Emergency Escape Breathing Apparatus Standards, 5113-5135 [2024-01074]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
reconsideration the Commission granted
an extension of time for small entities to
comply with all of the provisions of the
MDRI. The Order on Reconsideration
adopted a uniform compliance date for
all providers which results in
approximately twenty months (almost
two full years) from the Federal Register
publication to implement the
requirements. This extension accounts
for the resource concerns expressed by
Petitioners, while maintaining the
important role the MDRI requirements
play in facilitating the ability of the
American public to call for help, and
receive emergency information and/or
assistance during natural disasters, and
other emergency situations. The
Commission also granted a presumption
of confidentiality for filed RuDs which
eliminates the additional step for small
entities of having to submit a request for
confidential treatment under § 0.459 of
the Commission’s rules when filing an
RuD with the Commission when
requested. As discussed above, in the
Order on Reconsideration the
Commission considered the other
alternatives in the Petitioners’ request
for clarification and/reconsideration and
we declined to adopt any of those
approaches. The Commission was not
persuaded that the increased
Commission involvement, expenditure
of Commission resources, and the
undue delay in implementing the MDRI
which would have occurred had we
adopted the alternatives requested by
Petitioners and commenters was in the
public interest, or outweighed the
benefits of moving forward with the
MDRI requirements as adopted in the
Report and Order.
III. Ordering Clauses
52. Accordingly, it is ordered,
pursuant to sections 1, 4(i), 4(j), 4(n),
201(b), 214(d), 218, 251(e)(3), 301,
303(b), 303(g), 303(r), 307, 309(a), 316,
332, 403, 405, 615a–1, and 615c of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i) and (j),
154(n), 201(b), 214(d), 218, 251(e)(3),
301, 303(b), 303(g), 303(r), 307, 309(a),
316, 332, 403, 405, 615a–1, and 615c,
and § 1.429 of the Commission’s rules,
47 CFR 1.429, that this Order on
Reconsideration is adopted.
53. It is further ordered that Part 4 of
the Commission’s rules, 47 CFR part 4,
is amended as set forth in the Appendix,
and that such rule amendments shall be
effective 30 days after publication in the
Federal Register.
54. It is further ordered that the Office
of the Managing Director, Performance
Program Management, shall send a copy
of this Order on Reconsideration in a
report to be sent to Congress and the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
Government Accountability Office
pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act, 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 4
Airports, Communications common
carriers, Communications equipment,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Telecommunications.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene Dortch,
Secretary.
Final Rules
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Federal Communications
Commission amends 47 CFR part 4 as
follows:
PART 4—DISRUPTIONS TO
COMMUNICATIONS
1. The authority citation for part 4
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 34–39, 151, 154, 155,
157, 201, 251, 307, 316, 615a–1, 1302(a), and
1302(b); 5 U.S.C. 301, and Executive Order
no. 10530.
2. Amend § 4.17 by revising paragraph
(e) to read as follows:
■
§ 4.17 Mandatory Disaster Response
Initiative.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Compliance with the provisions of
this section is required beginning May
1, 2024, or 30 days following
publication of an announcement that
OMB review is completed, whichever
occurs later. The Commission will
revise this section once the compliance
date is established.
[FR Doc. 2023–28834 Filed 1–25–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Part 227
Docket No. FRA–2009–0044, Notice No.
2]
RIN 2130–AC14
Emergency Escape Breathing
Apparatus Standards
Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
FRA is amending its
regulations related to occupational noise
exposure in three ways. First, in
response to a congressional mandate,
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
5113
FRA is expanding those regulations to
require that railroads provide an
appropriate atmosphere-supplying
emergency escape breathing apparatus
to every train crew member and certain
other employees while they are
occupying a locomotive cab of a freight
train transporting a hazardous material
that would pose an inhalation hazard in
the event of release during an accident.
Second, FRA is changing the name of
this part of its regulations from
‘‘Occupational Noise Exposure’’ to
‘‘Occupational Safety and Health in the
Locomotive Cab’’ to reflect the
additional subject matter of this final
rule and to make other conforming
amendments. Third, FRA is removing
the provision stating the preemptive
effect of this part of FRA’s regulations
because it is unnecessary.
DATES: This final rule is effective March
26, 2024. The incorporation by reference
of certain publications listed in this rule
is approved by the Director of the
Federal Register as of March 26, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael Watson, Occupational Safety
and Health Manager, Office of Railroad
Safety, telephone 202–493–9544, email:
michael.watson@dot.gov or Richard
Baxley, Attorney-Adviser, Office of the
Chief Counsel, telephone: 202–853–
5053, email: richard.baxley@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Abbreviations and Terms Used in This
Document
AAR—Association of American Railroads
AIHA—American Industrial Hygiene
Association
ANSI—American National Standards
Institute
ASLRRA—American Short Line and Regional
Railroad Association
BLET—Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers
and Trainmen
BNSF—BNSF Railway Company
BRS—Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen
BS—British Standards Institution
CEN—European Committee for
Standardization
CFR—Code of Federal Regulations
CO2—carbon dioxide
DOT—U.S. Department of Transportation
EEBA—emergency escape breathing
apparatus
EN—European standard
FRA—Federal Railroad Administration
FRSA—the former Federal Railroad Safety
Act of 1970, repealed and reenacted as
positive law primarily at 49 U.S.C. ