible report of
warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing in § 234.5.
Third-party telephone service means a
service that receives telephonic reports
of unsafe conditions at highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings on behalf of a
railroad. A third-party telephone service
that receives reports on behalf of a
dispatching railroad is the only entity
between the receipt of the report from
the telephone caller and the
transmission of the report to the
dispatching railroad. A third-party
telephone service that receives reports
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on behalf of a maintaining railroad is
the only entity between the receipt of
the report from a dispatching railroad
and the transmission of the report to the
maintaining railroad.
Warning system failure at a pathway
grade crossing means failure of an active
pathway grade crossing warning system
to perform as intended.
§ 234.303 Emergency notification systems
for telephonic reporting of unsafe
conditions at highway-rail and pathway
grade crossings.
(a) Duty of dispatching railroad in
general. Each railroad shall establish
and maintain a toll-free telephone
service by which the railroad can
directly and promptly receive telephone
calls from the public reporting specific
information about any of the conditions
listed in paragraph (c) of this section
with respect to a highway-rail grade
crossing and paragraph (d) of this
section with respect to a pathway grade
crossing through which the railroad
dispatches a train, except as provided in
paragraphs (b) and (e) of this section,
and in § 234.306(a). The dispatching
railroad shall either have a live person
answer calls directly and promptly, or
use an automated answering system or
a third-party telephone service for the
purpose of receiving reports pursuant to
this section, except as provided in
paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Exceptions for certain railroads. If
a dispatching railroad operates in
accordance with either of the conditions
set forth in this paragraph, the railroad
is not subject to the general duties stated
in the last sentence of paragraph (a) of
this section.
(1) If a railroad dispatches one or
more trains through a highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing, each of which
is authorized to travel through the
crossing at speeds not greater than 20
miles per hour (mph), the railroad may
use an answering machine to receive
calls regarding unsafe conditions at
such a crossing. If using an answering
machine pursuant to this paragraph, the
railroad must retrieve its messages
immediately prior to the start of its
operations each day.
(2) If a railroad dispatches one or
more trains through a highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing on a seasonal or
intermittent basis (e.g., tourist, biweekly
service, or non-24-hour service), and
any of the trains is authorized to travel
through the crossing at speeds greater
than 20 mph, the railroad may use an
answering machine to receive calls
regarding unsafe conditions at such a
crossing, but only during hours of nonoperation. If using an answering
machine pursuant to this paragraph (b),
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Fmt 4701
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during periods of non-operation, the
railroad must retrieve its messages
daily. However, the railroad must
retrieve its messages immediately prior
to the start of its operations for the day,
and during hours of operation the
dispatching railroad shall either have a
live person answer calls directly and
promptly, use an automated answering
system, or employ a third-party
telephone service, in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section, to receive
reports regarding unsafe conditions at
crossings through which it dispatches
trains.
(c) Reportable unsafe conditions at
highway-rail grade crossings. Each
railroad shall establish a service
pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section,
except as provided in paragraphs (b)
and (e) of this section, and in
§ 234.306(a), to receive telephone calls
regarding the following conditions with
respect to a highway-rail grade crossing
through which it dispatches a train:
(1) A warning system malfunction at
the highway-rail grade crossing;
(2) A disabled vehicle or other
obstruction blocking a railroad track at
the highway-rail grade crossing;
(3) An obstruction to the view of a
pedestrian or a vehicle operator for a
reasonable distance in either direction
of a train’s approach to the highway-rail
grade crossing; or
(4) Any information relating to any
other unsafe condition at the highwayrail grade crossing.
(d) Reportable unsafe conditions at
pathway grade crossings. Each railroad
shall establish a service pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section, except as
provided in paragraphs (b) and (e) of
this section, and in § 234.306(a), to
receive telephone calls regarding the
following conditions with respect to a
pathway grade crossing through which
it dispatches a train:
(1) A failure of the active warning
system at the pathway grade crossing to
perform as intended;
(2) An obstruction blocking a railroad
track at the pathway grade crossing;
(3) An obstruction to the view of a
pathway grade crossing user for a
reasonable distance in either direction
of a train’s approach to the pathway
grade crossing; or
(4) Any information relating to any
other unsafe condition at the pathway
grade crossing.
(e) Class II or Class III railroads. A
Class II or Class III railroad that
dispatches one or more trains through a
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing
within an area in which the use of a
non-toll-free number would not incur
any additional fees for the caller than if
a toll-free number were used, may use
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that non-toll-free number to receive
calls pursuant to paragraph (a) of this
section regarding each such crossing in
that area.
(f) Reports not made through the ENS.
If a report of an unsafe condition at a
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing
is not made through the telephone
service described in paragraph (a) of this
section, this subpart E does not apply to
that report.
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 234.305 Remedial actions in response to
reports of unsafe conditions at highway-rail
and pathway grade crossings.
(a) General rule on response to
credible report of warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade
crossing. (1) If a railroad receives a
credible report of a warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade
crossing pursuant to § 234.303(c)(1) and
the railroad has maintenance
responsibility for the warning system to
which the report pertains, then it shall
take the appropriate action required by
subpart C of this part.
(2) If a railroad receives a credible
report of a warning system malfunction
at a highway-rail grade crossing
pursuant to § 234.303(c)(1) and the
railroad has dispatching responsibility
for the crossing, but does not have
maintenance responsibility for the
warning system to which the report
pertains, it shall promptly contact all
trains that are authorized to operate
through the highway-rail grade crossing
in an effort to notify the train crews of
the reported malfunction prior to each
train’s arrival at the crossing. After
contacting the appropriate trains, the
railroad shall then promptly contact the
maintaining railroad and inform it of the
reported malfunction. The maintaining
railroad shall then take the appropriate
action required by subpart C of this part.
(b) General rule on response to public
report of warning system malfunction at
a highway-rail grade crossing. (1) If a
railroad receives a public report of a
warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing pursuant to
§ 234.303(c)(1) and the railroad has
maintenance responsibility for the
warning system to which the report
pertains, the railroad shall promptly
contact all trains that are authorized to
operate through the highway-rail grade
crossing in an effort to notify the train
crews of the reported malfunction prior
to each train’s arrival at the crossing.
After contacting the appropriate trains,
the railroad shall then promptly contact
the law enforcement agency having
jurisdiction over the highway-rail grade
crossing and provide the necessary
information for the law enforcement
agency to direct traffic or carry out other
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activities to maintain safety at the
highway-rail grade crossing. The
railroad shall then promptly investigate
the report, determine the nature of the
malfunction and take the appropriate
action required by § 234.207.
(2) If a railroad receives a public
report of a warning system malfunction
at a highway-rail grade crossing warning
system pursuant to § 234.303(c)(1) and
the railroad does not have maintenance
responsibility for the warning system at
the highway-rail grade crossing, it shall
promptly contact all trains that are
authorized to operate through the
highway-rail grade crossing to which
the report pertains in an effort to notify
the train crews of the reported
malfunction prior to each train’s arrival
at the crossing. After contacting the
appropriate trains, the railroad shall
then promptly contact the law
enforcement agency having jurisdiction
over the highway-rail grade crossing and
provide the necessary information for
the law enforcement agency to direct
traffic or carry out other activities to
maintain safety at the highway-rail
grade crossing. The railroad shall then
promptly contact the maintaining
railroad and inform it of the reported
malfunction. The maintaining railroad
shall then promptly investigate the
report, determine the nature of the
malfunction, and take the appropriate
action required by § 234.207.
(c) General rule on response to report
of warning system failure at a pathway
grade crossing. (1) If a railroad receives
a report of a warning system failure at
a pathway grade crossing pursuant to
§ 234.303(d)(1) and the railroad has
maintenance responsibility for the
warning system to which the report
pertains, the railroad shall promptly
contact all trains that are authorized to
operate through the pathway grade
crossing in an effort to notify the train
crews of the reported failure prior to
each train’s arrival at the crossing. After
contacting the appropriate trains, the
railroad shall then promptly contact the
law enforcement agency having
jurisdiction over the pathway grade
crossing and provide the necessary
information for the law enforcement
agency to direct traffic or carry out other
activities to maintain safety at the
pathway grade crossing. The railroad
shall then promptly investigate the
report, determine the nature of the
failure, and without undue delay repair
the active warning system if necessary.
(2) If a railroad receives a report of
warning system failure at a pathway
grade crossing pursuant to
§ 234.303(d)(1), but does not have
maintenance responsibility for the
warning system to which the report
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pertains, the railroad shall promptly
contact all trains that are authorized to
operate through the pathway grade
crossing to which the report pertains in
an effort to notify the train crews of the
reported failure prior to each train’s
arrival at the crossing. After contacting
the appropriate trains, the railroad shall
then promptly contact the law
enforcement agency having jurisdiction
over the pathway grade crossing and
provide the necessary information for
the law enforcement agency to direct
traffic or carry out other activities to
maintain safety at the pathway grade
crossing. The railroad shall then
promptly contact the maintaining
railroad and inform it of the reported
failure. The maintaining railroad shall
then promptly investigate the report,
determine the nature of the failure, and
without undue delay repair the warning
system if necessary.
(d) General rule on response to report
of a disabled vehicle or other
obstruction blocking a railroad track at
a highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing. (1) If a railroad receives a
report of a disabled vehicle or other
obstruction blocking a railroad track at
a highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing, pursuant to § 234.303(c)(2) or
(d)(2), and the railroad has maintenance
responsibility for the crossing to which
the report pertains, the railroad shall
promptly contact all trains that are
authorized to operate through the
crossing in an effort to notify the train
crews of the reported obstruction prior
to each train’s arrival at the crossing.
After contacting the appropriate trains,
the railroad shall then promptly contact
the law enforcement agency having
jurisdiction over the crossing to provide
it with the information necessary to
assist in the removal of the reported
track obstruction or to carry out other
activities to maintain safety at the
crossing. The railroad shall then
promptly investigate the report,
determine the nature of the obstruction,
and without undue delay take the
necessary action to have the obstruction
removed.
(2) If a railroad receives a report of a
disabled vehicle or other obstruction
blocking a railroad track at a highwayrail or pathway grade crossing, pursuant
to § 234.303(c)(2) or (d)(2), but does not
have maintenance responsibility for the
crossing to which the report pertains,
the railroad shall promptly contact all
trains that are authorized to operate
through the crossing to which the report
pertains in an effort to notify the train
crews of the reported obstruction prior
to each train’s arrival at the crossing.
After contacting the appropriate trains,
the railroad shall then promptly contact
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the law enforcement agency having
jurisdiction over the crossing to provide
it with the information necessary to
assist in the removal of the reported
track obstruction or to carry out other
activities to maintain safety at the
crossing. The railroad shall then
promptly contact the maintaining
railroad and inform it of the reported
obstruction. The maintaining railroad
shall then promptly investigate the
report, determine the nature of the
obstruction, and without undue delay
take the necessary action to have the
obstruction removed.
(e) Special rule on contacting a train
that is not required to have
communication equipment. If a railroad
is not required by § 220.9 of this chapter
to have a working radio or working
wireless communications in each
occupied controlling locomotive of its
trains and the railroad receives a report
pursuant to § 234.303(c)(1), (c)(2), (d)(1),
or (d)(2) about a highway-rail or
pathway crossing that any of the trains
is authorized to operate through, the
railroad shall promptly contact the
occupied controlling locomotive of the
train as required by paragraph (a), (b),
(c), or (d) of this § 234.305 by the
quickest means available consistent
with § 220.13(a) of this chapter.
(f) General rule on response to report
of an obstruction of view at a highwayrail or pathway grade crossing. (1) Upon
receiving a report pursuant to
§ 234.303(c)(3) or (d)(3), the railroad, if
it is both the dispatching and the
maintaining railroad, shall timely
investigate the report and remove the
obstruction if it is lawful and feasible to
do so.
(2) If the dispatching railroad is not
also the maintaining railroad, it shall
promptly contact the maintaining
railroad, which shall timely investigate
the report and remove the obstruction if
it is lawful and feasible to do so.
(g) General rule on response to report
of other unsafe condition at a highwayrail or pathway grade crossing. Upon
receiving a report pursuant to
§ 234.303(c)(4) or (d)(4) related to the
maintenance of a crossbuck sign or
other similar grade crossing safety
device or any other unsafe condition
(such as a pot hole that could cause
injury or damage) not covered by
paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of this
§ 234.305, the railroad, if it is both the
dispatching and the maintaining
railroad, shall timely investigate the
report; and, if the railroad finds that the
unsafe condition exists, it shall timely
correct it if it is lawful and feasible to
do so. If the dispatching railroad is not
also the maintaining railroad, it shall
timely inform the maintaining railroad,
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which shall timely investigate the
report; and, if the maintaining railroad
finds that the unsafe condition exists, it
shall timely correct it if it is lawful and
feasible to do so.
(h) General rule on a maintaining
railroad’s responsibilities for receiving
reports of unsafe conditions at highwayrail and pathway grade crossings. (1) In
general. If the dispatching railroad is
required under this section to contact
the maintaining railroad, the
maintaining railroad shall—
(i) Provide the dispatching railroad
with sufficient contact information by
which the dispatching railroad may
timely contact the maintaining railroad
upon receipt of a report; and
(ii) Have either a live person answer
calls directly and promptly, or use an
automated answering system for the
purpose of receiving a call from the
dispatching railroad of a report of an
unsafe condition, except as provided in
paragraph (h)(2) of this section.
(2) Exceptions for use of a third-party
telephone service and answering
machine by a maintaining railroad. (i) If
a maintaining railroad is responsible for
the maintenance of a highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing through which
a railroad dispatches one or more trains,
each of which is authorized to travel
through the crossing at speeds not
greater than 20 mph, the maintaining
railroad may use a third-party telephone
service, in accordance with § 234.307, or
an answering machine to receive reports
from a dispatching railroad of unsafe
conditions at such a crossing. If using an
answering machine pursuant to this
paragraph, the railroad must retrieve its
messages immediately prior to the start
of its operations for the day.
(ii) If a maintaining railroad is
responsible for the maintenance of a
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing
only on a seasonal or intermittent basis
(e.g., tourist, biweekly service, or non24-hour service), the maintaining
railroad may use a third-party telephone
service, in accordance with § 234.307, or
an answering machine to receive reports
from a dispatching railroad of unsafe
conditions at such a crossing. If using an
answering machine pursuant to this
paragraph, during periods of nonoperation, the maintaining railroad must
retrieve its messages daily. However, the
railroad must retrieve its messages
immediately prior to the start of its
operations for the day, and during hours
of operation the railroad shall either
have a live person answer calls directly
or use an automated answering system
to receive reports regarding unsafe
conditions at such a crossing.
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§ 234.306 Multiple dispatching or
maintaining railroads with respect to the
same highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing; appointment of responsible
railroad.
(a) Duty of multiple dispatching
railroads to appoint a primary
dispatching railroad for the crossing. (1)
Where more than one railroad
dispatches a train through the same
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing,
the dispatching railroads for the
crossing shall appoint one of the
railroads to be the primary dispatching
railroad for the crossing and, as such,
the primary dispatching railroad for the
crossing shall do the following:
(i) Provide its emergency telephone
number to the railroad responsible for
the placement and maintenance of the
ENS sign(s) at the crossing;
(ii) Receive all reports through ENS of
unsafe conditions at the crossing as
required by § 234.303;
(iii) After receiving a report of an
unsafe condition at the crossing,
promptly contact all other railroads that
dispatch trains through the crossing to
warn them of the reported unsafe
condition, and, as appropriate, promptly
contact the maintaining railroad(s) for
the crossing as required by § 234.305;
and
(iv) Otherwise carry out its duties
under this subpart as a dispatching
railroad for the crossing, with respect to
the crossing.
(2) After receiving a report of an
unsafe condition at the crossing from
the appointed dispatching railroad, each
of the other dispatching railroad(s) to
which the report pertains shall carry out
the remedial action required by
§ 234.305 and the recordkeeping
required by § 234.313.
(b) Duty of multiple maintaining
railroads to appoint a railroad
responsible for the placement and
maintenance of the ENS sign(s). (1)
Where more than one railroad maintains
the same crossing, the maintaining
railroads for the crossing shall appoint
one of the railroads to be responsible for
the placement and maintenance of the
ENS sign(s) at the crossing pursuant to
§§ 234.309 and 234.311.
(2) The railroad appointed under
paragraph (b)(1) of this section shall
display on the ENS sign(s) at the
crossing the emergency telephone
number of the dispatching railroad for
the crossing or, if more than one
railroad dispatches a train through the
crossing, the emergency telephone
number of the primary dispatching
railroad for the crossing identified
under paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Duty of multiple maintaining
railroads with respect to remedial action
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at the crossing. Where there are
multiple maintaining railroads for a
crossing, the dispatching railroad (or, if
more than one railroad dispatches a
train through the crossing, the primary
dispatching railroad for the crossing
under paragraph (a) of this section)
upon receipt of a report of an unsafe
condition, shall promptly contact and
inform the appropriate maintaining
railroad(s) for the crossing of the
reported problem. After each
maintaining railroad for the crossing
receives a report of an unsafe condition
at the crossing that pertains to its
maintenance responsibilities for the
crossing, the maintaining railroad shall
carry out the remedial action required
by § 234.305 and the recordkeeping
required by § 234.313.
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 234.307 Use of third-party telephone
service by dispatching and maintaining
railroads.
(a) General use of a third-party
telephone service by a dispatching
railroad. A dispatching railroad may use
a third-party telephone service to
receive reports of unsafe conditions at
highway-rail and pathway grade
crossings pursuant to § 234.303. If a
dispatching railroad chooses to use a
third-party telephone service, the thirdparty telephone service shall be reached
directly and promptly by the telephone
number displayed on the ENS sign
pursuant to § 234.309. The third-party
telephone service may use an automated
answering system for the purpose of
receiving such reports. The dispatching
railroad shall have a live person answer
calls directly and promptly from the
third-party telephone service, unless
permitted pursuant to § 234.303(b) to
use an answering machine. The
dispatching railroad shall ensure that
the third-party telephone service
complies with the applicable
requirements of § 234.307.
(b) General use of a third-party
telephone service by a maintaining
railroad. Pursuant to § 234.305(h)(2), a
maintaining railroad that either
maintains a highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing on a seasonal or
intermittent basis (e.g., tourist, biweekly
service, or non-24 hours service), or a
crossing through which a railroad
dispatches one or more trains, each of
which is authorized to travel through
the crossing at speeds not greater than
20 mph, may use a third-party
telephone service to receive reports of
unsafe conditions at such a crossing
from a dispatching railroad. The thirdparty telephone service may use an
automated answering system for the
purpose of receiving such reports. The
maintaining railroad shall receive
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reports from the third-party telephone
service by either having a live person
answer calls directly and promptly, or
using an answering machine. If using an
answering machine pursuant to this
paragraph, the railroad must use the
answering machine in accordance with
§ 234.305(h)(2). The maintaining
railroad shall ensure that the third-party
telephone service complies with the
applicable requirements of § 234.307.
(c) Duties of third-party telephone
service in contacting dispatching and
maintaining railroads. Upon receiving a
report pursuant to §§ 234.303 or
234.305, on behalf of either the
dispatching railroad or maintaining
railroad, respectively, the third-party
telephone service shall immediately
contact the railroad, and, at a minimum,
provide it with the following
information:
(1) The nature of the reported unsafe
condition;
(2) The location of the unsafe
condition, including the U.S. DOT
National Crossing Inventory number for
the crossing;
(3) Whether the person reporting the
unsafe condition is a railroad employee,
law enforcement officer, highway traffic
official, or other employee of a public
agency acting in an official capacity;
(4) The date and time that the report
was received by the third-party
telephone service; and
(5) Any additional information
provided by the caller that may be
useful to restore the crossing to a safe
condition.
(d) Duties of railroad using third-party
telephone service. If a dispatching or
maintaining railroad uses a third-party
telephone service to receive reports of
unsafe conditions at a highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing, the railroad
shall—
(1) Provide the third-party telephone
service with sufficient contact
information by which the third-party
telephone service may immediately
contact the railroad upon receipt of a
report;
(2) Inform FRA in writing, before the
implementation of such a service, of the
railroad’s intent to use a third-party
telephone service, and provide FRA
with contact information for the thirdparty telephone service and information
identifying the highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings about which
the third-party telephone service will
receive reports;
(3) Inform FRA in writing within 30
days following any changes in the use
or discontinuance of a third-party
telephone service; and
(4) Take appropriate action required
by § 234.305, upon being contacted by
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the third-party telephone service about
a report.
(e) Third-party telephone service and
railroad responsibilities. If a railroad
uses a third-party telephone service to
receive reports pursuant to §§ 234.303
or 234.305, the third-party telephone
service is responsible for carrying out
the duties of this section and
recordkeeping duties under § 234.313,
and, if applicable under § 234.315. In
addition, the railroad remains
responsible for any acts or omissions of
the third-party telephone service it
utilizes that violate the provisions of
this section or the recordkeeping
requirements under § 234.313, and, if
applicable under § 234.315.
§ 234.309
ENS signs in general.
(a) Provision of information. If the
dispatching railroad and the
maintaining railroad(s) are not the same
entity, the dispatching railroad for a
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing
shall provide to the maintaining railroad
the telephone number that is to be
displayed on the ENS sign at the
crossing, not later than 180 calendar
days before the date that
implementation of an ENS is required.
(b) Information to be displayed. Each
ENS sign located at each highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing as required by
§ 234.311 shall display the necessary
information for the dispatching railroad
to receive reports of unsafe conditions at
the crossing. This information, at a
minimum, includes the following:
(1) The toll-free telephone number (or
non-toll-free telephone number as
provided for in § 234.303(e)) established
to receive reports pursuant to
§ 234.303(a);
(2) An explanation of the purpose of
the sign (e.g., ‘‘Report emergency or
problem to __’’); and
(3) The U.S. DOT National Crossing
Inventory number assigned to that
crossing.
(c) Sign size and other physical
features. Each ENS sign shall—
(1) Measure at least 12 inches wide by
9 inches high;
(2) Be retroreflective;
(3) Have legible text (i.e., letters and
numerals) with a minimum character
height of 1 inch for the information
required in paragraph (b) of this section;
and
(4) Have white text set on a blue
background with a white border, except
that the U.S. DOT National Crossing
Inventory number may be black text set
on a white rectangular background.
§ 234.311 ENS sign placement and
maintenance.
(a) Number of signs at highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing. (1) In general.
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The maintaining railroad, or the railroad
appointed pursuant to § 234.306(b), for
a highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing shall place and maintain a sign
on each approach to the crossing that
conforms to § 234.309, except as
provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this
section.
(2) Exceptions. (i) At a farm grade
crossing, the responsible railroad shall
place and maintain a minimum of one
sign that conforms to § 234.309 at the
crossing.
(ii) At a railroad yard, port or dock
facility, or a private industrial facility
that does not meet the definition of
‘‘plant railroad’’ in § 234.5, the
responsible railroad shall place and
maintain a minimum of one sign at each
vehicular entrance to the facility in
accordance with § 234.309, in lieu of
placing signs at each crossing within the
yard, port or dock facility, or private
industrial facility. Each sign must be
placed so that it is clearly visible to a
driver of a motor vehicle located at the
vehicular entrance to the facility.
(b) Placement of sign(s). (1) Each sign
required by paragraph (a) of this section
must be located at the crossing, except
as provided in paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of this
section, and maintained by the
responsible railroad so that the sign—
(i) Is conspicuous to users of the
roadway or pathway by day and night;
(ii) Does not obstruct any other sign
or traffic control device at the crossing;
(iii) Does not limit the view of a train
approaching the highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing; and
(iv) If mounted on a post, has
supports that are crashworthy (i.e.,
breakaway or yielding).
(2) A sign placed on the signal
bungalow does not comply with
paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section.
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES3
§ 234.313
Recordkeeping.
(a) In general. Each railroad subject to
this subpart shall keep records in
accordance with this section. Records
may be kept either on paper forms
provided by the railroad or by electronic
means in a manner that conforms with
§ 234.315. Each dispatching railroad
responsible for receiving reports
pursuant to § 234.303(a), each thirdparty telephone service responsible for
receiving reports pursuant to § 234.307,
and, if applicable, each maintaining
railroad shall keep, at a minimum, the
following information for each report
received under this subpart:
(1) The nature of the reported unsafe
condition;
(2) The location of the highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing, by highway
name, if applicable, and the U.S. DOT
National Crossing Inventory number.
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(3) The time and date of receipt of the
report by the railroad;
(4) If applicable, whether the person
who provided the report was a railroad
employee, law enforcement officer,
highway traffic official, or other
employee of a public agency acting in
an official capacity;
(5) Actions taken by the railroad prior
to resolving the reported unsafe
condition at the grade crossing (e.g.,
warning train crews, notifying the
maintaining railroad, or contacting law
enforcement or other public authorities);
(6) If the reported unsafe condition is
substantiated, actions taken by the
railroad to remedy the reported unsafe
condition, if lawful and feasible;
(7) The time and date when the
reported unsafe condition was
remedied;
(8) If no remedial action was taken,
the reason why; and
(9) If a dispatching railroad, in
accordance with § 234.305, is required
to contact a maintaining railroad, the
time and date when it contacted the
maintaining railroad.
(b) Records of credible reports of
warning system malfunction. A railroad
that has maintenance responsibility over
warning devices at a highway-rail grade
crossing and maintains records pursuant
to § 234.109, shall be deemed to comply
with the recordkeeping requirements of
this subpart with regard to credible
reports of warning system malfunctions.
(c) Records involving multiple
dispatching or maintaining railroads.
(1) Where multiple railroads dispatch
trains through the same highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing and appoint one
railroad to receive telephonic reports
regarding unsafe conditions at such
crossings pursuant to § 234.306, the
appointment must be recorded in
writing and a copy of the document
retained by each railroad for the
duration of the appointment or for one
year, whichever period is longer.
(2) Where multiple railroads have
maintenance responsibility for the same
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing
and they appoint one railroad to be
responsible for installing and
maintaining the ENS sign(s) at the
crossing pursuant to § 234.306, the
appointment must be recorded in
writing and a copy of the document
retained by each railroad for the
duration of the appointment or for one
year, whichever period is longer.
(d) Record retention period; records
availability. Each railroad shall retain
for at least one year (from the latest date
of railroad activity in response to a
report received under this subpart) all
records referred to in paragraphs (a) and
(b) of this section. Records required to
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be kept under this subpart shall be made
available to FRA as provided by 49
U.S.C. 20107.
§ 234.315
Electronic recordkeeping.
(a) If a railroad subject to this subpart
maintains records required by this
subpart in electronic format in lieu of on
paper, the system for keeping the
electronic records must meet all of the
following conditions:
(1) The railroad adequately limits and
controls accessibility to the records
retained in its electronic database
system and identifies those individuals
who have such access;
(2) The railroad has a terminal at the
location designated by the railroad as
the general office for the railroad system
and at each division headquarters;
(3) Each such terminal has a computer
and either a facsimile machine or a
printer connected to the computer to
retrieve and produce information in a
usable format for immediate review by
FRA representatives;
(4) The railroad has a designated
representative who is authorized to
authenticate retrieved information from
the electronic system as a true and
accurate copy of the electronically kept
record; and
(5) The railroad provides FRA
representatives with immediate access
to the record(s) for inspection and
copying during normal business hours
and provides a printout of such
record(s) upon request.
(b) If a record required by this subpart
is in the form of an electronic record
kept by an electronic recordkeeping
system that does not comply with
paragraph (a) of this section, then the
record must be kept on paper.
§ 234.317
Compliance dates.
(a) Railroads without an ENS of any
kind. If a railroad subject to this subpart
does not have an ENS of any kind in
place on August 13, 2012, the railroad
shall implement an ENS that conforms
to this subpart no later than September
1, 2015.
(b) Railroads with nonconforming
ENS telephone service. If a railroad
subject to this subpart already has its
own ENS telephone service or is using
a third-party ENS telephone service, and
that telephone service does not conform
to the requirements in § 234.303 or
§ 234.307, respectively, on August 13,
2012, the railroad shall comply with
§ 234.303 or § 234.307, respectively, no
later than March 1, 2014.
(c) Railroads with ENS signs of
nonconforming size. (1) If a railroad
subject to this subpart already has ENS
signs in place, and those signs do not
conform to the requirements in
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§ 234.309 on August 13, 2012, the
railroad’s ENS signs shall conform to
§ 234.309 no later than as required
below:
(i) If the railroad’s sign size is greater
than or equal to 60 square inches and
the height of the lettering on the sign is
greater than or equal to 3⁄4 inch for the
information required in § 234.309(b) on
August 13, 2012, the railroad may
maintain the sign for its useful life.
(ii) If the railroad’s sign size is greater
than or equal to 60 square inches but the
height of the lettering is less than 3⁄4
inch for the information required in
§ 234.309(b) on August 13, 2012, the
railroad’s sign must conform to
§ 234.309 no later than September 1,
2017.
(iii) If the railroad’s sign size is less
than 60 square inches, regardless of the
height of the lettering for the
information required in § 234.309(b), on
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:01 Jun 11, 2012
Jkt 226001
August 13, 2012, the railroad’s sign
must conform to § 234.309 no later than
September 1, 2015.
(2) If the railroad chooses to replace
an ENS sign of non-conforming size
before the applicable compliance date
stated, the railroad shall replace that
sign with a sign that conforms to
§ 234.309.
(d) Railroads with ENS signs having
nonconforming placement. If a railroad
subject to this subpart already has ENS
signs in place, and the placement of
those signs does not conform to the
requirements in § 234.311 on August 13,
2012, the placement of the railroad’s
ENS signs shall conform to § 234.311 no
later than September 1, 2017. If a
railroad changes the placement of the
sign before September 1, 2017, the
placement of the sign must conform to
§ 234.311. If a railroad replaces a sign
before September 1, 2017, so that the
PO 00000
Frm 00035
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35197
sign conforms to § 234.309, and the
placement of that sign does not conform
to § 234.311, the railroad shall also
change the placement of the sign so that
it conforms to § 234.311.
(e) Railroads with nonconforming
ENS recordkeeping. If a railroad subject
to this subpart already conducts
recordkeeping as part of its ENS, and
that recordkeeping does not conform to
§ 234.313 or § 234.315, the railroad’s
recordkeeping shall conform to
§ 234.313 or § 234.315 no later than
September 1, 2013.
Issued in Washington, DC, on June 1, 2012.
Joseph C. Szabo,
Administrator, Federal Railroad
Administration.
[FR Doc. 2012–13843 Filed 6–11–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–06–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 113 (Tuesday, June 12, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 35164-35197]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-13843]
[[Page 35163]]
Vol. 77
Tuesday,
No. 113
June 12, 2012
Part III
Department of Transportation
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Federal Railroad Administration
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49 CFR Part 234
Systems for Telephonic Notification of Unsafe Conditions at Highway-
Rail and Pathway Grade Crossings; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 77 , No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2012 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 35164]]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Part 234
[Docket No. FRA-2009-0041, Notice No. 2]
RIN 2130-AC12
Systems for Telephonic Notification of Unsafe Conditions at
Highway-Rail and Pathway Grade Crossings
AGENCY: Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule requires certain railroads to establish and
maintain systems that allow members of the public to call the
railroads, using a toll-free telephone number, and report an emergency
or other unsafe condition at highway-rail and pathway grade crossings.
The rule refers to such a system as an ``Emergency Notification
System,'' and it consists of the following components: the signs,
placed at the grade crossing, that display the information necessary
for the public to report an unsafe condition to the appropriate
railroad; the method that the railroad uses to receive and process a
telephone call reporting the unsafe condition; the remedial actions
that the appropriate railroad or railroads take to address the report
of the unsafe conditions; and the related recordkeeping conducted by
the railroad(s).
DATES: This final rule is effective August 13, 2012. Petitions for
reconsideration must be received on or before August 13, 2012.
Petitions for reconsideration will be posted in the docket for this
proceeding. Comments on any submitted petition for reconsideration must
be received on or before September 25, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Petitions for reconsideration or comments on such petitions:
Any petitions and any comments to petitions related to Docket No. FRA-
2009-0041, Notice No. 2, may be submitted by any of the following
methods:
Web Site: Federal eRulemaking Portal, https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the 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., W12-140, 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 comments 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 comments or materials.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
comments received, go to https://www.regulations.gov at any time 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: Beth Crawford, Transportation
Specialist, Grade Crossing Safety and Trespass Prevention, Office of
Safety Analysis, FRA, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Mail Stop 25,
Washington, DC 20590 (telephone: 202-493-6288), beth.crawford@dot.gov;
or Sara Mahmoud-Davis, Trial Attorney, Office of Chief Counsel, FRA,
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Mail Stop 10, Washington, DC 20590
(telephone: 202-366-1118), sara.mahmoud-davis@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents for Supplementary Information
I. Executive Summary
II. Statutory Background
III. History of Accidents Relevant to This Rulemaking
IV. History of Emergency Notification Systems (ENS)
A. In General
B. Various ENS Programs in the United States
C. FRA's 2006 Report to Congress
V. Section-by-Section Analysis
VI. Regulatory Impact
A. Executive Order 12866 and 13563 and DOT Regulatory Policies
and Procedures
B. Regulatory Flexibility Determination
C. Federalism
D. International Trade Impact Assessment
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
F. Compliance With the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
G. Environmental Assessment
H. Energy Impact
I. Privacy Act
I. Executive Summary
A. In General
There are approximately 211,000 public and private highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings in the United States. Each year since 1997,
highway-rail and pathway grade crossing collisions have caused more
railroad-related deaths than any other single factor, except for
trespassing on railroad property.
This rule furthers FRA's efforts to reduce deaths and injuries at
grade crossings and elsewhere along the Nation's railroads, by
requiring railroads to implement a telephonic system, referred to as an
``Emergency Notification System'' or ``ENS,'' through which they
receive reports of unsafe conditions at crossings. Specifically, this
rule implements Section 205 (Sec. 205) of the Rail Safety Improvement
Act of 2008 (RSIA), Public Law 110-432, Division A, which was signed
into law on October 16, 2008, and which is detailed later in this
preamble. This rule uses experience gained through pre-existing
voluntary, State, and Federal programs for systems similar to ENS, as
well as the U.S. DOT National Crossing Inventory, which began as a
voluntary program, and reflects comments on FRA's Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM) published March 4, 2011 (76 FR 11992). To a certain
extent, this rule also builds on pre-existing regulations in 49 CFR
part 234 that govern a railroad's response to certain reports of a
malfunction of a highway-rail grade crossing signal system and
maintenance, inspection, and testing of highway-rail grade crossing
signal systems.
B. Overview of Rule Requirements
1. Telephonic Reporting of Unsafe Conditions at Crossings
This rule requires each railroad that dispatches a train, or
otherwise provides the authority for the movement of a train, through a
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing, to set up and maintain an ENS
by which the railroad is able to directly receive telephonic reports
from the public of certain unsafe conditions at the crossing and then
take specified action to respond to those reports. There are four
categories of reportable unsafe conditions for each highway-rail and
pathway grade crossing. Generally, these categories are (1)
Malfunctions of signals, crossing gates, and other devices to promote
safety at the grade crossing; (2) disabled vehicles and other
obstructions blocking railroad tracks at the crossing; (3) obstructions
to the view of a pedestrian or a vehicle operator for a reasonable
distance in either direction of a train's approach to the crossing; and
(4) any other unsafe condition at the crossing, such as a downed
crossbuck sign or a pot hole in the crossing.
The railroad that dispatches a train through a crossing is called
the
[[Page 35165]]
``dispatching railroad.'' The dispatching railroad may receive these
reports by a variety of methods. The railroad may have a live person
answer the calls directly, or use a third-party telephone service. As
will be discussed later in more detail, FRA made revisions to the
proposed rule that permit a railroad to set up an automated answering
system, which ultimately results in the caller speaking to a live
person, or, under certain circumstances, the railroad may use an
answering machine to receive reports.
Sometimes a railroad does not have the responsibility for
maintaining the particular crossing through which it dispatches a
train. The rule provides that if the dispatching railroad does not have
maintenance responsibility for the crossing that is the subject of the
report received through the ENS, and if the report involves maintenance
of the crossing, then the dispatching railroad must relay the report to
the railroad responsible for maintaining the crossing (the maintaining
railroad) for investigation and remedial action. Accordingly, the
maintaining railroad must set up a telephonic system for receiving such
phone calls from the dispatching railroad. Depending on the
circumstances, the maintaining railroad may receive such calls through
the use of an automated answering system, third-party telephone
service, or answering machine.
It should also be noted that the rule addresses situations where
multiple railroads dispatch trains through the same crossing, by
requiring those railroads to identify one primary dispatching railroad
that is responsible for receiving reports made via the ENS for the
crossing.
2. Remedial Actions To Be Taken by Railroads
As will be discussed later in more detail, the receipt of a report
made through the ENS of an unsafe condition at a crossing triggers
certain responsibilities each for dispatching and maintaining
railroads. The dispatching railroad upon receiving such a report and
depending on the nature of the report, is required to contact all
trains authorized to operate through the crossing to which the report
pertains, inform local law enforcement officers of the reported unsafe
condition so that they may direct traffic or otherwise assist in
ensuring the safety of the crossing, and then either investigate the
report itself or request that the railroad with maintenance
responsibility for the crossing investigate the report. If the report
is substantiated, the railroad with maintenance responsibility for the
crossing is required to take certain actions to remedy the unsafe
condition.
3. Characteristics and Number of ENS Signs To Be Placed and Maintained
at a Crossing
This rule establishes requirements for the physical
characteristics, number, placement, and maintenance of ENS signs. In
general, each ENS sign must display a minimum amount of information,
the toll-free telephone number of the dispatching railroad, an
explanation of the purpose of the sign (e.g., ``Report emergency or
problem to ------''), and the U.S. DOT National Crossing Inventory
number assigned to that crossing.
The ENS signs also must meet certain color and size requirements.
Furthermore, the signs must be posted at the crossing in a manner that
they are conspicuous to the roadway or pathway user, do not obstruct
other signs or traffic control devices, and do not limit the view of
trains approaching the crossing. The signs also must be crashworthy if
mounted on a post.
In general, an ENS sign must be placed on each approach to a
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing. There are two exceptions. At a
farm grade crossing, a railroad is required to install and maintain
only one ENS sign. Additionally, one sign is sufficient at each
vehicular entrance to a certain type of private industrial facility.
In general, the responsibility for the placement and maintenance of
an ENS sign at a crossing is the responsibility of the maintaining
railroad. However, it should also be noted that, where there are
multiple railroads that maintain the same crossing, the rule requires
that those railroads identify one to be responsible for the placement
and maintenance of the sign(s) at the crossing.
4. Compliance Dates
In this rule, FRA extends several of the compliance dates beyond
the dates proposed in the NPRM, to provide railroads a longer period of
time to phase in implementation of an ENS. FRA made several significant
changes from the proposed rule, which will be discussed later in more
detail. For example, a railroad subject to the rule that has no type of
ENS currently in place now has until September 1, 2015, to establish
such a system. Additionally, for a railroad that currently has ENS
signs in place at its crossings, the requirements for replacing the
sign are as follows: If the sign is 60 square inches or greater with
lettering that measures at least \3/4\ inch high, the railroad is
permitted to retain the sign for the duration of the sign's useful
life; if the sign is 60 square inches or greater, but the lettering
measures less than \3/4\ inch high, the railroad must replace the sign
by September 1, 2017; and if the sign is smaller than 60 square inches,
regardless of the size of the lettering, the railroad must replace the
sign by September 1, 2015.
C. Expected Costs and Benefits of the Rule
FRA has estimated the costs of this rule, evaluated over a 15-year
period and using a discount rate of 7 percent. For the 15-year period
analyzed, the estimated quantified cost that will be imposed on
railroads totals $15.6 million, with a present value (PV, 7 percent) of
$10.1 million. This rule is expected to improve railroad safety by
ensuring that all crossings have adequate signage displaying a
telephone number for reporting unsafe conditions at the crossing to the
railroad. The primary benefits include heightened safety at crossings
from an earlier awareness of potential track obstructions, crossing
signal malfunctions, and other safety issues, which FRA anticipates
will reduce related crossing accidents and the associated fatalities,
injuries, and damages. Thus, in general, implementation of this rule
should decrease railroad accidents at crossings as well as other
railroad accidents, and associated casualties and damages. Based on
FRA's analysis, the agency has found that the expected accident-
reduction benefits will exceed the total cost of this rule. Over a 15-
year period, this analysis concludes that $57.8 million in cost savings
will accrue through casualty prevention and damage avoidance. The
discounted value of this casualty prevention and damage avoidance is
$31.7 million (PV, 7 percent).
The table below presents the estimated costs associated with this
rule.
15-Year Estimated Costs of the Final Rule
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 234.303--Toll-Free Service......................... $989,870
Section 234.306--Multiple Dispatching or Maintaining 9,800
Railroads.................................................
Section 234.307--Third-Party Service....................... 2,881
Section 234.309--Signs (Materials)......................... 2,863,448
Section 234.309--Signs (Installation)...................... 2,007,754
Section 234.311--Post (Materials).......................... 238,621
[[Page 35166]]
Section 234.311--Post (Installation)....................... 200,775
Section 234.313--Initial Recordkeeping..................... 299,790
Section 234.313--Remedial Recordkeeping.................... 3,490,728
------------
...........
Total.................................................. 10,103,668
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dollars are discounted at a present value rate of 7 percent. Note that
numbers may not add due to rounding.
The table below presents the estimated benefits associated with
this rule.
15-Year Estimated Benefits of the Final Rule
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fatalities (Prevented)..................................... $21,519,783
Injuries (Prevented)....................................... 8,587,839
Highway Vehicle Damage (Avoided)........................... 651,130
Railroad Equipment Damage (Avoided)........................ 327,922
Track/Structure Damage (Avoided)........................... 203,988
Other Benefits............................................. 416,974
...........
Total.................................................. $31,707,636
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dollars are discounted at a present value rate of 7 percent. Note that
numbers may not add due to rounding.
II. Statutory Background
This final rule is intended specifically to implement Sec. 205 of
the RSIA, Public Law 110-432, Division A, which was enacted October 16,
2008, and generally to increase safety at highway-rail and pathway
grade crossings. See 49 U.S.C. 20152, Notification of grade crossing
problems, and definitions in revised 49 CFR 234.5 and new 49 CFR
234.301. Sec. 205 of the RSIA mandates that the Secretary of
Transportation (Secretary) require certain railroad carriers
(railroads) to take a series of specified actions related to setting up
and using systems by which the public is able to notify the railroad by
toll-free telephone number of safety problems at its highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings. Such systems are commonly known as Emergency
Notification Systems (ENS) or ENS programs. This rule is also being
issued under the authority of a separate statutory provision, 49 U.S.C.
20103, which gives the Secretary very broad authority to prescribe rail
safety regulations and issue rail safety orders pursuant to notice-and-
comment procedures. The Secretary has delegated the responsibility to
carry out both Sec. 205 of the RSIA and 49 U.S.C. 20103 to the
Administrator of FRA. 49 CFR 1.49(m), (oo). Essentially, Sec. 205 of
the RSIA imposes a mandate requiring FRA as the Secretary's delegate to
prescribe regulations or orders imposing the requirements specified in
that section; this final rule implements that statutory mandate.
In particular, under Sec. 205 of the RSIA, FRA is to require each
railroad to ``establish and maintain a toll-free telephone service for
rights-of-way over which it dispatches trains'' through ``the grade
crossing of railroad tracks on those rights-of-way and public or
private roads,'' ``to directly receive calls reporting'' any of three
types of unsafe conditions at the grade crossing or other safety-
related information involving such a grade crossing. Under that
section, the three types of reportable unsafe conditions are as
follows: (1) Malfunctions of warning signals, crossing gates, and other
devices intended to promote safety at the highway-rail grade crossing;
(2) disabled vehicles blocking railroad tracks at such grade crossings;
and (3) obstructions to the view of a pedestrian or a vehicle operator
for a reasonable distance in either direction of a train's approach to
such a grade crossing. To the extent that the requirements of the final
rule exceed the requirements specified by the RSIA, FRA relies
primarily upon its general safety rulemaking authority under 49 U.S.C.
20103.
In addition to specifying the requirement that the Secretary must
impose on dispatching railroads to establish and maintain telephonic
notification systems, the RSIA includes a series of additional
specifications to be reflected in FRA's regulation. When a railroad
receives through the ENS a report of a malfunction of a warning signal,
crossing gate, and/or other device intended to promote safety at a
grade crossing or a report of a disabled vehicle blocking a railroad
track at a grade crossing through which the railroad dispatches a
train, the dispatching railroad must promptly contact trains operating
near the grade crossing to warn them of the malfunctioning device or
disabled vehicle. After contacting the trains, the dispatching railroad
must contact appropriate public safety officials having jurisdiction
over the grade crossing to provide them with the information necessary
for them to direct traffic, assist in the removal of the disabled
vehicle, or carry out other activities. When a railroad receives a
report through the ENS of either an obstruction to the view of a
pedestrian or a vehicle operator for a reasonable distance in either
direction of a train's approach to a grade crossing through which it
dispatches a train or a report of another unsafe condition involving
such a grade crossing, the railroad must timely investigate the report,
remove the obstruction if lawful and feasible to do so, or correct the
unsafe condition if lawful and feasible to do so, or, if that railroad
does not have maintenance responsibility for the crossing, ask the
maintaining railroad to do so as required by the rule.
Further, under the RSIA, FRA must require that the owner of the
track at a grade crossing ``ensure the placement * * * of appropriately
located signs'' bearing, at a minimum, ``a toll-free telephone number
to be used for placing calls'' to report unsafe conditions at the
crossing to the railroad that dispatches trains on that right-of-way
through the crossing, ``an explanation of the purpose of that toll-free
telephone number,'' and the ``grade crossing number assigned for that
crossing by the'' U.S. DOT National Crossing Inventory (Crossing
Inventory).
III. History of Accidents Relevant to This Rulemaking
There are approximately 211,000 public and private at-grade
highway-rail and pathway crossings (highway-rail and pathway grade
crossings) in the United States. In other words, the country has
approximately 211,000 locations where a collision can occur between a
train and a car, truck, or other motor vehicle, or a pedestrian at any
one time. Grade crossing collisions are among the most challenging
areas in FRA's efforts to reduce deaths and injuries along the Nation's
railroads. In fact, since 1997, grade crossing collisions have caused
more railroad-related fatalities per year than any other single factor
except for trespassing on railroad property. During the 11-year period
from 1999-2009, 2,306 collisions occurred at highway-rail and pathway
grade crossings where a vehicle was stalled or sight obstructions were
reported to FRA. See accident reporting regulations at 49 CFR part 225
and 49 CFR 234.7.
A train striking a pedestrian can result in serious injury or
death. Further, a collision between a train and a vehicle of any size
can be catastrophic. Serious injuries or deaths are far more likely to
occur with a collision between a train and a vehicle than with a
collision between two vehicles. While significant improvements in grade
crossing safety have been achieved over the last two decades, grade
crossing collisions still pose a significant public safety threat, and
one that can spiral beyond the immediate impact of the vehicle and
train. The derailment of a freight train as a result of a collision at
the grade
[[Page 35167]]
crossing can have a disastrous effect on the train crew or even on an
entire community, especially if the derailment results in a release of
hazardous material that necessitates the evacuation of a neighborhood
or the community. Moreover, if a passenger train derails as a result of
a collision, the risk of injuries extends beyond the vehicle occupants
and train crew to the passengers of the train. An example of such an
accident occurred in 1999 in Bourbonnais, Illinois, when a National
Railroad Passenger Corporation (Amtrak) passenger train struck a truck
loaded with steel at a highway-rail grade crossing. Almost the entire
train derailed, resulting in 11 deaths and 131 injuries to the
passengers and crew of the train.
Other vehicles and pedestrians in the vicinity of a highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing collision can also be at grave risk. This was
the scenario in 1993 when an Amtrak passenger train collided with a
gasoline tanker truck at a highway-rail grade crossing in Ft.
Lauderdale, Florida. The truck driver was attempting to cross through a
grade crossing where traffic was congested. The tanker truck was
punctured when it was struck by the Amtrak train; a fire erupted and
engulfed the truck and nine other vehicles near the crossing. The fire
killed the driver of the truck and five occupants of three stopped
vehicles near the grade crossing.
There are ancillary benefits associated with an ENS beyond its
primary purpose of facilitating the telephonic reporting of unsafe
conditions at highway-rail or pathway grade crossings and remedying
those unsafe conditions. Railroads with an ENS also have received calls
from the public reporting unsafe conditions in the general vicinity of
the crossing, but not immediately at the crossing. Although not within
the scope of this rule, responsive action by the railroads to such
reports of other types of unsafe conditions often accrue significant
benefits to the railroad and surrounding community.
The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) issued a report in
March 2012 of a derailment on the Canadian National Railway Company
(CN) that illustrates the potential benefit of having an ENS. The
accident occurred in Cherry Valley, Illinois in 2009. The derailment,
which resulted in a fatality, several injuries, and the evacuation of
600 residents, was caused by a washout of track near a highway-rail
grade crossing, but not at the crossing. Before the derailment
occurred, several individuals observed high water conditions affecting
the track. One individual was familiar with the practice of railroads
posting emergency telephone numbers at grade crossings and attempted to
locate such a sign. There was no sign posted at the crossing. Several
calls were placed to the local 911\1\ system to report the washout and
warn of the potential of a train derailment. The first call was
received by the 911 center 56 minutes before a train approached, but
local police only first learned of the situation approximately 20
minutes after that first call was made to 911. Additionally, several
critical minutes were lost as the local police attempted to identify
the railroad that owned the track. The NTSB concluded that ``[h]ad the
emergency contact information been available, the citizen [i.e., the
individual who was unable to locate the railroad contact information at
the Mulford Road crossing] would likely have called the CN instead of
911, or both. Even though the 911 center was able to identify the
crossing, it was not until 41 minutes after the initial 911 call that
the CN Police Emergency Call Center in Montreal was notified of the
track washout.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The current 911 system in the United States was designed to
provide a universal, easy-to-remember number, 9-1-1, for people to
reach police, fire or emergency medical assistance from any phone in
any location, without having to look up specific phone numbers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By the time the information was relayed to the proper railroad
officials, the train derailed, and several of the cars, carrying
flammable liquids, erupted in flames. As a result, several motor
vehicles that had been stopped at the crossing waiting for the train to
pass were impacted by the incident. One motor vehicle passenger was
fatally injured; two other passengers in the vehicle were seriously
injured along with five occupants of another car. The incident also
resulted in the evacuation of 600 nearby residents. The NTSB concluded
``that had the required CN grade crossing identification and emergency
contact information been posted at the Mulford Road crossing, the
railroad would likely have been notified of the track washout earlier,
and the additional time may have been sufficient for the [rail traffic
controllers] to issue instructions to stop the train and prevent the
accident.'' Derailment of CN Freight Train U70691-18 With Subsequent
Hazardous Materials Release and Fire, Cherry Valley, Illinois, June 19,
2009, Railroad Accident Report NTSB/RAR-12/01 (Washington, DC: National
Transportation Safety Board, February 14, 2012), https://www.ntsb.gov/doclib/reports/2012/RAR1201.pdf.
IV. History of Emergency Notification Systems (ENS)
A. In General
The existence of an effective system by which a member of the
public is provided with a telephone number that may be used to alert
the appropriate railroad promptly to an emergency situation or other
unsafe condition at a specific, identified highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing enables the railroad and local public safety officials
to respond to the crossing hazard earlier than they would otherwise be
able to do so. Therefore, the railroad is provided with more time to
take steps to avert an accident at the crossing before it happens or,
in any event, to mitigate its consequences. Currently, all Class I
railroads have put in place some sort of means by which they can
receive prompt telephonic notification from the public of any emergency
or other unsafe condition at most of their highway-rail grade
crossings, whereas many regional and short line railroads do not have
any such kind of notification system in place. The rule requires
certain railroads to implement such a communication system, which this
rule also calls an Emergency Notification System or ENS, covering
public and private highway-rail and pathway grade crossings.
B. Various ENS Programs in the United States
In 1983, the State of Texas established the first toll-free call-in
program in the United States that enabled the public to notify a State
call center by telephone of problems at the State's public highway-rail
grade crossings equipped with automated warning devices. As the current
Texas ENS program is organized today, after receiving such a call, the
Texas call center, operated by the Texas Department of Public Safety,
in turn notifies the railroad involved. The call-in system also
requires that a sign be posted at the highway-rail grade crossing with
the crossing's unique identifying number from the Crossing Inventory,
as well as a toll-free telephone number. Texas's call center has a
dedicated computer with a modified inventory database that facilitates
the identification of the relevant crossing and railroad. The Center
operator then calls the appropriate railroad and relays the report of
the problem. At last report, the Texas system handles more than 1,200
calls per month for the State's public crossings, even though only
those crossings equipped with active warning devices are equipped with
the signs containing the Center's toll-free telephone number. It should
be noted
[[Page 35168]]
that under this final rule, railroads using State programs for
notification of unsafe conditions at grade crossings, such as Texas's
program, may no longer comply with the regulation. However, a State
would be allowed to operate as a ``third-party telephone service'' as
described in the rule, as long as the program complies with all the
conditions specified.
Following the successful establishment of this ENS program in
Texas, and in part at the urging of FRA and the NTSB, virtually all of
the Nation's major railroads have voluntarily adopted similar systems
for the majority of their highway-rail and pathway grade crossings,
sometimes including all grade crossings, i.e., systems not limited only
to public highway-rail grade crossings or only to those equipped with
active warning devices. Unfortunately, more than 72,000 public and
private highway-rail and pathway grade crossings belonging to the
Nation's short line and regional railroads are not included. Many of
these railroads do not have 24-hour operations and do not have the
resources to establish such a call-in program.
The 1994 Rail-Highway Crossing Safety Action Plan Support Proposals
issued by DOT recommended an automated, computer-based system to
``receive, catalogue and forward telephone calls from the concerned''
public regarding signal malfunctions and other safety-related problems
at highway-rail grade crossings. Rail-Highway Crossing Safety Action
Plan Support Proposals, 17 (Washington, DC: FRA, June 13, 1994).
However, the automated system that was envisioned in 1994 was a type of
automated answering and message forwarding system that relied on the
caller to enter the required information. Once entered, this
information would then be forwarded to the appropriate railroad. Unlike
the automated answering system prescribed in this rule, the caller
would not have been directed to speak to a live operator. In FRA's
experience fully automated systems have proven to be unworkable,
whereas staffed systems have been successful.
In 1994, Congress directed FRA to conduct pilot projects in at
least two States to demonstrate the efficiency of such ``emergency
notification system'' programs covering highway-rail grade crossings
and to report to Congress on the results of the pilot projects. Section
301, ``Emergency Notification of Grade Crossing Problems,'' of Public
Law 103-440, November 2, 1994 (108 Stat. 4626). Also, in 1996, Congress
appropriated funds for the development of software and hardware to
support the demonstration of a toll-free ENS to report emergencies and
other safety problems at crossings.
Initially, FRA joined in a cooperative effort with the Texas
Department of Emergency Management to evaluate the Texas notification
system. Texas was designated one of the pilot States, and an extensive
array of software, hardware, and operating improvements was developed.
FRA prepared and implemented new software on an upgraded system in
1999. Based on comments and suggestions, further improvements were
implemented in 2001 when the Texas call center operation was
transferred to the Texas Department of Public Safety.
This 2001 version of the software was modified for use by a ``9-1-
1'' center in Clinton County, Pennsylvania, with the participation of
eight short line railroads. A 30-month demonstration program was
initiated in November 2001. See Project Plan: 1-800 Toll-Free Emergency
Notification System for Shortline Railroad Highway-Rail Crossings in
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (Washington, DC: Federal Railroad
Administration, September 20, 2000), https://www.fra.dot.gov/downloads/safety/emergency_notification_system.pdf.
In 2002, an agreement was reached with the Paducah & Louisville
Railway, Inc. (PAL) to conduct an additional pilot project (the third).
At the time PAL was a regional railroad with 24-hour operations and
approximately 400 grade crossings. FRA modified the program software to
accommodate the railroad's needs.
As a result of these pilot programs, FRA continued to modify its
software for use by States and railroads. The software enables the
timely reporting of emergencies, malfunctions, and other unsafe
conditions at grade crossings. Call center operators can log the
reported problem, access the Crossing Inventory files to look up the
proper crossing number, and notify the correct railroad dispatch center
and other emergency responders. FRA makes this software freely
available to railroads and emergency response centers. Furthermore, FRA
strongly encourages railroads and States with ENS programs to keep
their crossing inventory information current, as required by Sec. 204
of the RSIA (codified at 49 U.S.C. 20160 and 21301(a), with respect to
railroads, and 23 U.S.C. 130, with respect to States). A key component
of an effective ENS is to be able to correctly and quickly identify the
crossing number upon receiving a report of an unsafe condition at a
crossing.
C. FRA's 2006 Report to Congress
In May 2006, as mandated by Congress in Section 301, ``Emergency
Notification of Grade Crossing Problems,'' of Public Law 103-440, FRA
published a report to Congress outlining the development of ENS
programs (Report). Pilot Programs for Emergency Notification Systems at
Highway-Rail Grade Crossings, (Washington, DC: Federal Railroad
Administration, May 2006), https://www.fra.dot.gov/downloads/safety/1_800_report.pdf. The Report covered, among other things, the Texas ENS
program, the Pennsylvania ENS program, Congressional action, NTSB
recommendations, and FRA actions. Based on the findings of the Report,
FRA made certain recommendations, to Congress. These recommendations
were as follows: (1) Class I railroads should continue to implement,
augment, and review the ENS programs that they have initiated; (2)
smaller railroads, including commuter railroads, should work
cooperatively through The American Short Line and Regional Railroad
Association (ASLRRA), or another suitable organization or
organizations, to establish ENS programs serving member railroads; (3)
signs installed or replaced at highway-rail grade crossings should be
displayed prominently to crossing users (e.g., mounted on signal masts
where practicable) and should conform to the Federal Highway
Administration's (FHWA) Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices
(MUTCD) guidance; and (4) any program that does not currently include
passive highway-rail grade crossings be expanded to include, at
minimum, all such public crossings where it is practicable to do so.
The Report concluded that the pilot ENS programs in both Texas and
Pennsylvania afforded the general public a quick and easy means of
alerting appropriate railroad officials to safety-related problems.
Additionally, the Report concluded that the Texas ENS likely resulted
in the prevention of numerous accidents and injuries, and
Pennsylvania's ENS, albeit on a smaller scale than Texas's,
demonstrated that it is possible to create emergency call systems
through the development of agreements with multiple railroads. Finally,
the Report emphasized that the Pennsylvania ENS also showed the value
of including all highway-rail grade crossings, not just those with
train-activated warning devices.
[[Page 35169]]
V. Section-by-Section Analysis
Section 234.1 Scope
FRA is expanding this part to include new subpart E, Emergency
Notification Systems for Telephonic Reporting of Unsafe Conditions at
Highway-Rail and Pathway Grade Crossings. For this reason, FRA is
amending the description of the scope of the part, Sec. 234.1, by
converting it into two paragraphs, dividing the first paragraph into
four enumerated subparagraphs, and inserting in new Sec. 234.1(a)(4)
the following reference to new subpart E: ``Requirements that certain
railroads establish systems for receiving toll-free telephone calls
reporting various unsafe conditions at highway-rail grade crossings and
at pathway grade crossings, and for taking certain actions in response
to those calls.'' Further, for improved readability of the section, FRA
is designating the last sentence of the current Sec. 234.1 as
paragraph (b) of revised Sec. 234.1.
Section 234.3 Application and Responsibility for Compliance
This section is being adopted as proposed in the NPRM, with the
exception of minor typographical revisions. FRA received public comment
on this section from three commenters--an individual, the California
Public Utilities Commission (CPUC), and the ASLRRA.
The individual commenter noted that even though the NPRM clearly
stated that proposed part 234, subpart E, requires a railroad that
dispatches or otherwise provides the authority for the movement of one
or more trains through a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing to
establish and maintain an ENS,\2\ some small railroads may be confused
by the language in the rule. The commenter claimed that some small
railroads may incorrectly interpret the meaning of ``dispatch'' in a
narrow sense, such as only a railroad that employs an individual in a
``dispatcher'' position as actually ``dispatching'' trains. In the
final rule, FRA's definitions in Sec. 234.301 of ``dispatching
railroad,'' ``dispatches a train or dispatches trains,'' and
``maintaining railroad,'' and the associated duties and obligations for
these railroads described in the rule clearly explain which railroads
are subject to subpart E. Despite the commenter's concerns, railroads
have the burden of complying with FRA regulations, requiring them to
carefully read the final rule in its entirety and thoroughly understand
their duties and obligations as stated in the rule. For this reason,
FRA sees no need, as the commenter recommended, to contact small
railroads to inform them of their responsibilities pursuant to this
final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ E.g., the proposed rule, defined ``[d]ispatching railroad''
to mean ``a railroad that dispatches or otherwise provides the
authority for the movement of one or more trains through a highway-
rail or pathway grade crossing.'' 76 FR 11992, 12009 (March 4,
2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The CPUC recommended that all public highway-rail grade crossings
be covered by this rule, to include those through which a ``plant
railroad'' dispatches trains. In Sec. 234.3(a)(1), a ``plant
railroad'' is excepted from part 234. CPUC expressed concern that a
``plant railroad,'' as defined in Sec. 234.5, might dispatch trains
through a public highway-rail grade crossing, yet still not be required
by subpart E to establish and maintain an ENS. CPUC may be correct that
a small number of plant railroads may dispatch trains through public
highway-rail grade crossings and not be required to establish an ENS
because a ``plant railroad'' is excepted from part 234. However, FRA
historically has not regulated plant railroads. By their very nature,
most plant railroads operate at very low speed, which allows them to
avoid collisions. Furthermore, the low speed would reduce the severity
of any collision that does occur. Additionally, since the public
crossing is actually within the confines of the plant, the owner of the
crossing would be very evident to any user of the public crossing.
Consequently, the user of the crossing is better positioned to report
signal malfunctions, poor sight distance, or other unsafe conditions to
the plant. Finally, plant railroads would be free to implement their
own ENS if they choose to do so.
ASLRRA recommended that the rule not apply to Class II and Class
III railroads that operate at restricted speed for their primary
operating practice, in order to relieve those railroads of the rule's
financial burden. FRA is not in a position to make such an exception
since the RSIA statutorily mandates that each railroad ``establish and
maintain a toll-free telephone service for rights-of-way over which it
dispatches trains.'' However, FRA has carefully considered the various
monitoring and sign placement costs that the rule imposes on small
railroads and has made several changes with respect to these costs in
the final rule to lessen the financial burden. These changes are
described in more detail in the section-by-section analysis of
Sec. Sec. 234.303 and 234.311.
Section 234.5 Definitions
FRA received no public comments related specifically to the
definitions in this section. This section is being adopted as proposed
in the NPRM, with the exception of minor typographical and stylistic
changes, and a new definition. First, FRA is adding clarification to
the defined term ``Credible report of warning system malfunction,'' by
also calling it a ``credible report of warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing.'' Second, this section now defines the
term ``Warning system malfunction'' or ``warning system malfunction at
a highway-rail grade crossing.'' ``Warning system malfunction'' or
``warning system malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing'' means
an activation failure, a partial activation, or a false activation of a
highway-rail grade crossing warning system.
Subpart E--Emergency Notification Systems for Telephonic Reporting of
Unsafe Conditions at Highway-Rail and Pathway Grade Crossings
As proposed in the NPRM, FRA is amending part 234 by adding new
subpart E, which includes Sec. Sec. 234.301-234.317. In the final
rule, FRA is revising the title of the subpart to read--Emergency
Notification Systems for Telephonic Reporting of Unsafe Conditions at
Highway-Rail and Pathway Grade Crossings.
Section 234.301 Definitions
Unless otherwise stated here, FRA is adopting the definitions for
new subpart E as proposed in the NPRM. FRA received public comments
regarding several of the proposed definitions in this section. The
organization Crossing Call recommended that the proposed definition in
the NPRM of ``Automated answering service'' be amended to permit
incoming calls to be answered by an initial recorded announcement so
long as thereafter the call is handled by a live operator. Many of the
Class I railroads already have similar emergency notification systems
in place that respond to reports of emergencies and other unsafe
conditions at crossings in a timely manner and effectively route
callers to an automated menu of options before reaching a live
operator. FRA agrees with this recommendation, and is changing the term
``Automated answering service'' to ``Automated answering system,'' and
revising the definition, accordingly, to mean a type of answering
system that directs a telephone caller to a single menu of options,
where the caller has the choice to select one of the available options
to report an unsafe condition at a highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing; and immediately after selecting one of the
[[Page 35170]]
available menu options, the caller must be transferred to a live
telephone operator.
Separately, in this final rule, FRA is adding the term ``Answering
machine,'' which means either a device or a voicemail system that
allows a telephone caller to leave a recorded message to report an
unsafe condition at a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing, and the
railroad is able to retrieve the recorded message either remotely or
on-site. In this final rule, Sec. 234.303(b) permits the use of an
answering machine by certain dispatching railroads under certain
circumstances to receive reports of unsafe conditions at crossings
through which they dispatch trains. Additionally, Sec. 234.305(h)(2)
permits a maintaining railroad under certain circumstances to use an
answering machine to receive from a dispatching railroad reports of
unsafe conditions at crossings that it maintains.
In the NPRM, FRA solicited comments with respect to setting a
maximum amount of time a caller must wait before the call is answered
by the railroad. FRA received responses from a handful of industry
associations, two State agencies, and individuals. Advocates for a
maximum wait time included the Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen (BRS),
the CPUC, the Illinois Commerce Commission (ILCC), and the American
Association for Justice (AAJ), in addition to a few individuals. These
organizations and individuals recommended that the maximum wait time
experienced by a caller be between one and two minutes. The AAJ also
suggested that the railroads have an automated system to inform a
caller of how long the wait time will be to speak to a live operator.
However, the Angels on Track Foundation commented that public calls
reporting unsafe conditions at grade crossings should receive immediate
attention and that a caller should not experience any waiting time.
Separately, at the public hearing held by FRA on September 29,
2011, FRA asked the Association of American Railroads (AAR) to consider
a standard for the time that it takes for a live operator to answer a
call concerning a problem at a crossing. AAR submitted supplemental
comments that address this issue. AAR argued that it is impossible to
establish a meaningful performance standard for the time that it takes
to contact a live operator through toll-free numbers posted at
crossings. Furthermore, AAR stated that calls to railroad telephone
systems are typically answered ``expeditiously.'' AAR also stated that,
from the time a caller selects a telephone menu option for
``emergency'' or ``malfunctioning signal device,'' on average it is no
more than one minute before a live person answers. Crossing Call
suggested that if FRA promulgated standards for answering calls, those
standards should conform to the metrics tracked by answering services
(e.g., percent of calls answered within a certain time period).
FRA recognizes that the more promptly a railroad routes a caller to
a live operator, the sooner the railroad can avert a potential accident
or remedy a problem at a crossing. FRA encourages all railroads to
promptly route grade crossing emergency phone calls to a live operator;
but, at this time, FRA assesses that there is little additional safety
benefit to be derived from imposing a maximum call wait time in light
of the final rule's requirements in Sec. 234.303.
There were two commenters who took issue with the use of the term
``dispatching railroad.'' The NPRM proposed to define the term to mean,
``a railroad that dispatches or otherwise provides the authority for
the movement of one or more trains through a highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing.'' The Everett Railroad Company recommended that FRA
apply a narrow meaning to the term so as to make this final rule
applicable only to rail operations that employ a dispatcher and have
controlled trackage. FRA disagrees with this recommendation as contrary
to the statutory mandate for the rulemaking. Section 205 of the RSIA
states, in part, that
the Secretary of Transportation shall require each railroad carrier
to--(1) establish and maintain a toll-free telephone service for
rights of way over which it dispatches trains, to directly receive
calls reporting--(A) malfunctions of * * * devices to promote safety
at the grade crossing of railroad tracks on those rights-of-way and
public or private roads; (B) disabled vehicles blocking railroad
tracks at such grade crossings; (c) obstructions to the view of a
pedestrian or a vehicle operator for a reasonable distance in either
direction of a train's approach; or (d) other safety information
involving such grade crossings.
Section 205 of the RSIA does not define the word ``dispatches'' nor
does it limit the scope of this rule only to those railroads that have
a position of a dispatcher or have controlled trackage. So in
developing the final rule, FRA considered the plain meaning of the word
and the definition of ``dispatches'' in the final rule is consistent
with this plain meaning. The other commenter noted that smaller
railroads may be confused by the language in Sec. 234.305(a) of the
NPRM, and may interpret the language in the narrowest sense, meaning
that only railroads that ``dispatch'' trains using a dispatcher would
be considered a ``dispatching railroad,'' and required to comply with
Part 234. The final rule also defines ``dispatching railroad'' to mean,
``a railroad that dispatches or otherwise provides the authority for
the movement of one or more trains through a highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing.'' The definition makes clear that this rule applies to
both railroads that dispatch in the traditional sense, or by other
means control train movement through highway-rail or pathway grade
crossings. Furthermore, to clarify the meaning of the use of the verb
``to dispatch,'' in the final rule, FRA is adding the definition of the
phrase ``Dispatches a train'' or ``dispatches trains'' to mean
dispatches or otherwise provides the authority for the movement of the
train or trains through a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing.
To properly receive notification of unsafe conditions at grade
crossings, a railroad or group of railroads is required to implement a
system that consists of multiple components. To refer to the entire set
of these various components, the term ``Emergency Notification System''
or its abbreviation (``ENS'') is used. In the final rule, FRA adopted
the definition of ``Emergency Notification System'' as proposed in the
NPRM, with the exception of minor typographical and stylistic changes.
As explained previously in the NPRM, although the word ``emergency'' is
part of the term ``Emergency Notification System,'' FRA does not intend
to imply that all reportable unsafe conditions are emergencies, i.e.,
conditions that create an imminent hazard of death or injury to an
individual or damage to property. In other words, some reportable
unsafe conditions are not emergencies. The term ``Emergency
Notification System'' is used in part because of its use in the 1994
legislation and its use colloquially by persons managing or working
with the already existing ENS programs.
In the final rule, FRA is adding the term ``farm grade crossing''
to explain that farm grade crossings are a subset of highway-rail grade
crossings that are on private roadways and that are used for the
movement of farm motor vehicles, farm machinery, or livestock in
connection with agricultural pursuits, forestry, or other land-
productive purposes. In consideration of public comments on the number
of signs that would be required at crossings, the final rule in Sec.
234.311 permits farm grade crossings to have just one ENS sign. This
revision is discussed more thoroughly in the section-by-section
analysis of Sec. 234.311.
[[Page 35171]]
As mentioned previously in the NPRM, the railroad that dispatches a
train through a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing and the railroad
that maintains the crossing may not necessarily be the same entity. To
address this scenario, FRA proposed a definition for ``maintaining
railroad.'' In response to public comments, FRA is revising the
definition of ``Maintaining railroad'' to clarify the responsibilities
of a maintaining railroad and to account not only for an owner of the
track, but also for a lessee of the track. ``Maintaining railroad'' now
means the entity (e.g., track owner or lessee) that is responsible for
maintenance of the highway-rail or pathway grade crossing warning
device or other aspects of safety maintenance at the crossing. If the
maintenance responsibility is handled by a contractor, such as
maintaining a warning system or track structure at the highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing, then the contractor is considered the
``maintaining railroad'' for the purposes of this subpart.
The Kansas City Southern Railway Company (KCS) found the proposed
definition of ``Pathway grade crossing'' to be unclear and recommended
that the phrase ``explicitly authorized'' be further explained to
ensure that FRA's enforcement of the rule is consistent. KCS suggested
that for a public authority to ``explicitly authorize'' a pathway grade
crossing that public entity needs to have taken some affirmative act
that is memorialized in its records. Furthermore, KCS stated that for a
railroad to have ``explicitly authorized'' a pathway grade crossing,
there should at a minimum be a written agreement between the railroad
and some other entity allowing for public use of a pathway across the
railroad's tracks. KCS argued that ``continued use'' alone is
insufficient to establish a pathway grade crossing as ``explicitly
authorized.'' FRA agrees with KCS on this point. Continuous use of a
pathway grade crossing would constitute only one of several elements of
either an easement by prescription or by implication. By their very
nature, neither prescriptive nor implied easements are explicitly
authorized. In the NPRM, FRA's definition of ``Pathway grade crossing''
was taken from Section 2 of the RSIA, which defines ``crossing,'' as
used in the RSIA, as a location, other than a location where one or
more railroad tracks cross one or more railroad tracks at-grade,
where--
(B) a pathway explicitly authorized by a public authority or a
railroad carrier that is dedicated for the use of nonvehicular
traffic, including pedestrians, bicyclists, and others, that is not
associated with a public highway, road, or street, or a private
roadway, crosses one or more railroad tracks either at grade or
grade-separated.
122 Stat. 4848, 4849-50.
After careful consideration of the comment by KCS, FRA decided not
to revise the proposed definition of ``pathway grade crossing.'' There
are a number of ways that a pathway could be ``explicitly authorized,''
to include but not limited to, by easement stated in a deed, will, or
other written instrument, by public ordinance, or by written agreement
with a railroad or a public authority. In other words, there must be a
clear understanding between the interested parties that the existence
of the pathway is authorized.
In the final rule, FRA is adding the term ``Public report of
warning system malfunction,'' or ``Public report of warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing,'' to distinguish between
the two types of reports that may be received by a dispatching railroad
of a warning system malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing. The
first type of report, a ``public report of warning system
malfunction,'' originates from a member of the general public, that is,
not a railroad employee, law enforcement officer, highway traffic
official, or other employee of a public agency acting in an official
capacity. In contrast, a ``credible report of warning system
malfunction'' is supplied by a railroad employee, law enforcement
officer, highway traffic official, or other employee of a public agency
acting in an official capacity. The receipt of a credible report of
warning system malfunction triggers the duty to comply with subpart C.
Subpart C does not apply to public reports of warning system
malfunction.
In the final rule, FRA is also adding the term ``third-party
telephone service,'' to describe the use of a third-party service by a
dispatching or maintaining railroad, pursuant to Sec. 234.307, to
receive telephonic reports of unsafe conditions at highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings. This term is described in more detail in the
section-by-section analysis for Sec. 234.307.
FRA is also adding the term ``warning system failure at a pathway
grade crossing'' to mean a failure of an active pathway grade crossing
warning system to perform as intended. The term would include, but not
be limited to, such problems as the failure of the device to activate
as a train approaches the pathway crossing, a false activation of the
device when no train is approaching the pathway crossing, or a burnt
out light on the device. This definition is being added to explain the
term, which appears in Sec. 234.305, Remedial actions in response to
reports of unsafe conditions at highway-rail and pathway grade
crossings. Note that a ``warning system failure at a pathway grade
crossing'' does not trigger the remedial action requirements of subpart
C. The term ``warning system failure at a pathway grade crossing'' is
being added to differentiate it from the terms ``warning system
malfunction'' and ``warning system malfunction at a highway-rail grade
crossing,'' which describe the various activation failures that may
occur at a highway-rail grade crossing and that if the subject of a
credible report of warning system malfunction at a highway-rail grade
crossing do trigger the remedial action requirements of subpart C.
Section 234.303 Emergency Notification Systems for Telephonic Reporting
of Unsafe Conditions at Highway-Rail and Pathway Grade Crossings
Section 234.303(a) requires each railroad that dispatches a train,
or otherwise provides the authority for the movement of a train,
through a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing, to set up a system to
directly and promptly receive telephonic notification of certain unsafe
conditions at the crossing. In particular, Sec. 234.303(a) requires
these dispatching railroads to establish and maintain a toll-free
telephone service by which the railroad can directly receive calls
reporting any of the unsafe conditions listed in paragraph (c) (with
respect to highway-rail grade crossings) and paragraph (d) (with
respect to pathway grade crossings).
Further, Sec. 234.303(a) specifically requires that the railroad
either have a live person answer the calls directly and promptly, or
else use an automated answering system or a third-party telephone
service for answering the calls, except as provided in paragraph (b).
One of the comments expressed concern that this rule would conflict
with the hours of service laws (49 U.S.C. ch. 211). FRA disagrees that
this rule presents a conflict with the hours of service laws. One of
the many provisions in the current hours of service laws mandates that
a railroad dispatching service employee, such as an operator, train
dispatcher, or any other employee who by use of an electrical or
mechanical device dispatches, reports, transmits, receives, or delivers
orders related to or affecting train movements, may not remain or go
[[Page 35172]]
on duty for more than 9 or 12 hours in a 24-hour period, depending on
the number of shifts employed at the tower, office, station, or place
that the employee is on duty. (49 U.S.C. 21105). This final rule does
not stipulate which employees would be assigned to receive and respond
to emergency notification calls as required by subpart E. It is the
railroad's responsibility to divide employees' duties in a way that
would not violate the hours of service laws, and/or hire additional
employees, if necessary. FRA recognizes that some of the small
railroads may operate with fewer employees and would have less
flexibility in scheduling staff to receive and respond to incoming
calls. To that end, FRA has made several changes in the final rule to
address such concerns. These changes are discussed in the relevant
sections that follow.
Several of the comments that FRA received noted that either local
law enforcement or 911 systems are capable of handling emergency calls
for unsafe conditions at grade crossings. FRA disagrees. A system in
which a telephone call gets routed directly to the dispatching railroad
is more efficient than one that relies on local law enforcement
agencies or 911 systems. While some local law enforcement agencies may
be familiar with the railroad's contact information in the event of an
emergency, FRA believes that many local law enforcement agencies and
911 systems lack the knowledge or information to properly notify the
railroad in these kinds of situations. For example, some local law
enforcement agencies and 911 systems may incorrectly contact the wrong
railroad or identify the crossing by its street name rather than the
Crossing Inventory number. Furthermore, some local law enforcement
agencies may have neither the capacity nor the capabilities to promptly
route this information to the dispatching railroad. It is imperative
for improved crossing safety that the dispatching railroad receives
precise information so that it can act quickly to take the steps
necessary to attempt to prevent a collision or other crossing incident
and any resulting casualties and, in any event, to mitigate their
severity.
A dispatching railroad must be able to directly receive calls
through the toll-free telephone service, unless the railroad is
permitted to use a non-toll-free number as provided in paragraph (e) of
this section. ``Directly'' does not necessarily mean that the railroad
must be the first entity that receives the telephone call when the
toll-free service is used. In the NPRM, FRA proposed that only one
entity may exist between the caller and the railroad. In the final
rule, ``directly'' does mean that only one entity--a third-party
telephone service--may be placed between the caller reporting the
unsafe condition(s) at the grade crossing and the dispatching railroad.
The rationale for the use of a third-party telephone service is
addressed further in the discussion of Sec. 234.307. Regardless if an
additional entity is used, the dispatching railroad ultimately remains
responsible for setting up and using a system by which it can receive
notification of unsafe conditions at a grade crossing and take the
appropriate action in response to such notification. This
responsibility is placed on the dispatching railroad because it is in
the best position to immediately contact and warn the affected train
crew(s) of the reported unsafe condition(s) prior to each train's
arrival at the crossing to which the report pertains.
One comment noted that placing signs at private highway-rail grade
crossings (i.e., a highway-rail grade crossing on a private roadway)
and pathway grade crossings would not result in a benefit to the
public. FRA believes that providing a mechanism to report an unsafe
condition is vital, regardless of the type of crossing. Incidents such
as a downed tree, or a recreational vehicle hung up on the crossing can
and do happen at all types of highway-rail and pathway grade crossings,
both public and private. Furthermore, as FRA stated in the NPRM, the
frequency with which a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing is used
does not determine whether it is included in the system established
pursuant to Sec. 234.303(a). FRA believes that it is important to
provide an immediate means to communicate a notice of an unsafe
condition even at such grade crossings traversed infrequently. Imagine,
for example, the driver of a logging truck stuck at a seldom-used
private highway-rail grade crossing in the Rocky Mountains with no
knowledge of what actions to take or whom to contact. FRA agrees that
some private highway-rail grade crossings, such as farm grade
crossings, have characteristics that lend themselves to a modification
of the requirement to have a sign on each approach to the crossing.
Farm grade crossings are discussed in more detail in the analysis of
Sec. 234.311.
In the final rule, FRA is creating a new paragraph (b) in Sec.
234.303 to provide exceptions to Sec. 234.303(a) that allow certain
railroads under certain conditions to use an answering machine, as
defined in Sec. 234.301, to receive reports of unsafe conditions at
highway-rail and pathway grade crossings through which they dispatch
trains. The exceptions in Sec. 234.303(b) reduce the economic burden
placed on smaller railroads, allowing many of these railroads to use an
existing phone line to receive ENS reports and, thereby avoiding any
additional expense for a toll-free service.
Paragraph (b)(1) permits a railroad that dispatches trains each of
which is authorized to travel through a highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing at speeds not greater than 20 miles per hour (mph) to use an
answering machine to receive calls regarding unsafe conditions at the
crossing. If the railroad uses an answering machine under these
circumstances, the railroad must retrieve its messages immediately
prior to the start of its operations for the day to ensure that a
report of an unsafe condition does not come in after the answering
machine has been checked, but before the first train of the day
departs. FRA's rationale for this exception is that at speeds of 20 mph
or less the train engineer would have a greater ability to stop the
train in advance of a crossing that has an unsafe condition, and
thereby have a greater opportunity to avert an accident at the
crossing, than would a train traveling at higher speeds.
Paragraph (b)(2) permits a railroad that dispatches one or more
trains through a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing on a seasonal
or intermittent basis (e.g., a tourist, biweekly, or non-24-hour
service), and any of the trains is authorized to travel through the
crossing at speeds greater than 20mph to use an answering machine, but
only during hours of non-operation. During periods of non-operation,
the railroad is required to retrieve its messages once daily. However,
the railroad must retrieve its messages immediately prior to the start
of its operations for the day, to ensure that a report of an unsafe
condition does not come in after the answering machine has been
checked, but before the first train of the day departs. During hours of
operation, the railroad must comply with Sec. 234.303(a) by either
having a live person answer calls directly and promptly, using an
automated answering system, or employing a third-party telephone
service to receive reports of unsafe conditions at crossings through
which it dispatches such trains.
The four types of unsafe conditions at highway-rail grade crossings
that are to be reportable through the ENS are set forth in Sec.
234.303(c). In the final rule, FRA is adopting this paragraph as
proposed in the NPRM, with the exception of typographical and stylistic
[[Page 35173]]
changes. The first type of reportable unsafe condition at a highway-
rail grade crossing is a warning system malfunction at the crossing.
The second type of reportable unsafe condition at a highway-rail
grade crossing is a disabled vehicle or other obstruction blocking a
railroad track at the crossing. As mentioned in Section II of this
preamble, a significant number of collisions between a train and a
vehicle have occurred at highway-rail grade crossings due to a vehicle
blocking the railroad tracks at the crossing, with many of these
collisions resulting in injuries and fatalities. While FRA acknowledges
that not all of these incidents may have been prevented by the presence
of an ENS, such a system increases the likelihood that the dispatching
railroad will learn of the disabled vehicle in time to alert the train
crew(s) prior to each train's arrival at the crossing, thus potentially
averting a collision and any resulting casualties. Other obstructions,
aside from a disabled vehicle, also may block the tracks at a crossing
and create an unsafe condition that needs to be reported to the
railroad. For instance, as a result of a severe storm, a large tree may
fall onto the tracks at a highway-rail grade crossing, and if a
railroad is not alerted about this unsafe condition, a train that is
authorized to operate through that crossing could collide with the
downed tree, thus potentially causing a derailment. Under Sec. 205 of
the RSIA, the second category of unsafe conditions is a disabled
vehicle blocking the tracks at a grade crossing. To the extent that
FRA's final rule requires more than Sec. 205 of the RSIA would have it
require, the agency relies on its general safety rulemaking authority.
The third type of a reportable unsafe condition at a highway-rail
crossing is an obstruction to the view of a pedestrian or a vehicle
operator for a reasonable distance in either direction of a train's
approach to the crossing. FRA's Track Safety Standards provide that
``vegetation on railroad property which is on or immediately adjacent
to the roadbed shall be controlled so that it does not [o]bstruct
visibility of railroad signs and signals [a]t highway-rail grade
crossings.'' 49 CFR 213.7(b)(1) (Sec. 213.7(b)(1)). Section
234.303(c)(3) allows a member of the public to inform the railroad of
conditions at highway-rail grade crossings that may not fall under
Sec. 213.7(b)(1), but that, in the individual's opinion, present an
unsafe condition involving a sight obstruction at the crossing. In the
NPRM, FRA solicited comments regarding what is a ``reasonable
distance'' to determine whether an obstruction to a pedestrian or
vehicle operator's view of a train's approach to a highway-rail grade
crossing presents an unsafe condition at the grade crossing. Amtrak in
its comments noted that the regulation does not define ``reasonable
distance,'' which depends on the particular facts of the situation and
makes it a very subjective standard. AAR remarked that there can be
legitimate disagreements over whether an obstruction even poses an
unsafe condition. The AAJ commented that no one sight distance should
apply to all crossings, and thus, all reports of sight distance
obstruction should be investigated. Several of the comments, including
AAJ suggested using the Federal Highway Administration's Railroad-
Highway Grade Crossing Handbook to determine appropriate minimum sight
distances. After careful consideration, FRA is not qualifying the
meaning of ``reasonable'' in this final rule. Since a crossing user is
unlikely to have knowledge of this specific FRA regulation, the
individual will report an unsafe condition based on their personal
judgment and perspective of the situation, and the particular
conditions at the crossing at the time. What actions, if any, the
railroad must take in response to such reports is discussed in Sec.
234.305.
The final type of reportable unsafe condition at a highway-rail
grade crossing is described in Sec. 234.303(c)(4) as any condition at
the crossing that may be considered unsafe and is not covered by Sec.
234.303(c)(1)-(3). This catch-all provision is intended to provide the
public with the opportunity to report other types of unsafe conditions
that are not covered by Sec. 234.303(c)(1)-(3). In the NPRM, FRA
explained that a downed or missing crossbuck sign illustrates the type
of condition at a highway-rail grade crossing that may be deemed unsafe
and, therefore, should be reported to the railroad, but does not fall
into one of the three other categories. The CPUC in its comments
provided a few other examples of unsafe conditions that do not fall
into one of the three other categories, such as ``rough pavement or
broken track paneling.'' These are merely some examples of the various
conditions that may be considered unsafe under this catch-all
provision.
The four types of reportable unsafe conditions at pathway grade
crossings as opposed to highway-rail grade crossings are set forth in
Sec. 234.303(d). In the final rule, FRA is adopting this paragraph as
proposed in the NPRM, with the exception of typographical and stylistic
changes. The four types of reportable unsafe conditions at pathway
grade crossings are, essentially, the same as those for highway-rail
grade crossings, but, as detailed below, the four types of reportable
unsafe conditions at pathway grade crossings are not described in the
exact same words, and unlike the first type of report for a highway-
rail grade crossing, the first type of report for a pathway grade
crossing does not trigger the duty to address the report in the manner
prescribed by existing subpart C.
The first type of reportable condition for a pathway grade crossing
is a failure of the active warning system at the pathway grade crossing
to perform as intended. Section 234.303(c)(1) does not use the term
``warning system malfunction'' to refer to a failure of an active
warning system at a pathway grade crossing because, as defined in Sec.
234.5, a ``warning system malfunction'' is an activation failure,
partial activation, or false activation of the active warning system at
a highway-rail grade crossing, not a pathway grade crossing. Further,
``activation failure,'' ``partial activation,'' and ``false
activation'' are all defined in Sec. 234.5 and only apply to highway-
rail grade crossings. In the final rule, FRA does not establish
specific standards regarding the maintenance and repair of active
warning systems at pathway grade crossings. However, the final rule
does require a railroad to provide the public with a means to report
when the active warning system at a pathway grade crossing through
which it dispatches a train is not performing as intended and is
creating an unsafe condition at the crossing.
While the term ``failure of the active warning system at the
pathway grade crossing to perform as intended'' as used in Sec.
234.303(d)(1) is not specifically defined, FRA believes that the term
sufficiently addresses the scenarios in which an active warning system
at a pathway grade crossing malfunctions and poses a significant safety
risk to a pathway grade crossing user. The term includes, but is not
limited to, such problems as the failure of the device to activate as a
train approaches the pathway crossing, a false activation of the device
when no train is approaching the pathway crossing, or a burnt out light
on the device. Although FRA solicited comments regarding the types of
failures of an active warning system at a pathway grade crossing that
may differ from failures of active warning systems at highway-rail
grade crossings, there were no public comments received on this issue.
Additionally, FRA sought comments regarding how the maintenance and
repair of an active warning system at a pathway grade
[[Page 35174]]
crossing differ from the required maintenance and repair of an active
warning system at a highway-rail grade crossing. The ILCC replied that
there should be no difference in the testing, maintenance, and repair
of an active warning system whether it be at a highway-rail grade
crossing or a pathway grade crossing. In fact, FRA notes that pathway
grade crossing warning systems typically have different designs than
those of traditional grade crossing warning systems.
The second type of reportable unsafe condition at a pathway grade
crossing is an obstruction blocking a railroad track at the crossing.
To avoid confusion, the term ``disabled vehicle'' is purposely omitted
from Sec. 234.303(d)(2), though it is used in Sec. 234.303(c)(2),
because, as defined in Sec. 234.301, a ``pathway grade crossing'' is,
among other things, dedicated for the use of nonvehicular traffic;
thus, by the definition, a vehicle should not be using a pathway grade
crossing. However, to ensure that all possible scenarios in which an
obstruction could be blocking the tracks at a pathway grade crossing,
including certain disabled vehicles that may be using the pathway (such
as all-terrain vehicles, golf carts, maintenance vehicles, or
snowmobiles), Sec. 234.303(d)(2) uses the broad term ``obstruction.''
The third type of reportable unsafe condition at a pathway grade
crossing is an obstruction to the view of a pathway user for a
reasonable distance in either direction of a train's approach to the
crossing. See discussion above of Sec. 234.303(c)(3).
The final type of reportable unsafe condition at a pathway grade
crossing is any condition at the crossing that may be considered unsafe
and is not covered by Sec. 234.303(d)(1)-(3). See discussion above of
Sec. 234.303(c)(4).
FRA believes that there may be certain scenarios in which a caller
would be discouraged from reporting an unsafe condition at a grade
crossing because the use of a non-toll-free number would impose an
additional cost on the caller as opposed to if a toll-free number was
used. Yet, the requirement for the number to be toll-free may be overly
burdensome to a short line or other small railroad. To avoid these
types of situations, FRA adopts Sec. 234.303(e) in this final rule (as
proposed in the NPRM), which states that if a railroad classified by
the Surface Transportation Board (STB) as a Class II or Class III rail
carrier dispatches trains within an area in which the use of a non-
toll-free number would incur no additional fees for the caller than if
a toll-free number were used, then that railroad may use that non-toll-
free number to receive calls pursuant to Sec. 234.303(a) regarding
each grade crossing in that area.
FRA adopts as paragraph (f) in this section, the text proposed as
paragraph (e) of Sec. 234.303 in the NPRM. Paragraph (f) provides that
if a report of an unsafe condition at a highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing was not made through the telephone service described in Sec.
234.303(a), then subpart E does not apply to the report. Subpart E only
sets forth the requirements for the establishment and use of an ENS
within the meaning of subpart E, and the response to a report of an
unsafe condition received through a required ENS. A report that is not
received through a required ENS falls outside the scope of the
requirements of subpart E and, therefore, does not trigger the duty to
comply with the requirements of subpart E.
Section 234.305 Remedial Actions in Response to Reports of Unsafe
Conditions at Highway-Rail and Pathway Grade Crossings
Section 234.305 addresses the actions that a railroad must take in
response to an ENS-generated report of an unsafe condition at a
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing. In the final rule, FRA adopts
the majority of this section as proposed in the NPRM. Specific changes
that were made in the final rule are explained in detail below.
In response to the NPRM, the AAR commented that the words
``promptly'' and ``immediately'' are used in an inconsistent manner
throughout the proposed section with respect to the railroad's response
to reports of unsafe conditions at highway-rail and pathway grade
crossings. The term ``promptly'' is already used in subpart C, so in
the final rule, where it was appropriate, FRA replaced ``immediately''
with ``promptly'' to correspond with subpart C.
Additionally, AAR recommended that FRA amend the language proposed
in the NPRM, requiring a railroad to ``immediately contact all trains
that are authorized to operate through the highway-rail grade crossing
[or pathway grade crossing] and warn the trains of the reported
malfunction [or failure].'' AAR suggested incorporating the phrase
``prior to the trains' arrival at the crossing,'' which is similar to
language already used in subpart C, Sec. 234.105 and Sec. 234.107. To
remain consistent with current regulations and to enhance clarity in
this final rule, FRA is changing the text from that proposed in the
NPRM to require in the final rule that a railroad promptly contact all
trains that are authorized to operate through the highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing, in an effort to notify the train crews of the
reported malfunction or failure prior to each train's arrival at the
crossing.
Paragraph (a) of this section is the general rule on response to
ENS-generated credible reports of warning system malfunctions at
highway-rail grade crossings. If a railroad receives an ENS-generated
report of a warning system malfunction that is a credible report of
warning system malfunction and the railroad has maintenance
responsibility for the warning system at the highway-rail grade
crossing to which the report pertains, the railroad is required to take
the action required by subpart C. As defined in Sec. 234.5, a
``credible report of warning system malfunction'' is ``a report that
contains specific information regarding a malfunction of a highway-rail
grade crossing warning system at an identified highway-rail grade
crossing, supplied by a railroad employee, law enforcement officer,
highway traffic official, or other employee of a public agency acting
in an official capacity.'' If a report of a warning system malfunction
is not provided by one of the four specific types of people listed,
then the report is not a credible report of warning system malfunction
within the meaning of either subpart C or subpart E, and subpart C does
not require any remedial action in response to those reports. It should
be noted that the term ``credible report of warning system
malfunction'' only applies to highway-rail grade crossings and does not
include pathway grade crossings. Thus, for these technical reasons,
regardless of who reports a warning system malfunction at a pathway
grade crossing, the report is not considered a ``credible report of
warning system malfunction'' within the meaning of either subpart C or
subpart E.
Several of the comments that FRA received in response to the NPRM
indicated that FRA's use of the term ``credible report of a warning
system malfunction'' may need some clarification. The term, as used in
part 234, is simply a technical term. ``Credible report of warning
system malfunction'' refers to reports of signal malfunctions by a
specific class of public officials and railroad personnel acting in an
official capacity. These regulations have been in existence for many
years. The use of the word ``credible'' in that term does not go to the
accuracy or truthfulness of the report; rather, the term simply denotes
the type of report the receipt of which is the precondition that
triggers the duty
[[Page 35175]]
for a railroad to perform certain actions, pursuant to subpart C. In
other words, when a credible report of warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing is received from one of the four specific
types of people listed, as opposed to reports received from a member of
the general public, the railroad having maintenance responsibility for
the warning system must promptly take the actions prescribed by subpart
C. Just because a report originates from a member of the general public
and, therefore, is not classified as a ``credible report of warning
system malfunction'' as defined by Sec. 234.5, does not mean that the
report is any less accurate or truthful.
In consideration of the many comments received on this issue, FRA
decided in the final rule to refrain from the use of the phrase ``not a
credible report,'' so as not, however inadvertently, to disparage or
undermine the legitimacy of reports that originate from the general
public. Instead, FRA created the new, defined term, ``public report of
warning system malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing,'' which
means a report that contains specific information regarding a warning
system malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing that is supplied to
a railroad via the ENS by a member of the public who does not belong to
one of the categories of individuals listed in the definition of
``Credible report of warning system malfunction'' in Sec. 234.5. In
other words, public report of warning system malfunction means a report
that contains specific information regarding a warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing that is supplied to a
railroad via the ENS by someone who is not a railroad employee, law
enforcement officer, highway traffic official, or other employee of a
public agency acting in an official capacity. The term ``public report
of warning system malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing'' only
applies to warning system malfunctions that occur at highway-rail grade
crossings. If a report is neither a ``credible report of warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing'' nor a ``public report of
warning system malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing,'' then it
is just referred to in the final rule as a ``report'' of another type
of unsafe condition, e.g., ``report of warning system failure at a
pathway grade crossing.''
Paragraph (a) of Sec. 234.305 explains that if the report is a
credible report of warning system malfunction, but the railroad that
initially receives the report is not the railroad that has maintenance
responsibility for the warning system at the highway-rail grade
crossing to which the report pertains, that railroad is already
responsible for contacting the trains that are authorized to operate
through the highway-rail grade crossing and warn the trains of the
reported malfunction under subpart C. After warning the trains, the
railroad must then contact the railroad that has maintenance
responsibility for the warning system at the highway-rail grade
crossing, which will then be responsible for taking the appropriate
remedial action under subpart C. FRA recognizes that in some instances
the railroad that initially receives the report may not be the railroad
that has maintenance responsibility over the warning system at that
crossing. Therefore, to ensure that the responsibility to take the
appropriate remedial action as required by subpart C falls on the
appropriate railroad, Sec. 234.305(a)(2) requires the railroad with
maintenance responsibility to take the appropriate remedial action
under subpart C, except for promptly contacting the trains operating
through the crossing and the law enforcement agency with jurisdiction
for the crossing; these responsibilities remain with the dispatching
railroad.
Paragraph (b) of Sec. 234.305 is the general rule on response to
an ENS-generated public report of a warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing, and requires that railroads take certain
specified remedial action in response to such a report. In other words,
Sec. 234.305(b) addresses ENS-generated reports of warning system
malfunctions that do not fall within the amended definition of
``credible report of warning system malfunction'' in Sec. 234.5
because the report is made by someone who is not a railroad employee,
law enforcement officer, highway traffic official, or other employee of
a public agency acting in an official capacity. In particular, if a
railroad receives such a public report of a warning system malfunction
and that railroad has maintenance responsibility for the warning system
at the crossing, the railroad must promptly contact all trains that are
authorized to operate through the grade crossing about which the report
pertains, in an effort to notify the train crews of the reported
malfunction prior to each train's arrival at the crossing. The railroad
must then promptly contact the law enforcement agency that has
jurisdiction over the crossing and provide the necessary information
for the law enforcement agency to direct traffic or carry out other
activities to maintain safety at the grade crossing. Further, the
railroad must promptly investigate the report and determine the nature
of the malfunction and, if necessary, take appropriate action as
required by a provision of existing 49 CFR part 234, subpart D, i.e.,
Sec. 234.207(a), which requires that ``[w]hen any essential component
of a highway-rail grade crossing warning system fails to perform its
intended function, the cause shall be determined and the faulty
component adjusted, repaired, or replaced without undue delay.''
If a railroad receives a public report of a warning system
malfunction and that railroad does not have maintenance responsibility
for the warning system at the highway-rail grade crossing, the railroad
must promptly contact the train crews of all trains that are authorized
to operate through the grade crossing to which the report pertains, in
an effort to notify the train crews of the reported malfunction prior
to each train's arrival at the crossing. The railroad must then
promptly contact the law enforcement agency that has jurisdiction over
the grade crossing and provide the necessary information for the law
enforcement agency to direct traffic or carry out other activities to
maintain safety at the grade crossing. The railroad must then promptly
contact the railroad that has maintenance responsibility for the
warning system and inform that railroad of the reported malfunction.
The railroad having maintenance responsibility must promptly
investigate the report, determine the nature of the malfunction, and
take the appropriate action as required by 49 CFR 234.207(a) if
necessary.
Paragraph (c) of Sec. 234.305 is the general rule on response to a
report of a warning system failure at a pathway grade crossing. If the
dispatching railroad for the pathway crossing receives a report
pursuant to Sec. 234.303(c)(1) and that railroad also has maintenance
responsibility for the active warning system at the pathway grade
crossing, the railroad shall promptly contact all trains that are
authorized to operate through the pathway grade crossings to which the
report pertains, in an effort to notify the train crews of the reported
failure prior to each train's arrival at the crossing. The railroad
shall then promptly contact the law enforcement agency having
jurisdiction over the pathway grade crossing and provide the necessary
information to the law enforcement agency to direct traffic or carry
out other activities to maintain safety at the pathway grade crossing.
Finally, the railroad shall then promptly investigate
[[Page 35176]]
the report, determine the nature of the reported failure, and without
undue delay repair the active warning system if necessary.
If the dispatching railroad receives a report of a warning system
failure at a pathway grade crossing and that dispatching railroad does
not have maintenance responsibility for the warning system at the
pathway grade crossing, the dispatching railroad must promptly contact
all trains that are authorized to operate through the pathway grade
crossing to which the report pertains, in an effort to notify the train
crews of the reported failure prior to each train's arrival at the
crossing. The dispatching railroad must then promptly contact the law
enforcement agency that has jurisdiction over the pathway grade
crossing and provide the necessary information for the law enforcement
agency to direct traffic or carry out other activities to maintain
safety at the pathway grade crossing. The dispatching railroad must
then promptly contact the railroad that has maintenance responsibility
for the warning system at the pathway grade crossing and inform that
railroad of the reported failure. The railroad having maintenance
responsibility shall then promptly investigate the report, determine
the nature of the reported failure, and without undue delay repair the
warning system if necessary.
Paragraph (d) of Sec. 234.305 is the general rule on response to a
report of a disabled vehicle or other obstruction blocking a railroad
track at a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing, pursuant to Sec.
234.303(c)(3) or (d)(2), respectively. If the dispatching railroad
receives a report of a disabled vehicle or obstruction blocking a
railroad track at a grade crossing, and that railroad also has
maintenance responsibility for the crossing, the railroad must promptly
contact all trains that are authorized to operate through the grade
crossing to which the report pertains, in an effort to notify the train
crews of the reported disabled vehicle or obstruction prior to each
train's arrival at the crossing. The railroad must then contact the law
enforcement agency having jurisdiction over the grade crossing to
provide that agency with the information necessary to assist in the
removal of the disabled vehicle or other obstruction, or to carry out
other activities to maintain safety at the crossing. In the NPRM, FRA
solicited comments on whether to require the railroad that receives the
report (i.e., dispatching railroad) to contact the maintaining railroad
if the obstruction is anything other than a disabled vehicle, stating
that ``[t]he maintaining railroad would then be responsible for
contacting the law enforcement agency and any other entities to assist
in directing traffic (if necessary) and removing the obstruction.'' AAR
commented that the obstruction could be something beyond the power of
the maintaining railroad to address and that requiring the maintaining
railroad to be notified in such circumstances serves no purpose. FRA
disagrees. In the final rule, paragraph (d)(2) of this section requires
that, if the dispatching and maintaining railroad are not the same
entity, after the dispatching railroad promptly contacts the
appropriate trains and law enforcement agency, it must then promptly
contact the maintaining railroad to inform it of the obstruction
blocking the track. FRA has determined that the quickest way to contact
the law enforcement agency is to have the dispatching railroad make the
contact. Because the obstruction is blocking the railroad track it has
to be removed in order for train operations to be resumed, and this
action is the responsibility of the maintaining railroad. Once informed
of the obstruction, the maintaining railroad shall then promptly
investigate the report, determine the nature of the obstruction, and
without undue delay take the necessary action to have the obstruction
removed.
Paragraph (e) of Sec. 234.305 is the special rule on contacting a
train that is not required to have communication equipment. Section
220.9 of FRA's regulations on railroad communications sets forth
communication equipment standards for trains. 49 CFR 220.9. These
standards vary according to specific criteria set forth in Sec. 220.9.
According to Sec. 220.9(b), no communication equipment is required on
a train if that train does not transport passengers or hazardous
material and does not engage in joint operations or operate at a speed
greater than 25 miles per hour. See 63 FR 47188 (Sept. 4, 1998); Sec.
220.9(b)(1)-(4). However, in subpart E, upon receipt of a credible
report of warning system malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing,
a public report of warning system malfunction at a highway-rail grade
crossing, a report of warning system failure at a pathway grade
crossing, or a report of disabled vehicle or other obstruction blocking
a track, a railroad will be required to promptly contact all trains
authorized to operate through the highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing to which the report pertains, to notify the train crews of the
reported unsafe condition prior to each train's arrival at the
crossing. If that train is not required by Sec. 220.9 to have any
communications equipment, the railroad must contact that train by the
quickest means available. Currently, railroad employees are required by
49 CFR 220.13(a) to immediately report certain emergencies by the
quickest means available. To maintain consistency among FRA
regulations, Sec. 234.305(e) requires that the quickest means used to
contact a train upon receipt of a report of a warning system
malfunction, warning system failure, or disabled vehicle or other
obstruction blocking a track at the crossing is consistent with the
quickest means that an employee would use to report an emergency
pursuant to Sec. 220.13(a).
Paragraph (f) of Sec. 234.305 is the general rule on response to a
report of an obstruction to the view of a pedestrian or a vehicle
operator for a reasonable distance in either direction of a train's
approach to the highway-rail or pathway grade crossing (i.e., visual
obstruction). When the dispatching railroad receives a report of a
visual obstruction and the railroad also has maintenance responsibility
for the highway-rail or pathway grade crossing, the railroad shall
timely investigate the report and remove the visual obstruction if it
is lawful and feasible to do so. If the dispatching railroad does not
have maintenance responsibility for the highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing, the dispatching railroad shall promptly contact the railroad
having maintenance responsibility for the highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing, which shall timely investigate the report and remove the
visual obstruction, if it is lawful and feasible to do so. FRA
recognizes that in certain instances it may not be possible to remove a
visual obstruction, such as a natural visual obstruction due to the
steepness of the road or path approaching the crossing or a visual
obstruction due to the curvature of the track, or it may not be lawful
to do so. Therefore, Sec. 234.305(f) imposes a duty on the maintaining
railroad to remove the visual obstruction only if it is lawful and
feasible to do so.
In the NPRM, FRA solicited comments on what types of visual
obstructions are not feasible to remove. AAR responded that ``not all
obstructions are within the control of the railroads and can be
cleared.'' Other commenters expressed similar concerns, to include the
ILCC, which cited topographical features, appurtenances, and structures
required by local conditions, such as retaining walls, and drainage
structures, as types of obstructions that may not be feasible for the
railroad to correct or remove. FRA recognizes that not all obstructions
to view are feasible to correct, or within the legal right of the
railroad to do so.
[[Page 35177]]
Additionally, some commenters noted that the use of the words
``obstruction'' and ``feasible'' are vague concepts. FRA intentionally
chose to use such ambiguous terms. Individuals who use a crossing may
have varying degrees of perspective on what constitutes an unsafe
obstruction. Furthermore, it is the responsibility of the railroad,
once a report of this type is received, to investigate and make its own
determination as to whether it is lawful and feasible to correct the
situation. Additionally, the ILCC urged FRA to refrain from
categorically excluding certain types of reports of visual obstructions
from the reports that a railroad would be required to investigate. FRA
agreed with the ILCC's suggestion, and the final rule does not limit
the types of obstructions to view that a railroad would be required to
investigate and correct, if lawful and feasible to do so.
Paragraph (g) of Sec. 234.305 is the general rule on response to a
report of other unsafe conditions at a highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing. In the final rule, FRA combined proposed (g)(1) and (g)(2)
into one paragraph. If the dispatching railroad receives a report
related to a safety device at a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing,
such as a downed crossbuck or other similar grade crossing device, or a
report of any other unsafe condition, such as a pothole in the
crossing, that is not covered by paragraphs (a), (b), or (c) of this
section, and the railroad has maintenance responsibility for the
crossing, the railroad must timely investigate the report, and if the
railroad finds that the unsafe condition exists, the railroad must
timely correct it if it is lawful and feasible to do so. However, if
the dispatching railroad that receives the report does not also have
maintenance responsibility for the crossing, upon receipt of the
report, the railroad must timely inform the maintaining railroad of the
reported unsafe condition. The maintaining railroad must then timely
investigate the report, and if it finds that the unsafe condition
exists, it must timely correct it if it is lawful and feasible to do
so. In the NPRM, FRA solicited comments on what types of other unsafe
conditions are not feasible to correct. AAR noted that the failure of
nearby highway signals to properly coordinate timing with crossing
signals may not be feasible to correct. FRA agrees that improperly
programmed highway signals are beyond the ability of the railroad to
correct. However, when such hazards are reported to the railroad, the
railroad is encouraged to report the condition to the appropriate
highway authority.
In the final rule, FRA clarifies the purpose of paragraph (h), by
renaming it the general rule on a maintaining railroad's
responsibilities for receiving reports of unsafe conditions at highway-
rail and pathway grade crossings. If the dispatching railroad is not
the same as the maintaining railroad, the maintaining railroad shall
provide the dispatching railroad with sufficient contact information by
which the dispatching railroad may timely contact the maintaining
railroad upon receipt of a report, as required. Furthermore, to receive
calls from the dispatching railroad of reports of unsafe conditions,
the maintaining railroad must have either a live person answer calls
directly and promptly, or use an automated answering system, unless it
is permitted by the exceptions in Sec. 234.305(h)(2) to use an
answering machine or a third-party telephone service. If a maintaining
railroad uses a third-party telephone service it must do so in
accordance with Sec. 234.307. The exceptions in paragraph (h)(2) of
this section provide, in particular, smaller maintaining railroads a
less costly option for receiving telephonic reports of unsafe
conditions from dispatching railroads. These exceptions are similar to
those extended to dispatching railroads in Sec. 234.303(b).
Section 234.306 Multiple Dispatching or Maintaining Railroads With
Respect to the Same Highway-Rail or Pathway Grade Crossing; Appointment
of Responsible Railroad
In the NPRM, under the section-by-section analysis for Sec. Sec.
234.303 and 234.311, FRA solicited comments on how to handle a highway-
rail or pathway grade crossing where there are multiple railroads
dispatching trains on one or more tracks through the crossing, and
possibly, multiple maintaining railroads each responsible for various
maintenance responsibilities at the same crossing.
FRA recognizes that there are some situations where there are
multiple tracks at a grade crossing where each railroad dispatches
trains over its own track. Under these circumstances, FRA believes it
would create confusion if each railroad posts a sign with its own
emergency telephone number. Having more than one emergency number
posted at such crossings would not only be more confusing for the users
of the crossing and an unnecessary cost for the multiple railroads, but
also a less effective method of responding to reports of unsafe
conditions.
AAR and CPUC suggested that under circumstances where there are
multiple railroads that dispatch trains through the same crossing, the
railroads should coordinate among themselves to delineate their
individual responsibilities. AAR also stated that in such situations
the railroads should ``make arrangements as to whose telephone number
will be displayed on the sign.'' FRA agrees that one point of contact
for the crossing is the most efficient and safest means to address a
situation where multiple railroads dispatch trains through the same
crossing.
Separately, AAR also suggested that FRA include in its Crossing
Inventory database an indicator of where multiple railroads dispatch
through the same crossing. FRA will not be doing this since it is
outside of the scope of this rule. The recommendation by AAR does not
enhance the effectiveness of the rule.
In this final rule, FRA is creating Sec. 234.306 to address the
situation of multiple railroads that dispatch trains through the same
crossing, and the possibility that multiple railroads have maintenance
responsibilities for the same crossing. FRA notes that with respect to
the requirements of this section, the railroads are free to work out a
cost-sharing agreement among themselves.
Paragraph (a) of Sec. 234.306 requires that where multiple
railroads dispatch trains through the same crossing, the railroads must
appoint one of their number to be the primary dispatching railroad for
the crossing and, as such, to receive reports of unsafe conditions
pursuant to Sec. 234.303. The emergency phone number of the primary
dispatching railroad for the crossing shall be displayed on the ENS
sign(s) at the crossing. Furthermore, when the primary dispatching
railroad receives a report of an unsafe condition at the crossing, it
is responsible for promptly contacting all the other railroads that
dispatch trains through the crossing to notify them of the report. Each
of these other dispatching railroads to which the report pertains must
carry out the appropriate remedial action as required by Sec. 234.305
and recordkeeping as required by Sec. 234.313.
The primary dispatching railroad for the crossing is also
responsible for notifying each railroad that has maintenance
responsibility for the crossing of a reported unsafe condition, if the
maintaining railroad is a different entity from the dispatching
railroad already contacted. Finally, in response to reports of unsafe
conditions, the primary dispatching railroad, as a railroad that also
dispatches trains through the crossing, must otherwise
[[Page 35178]]
carry out its own duties as a dispatching railroad under this subpart.
Paragraph (b) of this section, similarly requires that if there is
more than one maintaining railroad for the same crossing, the
maintaining railroads must appoint one of their number to be
responsible for placing and maintaining the ENS sign(s) at the crossing
as required by Sec. Sec. 234.309 and 234.311. The railroad appointed
under this paragraph must post the emergency telephone number of the
dispatching railroad, or if applicable, that of the primary dispatching
railroad, for the crossing on the ENS sign(s) at the crossing.
Additionally, after receiving a report of an unsafe condition at the
crossing from the dispatching railroad, each of the maintaining
railroads to which the report pertains must carry out the appropriate
remedial action as required by Sec. 234.305 and recordkeeping as
required by Sec. 234.313.
Where there are multiple maintaining railroads for a crossing,
paragraph (c) of this section imposes a duty on a dispatching railroad,
or if applicable, the primary dispatching railroad, to promptly contact
and inform the appropriate maintaining railroad(s) of a reported
problem at that crossing. After being informed of a report of an unsafe
condition that pertains to the maintaining railroad's maintenance
responsibilities for the crossing, the railroad must carry out the
appropriate remedial action as required by Sec. 234.305 and
recordkeeping as required by Sec. 234.313.
Section 234.307 Use of Third-Party Telephone Service by Dispatching and
Maintaining Railroads
Section 234.307 addresses the option for a dispatching railroad to
use a third-party telephone service to receive reports concerning an
unsafe condition at a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing pursuant
to Sec. 234.303. This section also describes the duties of maintaining
railroads with respect to their use of a third-party telephone service
as permitted by Sec. 234.305(h)(2).
In response to the NPRM, the Angels on Track Foundation objected to
the use of a third-party telephone service, asserting that it would
compromise safety because railroads would not be receiving calls
``directly.'' FRA does not believe that this method of receiving
reports of unsafe conditions at highway-rail and pathway grade
crossings would compromise safety. All of the Class I railroads
currently have telephone systems in place by which they receive reports
of unsafe conditions at highway-rail and pathway grade crossings. As a
result, Class I railroads are unlikely to employ a third-party
telephone service. Permitting the use of a third-party telephone
service provides smaller railroads with a more economical and less
burdensome option, without compromising safety. As previously stated in
the NPRM, FRA recognizes that many regional and short line railroads
may not have the capability and resources to set up and operate a 24-
hour system to receive and respond to reports of unsafe conditions at
highway-rail and pathway grade crossings. Indeed, requiring such a
system could divert limited resources from more vital safety projects.
The results of the pilot project that FRA conducted with eight short
line railroads in Pennsylvania from October 15, 2001 through May 31,
2003, proved to be extremely successful and demonstrated that a third-
party telephone service is a reasonable approach when considered from
both a safety and economic perspective.
In the NPRM, FRA stated that for a railroad to ``directly'' receive
calls reporting unsafe conditions at a crossing as required by Sec.
234.303, one entity should be the maximum number of entities that may
exist between (1) a caller reporting an unsafe condition at a grade
crossing and (2) the railroad. FRA believes that allowing more than one
entity in between could potentially delay the railroad's receipt of the
report and therefore delay its response to the unsafe condition, to the
extent that the ENS would not be effective. On review of Sec. 234.307,
the BRS suggested in its comments that FRA revise Sec. 234.307 to
ensure that the third-party telephone service is the only entity
allowed between a caller reporting an unsafe condition at a grade
crossing and the railroad. In the final rule, FRA created a defined
term for ``third-party telephone service'' in Sec. 234.301, which
stipulates that the third-party telephone service is the only entity
between a caller who is reporting an unsafe condition at a highway-rail
or pathway grade crossing and the transmission of the report to the
dispatching railroad. The definition also stipulates that a third-party
telephone service that receives reports from a dispatching railroad, on
behalf of a maintaining railroad, is the only entity between the
receipt of the report and the transmission of the report to the
maintaining railroad. FRA also revised the language in Sec. 234.307 to
permit the third-party telephone service to utilize an automated
answering system, as defined in Sec. 234.301, to receive reports of
unsafe conditions at highway-rail or pathway grade crossings.
Paragraphs (a) and (b) of Sec. 234.307 permit a dispatching
railroad and a maintaining railroad to use a third-party telephone
service to receive reports pursuant to Sec. Sec. 234.303 and
234.305(h)(2), respectively. FRA believes that it may be in the
railroad's interest to use a third-party telephone service that is in
the business of receiving and processing calls from the public or from
dispatching railroads because that is the third party telephone
service's specialty. However, even if the railroad uses a third-party
telephone service, the railroad ultimately remains responsible for
receiving the report initially received by the third party telephone
service, and the railroad is responsible for taking the appropriate
remedial action as required by Sec. 234.305 and complying with the
proper recordkeeping requirements in Sec. 234.313. The third-party
telephone service is merely an extension of the railroad.
In response to the NPRM, several commenters suggested that the
third-party telephone service should perform the function of notifying
the train crews and public safety officials when it receives reports of
unsafe conditions at highway-rail and pathway grade crossings,
asserting that this would result in faster transmission of the
information to the appropriate parties. FRA disagrees. The dispatching
railroad is the only entity that has the authority to control train
movements through a crossing, and the dispatching railroad is the only
entity with the practical ability to notify train crews in the event of
an emergency or any other unsafe condition. Police do not dispatch or
otherwise authorize movement of trains. One of the only means available
to the police to warn a train of an emergency would be to flag the
train down with the use of fusees, which in most cases is neither
efficient nor practical when compared to the railroad's ability to
notify its train crews. Furthermore, to allow the third-party telephone
service to directly communicate with train crews, as some commenters
suggested, would in effect alter train movements and create a conflict
with other train movements being controlled by the dispatching
railroad. Third-party telephone services do not have the knowledge,
training, or authority to control train movements.
With respect to dispatching railroads, the role of the third-party
telephone service is intended to be limited to receiving calls from the
public of an unsafe condition, recording the information, and relaying
that information to the dispatching railroad that has contracted for
the third-party
[[Page 35179]]
telephone service. As previously stated, the railroad then is required
to take the appropriate action as prescribed in the rule, to include,
if applicable, contacting the train crews, the local public safety
officials, and the maintaining railroad (if the maintaining railroad is
a separate entity from the dispatching railroad) depending on the
nature of the report. Similarly, with respect to maintaining railroads,
the role of the third-party telephone service is intended to be limited
to receiving calls from the dispatching railroad of an unsafe
condition, recording the information, and relaying that information to
the maintaining railroad that has contracted for the third-party
telephone service.
Paragraph (a) also requires that the third-party telephone service
is reached directly and promptly by the telephone number displayed on
the sign pursuant to Sec. 234.309. In the final rule, FRA decided to
permit the third-party telephone service to receive calls using an
automated answering system, as defined in Sec. 234.301, which has a
single menu of options for a caller to select to report an unsafe
condition at a crossing immediately prior to the caller being
transferred to a live person.
Paragraph (c) sets forth the duties of the third-party telephone
service. The third-party telephone service is required to contact the
railroad immediately when it receives a report pursuant to Sec. Sec.
234.303 or 234.305. The third-party telephone service must then provide
the railroad with a minimum amount of information. First, the third-
party telephone service must provide the nature of the reported unsafe
condition. The nature of the reported unsafe condition must fall into
one of the categories listed in Sec. 234.303(c)(1)-(4) or (d)(1)-(4)
so that the dispatching railroad can take the appropriate remedial
action as required by Sec. 234.305. Second, the third-party telephone
service must provide information on the location of the unsafe
condition, which includes providing the Crossing Inventory number for
the crossing. Third, the third-party telephone service must inform the
railroad whether or not the person reporting the unsafe condition is a
railroad employee, law enforcement officer, highway traffic official,
or other employee of a public agency acting in an official capacity.
The third-party telephone service is required to provide this
information so that the dispatching railroad can determine whether the
report is a credible report of warning system malfunction and, if it
is, the railroad must take the appropriate remedial action required by
Sec. 234.305 and existing subpart C. Additionally, the third-party
telephone service must provide the railroad with the date and time that
the report was received by the third-party telephone service--this
requirement was added to the final rule and is consistent with the
recordkeeping duties in Sec. 234.313. Finally, the third-party
telephone service must provide the railroad with any additional
information provided by the caller that may be useful to restore the
crossing to a safe condition.
Paragraph (d) requires a railroad that uses a third-party telephone
service to provide the service with sufficient contact information so
that when the third-party service receives a report of an unsafe
condition at a grade crossing, it can immediately contact the railroad.
In the final rule, FRA requires the railroad to have a live person
answer calls directly from the third-party telephone service, unless
the railroad is permitted pursuant to either Sec. 234.303(b) or Sec.
234.305(h)(2) to use an answering machine. There may be an unsafe
condition for which immediate action by the railroad is necessary, such
as a disabled vehicle blocking a track at the crossing; therefore, the
contact information that the railroad provides the third-party
telephone service must be sufficient to the extent that when the third-
party telephone service contacts the railroad, a railroad employee
answers the call and takes the appropriate action necessary under Sec.
234.305. The responsibility of the third-party telephone service is
solely to receive reports and relay those reports to the railroad; any
remedial action that is necessary to correct the unsafe condition is
the responsibility of the railroad.
Paragraph (d) also requires a railroad to inform FRA in writing of
its intent to use a third-party telephone service to receive reports
before the implementation of such a service. The railroad must also
provide FRA with the contact information of the third-party telephone
service that the railroad intends to use. Further, the railroad must
provide FRA with a list identifying the grade crossings about which the
third-party service will be receiving reports. In the final rule, FRA
is adding a requirement that the railroad must inform FRA in writing
within 30 days following any changes in the use or discontinuance of a
third-party telephone service. All of this information that the
railroad provides to FRA will allow FRA to evaluate the impact that the
use of a third-party telephone service has on a railroad's ability to
comply with the provisions of this subpart. Finally, paragraph (d)
reaffirms the requirement that once a railroad receives a report of an
unsafe condition at a grade crossing, the railroad must take the
remedial action required by Sec. 234.305.
In response to the NPRM, the organization Crossing Call commented
that proposed Sec. 234.307(d) put an undue burden on the third-party
telephone service by requiring it to comply with all of subpart E
because proposed paragraph (d) stated that ``A third-party service is
responsible for complying with this subpart.'' FRA did not intend to
hold a third-party telephone service responsible for compliance with
all of subpart E. Accordingly, in the final rule, FRA in paragraph (e)
of this section, clarifies that the third-party telephone service is
responsible only for carrying out the duties of Sec. 234.307, in
addition to the recordkeeping duties under Sec. 234.313, and, if
applicable, Sec. 234.315. Furthermore, the railroad is responsible for
any acts or omissions of the third-party telephone service under the
contract that violate these specified sections of subpart E.
FRA recognizes that future advances in technology may provide
opportunities for call-in systems that are not specifically described
in this rule. FRA is willing to review any new technology and consider
its applicability to the regulation, or consider amending the
regulation in the future if warranted. FRA welcomes the opportunity to
review any such technologies that meet the requirements of the
regulation.
Section 234.309 ENS Signs in General
Section 234.309 specifies the color, minimum content and size
requirements, and other aspects of the signs that Sec. 234.311
requires to be placed and maintained at highway-rail and pathway grade
crossings as part of an ENS. A minimum amount of information must be
displayed on the sign so that the unsafe condition may be properly
reported and remedied. Paragraph (a) of this section requires that if
the dispatching railroad and the maintaining railroad(s) are not the
same entity, the dispatching railroad for the crossing must provide to
the maintaining railroad the telephone number that is to be displayed
on the ENS sign at the crossing, not later than 180 calendar days
before the implementation of an ENS is required. In this final rule,
FRA is increasing the amount of time from 30 days as proposed to 180
days to provide the maintaining railroad with sufficient time to notify
the sign manufacturer of the phone number to be displayed on the signs,
to allow for the production of the signs, and then for the installation
[[Page 35180]]
of the signs at the crossings by the maintaining railroad.
Paragraph (b) describes the minimum information that is to be
displayed on an ENS sign, which includes the following: the toll-free
number established to receive reports pursuant to Sec. 234.303(a) (or
non-toll-free number as provided for in Sec. 234.303(e)); an
explanation of the purpose of the sign (e.g., ``Report emergency or
problem to ------------''); and the U.S. DOT National Crossing
Inventory number assigned to the crossing.
To maintain a certain amount of consistency among the signs so that
a grade crossing user may be able to easily identify and understand
them, paragraph (c) requires the signs to meet the following
requirements: measure at least 12 inches wide by 9 inches high; be
retroreflective; have legible text, i.e., lettering and numerals, with
a minimum character height of 1 inch for the information required in
paragraph (b) of this section; and the sign must have white text set on
a blue background with a white border, except that the Crossing
Inventory number may be black text set on a white rectangular
background.
In the NPRM, FRA solicited comments regarding which standards and
guidance provided in the FHWA's MUTCD or Standard Highway Signs and
Markings book (SHSM) should be adopted in the final rule as the
requirements for the signs placed at crossings pursuant to Sec. Sec.
234.309 and 234.311. The majority of commenters supported using the
MUTCD as the standard sign design.
The MUTCD defines the standards used by road managers nationwide to
install and maintain traffic control devices on all public streets,
highways, and bikeways, and on private roads open to public traffic.
The MUTCD is approved by the FHWA and recognized as the national
standard for traffic control on all public roads. It is incorporated by
reference into the Code of Federal Regulations at 23 CFR part 655.
MUTCD specifications include the shapes, colors, and fonts used in
road markings and signs. In the United States, all traffic control
devices must generally conform to these standards. The manual is used
by State and local agencies as well as private construction firms to
ensure that the traffic control devices they use conform to the
national standard. While some State agencies have developed their own
sets of standards, including their own MUTCDs, these must substantially
conform to the Federal MUTCD.
Section 8B.18 of the MUTCD \3\ provides both guidance and a
technical standard for emergency notification signs. Specifically, the
guidance states that--
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices for Streets and
Highways, 762-63 (Washington DC: Federal Highway Administration,
December 2009).
Emergency Notification signs [see Figure 1] should be installed
at all highway-rail grade crossings * * * to provide information to
road users so that they can notify the railroad company * * * about
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
emergencies or malfunctioning traffic control devices.
Specifically, the standard includes the following--
When Emergency Notification signs are used at a
highway-rail grade crossing, they shall, at a minimum, include the
U.S. DOT grade crossing inventory number and the emergency contact
telephone number.
Emergency Notification [s]igns shall have a white
legend and border on a blue background.
The Emergency Notification signs shall be positioned so
as to not obstruct any traffic control devices or limit the view of
rail traffic approaching the grade crossing.
Section 8B.18 of the MUTCD provides the following additional
guidance for emergency notification signs, which specifically states--
Emergency Notification signs should be retroreflective.
Emergency Notification signs should be oriented so as
to face highway vehicles stopped on or at the grade crossing or on
the traveled way near the grade crossing.
At station crossings, Emergency Notification signs or
information should be posted in a conspicuous location.
Emergency Notification signs mounted on Crossbuck
Assemblies or signal masts should only be large enough to provide
the necessary contact information. Use of larger signs that might
obstruct the view of rail traffic or other highway vehicles should
be avoided.
After consideration of the public comments in support of the MUTCD,
the final rule establishes broad requirements relating to the physical
sign characteristics in Sec. 234.309 and the placement of the sign in
Sec. 234.311 that are similar to the standards and guidance contained
in the MUTCD for emergency notification signs. However, FRA chose not
to include a specific requirement that ENS signs conform to the MUTCD.
Rather, FRA believes that the broad requirements contained in this
section and in Sec. 234.311 are sufficient. Because the requirements
in Sec. Sec. 234.309 and 234.311 are quite similar to the standards
and guidance on emergency notification signs in the MUTCD, FRA will
refer to the MUTCD as a guide to inform its enforcement of the
provisions in Sec. Sec. 234.309 and 234.311. Moreover, if a railroad
follows the standards and guidance in the MUTCD, FRA will find the
railroad in compliance with Sec. Sec. 234.309 and 311. Figure 1 below
is an example of an emergency notification sign provided in the MUTCD.
Figure 2 is an example of an alternate design that, like Figure 1, also
would meet the requirements of Sec. 234.309.
The ILCC commented that the sign dimensions and letter size
proposed in the NPRM, and adopted in the final rule, may be too small
for a motorist to read. FRA believes that the minimum required size of
the sign and its lettering reflects the attributes of many highway
signs that are currently in use, and that the size of both is
sufficiently large enough for a user of a highway rail or pathway grade
crossing to read. The ILCC also suggested that the Crossing Inventory
number assigned to that crossing be highlighted on the sign. Paragraph
(c) of this section provides the option to highlight the Crossing
Inventory number by displaying the number using black-colored text set
on a white rectangular background. Separately, FRA acknowledges that
each crossing may have different geometric characteristics that can
pose challenges when positioning a sign. As a result, Sec. 234.309
sets minimum design requirements to allow railroads the flexibility to
install signs appropriate to the individual environment of the
crossing. The final rule does not prohibit a railroad from using larger
dimensions, for example, or adding certain stylistic features, so long
as they do not conflict with Sec. 234.309.
One commenter expressed concern about the use of the term
``emergency'' on the sign, believing that most people are accustomed to
dialing 911 and may call the railroad regarding emergencies not related
to the highway-rail or pathway grade crossing. The final rule does not
require the use of the term ``emergency'' on the sign, only that the
sign convey the purpose of the sign pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of
this section. FRA recognizes that the use of the term ``emergency'' is
one acceptable method of explaining the purpose of the sign. In the
many ENS-style systems that are in place today, from Class I railroads
to the pilot programs in Pennsylvania and Kentucky, FRA is not aware
that calls of this nature have been an issue, and believes the term
``emergency'' appropriately conveys the intent of the sign.
Comments submitted by the Everett Railroad Company expressed
concern that posting of an emergency number could lead to nuisance
calls and false reports of emergencies, placing an
[[Page 35181]]
excessive burden on small railroads. History has proven this concern to
be unwarranted for the most part. As railroads began to adopt various
forms of emergency notification systems, the expectation of nuisance
calls was a concern, but did not materialize. This fact was supported
by the pilot projects, discussed previously, that FRA conducted in the
State of Kentucky, the State of Texas, and with several short line
railroads in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. See Pilot Programs for
Emergency Notification Systems at Highway-Rail Grade Crossings
(Washington, DC: Federal Railroad Administration, May 2006), https://www.fra.dot.gov/downloads/safety/1_800_report.pdf. The pilot programs
did not find that false reports, or nuisance calls were an issue. In
fact, the report concluded that railroads and the public overwhelmingly
benefit from emergency call-in systems, noting,
[t]he preponderance of calls have reported broken or malfunctioning
warning devices, but other calls have reported trains blocking
crossings, rough roadway surfaces, obstructions on tracks (often
vehicles that are stuck), fires, vandalism, trespassers, etc. Trains
have been slowed or stopped to avoid obstructions. Warning devices
have been repaired more quickly because railroads have been provided
more timely notifications that problems existed.
In order for the public to have an effective means to report
warning system malfunctions and other unsafe conditions, a sign(s) must
be located at the crossing with the pertinent information in order to
contact the appropriate railroad and provide the railroad with
sufficient information to correct the unsafe condition. The
organization Crossing Call commented that while collisions on smaller
railroads with reduced speeds may pose less of a hazard, there are
additional benefits to an ENS other than reporting a stalled vehicle at
the crossing. Crossing Call noted that--
[a] properly functioning warning systems [sic] promotes a public
perception that the warning ought to be heeded * * *. An Emergency
Notification System facilitates prompt attention to malfunctioning
equipment and fosters the perception that railroads are concerned
that equipment operates as intended.
FRA agrees. Although railroads have previously been obligated to take
certain actions as required by subpart C if a report of a crossing
system malfunction was reported by a person belonging to one of the
categories defined in ``credible report of warning system malfunction''
in Sec. 234.5, this rule expands the duty of the railroad to take
certain actions when reports are received from the general public.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12JN12.007
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12JN12.008
Section 234.311 ENS Sign Placement and Maintenance
Section 234.311 requires signs of the type specified by Sec.
234.309 to be placed and maintained at highway-rail and pathway grade
crossings. The maintaining railroad for the crossing would be
responsible for the proper placement and maintenance of the sign. The
dispatching railroad for the crossing would be responsible for
providing the telephone number posted on the sign to the maintaining
railroad, if the two are not the same railroad.
FRA received comments from a handful of railroads and industry
associations, two State agencies, and some individuals with respect to
the placement and maintenance of ENS signs. Paragraph (a) of this
section requires ENS signs to be placed and maintained on each approach
at all public and private highway-rail and pathway grade crossings. An
exception is provided in paragraph (a)(2)(i), which was not proposed in
the NPRM, that allows for only one sign to be placed and maintained at
farm grade crossings, as defined in Sec. 234.301. FRA believes that
this exception is warranted because farm grade crossings generally have
less vehicular traffic and people who traverse these crossings
typically are more familiar with the crossings and likely will have
prior knowledge of the presence and location of the ENS sign, if they
need to report an unsafe condition.
Another exception is provided in paragraph (a)(2)(ii), which was
not proposed in the NPRM and which allows for one sign to be placed and
maintained at each vehicular entrance to a railroad yard, port or dock
facility,
[[Page 35182]]
or a private industrial facility that does not meet the definition of a
``plant railroad'' in Sec. 234.5, rather than signs at each crossing
within the yard, port or dock facility or private industrial facility.
As mentioned previously in the NPRM, FRA considered whether to
expand subpart E to cover all public highway-rail grade crossings
located within a port or dock facility, railroad yard, or private
industrial facility and to make such a facility or yard subject to part
234. The ILCC recommended expanding subpart E to cover all public
highway-rail grade crossings located within a port or dock facility.
The CPUC made a similar recommendation. However, these facilities are
typically not open to the general public. FRA believes that a sign
located at each vehicular entrance sufficiently provides an invitee
with the telephone number of the dispatching railroad if necessary to
report an unsafe condition. Furthermore, these facilities often have a
significant number of crossings located within a small area, and FRA
believes that it is impracticable to consider each crossing within
these areas as a separate grade crossing, and posting a sign at every
crossing may not be possible. Additionally, railroads typically operate
in these facilities at very low speed and thus the hazards of a
collision are reduced. Furthermore, treating all the public highway-
rail grade crossings within these facilities/yards as one public
highway-rail grade crossing is consistent with the Crossing Inventory,
Policy, Procedures and Instructions for States and Railroads
(Washington, DC: Federal Railroad Administration, August 2007), https://www.fra.dot.gov/downloads/safety/RXIPolicyInstructions0807.pdf.
A couple of commenters suggested that there be no requirement to
have ENS signs placed and maintained at private highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings because these private crossings typically are
not accessible from public roads and many of them do not have
crossbucks. FRA disagrees with this suggestion because probable
invitees that use private crossings will not be familiar with the
crossings nor have prior knowledge of the presence and/or location of
the ENS signs. The presence of two signs--one on each approach--will
enhance an invitee's awareness and ability to utilize ENS. A collision
that is caused by a vehicle that is stalled on a private grade crossing
and is struck by a train has the same consequences as a similar
collision that occurs on a public grade crossing. The users of a
private grade crossing should have the same opportunity to utilize ENS,
and thus FRA has determined that two signs are appropriate at private
grade crossings.
Furthermore, one commenter recommended that the private party that
operates over the private crossing should be responsible for the
installation and maintenance of the ENS sign at the crossing, as
opposed to the railroad. FRA believes that it is a maintaining
railroad's responsibility to install and maintain the ENS sign;
however, this final rule puts no restrictions on a railroad's authority
to make a private crossing agreement to that effect, if so desired.
In the NPRM, FRA proposed general requirements regarding the
placement of the sign so that the sign may be easily seen and does not
obstruct any other sign or traffic control devices at the crossing. FRA
sought public comment on ``sign placement so the appropriate placement
for optimal visual effectiveness of the sign may be determined.'' AAR
was the only commenter opposed to what is now paragraph (b) of Sec.
234.311. FRA made several changes to proposed paragraph (b) in this
final rule. The paragraph now identifies four requisite characteristics
related to the placement of an ENS sign--that it is conspicuous; does
not obstruct other signs or traffic control devices at the crossing;
does not limit the view of a train; and, if mounted on a post, it has
supports that are crashworthy.
AAR contended that paragraph (b) as it was proposed in the NPRM
should be deleted from this section because the MUTCD already addresses
the placement of ENS signs. Additionally, AAR asserted that some of the
requirements proposed in the NPRM were ambiguous, and therefore would
result in compliance and enforcement problems. FRA believes that the
revised requirements contained in paragraph (b) of this final rule are
more understandable than those proposed in the NPRM. As stated
previously, in the discussion of Sec. 234.309, FRA prefers to set its
own standards for sign placement and maintenance rather than
incorporate the MUTCD by reference.
Several other commenters made suggestions regarding the location
and orientation of the signs. The BRS suggested that signs be placed in
a location where a stopped motorist is not required to exit the vehicle
to read the sign. FRA believes that the requirement in paragraph (b)(i)
for an ENS sign to be conspicuous to roadway and pathway users by day
and night, combined with the size and letter requirements in Sec.
234.309(c), will limit the times that motorists need to exit their
vehicles to read a sign and obtain the telephone number to report
unsafe conditions at a crossing. With regard to ENS signs placed on
signal bungalows, FRA stated in the NPRM that ``[i]t is difficult to
envision a scenario in which placing the sign on the signal bungalow
would satisfy all of the [proposed] requirements [particularly those
that require] a sign to be placed at a grade crossing so that it is
conspicuous to the users of the roadway or pathway.'' The CPUC and ILCC
advocated that signs be placed directly at the crossing for each
direction of traffic, and acknowledged that ENS signs placed solely on
signal bungalows would be too distant from a crossing to be conspicuous
to roadway and pathway users. Yet, Amtrak and New Jersey Transit Rail
Operations (NJTR) each asserted that their signs currently placed on
signal bungalows are sufficiently conspicuous since they are
approximately four times larger than the minimum size required in the
final rule, and the height of the lettering is two to three times
greater than that required in the final rule. Although Amtrak's and
NJTR's signs are much larger than the specifications required in the
final rule, FRA believes that because they are not located at the
crossing itself, but rather on the signal bungalow, the signs are less
conspicuous to the roadway or pathway user who is at the crossing and
needs to report an emergency or other unsafe condition. Signal
bungalows vary widely in their distance from a crossing, so even though
the dimensions and lettering of the signs may be considerably larger
than required by Sec. 234.309, it still may be difficult for a user of
a highway-rail grade crossing to read the sign. Accordingly, the final
rule does not prohibit the placement of a sign on the signal bungalow,
but a sign placed on the signal bungalow, but nowhere else at the
crossing, does not comply with Sec. 234.311. Railroads, like NJTR,
that currently have ENS signs that are only located on the signal
bungalow will have until September 1, 2017, for their signs to conform
to the placement requirements in Sec. 234.311, pursuant to Sec.
234.317.
In the NPRM, FRA solicited comments on other locations at grade
crossings, besides signal bungalows, where the placement of the ENS
sign would not satisfy proposed Sec. 234.311. CPUC suggested that, in
addition to the signal bungalow, it would not be appropriate to place
an ENS sign facing the track, unless there is also a sign for each
direction of traffic; outside of the crossing area; within a heavily
fenced enclosure that would obscure the sign;
[[Page 35183]]
immediately behind another sign; or more than 10 feet outside the
public right of way unless supplemented by additional signs at the
crossing. For the final rule, FRA determined that the requirement in
Sec. 234.311(b)(i) that the ENS sign be conspicuous to users of the
roadway or pathway by day and night, adequately ensures that ENS signs
placed in such locations would not comply.
In the final rule, a sign at a grade crossing is not required to be
mounted on a post, but rather may be mounted anywhere at the crossing
that is consistent with its being conspicuous to users of the roadway
or pathway by day and night, as well as consistent with the other
placement requirements in Sec. 234.311. FRA did not require a specific
location at a crossing where a sign must be placed because such a
specific location may not exist at every crossing. A few of the places
suggested by commenters that would comply with Sec. 234.311 include
mounting the sign below the crossbuck, on the signal mast, below the
gate mechanism, or on a post to the side of the crossbuck. NJTR is the
only railroad that commented that there is not sufficient space on the
crossing gate masts at their crossings to install ENS signs that meet
the minimum sign size specified in Sec. 234.309(c) of at least 12
inches wide by 9 inches high. FRA notes that signs of this size have
been installed on crossing gate masts by other railroads so that they
do not interfere with the operation of the automatic warning systems.
Furthermore, the railroad may display the ENS sign on a separate post,
if necessary.
Section 234.313 Recordkeeping
Section 234.313 sets forth the recordkeeping requirements for this
subpart that apply to each railroad subject to this subpart. Paragraph
(a) of this section requires each railroad to keep certain records
pertaining to its compliance with this subpart. Records may be kept on
paper forms generated by the railroad or kept electronically in a
manner that conforms with Sec. 234.315. In this final rule, FRA mainly
adopts paragraph (a) as it was proposed in the NPRM, with the exception
of stylistic changes and one addition. In addition to the recordkeeping
requirements already enumerated in the NPRM, paragraph (a) now also
requires that a railroad retain information regarding the reason why no
remedial action was taken by it. In the NPRM, FRA solicited comments on
what other information the railroad should be required to record. The
CPUC recommended requiring information about why a railroad found a
reported problem infeasible or unlawful to remedy. FRA believes that
the new requirement in paragraph (a) addresses the issue raised by
CPUC. The ILCC also suggested that weather conditions at the crossing
location be recorded when a caller makes a report of an unsafe
condition. While this may be helpful information for some remedial
actions undertaken by the railroad, FRA is not requiring that weather
conditions be recorded. The recordkeeping requirements mandated by this
section are minimum requirements; railroads are permitted to record
additional information if they choose to do so.
Subpart C at 49 CFR 234.109 (Sec. 234.109) already has specific
recordkeeping requirements for a railroad that receives a credible
report of warning system malfunction; therefore, paragraph (b) of Sec.
234.313 states there is no separate recordkeeping requirement in
subpart E for credible reports of warning system malfunction.
In the final rule, FRA adds paragraphs (c) to this section to
address the recordkeeping requirements associated with new Sec.
234.306. In Sec. 234.306, where multiple railroads dispatch trains
through the same highway-rail or pathway grade crossing, the railroads
are required to appoint one of their number to receive telephonic
reports. Similarly, in Sec. 234.306, where multiple railroads have
maintenance responsibilities for the same crossing, the railroads are
required to appoint one of their number to install and maintain the ENS
sign(s) at the crossing. Paragraph (c) of Sec. 234.313 requires that
these appointments be recorded in writing and a copy of the document
retained by each railroad for the duration of the appointment.
Paragraph (e) of this section requires that each railroad retain
for at least one year (from the latest date of railroad activity in
response to a report received under this subpart) all records that it
makes that are required by this section. Records required to be kept
must be made available to FRA as provided by statute (49 U.S.C. 20107).
Some public comments received by FRA indicated that one year is not a
sufficient period of time for the railroads to retain the records
required by this section. However, a one-year period for retention of
records is consistent with other FRA regulations in part 234.
In the NPRM, FRA solicited comments on whether to require the
railroad to record the caller's name and contact information so that
the railroad could follow up with the caller if necessary. A few
commenters, including the ILCC and the organization Crossing Call,
supported obtaining the caller's name and contact information. However,
the AAR recommended against this proposal, stating that the caller's
identifying information is not necessary for enforcement purposes and
that not all callers would be willing to provide such information. In
light of these comments, FRA has decided not to require a dispatching
railroad to record a caller's name or contact information in this final
rule. Dispatching and maintaining railroads are required to take
remedial actions pursuant to Sec. 234.305, regardless of whether or
not they know the identity of the caller. A railroad's knowledge of a
caller's name and contact information would add little or no benefit to
a railroad's remedial efforts. Moreover, some callers reporting an
unsafe condition may be deterred from making a report if required to
provide their name and contact information.
The Angels on Track Foundation recommended that railroads be
required to provide State agencies that are responsible for selecting
crossings for upgrades and enforcing regulations at crossings with
documentation of the reports of unsafe conditions received through ENS.
FRA believes this recommendation is outside the scope of this rule;
however, railroads are at liberty to provide such information to State
agencies.
Finally, Amtrak requested that FRA protect any documentation and
data prepared, compiled, or collected under subpart E from discovery or
admission into evidence or otherwise used for any other purpose in a
Federal or State court proceeding for damages involving personal injury
or wrongful death against a railroad. Specifically, Amtrak references
23 U.S.C. 409, which Congress enacted pursuant to an FHWA proposal to
shield information provided to FHWA by State and local governments to
further highway transportation safety. Congress in Sec. 205 of the RSIA
did not provide a similar protection against the discovery or admission
into evidence of certain information in a Federal or State court
proceeding in any action for damages arising from information or data
obtained as a result of this final rule. Without an express
Congressional mandate, it is outside FRA's authority to provide the
protections sought by Amtrak.
Section 234.315 Electronic Recordkeeping
Section 234.315 addresses the keeping of records required by
subpart E electronically. This section applies to railroads that choose
to conduct electronic recordkeeping under subpart E. These electronic
recordkeeping
[[Page 35184]]
requirements are modeled after the requirements set forth in FRA's
Railroad Operating Rules at 49 CFR 217.9(g) (Sec. 217.9(g)). The final
rule adopts Sec. 234.315 as proposed in the NPRM, with the exception
of typographical and stylistic changes and clarification that the
section applies only to records required by subpart E and not to
records required by part 234 in general. FRA received no public
comments in response to this proposed section.
If a railroad chooses to conduct electronic recordkeeping of
records required by subpart E, the railroad must provide adequate
security measures to limit employee access to its electronic data
processing system and must prescribe who is allowed to create, modify,
or delete data from the database. Although FRA does not identify the
management position authorized to institute changes in the database,
the railroad must indicate the source authorized to make such changes.
The railroad must have a computer and a facsimile or printer connected
to the computer to retrieve and produce records for immediate review by
FRA representatives. Section 217.9(g) requires the computer to be a
desktop computer. However, FRA recognizes that all railroads may not
necessarily maintain their records on a desktop computer, so rather
than adopting this requirement from Sec. 217.9(g), FRA is allowing
railroads the flexibility to maintain their records on other types of
computers, such as laptops. It should be noted that, regardless of the
type of computer on which the railroad maintains its electronic
records, it must be possible for a facsimile or printer to be connected
to the computer to retrieve and produce records for immediate review by
FRA representatives. The documents must be made available for FRA
inspection during ``normal business hours,'' which FRA interprets as
the time, any day of the week, when railroads conduct their regular
business transactions.
Nevertheless, FRA reserves the right to review and examine the
documents prepared in accordance with the applicable section of subpart
E, at any reasonable time if situations warrant it. Each railroad must
also designate who is authorized to authenticate the hard copies
produced from the electronic format. In short, each railroad electing
to retain its records electronically must ensure the integrity of the
information and prevent possible tampering with data, enabling FRA to
fully execute its enforcement responsibilities. Furthermore, if an
electronic record kept by the railroad pursuant to this subpart does
not comply with paragraph (a) of Sec. 234.315, then the record must be
kept on paper.
Section 234.317 Compliance Dates
Section 234.317 provides the date by which each of various groups
of railroads must comply with this subpart. In response to the
compliance dates proposed in the NPRM, FRA received several comments
from railroads and other groups and individuals in the railroad
industry. With respect to railroads that currently do not have an ENS
of any kind in place, the ILCC recommended that these railroads have 12
months to implement a system that conforms to the subpart. The
organization Crossing Call stated that the proposal in the NPRM to
allow railroads without an ENS to implement one within 18 months (after
the effective date of subpart E), as proposed in the NPRM, was an
overly generous amount of time, and recommended allowing only 9 months
to conform to the subpart. One individual commented that the compliance
dates proposed in the NPRM failed to instill a sense of urgency and all
railroads should be allowed somewhere between six and twelve months to
conform to the subpart. After careful consideration of these comments,
as well as comments from smaller railroads regarding the financial
burden that the rule will place on their business operations (see
Regulatory Evaluation for this final rule), FRA decided in the final
rule to extend the implementation period for railroads that currently
do not have any sort of ENS in place from 18 months, as proposed in the
NPRM, to approximately three years after the effective date of the
final rule, i.e., September 1, 2015. This additional time provides
smaller railroads the opportunity to phase-in implementation of an ENS
in stages, thus spreading out the costs of implementation.
Paragraph (a) of this section applies to railroads that do not have
anything in place that could be considered an ENS as defined in Sec.
234.301. However, if a railroad has a system in place, but some or all
of the components do not conform to this subpart, the amount of time
the railroad has to bring it into compliance depends on which component
is noncompliant.
In paragraph (b) of Sec. 234.317, if a railroad already has its
own ENS telephone service or is using a third-party telephone service,
but that telephone service does not comply with the requirements in
Sec. 234.303 or Sec. 243.307, respectively, the railroad must bring
the ENS telephone service into compliance by March 1, 2014--as opposed
to the six months proposed in the NPRM.
In paragraph (c)(1) of Sec. 234.317, if a railroad already has ENS
signs in place, but those signs do not comply with the requirements set
forth in Sec. 234.309, the railroad's ENS signs must conform to Sec.
234.309 within certain time periods as required in paragraph (c)(1)(i)-
(iii) of Sec. 234.317.
In response to the NPRM, both the AAR and KCS recommended that all
existing ENS signs be permitted to remain in place for their normal
useful life. In consideration of these comments, in the final rule, FRA
is allowing certain signs to remain in place for the lifecycle of the
sign. Specifically, paragraph (c)(1)(i) permits a railroad to keep an
ENS sign that is in place for its useful life if the sign size is
greater than or equal to 60 square inches, and the height of the
lettering on the sign is greater than or equal to \3/4\ inch for the
information required in Sec. 234.309(b). FRA assesses that the useful
life of a sign is approximately 15 years. This modification in the
final rule decreased the estimated costs initially assessed in the NPRM
by $3.0 million over a 15-year period. At present, the majority of
Class 1 railroad signs located at crossings meet the size and lettering
requirements in paragraph (c)(1)(i).
However, AAR also advocated for railroads being allowed to use
their existing inventory of signs if they contain the telephone number
and Crossing Inventory number. FRA disagrees. Once a railroad replaces
a sign, the new sign must conform to Sec. 234.309, so that within a
reasonable amount of time there is uniformity to the signs at crossings
throughout the United States.
Paragraph (c)(1)(ii) requires that if a railroad has an ENS sign in
place that is greater than or equal to 60 square inches, but the height
of the lettering on the sign is less than \3/4\ inch for the
information required in Sec. 234.309(b), the railroad must replace the
sign with a compliant sign by September 1, 2017.
Paragraph (c)(1)(iii) requires that if a railroad has an ENS sign
in place that is less than 60 square inches, regardless of the height
of the lettering for the information required in Sec. 234.309(b), the
railroad must replace the sign with a compliant sign by September 1,
2015.
Paragraph (c)(2) of this section stipulates that if the railroad
replaces a non-conforming sign before the expiration of the time
periods in paragraph(c)(1)(i)-(iii), the railroad must replace the sign
with one that conforms to Sec. 234.309.
Under paragraph (d) of Sec. 234.317, if a railroad already has ENS
signs in place,
[[Page 35185]]
but the placement of those signs does not comply with the requirements
set forth in Sec. 234.311, the placement of the signs must conform to
Sec. 234.311 by September 1, 2017. If the railroad changes the
placement of the sign before the expiration of the five-year period,
the placement of the sign must conform to Sec. 234.311. Furthermore,
if a railroad replaces a sign before September 1, 2017 so that the sign
conforms to Sec. 234.309 and the placement of the sign does not
conform to Sec. 234.311, the railroad must also change the placement
of the sign so that it conforms to Sec. 234.311.
In the NPRM, FRA solicited comments on whether to reduce the amount
of time that the railroad would have to bring the placement of the sign
into compliance if the only sign at the crossing is placed on the
signal bungalow. FRA received several comments on this issue. The BRS,
the CPUC, and the ILCC all supported reducing the implementation period
from 5 years to 18 months or less for signs placed on signal bungalows.
However, to provide economic relief to railroads, FRA decided in the
final rule to grant railroads until September 1, 2017, allotting the
same amount of time as proposed in the NPRM.
Finally, paragraph (e) requires that if a railroad already conducts
recordkeeping as part of its ENS, but the recordkeeping does not
conform to Sec. 234.313 or Sec. 234.315, the railroad's recordkeeping
must conform to Sec. 234.313 or, as applicable, Sec. 234.315, by
September 1, 2013.
V. Regulatory Impact
A. Executive Order 12866 and 13563 and DOT Regulatory Policies and
Procedures
This final rule has been evaluated in accordance with existing
policies and procedures and determined to be non-significant under both
Executive Order 12866 and 13563 and DOT policies and procedures. See 44
FR 11034 (February 26, 1979). FRA has prepared and placed in the docket
a regulatory evaluation addressing the economic impact of this final
rule. FRA has met with and made presentations to those who are likely
to be affected by this rule in order to seek their views on the rule.
As part of the regulatory evaluation, FRA has assessed quantitative
measurements of the cost streams expected to result from the
implementation of this final rule. For the 15-year period analyzed, the
estimated quantified cost that will be imposed on industry totals $15.6
million with a present value (PV, 7 percent) of $10.1 million. The
requirements that are expected to impose the largest burdens relate to
recordkeeping and the purchase and installation of signs at grade
crossings. The table below presents the estimated costs associated with
this final rule.
15-Year Estimated Costs of the Final Rule
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 234.303--Toll-Free Service...................... $989,870
Section 234.306--Multiple Dispatching or Maintaining 9,800
Railroads..............................................
Section 234.307--Third-Party Service.................... 2,881
Section 234.309--Signs (Materials)...................... 2,863,448
Section 234.309--Signs (Installation)................... 2,007,754
Section 234.311--Post (Materials)....................... 238,621
Section 234.311--Post (Installation).................... 200,775
Section 234.313--Initial Recordkeeping.................. 299,790
Section 234.313--Remedial Recordkeeping................. 3,490,728
---------------
Total............................................... $10,103,668
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dollars are discounted at a present value rate of 7 percent. Note that
numbers may not add due to rounding.
As part of the regulatory evaluation, FRA has explained what the
likely benefits for this final rule will be, and provided numerical
assessments of the potential value of such benefits. This final rule is
expected to improve railroad safety by ensuring that all highway-rail
and pathway grade crossings have adequate signage to enable the public
to inform the railroad of emergencies and other unsafe conditions. The
primary benefits include a heightened safety environment in grade
crossing areas and potential avoidance of casualties, fatalities, and
damage through earlier awareness of track obstructions, including
stalled highway vehicles, and other safety hazards. Thus, in general,
the final rule should decrease grade crossing accidents and incidents
and associated casualties and damages. Other than the reduction of
accidents, fatalities, injuries, and associated damages, FRA is aware
of several other benefits that will occur when accidents are prevented.
Savings have been estimated for avoiding train delay, highway delay,
emergency personnel responding, vehicle towing, and accident clean-up
associated with grade crossing accidents.
Based on its analysis, FRA has found that the expected accident
reduction benefits will exceed the total cost of this final rule. Over
a 15-year period, this analysis finds that $57.8 million in cost
savings will accrue through casualty prevention, damage avoidance, and
other benefits. The discounted value of this is $31.7 million (PV, 7
percent). The table below presents the estimated benefits associated
with this final rule.
15-Year Estimated Benefits of the Final Rule
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fatalities (Prevented).................................. $21,519,783
Injuries (Prevented).................................... 8,587,839
Highway Vehicle Damage (Avoided)........................ 651,130
Railroad Equipment Damage (Avoided)..................... 327,922
Track/Structure Damage (Avoided)........................ 203,988
Other Benefits.......................................... 416,974
---------------
Total................................................... $31,707,636
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dollars are discounted at a present value rate of 7 percent. Note that
numbers may not add due to rounding.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive Order 13272
To ensure potential impacts of rules on small entities are properly
considered, FRA has developed this final rule in accordance with
Executive Order 13272 (``Proper Consideration of Small Entities in
Agency Rulemaking'') and DOT's procedures and policies 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 earlier, FRA has initiated this rulemaking as a
requirement of the RSIA. This final rule requires each railroad to
establish and maintain a toll-free telephone service to directly
receive calls from the public reporting an emergency or other unsafe
condition at its grade crossings, and to remedy those unsafe
conditions, as appropriate. As part of these duties, a railroad is
required to install and maintain signs at its grade crossings that
display its emergency telephone number.
(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. For the rule there is only one type of small
entity that is affected: small railroads.
[[Page 35186]]
``Small entity'' is defined in 5 U.S.C. 601 (Section 601). Section
601(3) defines the term ``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 entity'' a
not-for-profit enterprise that is independently owned and operated, and
not dominant in its field of operations.
The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) stipulates in its
``Size Standards'' that the largest a railroad business firm that is
``for-profit'' may be, and still be classified as a ``small entity,''
is 1,500 employees for ``Line Haul Operating Railroads'' and 500
employees for ``Switching and Terminal Establishments.'' See ``Size
Eligibility Provisions and Standards,'' 13 CFR part 121 subpart A.
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, which formally establishes small entities as
railroads that meet the line haulage revenue requirements of a Class
III railroad. See 68 FR 24891 (May 9, 2003), codified at Appendix C to
49 CFR part 209. Currently, the revenue requirements are $20 million or
less in annual operating revenue, adjusted annually for inflation. The
$20 million limit (adjusted annually for inflation) is based on the
STB's threshold for a Class III railroad, which is adjusted by applying
the railroad revenue deflator adjustment. For further information on
the calculation of the specific dollar limit, see 49 CFR part 1201. FRA
is using the STB's threshold in its definition of ``small entities''
for this rule.
Included in the entities impacted by this final rule are
governmental jurisdictions or transit authorities--none of which are
small for purposes of the SBA (i.e., no entity serves a locality with a
population less than 50,000). Commuter railroads are part of larger
transit organizations that receive Federal funds. Therefore, they are
not included in this analysis. Additionally, this final rule is
expected to indirectly impact sign and post manufacturers, but only to
the extent that the demand increases for products and services they
supply. Such impact, however, will likely be both small and favorable
to those small businesses.
Railroads. FRA estimates that there are 710 Class III freight and
passenger (excluding commuter and intercity) railroads in the United
States. Certain provisions of this final rule will apply to all
railroads that dispatch trains through highway-rail or pathway grade
crossings. Out of the 710 Class III railroads, FRA estimates that there
are 153 small freight and passenger (excluding commuter and intercity)
railroads that do not have a dispatching function as part of their
operations; and therefore, would not be affected by these certain
provisions of this final rule. Thus, FRA has concluded that 557 small
railroads will be affected by those provisions of this final rule.
Hence, FRA has concluded that a substantial number of small entities
will be impacted. However, as explained below, the impact on these
small railroads will not be significant.
The small railroads affected by this final rule are defined as
Class III railroads with grade crossings. FRA estimates that Class III
railroads dispatch trains over 59,845 grade crossings. To evaluate the
impact on these railroads, it is helpful to separate them into three
groups by number of employees. Thus, FRA subdivided these railroads
into small railroads, very small railroads, and extremely small
railroads. Small railroads are Class III railroads with 15 or more
employees. Very small railroads are those with fewer than 15 employees,
but more than 2 employees. Extremely small railroads are those with 2
or fewer employees. The table below shows the average annualized cost
per small railroad, by category:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average
Average number annualized
Class III affected entities Number of of crossings cost per
railroads per railroad railroad per
year
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Small........................................................... 203 199 $2,461
Very Small...................................................... 217 69 944
Extremely Small................................................. 137 32 312
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: Federal Railroad Administration 2009 data, compiled on September 1, 2010.
The cost to comply with this final rule largely depends upon the
number of crossings that a railroad maintains. Throughout the
regulatory evaluation, FRA has split the small railroads into three
categories and analyzed the costs and benefits separately for each of
these categories. The burden placed on the very small and extremely
small Class III railroads is generally proportionately less because
they usually maintain fewer crossings.
FRA estimates there are 203 small railroads with 15 or more
employees. This group of railroads has 40,363 grade crossings; an
average of approximately 199 crossings per railroad. FRA estimates the
average total cost for small railroads to comply with this final rule
is approximately $4,304 per railroad for each of the first 3 years, and
$1,037 per railroad per year for each of the following 12 years.
FRA estimates there are 217 very small railroads; those with less
than 15 employees but more than 2 employees. This group of very small
railroads has 15,074 grade crossings, an average of approximately 69
crossings per railroad. The average total cost for very small railroads
is approximately $1,567 per railroad for each of the first 3 years, and
$428 per railroad per year for each of the following 12 years.
Extremely small railroads are those with two or fewer employees.
There are 137 railroads in this category, accounting for 4,408 grade
crossings. Extremely small railroads have an average of approximately
32 grade crossings. The average total cost for extremely small
railroads is approximately $646 per railroad for each of the first 3
years, and $104 per railroad per year for each of the following 12
years. Using the average annualized cost of $312 per railroad per year,
and an average of 32 crossings per railroad, FRA estimates the cost to
these extremely small railroads to comply with this final rule is about
$10 per crossing per year over the 15-year analysis. Railroads with
just a few crossings will incur very minimal costs to comply with this
final rule. Thus, this final rule will not have a significant economic
impact on extremely small railroads.
Many small railroads are subsidiaries of large short line holding
companies
[[Page 35187]]
with the expertise and resources comparable to larger railroads. The
requirement to install two new signs per crossing and provide a toll-
free telephone number in case of emergencies will not have a
significant economic impact on these railroads. Short line railroads
affected by this final rule might collaborate with other small
railroads to implement its requirements, which would lower the burden
on these small railroads.
FRA received several comments related to the impact on small
entities and tourist railroads, regarding the regulatory flexibility
analysis, and compliance with Executive Order 13272. FRA considered
these comments and, accordingly, in this final rule, FRA examined the
impact on small businesses, made cost-reducing changes, and re-
evaluated the costs and benefits.
Several comments on the NPRM requested that FRA adjust the
monitoring and signage requirements to give consideration to small
entities. The changes to the final rule made since the NPRM will reduce
the burden on small railroads. FRA revised the monitoring requirements
for railroads that dispatch trains authorized to operate at speeds less
than or equal to 20 mph through crossings. Also, those railroads that
operate at seasonally or intermittently and at speeds greater than 20
mph through crossings are not required to have live monitoring during
hours of non-operation. Farm grade crossings are now only required to
have one sign per crossing; this reduces the number of signs for Class
III railroads by 13,510. These changes have moderately decreased the
annual and total costs for small entities. Based on changes made in the
regulatory requirements since the NPRM, FRA is even more confident that
the impact on small entities will not be significant.
Previously, FRA sampled small railroads and found that revenue
averaged approximately $4.7 million (not discounted) in 2006. One
percent of average annual revenue per small railroad, or $47,000, is
far more than the average annual cost that these railroads will incur
because of this final rule. Very small and extremely small railroads
likely do have smaller revenues than larger Class III railroads.
However, FRA believes that this average provides a good representation
of the small railroads, in general. If a railroad has annual average
revenue greater than $134,122, the annual cost per railroad will be
less than 1 percent of revenue.
FRA concludes that the final rule will not have a noticeable
economic impact on the competitive position of small entities, or on
the small entity segment of the railroad industry as a whole.
(2) Certification. Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 605(b)), FRA certifies that this final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Although a substantial number of small railroads will be affected by
the final rule, none of these entities will be significantly impacted.
C. Federalism
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 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 final rule has been analyzed in accordance with the principles
and criteria contained in Executive Order 13132. The rule will not have
a substantial effect on the States or their political subdivisions; it
will not impose any compliance costs; and it will 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.
This final rule amends part 234, which contains FRA's principal
regulations regarding grade crossing safety. Although the final rule on
State-specific highway-rail grade crossing action plans published June
28, 2010 (75 FR 36552) removed the preemptive effect provision in part
234, part 234 still could have preemptive effect by operation of law
under a provision of the former Federal Railroad Safety Act of 1970
(former FRSA), which was repealed and recodified at 49 U.S.C. 20106
(Section 20106). Section 20106 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.
FRA believes that Section 20106 sufficiently addresses the
preemptive effect of FRA's regulations. Providing a separate Federal
regulatory provision in this final rule, as suggested by some public
comments on the proposed rule, concerning the regulation's preemptive
effect is duplicative and unnecessary.
In sum, FRA has analyzed this final rule in accordance with the
principles and criteria contained in Executive Order 13132. As
explained above, FRA has determined that this final rule has no
federalism implications, other than the possible preemption of State
laws under Federal railroad safety statutes, specifically 49 U.S.C.
20106. Accordingly, FRA has determined that preparation of a federalism
summary impact statement for this final rule is not required.
D. International Trade Impact Assessment
The Trade Agreement Act of 1979 prohibits Federal agencies from
engaging in any standards or related activities that create unnecessary
obstacles to the foreign commerce of the United States. Legitimate
domestic objectives, such as safety, are not considered unnecessary
obstacles. The statute also requires consideration of international
standards and where appropriate, that they be the basis for U.S.
standards. This rulemaking is purely domestic in nature and is not
expected to affect trade opportunities for U.S. firms doing business
overseas or for foreign firms doing business in the United States.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection requirements in this final rule are
being submitted for approval to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
The sections of
[[Page 35188]]
the final rule that contain the new information collection requirements
and the estimated time to fulfill each requirement are as follows:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total annual Average time per Total annual
CFR Section/Subject Respondent universe responses response burden hours
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
234.303(b)--Receipt by 594 railroads...... 63,891 reports..... 1 minute........... 1,065
Dispatching RR of Report of
Unsafe Condition at Highway-Rail
Grade Crossing.
234.303(d)--Receipt by 594 railroads...... 1,860 reports/1,860 1 minute + 1 minute 62
Dispatching RR of Report of records.
Unsafe Condition at Pathway
Grade Crossing.
234.305 (a)(2)--Immediate Contact 594 railroads...... 465 contacts....... 1 minute........... 8
by Dispatching RR Not Having
Maintenance Responsibility of
All Trains Authorized to Operate
through That Crossing in
Response to Credible Report of
Warning System Malfunction at
Highway-Rail Grade Crossing.
--(a)(2) Contact of Crossing 594 railroads...... 465 contacts + 465 1 minute + 1 minute 16
Maintenance RR by records.
Dispatching RR Not Having
Maintenance Responsibility
in Response to Credible
Report of Warning System
Malfunction at Highway-Rail
Grade Crossing.
--(b)(1) In Response to 594 railroads...... 925 contacts + 925 1 minute + 1 minute 30
Public Report of Warning records.
System Malfunction at
Highway-Rail Grade Crossing
Immediate Contact by
Dispatching RR Having
Maintenance Duty for
Crossing of All Trains
Authorized to Operate
Through That Crossing.
--Dispatching RR Having 594 railroads...... 925 contacts....... 1 minute........... 15
Maintenance Duty for Crossing
Contact of Appropriate Law
Enforcement Authority with
Necessary Information regarding
Reported Malfunction.
--234.305 (b)(2) In Response 594 railroads...... 920 contacts....... 1 minute........... 15
to Public Report of Warning
System Malfunction at
Highway-Rail Grade Crossing
Immediate Contact by
Dispatching RR Not Having
Maintenance Duty for that
Crossing of All Trains
Authorized to Operate
Through That Crossing.
--Dispatching RR Contact of 594 railroads...... 920 contacts....... 1 minute........... 15
Law Enforcement Authority to
Direct Traffic/Maintain
Safety.
--Dispatching RR Contact of 594 railroads...... 920 contacts + 920 1 minute + 1 minute 30
Maintaining RR re: Reported records.
Malfunction and Maintaining
RR Record of Unsafe
Condition.
234.305(c)(1)--In Response to 594 railroads...... 2 contacts + 2 1 minute + 1 minute .06666
Report of Warning System records.
Failure at Pathway Grade
Crossing Dispatching RR
Having Maintenance Duty
Contact of All Trains
Authorized to Operate Thru
It & Record of Unsafe
Condition.
--In Response to Report of 594 railroads...... 2 contacts......... 1 minute........... .03333
Warning System Failure at
Pathway Grade Crossing
Dispatching RR Having
Maintenance Duty Contact of
Law Enforcement Agencies to
Direct Traffic & Maintain
Safety.
--234.305(d)(1) Upon 594 railroads...... 7,440 contact + 1 minute + 1 minute 248
Receiving Report of Disabled 7,440 reds..
Vehicle or Other Obstruction
Dispatching RR Having
Maintenance Duty Contact of
All Trains Authorized to
Operate Through Highway-Rail
or Pathway Grade Crossing &
Record of Unsafe Condition.
--Dispatching RR Having 594 railroads...... 7,440 contacts..... 1 minute........... 124
Maintenance Duty Contact of
Law Enforcement Authority
Upon Receiving Report of
Disabled Vehicle or Other
Obstruction.
--(d)(2) Dispatching RR Not 594 railroads...... 2,556 contacts..... 1 minute........... 43
Having Maintenance Duty
Contact of All Trains
Authorized to Operate
through Highway-Rail or
Pathway Grade Crossing After
Report of Disabled Vehicle
or Other Unsafe Condition.
[[Page 35189]]
--Dispatching RR Not Having 594 railroads...... 2,556 contacts..... 1 minute........... 43
Maintenance Responsibility
Contact of Law Enforcement
Authority regarding Disabled
Vehicle/Unsafe Condition.
--Dispatching RR Contact of 594 railroads...... 2,556 contacts + 1 minute + 1 minute 86
Maintaining RR regarding 2,556 records.
Unsafe Condition at Crossing
& Record of Unsafe Condition.
234.305(h)--Provision of 594 railroads...... 10 info contacts... 1 minute........... .1667
Contact Information by
Maintaining RR to
Dispatching RR in Order to
Be Contacted regarding
Reports of Unsafe Conditions
at Highway-Rail and Pathway
Grade Crossings.
234.306(a)--Appointment of 594 railroads...... 50 appointments & 60 minutes......... 50
One Dispatching RR as records.
Primary Dispatching RR Where
Multiple RRs Dispatch Trains
through Same Highway-Rail or
Pathway Grade Crossing to
Provide Info. for ENS Sign.
(b)--Appointment of One 594 railroads...... 50 appointment & 60 minutes......... 50
Maintaining RR As Primary records.
Maintaining RR Where
Multiple RRs Maintain Same
Highway-Rail or Pathway
Grade Crossing for Placement
and Maintenance of ENS Sign.
234.307(b)--3rd Party 594 railroads...... 50 reports + 50 1 minute + 1 minute 2
Telephone Service Report of records.
Unsafe Conditions at Highway-
Rail or Pathway Grade
Crossings to Maintaining
Railroad and Maintaining RR
Record of Unsafe Condition.
(c)--3rd Party Telephone 594 railroads...... 50 reports......... 1 minute........... 1
Service Report to
Dispatching RR of Unsafe
Condition.
(d)(1)--Provision of Contact 594 railroads...... 17 contact calls... 15 minutes......... 4
Information to 3rd Party
Telephone Service by
Dispatching RR or
Maintaining RR Using That
Service to Receive Reports
of Unsafe Conditions at
Highway-Rail or Pathway
Grade Crossings.
(d)(2)--Written Notice to FRA 594 railroads...... 17 letters......... 60 minutes......... 17
by Railroad of Intent to Use
3rd Party Svc.
(d)(3)--Railroad Written 594 railroads...... 5 letters.......... 60 minutes......... 5
Notification to FRA of Any
Changes in Use or
Discontinuance of 3rd Party
Service.
234.309(a)--ENS Signs-- 594 railroads...... 10 contacts........ 30 minutes......... 5
General--Provision of ENS
Telephone Number to
Maintaining RR by
Dispatching RR If Two RRs
Are Not the Same.
--(b) ENS Signs Located at 594 railroads...... 81,948 signs....... 30 minutes......... 40,974
Highway-Rail or Pathway
Grade Crossings as required
by Sec. 234.311 with
Necessary Information to
Receive Reports Required
under Sec. 234.303.
234.313--Recordkeeping--Records 594 railroads...... 186,000 records.... 4 minutes.......... 12,400
of Reported Unsafe Conditions
Pursuant to Sec. 234.303.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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. Kimberly Toone at 202-493-6132 or via email at the
following addresses: Robert.Brogan@dot.gov; Kimberly.Toone@dot.gov.
Organizations and individuals desiring to submit comments on the
collection of information requirements should direct them to the Office
of Management and Budget, Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Washington, D. C. 20503, Attention: FRA Desk Officer. Comments may also
be sent via email to OMB at the following address: oira_submissions@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 permitted to impose a penalty on persons for violating
information collection requirements which do not display a current OMB
control number, if required. FRA intends to obtain current OMB control
numbers for any new information collection requirements resulting from
this rulemaking action prior to the effective date of this final rule.
The OMB control number, when assigned, will be announced by separate
notice in the Federal Register.
[[Page 35190]]
F. Environmental Assessment
FRA has evaluated this final rule in accordance with its
``Procedures for Considering Environmental Impacts'' (FRA's Procedures)
(64 FR 28545, May 26, 1999) as required by the National Environmental
Policy Act (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), other environmental statutes,
Executive Orders, and related regulatory requirements. FRA has
determined that this final rule is not a major FRA action (requiring
the preparation of an environmental impact statement or environmental
assessment) because it is categorically excluded from detailed
environmental review pursuant to section 4(c)(20) of FRA's Procedures.
(See 64 FR 28547, May 26, 1999.) Section 4(c)(20) reads as follows:
``Actions categorically excluded. Certain classes of FRA actions have
been determined to be categorically excluded from the requirements of
these Procedures as they do not individually or cumulatively have a
significant effect on the human environment. * * * The following
classes of FRA actions are categorically excluded: * * * Promulgation
of railroad safety rules and policy statements that do not result in
significantly increased emissions or air or water pollutants or noise
or increased traffic congestion in any mode of transportation.''
In accordance with section 4(c) and (e) of FRA's Procedures, the
agency has further concluded that no extraordinary circumstances exist
with respect to this regulation that might trigger the need for a more
detailed environmental review. As a result, FRA finds that this final
rule is not a major Federal action significantly affecting the quality
of the human environment.
G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
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 million or more (adjusted
annually for inflation) [$140,800,000 or more in 2010] in any one 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. This final rule will not result in
the expenditure, in the aggregate, of more than $140,800,000 or more in
any one year, and thus preparation of such a statement is not required.
H. Energy Impact
Executive Order 13211 requires Federal agencies to prepare a
Statement of Energy Effects for any ``significant energy action.'' 66
FR 28355 (May 22, 2001). Under the Executive Order, a ``significant
energy action'' is defined as any action by an agency (normally
published in the Federal Register) that promulgates, or is expected to
lead to the promulgation of, a final rule or regulation, including
notices of inquiry, advance notices of proposed rulemaking, and notices
of proposed rulemaking: (1)(i) That is a significant regulatory action
under Executive Order 12866 or any successor order, and (ii) is likely
to have a significant adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or
use of energy; or (2) is designated by the Administrator of the Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs as a significant energy action.
FRA has evaluated this final rule in accordance with Executive Order
13211. FRA has determined that this final rule will not have a
significant adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or use of
energy. Consequently, FRA has determined that this regulatory action is
not a ``significant energy action'' within the meaning of Executive
Order 13211.
I. Privacy Act Statement
Interested parties should be aware that 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 (Volume 65, Number 70;
Pages 19477-78), or you may visit https://www.regulations.gov.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 234
Highway safety, Penalties, Railroad safety, and Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, State and local governments.
The Final Rule
In consideration of the foregoing, FRA amends part 234 of chapter
II, subtitle B of title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, as follows:
PART 234--GRADE CROSSING SAFETY, INCLUDING SIGNAL SYSTEMS, STATE
ACTION PLANS, AND EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION SYSTEMS
0
1. The authority citation for part 234 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 20103, 20107, 20152, 21301, 21304, 21311,
22501 note; Pub. L. 110-432, Div. A, Secs. 202, 205; 28 U.S.C. 2461,
note; and 49 CFR 1.49.
0
2. The heading for part 234 is revised to read as set forth above.
0
3. Section 234.1 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 234.1 Scope.
(a) This part prescribes minimum--
(1) Maintenance, inspection, and testing standards for highway-rail
grade crossing warning systems;
(2) Standards for the reporting of failures of highway-rail grade
crossing warning systems and for the actions that railroads must take
when such systems malfunction;
(3) Requirements for particular identified States to develop State
highway-rail grade crossing action plans; and
(4) Requirements that certain railroads establish systems for
receiving toll-free telephone calls reporting various unsafe conditions
at highway-rail grade crossings and pathway grade crossings, and for
taking certain actions in response to those calls.
(b) This part does not restrict a railroad from adopting and
enforcing additional or more stringent requirements not inconsistent
with this part.
0
4. Section 234.3 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 234.3 Application and responsibility for compliance.
(a) With the exception of Sec. 234.11, this part applies to all
railroads except the following:
(1) Operations of a plant railroad as defined in Sec. 234.5;
(2) Rapid transit operations in an urban area that are not
connected to the general railroad system of transportation; or
(3) Tourist, scenic, historic, or excursion operations conducted
only on track used exclusively for that purpose (i.e., there is no
freight, intercity passenger, or commuter passenger railroad operation
on the track) and only
[[Page 35191]]
on track inside an installation that is insular; i.e., the operations
are limited to a separate enclave in such a way that there is no
reasonable expectation that the safety of the public--except a business
guest, a licensee of the railroad or an affiliated entity, or a
trespasser--would be affected by the operation. An operation will not
be considered insular if one or more of the following exists on its
line:
(i) A public highway-rail crossing that is in use;
(ii) An at-grade rail crossing that is in use;
(iii) A bridge over a public road or waters used for commercial
navigation; or
(iv) A common corridor with a railroad, i.e., its operations are
within 30 feet of those of any railroad.
(b) Although the duties imposed by this part are generally stated
in terms of the duty of a railroad, each person, including a contractor
or subcontractor for a railroad, who performs any task covered by this
part, shall perform that task in accordance with this part.
0
5. Section 234.5 is amended as follows:
0
a. Remove the definition of ``Credible report of system malfunction''
and add a definition of ``Credible report of warning system malfunction
or credible report of warning system malfunction at a highway-rail
grade crossing'' in its place.
0
b. Add definitions of ``FRA'' and ``Plant railroad'' in alphabetical
order.
0
c. Remove the definition of ``Warning system malfunction'' and add a
definition of ``Warning system malfunction or warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing'' in its place.
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 234.5 Definitions.
* * * * *
Credible report of warning system malfunction or credible report of
warning system malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing means a
report that contains specific information regarding a malfunction of a
highway-rail grade crossing warning system at an identified highway-
rail grade crossing, supplied by a railroad employee, law enforcement
officer, highway traffic official, or other employee of a public agency
acting in an official capacity.
* * * * *
FRA means the Office of Railroad Safety, Federal Railroad
Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590.
* * * * *
Plant railroad means a plant or installation that owns or leases a
locomotive, uses that locomotive to switch cars throughout the plant or
installation, and is moving goods solely for use in the facility's own
industrial processes. The plant or installation could include track
immediately adjacent to the plant or installation if the plant railroad
leases the track from the general system railroad and the lease
provides for (and actual practice entails) the exclusive use of that
trackage by the plant railroad and the general system railroad for
purposes of moving only cars shipped to or from the plant. A plant or
installation that operates a locomotive to switch or move cars for
other entities, even if solely within the confines of the plant or
installation, rather than for its own purposes or industrial processes,
will not be considered a plant railroad because the performance of such
activity makes the operation part of the general railroad system of
transportation.
* * * * *
Warning system malfunction or warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing means an activation failure, a partial
activation, or a false activation of a highway-rail grade crossing
warning system.
0
6. The heading for subpart C of part 234 is revised to read as follows:
Subpart C--Response to Credible Reports of Warning System
Malfunction at Highway-Rail Grade Crossings
0
7. A new subpart E to part 234 is added to read as follows:
Subpart E--Emergency Notification Systems for Telephonic Reporting of
Unsafe Conditions at Highway-Rail and Pathway Grade Crossings
Sec.
234.301 Definitions.
234.303 Emergency notification systems for telephonic reporting of
unsafe conditions at highway-rail and pathway grade crossings.
234.305 Remedial actions in response to reports of unsafe conditions
at highway-rail and pathway grade crossings.
234.306 Multiple dispatching or maintaining railroads with respect
to the same highway-rail or pathway grade crossing; appointment of
responsible railroad.
234.307 Use of third-party telephone service by dispatching and
maintaining railroads.
234.309 ENS signs in general.
234.311 ENS sign placement and maintenance.
234.313 Recordkeeping.
234.315 Electronic recordkeeping.
234.317 Compliance dates.
Subpart E--Emergency Notification Systems for Telephonic Reporting
of Unsafe Conditions at Highway-Rail and Pathway Grade Crossings
Sec. 234.301 Definitions.
As used in this subpart--
Answering machine means either a device or a voicemail system that
allows a telephone caller to leave a recorded message to report an
unsafe condition at a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing, as
described in Sec. 234.303(c) and (d), and the railroad is able to
retrieve the recorded message either remotely or on-site.
Automated answering system means a type of answering system that
directs a telephone caller to a single menu of options, where the
caller has the choice to select one of the available options to report
an unsafe condition at a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing, as
described in Sec. 234.303(c) and (d), and immediately after selecting
one of the available menu options, the caller is transferred to a live
telephone operator.
Class II and Class III have the meaning assigned by regulations of
the Surface Transportation Board (49 CFR part 1201; General
Instructions 1-1), as those regulations may be revised and applied by
order of the Board (including modifications in class threshold based on
revenue deflator adjustments).
Dispatches a train or dispatches trains means dispatches or
otherwise provides the authority for the movement of the train or
trains through a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing.
Dispatching railroad means a railroad that dispatches or otherwise
provides the authority for the movement of one or more trains through a
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing.
Emergency Notification System means a system in place by which a
railroad receives, processes, and responds to telephonic reports of an
unsafe condition at a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing. An
Emergency Notification System includes the following components:
(1) The signs, placed and maintained at the grade crossings that
display the information necessary for the public to report an unsafe
condition at the grade crossing to the dispatching railroad by
telephone;
(2) The method that the railroad uses to receive and process a
telephone call reporting the unsafe condition;
(3) The remedial actions that a railroad takes to address the
report of the unsafe condition; and
(4) The recordkeeping conducted by a railroad in response to the
report of the unsafe condition at the grade crossing.
[[Page 35192]]
ENS means Emergency Notification System as defined in this section.
Farm grade crossing means a type of highway-rail grade crossing
where a private roadway used for the movement of farm motor vehicles,
farm machinery, or livestock in connection with agricultural pursuits,
forestry, or other land-productive purposes crosses one or more
railroad tracks at grade.
Highway-rail and pathway grade crossing means a highway-rail grade
crossing and a pathway grade crossing.
Highway-rail or pathway grade crossing means either a highway-rail
grade crossing or a pathway grade crossing.
Maintaining railroad means the entity (e.g., track owner or lessee)
that is responsible for maintenance of the highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing warning device, or for maintenance of other aspects of
the highway-rail or pathway grade crossing. If the maintenance
responsibility is handled by a contractor, such as maintaining a grade
crossing warning system or track structure at the highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing, then the contractor is considered the
``maintaining railroad'' for the purposes of this subpart.
Pathway grade crossing means a pathway that crosses one or more
railroad tracks at grade and that is--
(1) Explicitly authorized by a public authority or a railroad;
(2) Dedicated for the use of non-vehicular traffic, including
pedestrians, bicyclists, and others; and
(3) Not associated with a public highway, road, or street, or a
private roadway.
Public report of warning system malfunction or public report of
warning system malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing means a
report that contains specific information regarding a warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing that is supplied to a
railroad via the ENS by a member of the public who does not belong to
one of the categories of individuals listed in the definition of
Credible report of warning system malfunction or credible report of
warning system malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing in Sec.
234.5.
Third-party telephone service means a service that receives
telephonic reports of unsafe conditions at highway-rail and pathway
grade crossings on behalf of a railroad. A third-party telephone
service that receives reports on behalf of a dispatching railroad is
the only entity between the receipt of the report from the telephone
caller and the transmission of the report to the dispatching railroad.
A third-party telephone service that receives reports on behalf of a
maintaining railroad is the only entity between the receipt of the
report from a dispatching railroad and the transmission of the report
to the maintaining railroad.
Warning system failure at a pathway grade crossing means failure of
an active pathway grade crossing warning system to perform as intended.
Sec. 234.303 Emergency notification systems for telephonic reporting
of unsafe conditions at highway-rail and pathway grade crossings.
(a) Duty of dispatching railroad in general. Each railroad shall
establish and maintain a toll-free telephone service by which the
railroad can directly and promptly receive telephone calls from the
public reporting specific information about any of the conditions
listed in paragraph (c) of this section with respect to a highway-rail
grade crossing and paragraph (d) of this section with respect to a
pathway grade crossing through which the railroad dispatches a train,
except as provided in paragraphs (b) and (e) of this section, and in
Sec. 234.306(a). The dispatching railroad shall either have a live
person answer calls directly and promptly, or use an automated
answering system or a third-party telephone service for the purpose of
receiving reports pursuant to this section, except as provided in
paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Exceptions for certain railroads. If a dispatching railroad
operates in accordance with either of the conditions set forth in this
paragraph, the railroad is not subject to the general duties stated in
the last sentence of paragraph (a) of this section.
(1) If a railroad dispatches one or more trains through a highway-
rail or pathway grade crossing, each of which is authorized to travel
through the crossing at speeds not greater than 20 miles per hour
(mph), the railroad may use an answering machine to receive calls
regarding unsafe conditions at such a crossing. If using an answering
machine pursuant to this paragraph, the railroad must retrieve its
messages immediately prior to the start of its operations each day.
(2) If a railroad dispatches one or more trains through a highway-
rail or pathway grade crossing on a seasonal or intermittent basis
(e.g., tourist, biweekly service, or non-24-hour service), and any of
the trains is authorized to travel through the crossing at speeds
greater than 20 mph, the railroad may use an answering machine to
receive calls regarding unsafe conditions at such a crossing, but only
during hours of non-operation. If using an answering machine pursuant
to this paragraph (b), during periods of non-operation, the railroad
must retrieve its messages daily. However, the railroad must retrieve
its messages immediately prior to the start of its operations for the
day, and during hours of operation the dispatching railroad shall
either have a live person answer calls directly and promptly, use an
automated answering system, or employ a third-party telephone service,
in accordance with paragraph (a) of this section, to receive reports
regarding unsafe conditions at crossings through which it dispatches
trains.
(c) Reportable unsafe conditions at highway-rail grade crossings.
Each railroad shall establish a service pursuant to paragraph (a) of
this section, except as provided in paragraphs (b) and (e) of this
section, and in Sec. 234.306(a), to receive telephone calls regarding
the following conditions with respect to a highway-rail grade crossing
through which it dispatches a train:
(1) A warning system malfunction at the highway-rail grade
crossing;
(2) A disabled vehicle or other obstruction blocking a railroad
track at the highway-rail grade crossing;
(3) An obstruction to the view of a pedestrian or a vehicle
operator for a reasonable distance in either direction of a train's
approach to the highway-rail grade crossing; or
(4) Any information relating to any other unsafe condition at the
highway-rail grade crossing.
(d) Reportable unsafe conditions at pathway grade crossings. Each
railroad shall establish a service pursuant to paragraph (a) of this
section, except as provided in paragraphs (b) and (e) of this section,
and in Sec. 234.306(a), to receive telephone calls regarding the
following conditions with respect to a pathway grade crossing through
which it dispatches a train:
(1) A failure of the active warning system at the pathway grade
crossing to perform as intended;
(2) An obstruction blocking a railroad track at the pathway grade
crossing;
(3) An obstruction to the view of a pathway grade crossing user for
a reasonable distance in either direction of a train's approach to the
pathway grade crossing; or
(4) Any information relating to any other unsafe condition at the
pathway grade crossing.
(e) Class II or Class III railroads. A Class II or Class III
railroad that dispatches one or more trains through a highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing within an area in which the use of a non-toll-
free number would not incur any additional fees for the caller than if
a toll-free number were used, may use
[[Page 35193]]
that non-toll-free number to receive calls pursuant to paragraph (a) of
this section regarding each such crossing in that area.
(f) Reports not made through the ENS. If a report of an unsafe
condition at a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing is not made
through the telephone service described in paragraph (a) of this
section, this subpart E does not apply to that report.
Sec. 234.305 Remedial actions in response to reports of unsafe
conditions at highway-rail and pathway grade crossings.
(a) General rule on response to credible report of warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing. (1) If a railroad
receives a credible report of a warning system malfunction at a
highway-rail grade crossing pursuant to Sec. 234.303(c)(1) and the
railroad has maintenance responsibility for the warning system to which
the report pertains, then it shall take the appropriate action required
by subpart C of this part.
(2) If a railroad receives a credible report of a warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing pursuant to Sec.
234.303(c)(1) and the railroad has dispatching responsibility for the
crossing, but does not have maintenance responsibility for the warning
system to which the report pertains, it shall promptly contact all
trains that are authorized to operate through the highway-rail grade
crossing in an effort to notify the train crews of the reported
malfunction prior to each train's arrival at the crossing. After
contacting the appropriate trains, the railroad shall then promptly
contact the maintaining railroad and inform it of the reported
malfunction. The maintaining railroad shall then take the appropriate
action required by subpart C of this part.
(b) General rule on response to public report of warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing. (1) If a railroad
receives a public report of a warning system malfunction at a highway-
rail grade crossing pursuant to Sec. 234.303(c)(1) and the railroad
has maintenance responsibility for the warning system to which the
report pertains, the railroad shall promptly contact all trains that
are authorized to operate through the highway-rail grade crossing in an
effort to notify the train crews of the reported malfunction prior to
each train's arrival at the crossing. After contacting the appropriate
trains, the railroad shall then promptly contact the law enforcement
agency having jurisdiction over the highway-rail grade crossing and
provide the necessary information for the law enforcement agency to
direct traffic or carry out other activities to maintain safety at the
highway-rail grade crossing. The railroad shall then promptly
investigate the report, determine the nature of the malfunction and
take the appropriate action required by Sec. 234.207.
(2) If a railroad receives a public report of a warning system
malfunction at a highway-rail grade crossing warning system pursuant to
Sec. 234.303(c)(1) and the railroad does not have maintenance
responsibility for the warning system at the highway-rail grade
crossing, it shall promptly contact all trains that are authorized to
operate through the highway-rail grade crossing to which the report
pertains in an effort to notify the train crews of the reported
malfunction prior to each train's arrival at the crossing. After
contacting the appropriate trains, the railroad shall then promptly
contact the law enforcement agency having jurisdiction over the
highway-rail grade crossing and provide the necessary information for
the law enforcement agency to direct traffic or carry out other
activities to maintain safety at the highway-rail grade crossing. The
railroad shall then promptly contact the maintaining railroad and
inform it of the reported malfunction. The maintaining railroad shall
then promptly investigate the report, determine the nature of the
malfunction, and take the appropriate action required by Sec. 234.207.
(c) General rule on response to report of warning system failure at
a pathway grade crossing. (1) If a railroad receives a report of a
warning system failure at a pathway grade crossing pursuant to Sec.
234.303(d)(1) and the railroad has maintenance responsibility for the
warning system to which the report pertains, the railroad shall
promptly contact all trains that are authorized to operate through the
pathway grade crossing in an effort to notify the train crews of the
reported failure prior to each train's arrival at the crossing. After
contacting the appropriate trains, the railroad shall then promptly
contact the law enforcement agency having jurisdiction over the pathway
grade crossing and provide the necessary information for the law
enforcement agency to direct traffic or carry out other activities to
maintain safety at the pathway grade crossing. The railroad shall then
promptly investigate the report, determine the nature of the failure,
and without undue delay repair the active warning system if necessary.
(2) If a railroad receives a report of warning system failure at a
pathway grade crossing pursuant to Sec. 234.303(d)(1), but does not
have maintenance responsibility for the warning system to which the
report pertains, the railroad shall promptly contact all trains that
are authorized to operate through the pathway grade crossing to which
the report pertains in an effort to notify the train crews of the
reported failure prior to each train's arrival at the crossing. After
contacting the appropriate trains, the railroad shall then promptly
contact the law enforcement agency having jurisdiction over the pathway
grade crossing and provide the necessary information for the law
enforcement agency to direct traffic or carry out other activities to
maintain safety at the pathway grade crossing. The railroad shall then
promptly contact the maintaining railroad and inform it of the reported
failure. The maintaining railroad shall then promptly investigate the
report, determine the nature of the failure, and without undue delay
repair the warning system if necessary.
(d) General rule on response to report of a disabled vehicle or
other obstruction blocking a railroad track at a highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing. (1) If a railroad receives a report of a
disabled vehicle or other obstruction blocking a railroad track at a
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing, pursuant to Sec. 234.303(c)(2)
or (d)(2), and the railroad has maintenance responsibility for the
crossing to which the report pertains, the railroad shall promptly
contact all trains that are authorized to operate through the crossing
in an effort to notify the train crews of the reported obstruction
prior to each train's arrival at the crossing. After contacting the
appropriate trains, the railroad shall then promptly contact the law
enforcement agency having jurisdiction over the crossing to provide it
with the information necessary to assist in the removal of the reported
track obstruction or to carry out other activities to maintain safety
at the crossing. The railroad shall then promptly investigate the
report, determine the nature of the obstruction, and without undue
delay take the necessary action to have the obstruction removed.
(2) If a railroad receives a report of a disabled vehicle or other
obstruction blocking a railroad track at a highway-rail or pathway
grade crossing, pursuant to Sec. 234.303(c)(2) or (d)(2), but does not
have maintenance responsibility for the crossing to which the report
pertains, the railroad shall promptly contact all trains that are
authorized to operate through the crossing to which the report pertains
in an effort to notify the train crews of the reported obstruction
prior to each train's arrival at the crossing. After contacting the
appropriate trains, the railroad shall then promptly contact
[[Page 35194]]
the law enforcement agency having jurisdiction over the crossing to
provide it with the information necessary to assist in the removal of
the reported track obstruction or to carry out other activities to
maintain safety at the crossing. The railroad shall then promptly
contact the maintaining railroad and inform it of the reported
obstruction. The maintaining railroad shall then promptly investigate
the report, determine the nature of the obstruction, and without undue
delay take the necessary action to have the obstruction removed.
(e) Special rule on contacting a train that is not required to have
communication equipment. If a railroad is not required by Sec. 220.9
of this chapter to have a working radio or working wireless
communications in each occupied controlling locomotive of its trains
and the railroad receives a report pursuant to Sec. 234.303(c)(1),
(c)(2), (d)(1), or (d)(2) about a highway-rail or pathway crossing that
any of the trains is authorized to operate through, the railroad shall
promptly contact the occupied controlling locomotive of the train as
required by paragraph (a), (b), (c), or (d) of this Sec. 234.305 by
the quickest means available consistent with Sec. 220.13(a) of this
chapter.
(f) General rule on response to report of an obstruction of view at
a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing. (1) Upon receiving a report
pursuant to Sec. 234.303(c)(3) or (d)(3), the railroad, if it is both
the dispatching and the maintaining railroad, shall timely investigate
the report and remove the obstruction if it is lawful and feasible to
do so.
(2) If the dispatching railroad is not also the maintaining
railroad, it shall promptly contact the maintaining railroad, which
shall timely investigate the report and remove the obstruction if it is
lawful and feasible to do so.
(g) General rule on response to report of other unsafe condition at
a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing. Upon receiving a report
pursuant to Sec. 234.303(c)(4) or (d)(4) related to the maintenance of
a crossbuck sign or other similar grade crossing safety device or any
other unsafe condition (such as a pot hole that could cause injury or
damage) not covered by paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of this Sec.
234.305, the railroad, if it is both the dispatching and the
maintaining railroad, shall timely investigate the report; and, if the
railroad finds that the unsafe condition exists, it shall timely
correct it if it is lawful and feasible to do so. If the dispatching
railroad is not also the maintaining railroad, it shall timely inform
the maintaining railroad, which shall timely investigate the report;
and, if the maintaining railroad finds that the unsafe condition
exists, it shall timely correct it if it is lawful and feasible to do
so.
(h) General rule on a maintaining railroad's responsibilities for
receiving reports of unsafe conditions at highway-rail and pathway
grade crossings. (1) In general. If the dispatching railroad is
required under this section to contact the maintaining railroad, the
maintaining railroad shall--
(i) Provide the dispatching railroad with sufficient contact
information by which the dispatching railroad may timely contact the
maintaining railroad upon receipt of a report; and
(ii) Have either a live person answer calls directly and promptly,
or use an automated answering system for the purpose of receiving a
call from the dispatching railroad of a report of an unsafe condition,
except as provided in paragraph (h)(2) of this section.
(2) Exceptions for use of a third-party telephone service and
answering machine by a maintaining railroad. (i) If a maintaining
railroad is responsible for the maintenance of a highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing through which a railroad dispatches one or more
trains, each of which is authorized to travel through the crossing at
speeds not greater than 20 mph, the maintaining railroad may use a
third-party telephone service, in accordance with Sec. 234.307, or an
answering machine to receive reports from a dispatching railroad of
unsafe conditions at such a crossing. If using an answering machine
pursuant to this paragraph, the railroad must retrieve its messages
immediately prior to the start of its operations for the day.
(ii) If a maintaining railroad is responsible for the maintenance
of a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing only on a seasonal or
intermittent basis (e.g., tourist, biweekly service, or non-24-hour
service), the maintaining railroad may use a third-party telephone
service, in accordance with Sec. 234.307, or an answering machine to
receive reports from a dispatching railroad of unsafe conditions at
such a crossing. If using an answering machine pursuant to this
paragraph, during periods of non-operation, the maintaining railroad
must retrieve its messages daily. However, the railroad must retrieve
its messages immediately prior to the start of its operations for the
day, and during hours of operation the railroad shall either have a
live person answer calls directly or use an automated answering system
to receive reports regarding unsafe conditions at such a crossing.
Sec. 234.306 Multiple dispatching or maintaining railroads with
respect to the same highway-rail or pathway grade crossing; appointment
of responsible railroad.
(a) Duty of multiple dispatching railroads to appoint a primary
dispatching railroad for the crossing. (1) Where more than one railroad
dispatches a train through the same highway-rail or pathway grade
crossing, the dispatching railroads for the crossing shall appoint one
of the railroads to be the primary dispatching railroad for the
crossing and, as such, the primary dispatching railroad for the
crossing shall do the following:
(i) Provide its emergency telephone number to the railroad
responsible for the placement and maintenance of the ENS sign(s) at the
crossing;
(ii) Receive all reports through ENS of unsafe conditions at the
crossing as required by Sec. 234.303;
(iii) After receiving a report of an unsafe condition at the
crossing, promptly contact all other railroads that dispatch trains
through the crossing to warn them of the reported unsafe condition,
and, as appropriate, promptly contact the maintaining railroad(s) for
the crossing as required by Sec. 234.305; and
(iv) Otherwise carry out its duties under this subpart as a
dispatching railroad for the crossing, with respect to the crossing.
(2) After receiving a report of an unsafe condition at the crossing
from the appointed dispatching railroad, each of the other dispatching
railroad(s) to which the report pertains shall carry out the remedial
action required by Sec. 234.305 and the recordkeeping required by
Sec. 234.313.
(b) Duty of multiple maintaining railroads to appoint a railroad
responsible for the placement and maintenance of the ENS sign(s). (1)
Where more than one railroad maintains the same crossing, the
maintaining railroads for the crossing shall appoint one of the
railroads to be responsible for the placement and maintenance of the
ENS sign(s) at the crossing pursuant to Sec. Sec. 234.309 and 234.311.
(2) The railroad appointed under paragraph (b)(1) of this section
shall display on the ENS sign(s) at the crossing the emergency
telephone number of the dispatching railroad for the crossing or, if
more than one railroad dispatches a train through the crossing, the
emergency telephone number of the primary dispatching railroad for the
crossing identified under paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Duty of multiple maintaining railroads with respect to remedial
action
[[Page 35195]]
at the crossing. Where there are multiple maintaining railroads for a
crossing, the dispatching railroad (or, if more than one railroad
dispatches a train through the crossing, the primary dispatching
railroad for the crossing under paragraph (a) of this section) upon
receipt of a report of an unsafe condition, shall promptly contact and
inform the appropriate maintaining railroad(s) for the crossing of the
reported problem. After each maintaining railroad for the crossing
receives a report of an unsafe condition at the crossing that pertains
to its maintenance responsibilities for the crossing, the maintaining
railroad shall carry out the remedial action required by Sec. 234.305
and the recordkeeping required by Sec. 234.313.
Sec. 234.307 Use of third-party telephone service by dispatching and
maintaining railroads.
(a) General use of a third-party telephone service by a dispatching
railroad. A dispatching railroad may use a third-party telephone
service to receive reports of unsafe conditions at highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings pursuant to Sec. 234.303. If a dispatching
railroad chooses to use a third-party telephone service, the third-
party telephone service shall be reached directly and promptly by the
telephone number displayed on the ENS sign pursuant to Sec. 234.309.
The third-party telephone service may use an automated answering system
for the purpose of receiving such reports. The dispatching railroad
shall have a live person answer calls directly and promptly from the
third-party telephone service, unless permitted pursuant to Sec.
234.303(b) to use an answering machine. The dispatching railroad shall
ensure that the third-party telephone service complies with the
applicable requirements of Sec. 234.307.
(b) General use of a third-party telephone service by a maintaining
railroad. Pursuant to Sec. 234.305(h)(2), a maintaining railroad that
either maintains a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing on a seasonal
or intermittent basis (e.g., tourist, biweekly service, or non-24 hours
service), or a crossing through which a railroad dispatches one or more
trains, each of which is authorized to travel through the crossing at
speeds not greater than 20 mph, may use a third-party telephone service
to receive reports of unsafe conditions at such a crossing from a
dispatching railroad. The third-party telephone service may use an
automated answering system for the purpose of receiving such reports.
The maintaining railroad shall receive reports from the third-party
telephone service by either having a live person answer calls directly
and promptly, or using an answering machine. If using an answering
machine pursuant to this paragraph, the railroad must use the answering
machine in accordance with Sec. 234.305(h)(2). The maintaining
railroad shall ensure that the third-party telephone service complies
with the applicable requirements of Sec. 234.307.
(c) Duties of third-party telephone service in contacting
dispatching and maintaining railroads. Upon receiving a report pursuant
to Sec. Sec. 234.303 or 234.305, on behalf of either the dispatching
railroad or maintaining railroad, respectively, the third-party
telephone service shall immediately contact the railroad, and, at a
minimum, provide it with the following information:
(1) The nature of the reported unsafe condition;
(2) The location of the unsafe condition, including the U.S. DOT
National Crossing Inventory number for the crossing;
(3) Whether the person reporting the unsafe condition is a railroad
employee, law enforcement officer, highway traffic official, or other
employee of a public agency acting in an official capacity;
(4) The date and time that the report was received by the third-
party telephone service; and
(5) Any additional information provided by the caller that may be
useful to restore the crossing to a safe condition.
(d) Duties of railroad using third-party telephone service. If a
dispatching or maintaining railroad uses a third-party telephone
service to receive reports of unsafe conditions at a highway-rail or
pathway grade crossing, the railroad shall--
(1) Provide the third-party telephone service with sufficient
contact information by which the third-party telephone service may
immediately contact the railroad upon receipt of a report;
(2) Inform FRA in writing, before the implementation of such a
service, of the railroad's intent to use a third-party telephone
service, and provide FRA with contact information for the third-party
telephone service and information identifying the highway-rail and
pathway grade crossings about which the third-party telephone service
will receive reports;
(3) Inform FRA in writing within 30 days following any changes in
the use or discontinuance of a third-party telephone service; and
(4) Take appropriate action required by Sec. 234.305, upon being
contacted by the third-party telephone service about a report.
(e) Third-party telephone service and railroad responsibilities. If
a railroad uses a third-party telephone service to receive reports
pursuant to Sec. Sec. 234.303 or 234.305, the third-party telephone
service is responsible for carrying out the duties of this section and
recordkeeping duties under Sec. 234.313, and, if applicable under
Sec. 234.315. In addition, the railroad remains responsible for any
acts or omissions of the third-party telephone service it utilizes that
violate the provisions of this section or the recordkeeping
requirements under Sec. 234.313, and, if applicable under Sec.
234.315.
Sec. 234.309 ENS signs in general.
(a) Provision of information. If the dispatching railroad and the
maintaining railroad(s) are not the same entity, the dispatching
railroad for a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing shall provide to
the maintaining railroad the telephone number that is to be displayed
on the ENS sign at the crossing, not later than 180 calendar days
before the date that implementation of an ENS is required.
(b) Information to be displayed. Each ENS sign located at each
highway-rail or pathway grade crossing as required by Sec. 234.311
shall display the necessary information for the dispatching railroad to
receive reports of unsafe conditions at the crossing. This information,
at a minimum, includes the following:
(1) The toll-free telephone number (or non-toll-free telephone
number as provided for in Sec. 234.303(e)) established to receive
reports pursuant to Sec. 234.303(a);
(2) An explanation of the purpose of the sign (e.g., ``Report
emergency or problem to ----''); and
(3) The U.S. DOT National Crossing Inventory number assigned to
that crossing.
(c) Sign size and other physical features. Each ENS sign shall--
(1) Measure at least 12 inches wide by 9 inches high;
(2) Be retroreflective;
(3) Have legible text (i.e., letters and numerals) with a minimum
character height of 1 inch for the information required in paragraph
(b) of this section; and
(4) Have white text set on a blue background with a white border,
except that the U.S. DOT National Crossing Inventory number may be
black text set on a white rectangular background.
Sec. 234.311 ENS sign placement and maintenance.
(a) Number of signs at highway-rail or pathway grade crossing. (1)
In general.
[[Page 35196]]
The maintaining railroad, or the railroad appointed pursuant to Sec.
234.306(b), for a highway-rail or pathway grade crossing shall place
and maintain a sign on each approach to the crossing that conforms to
Sec. 234.309, except as provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(2) Exceptions. (i) At a farm grade crossing, the responsible
railroad shall place and maintain a minimum of one sign that conforms
to Sec. 234.309 at the crossing.
(ii) At a railroad yard, port or dock facility, or a private
industrial facility that does not meet the definition of ``plant
railroad'' in Sec. 234.5, the responsible railroad shall place and
maintain a minimum of one sign at each vehicular entrance to the
facility in accordance with Sec. 234.309, in lieu of placing signs at
each crossing within the yard, port or dock facility, or private
industrial facility. Each sign must be placed so that it is clearly
visible to a driver of a motor vehicle located at the vehicular
entrance to the facility.
(b) Placement of sign(s). (1) Each sign required by paragraph (a)
of this section must be located at the crossing, except as provided in
paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of this section, and maintained by the responsible
railroad so that the sign--
(i) Is conspicuous to users of the roadway or pathway by day and
night;
(ii) Does not obstruct any other sign or traffic control device at
the crossing;
(iii) Does not limit the view of a train approaching the highway-
rail or pathway grade crossing; and
(iv) If mounted on a post, has supports that are crashworthy (i.e.,
breakaway or yielding).
(2) A sign placed on the signal bungalow does not comply with
paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section.
Sec. 234.313 Recordkeeping.
(a) In general. Each railroad subject to this subpart shall keep
records in accordance with this section. Records may be kept either on
paper forms provided by the railroad or by electronic means in a manner
that conforms with Sec. 234.315. Each dispatching railroad responsible
for receiving reports pursuant to Sec. 234.303(a), each third-party
telephone service responsible for receiving reports pursuant to Sec.
234.307, and, if applicable, each maintaining railroad shall keep, at a
minimum, the following information for each report received under this
subpart:
(1) The nature of the reported unsafe condition;
(2) The location of the highway-rail or pathway grade crossing, by
highway name, if applicable, and the U.S. DOT National Crossing
Inventory number.
(3) The time and date of receipt of the report by the railroad;
(4) If applicable, whether the person who provided the report was a
railroad employee, law enforcement officer, highway traffic official,
or other employee of a public agency acting in an official capacity;
(5) Actions taken by the railroad prior to resolving the reported
unsafe condition at the grade crossing (e.g., warning train crews,
notifying the maintaining railroad, or contacting law enforcement or
other public authorities);
(6) If the reported unsafe condition is substantiated, actions
taken by the railroad to remedy the reported unsafe condition, if
lawful and feasible;
(7) The time and date when the reported unsafe condition was
remedied;
(8) If no remedial action was taken, the reason why; and
(9) If a dispatching railroad, in accordance with Sec. 234.305, is
required to contact a maintaining railroad, the time and date when it
contacted the maintaining railroad.
(b) Records of credible reports of warning system malfunction. A
railroad that has maintenance responsibility over warning devices at a
highway-rail grade crossing and maintains records pursuant to Sec.
234.109, shall be deemed to comply with the recordkeeping requirements
of this subpart with regard to credible reports of warning system
malfunctions.
(c) Records involving multiple dispatching or maintaining
railroads. (1) Where multiple railroads dispatch trains through the
same highway-rail or pathway grade crossing and appoint one railroad to
receive telephonic reports regarding unsafe conditions at such
crossings pursuant to Sec. 234.306, the appointment must be recorded
in writing and a copy of the document retained by each railroad for the
duration of the appointment or for one year, whichever period is
longer.
(2) Where multiple railroads have maintenance responsibility for
the same highway-rail or pathway grade crossing and they appoint one
railroad to be responsible for installing and maintaining the ENS
sign(s) at the crossing pursuant to Sec. 234.306, the appointment must
be recorded in writing and a copy of the document retained by each
railroad for the duration of the appointment or for one year, whichever
period is longer.
(d) Record retention period; records availability. Each railroad
shall retain for at least one year (from the latest date of railroad
activity in response to a report received under this subpart) all
records referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section. Records
required to be kept under this subpart shall be made available to FRA
as provided by 49 U.S.C. 20107.
Sec. 234.315 Electronic recordkeeping.
(a) If a railroad subject to this subpart maintains records
required by this subpart in electronic format in lieu of on paper, the
system for keeping the electronic records must meet all of the
following conditions:
(1) The railroad adequately limits and controls accessibility to
the records retained in its electronic database system and identifies
those individuals who have such access;
(2) The railroad has a terminal at the location designated by the
railroad as the general office for the railroad system and at each
division headquarters;
(3) Each such terminal has a computer and either a facsimile
machine or a printer connected to the computer to retrieve and produce
information in a usable format for immediate review by FRA
representatives;
(4) The railroad has a designated representative who is authorized
to authenticate retrieved information from the electronic system as a
true and accurate copy of the electronically kept record; and
(5) The railroad provides FRA representatives with immediate access
to the record(s) for inspection and copying during normal business
hours and provides a printout of such record(s) upon request.
(b) If a record required by this subpart is in the form of an
electronic record kept by an electronic recordkeeping system that does
not comply with paragraph (a) of this section, then the record must be
kept on paper.
Sec. 234.317 Compliance dates.
(a) Railroads without an ENS of any kind. If a railroad subject to
this subpart does not have an ENS of any kind in place on August 13,
2012, the railroad shall implement an ENS that conforms to this subpart
no later than September 1, 2015.
(b) Railroads with nonconforming ENS telephone service. If a
railroad subject to this subpart already has its own ENS telephone
service or is using a third-party ENS telephone service, and that
telephone service does not conform to the requirements in Sec. 234.303
or Sec. 234.307, respectively, on August 13, 2012, the railroad shall
comply with Sec. 234.303 or Sec. 234.307, respectively, no later than
March 1, 2014.
(c) Railroads with ENS signs of nonconforming size. (1) If a
railroad subject to this subpart already has ENS signs in place, and
those signs do not conform to the requirements in
[[Page 35197]]
Sec. 234.309 on August 13, 2012, the railroad's ENS signs shall
conform to Sec. 234.309 no later than as required below:
(i) If the railroad's sign size is greater than or equal to 60
square inches and the height of the lettering on the sign is greater
than or equal to \3/4\ inch for the information required in Sec.
234.309(b) on August 13, 2012, the railroad may maintain the sign for
its useful life.
(ii) If the railroad's sign size is greater than or equal to 60
square inches but the height of the lettering is less than \3/4\ inch
for the information required in Sec. 234.309(b) on August 13, 2012,
the railroad's sign must conform to Sec. 234.309 no later than
September 1, 2017.
(iii) If the railroad's sign size is less than 60 square inches,
regardless of the height of the lettering for the information required
in Sec. 234.309(b), on August 13, 2012, the railroad's sign must
conform to Sec. 234.309 no later than September 1, 2015.
(2) If the railroad chooses to replace an ENS sign of non-
conforming size before the applicable compliance date stated, the
railroad shall replace that sign with a sign that conforms to Sec.
234.309.
(d) Railroads with ENS signs having nonconforming placement. If a
railroad subject to this subpart already has ENS signs in place, and
the placement of those signs does not conform to the requirements in
Sec. 234.311 on August 13, 2012, the placement of the railroad's ENS
signs shall conform to Sec. 234.311 no later than September 1, 2017.
If a railroad changes the placement of the sign before September 1,
2017, the placement of the sign must conform to Sec. 234.311. If a
railroad replaces a sign before September 1, 2017, so that the sign
conforms to Sec. 234.309, and the placement of that sign does not
conform to Sec. 234.311, the railroad shall also change the placement
of the sign so that it conforms to Sec. 234.311.
(e) Railroads with nonconforming ENS recordkeeping. If a railroad
subject to this subpart already conducts recordkeeping as part of its
ENS, and that recordkeeping does not conform to Sec. 234.313 or Sec.
234.315, the railroad's recordkeeping shall conform to Sec. 234.313 or
Sec. 234.315 no later than September 1, 2013.
Issued in Washington, DC, on June 1, 2012.
Joseph C. Szabo,
Administrator, Federal Railroad Administration.
[FR Doc. 2012-13843 Filed 6-11-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-06-P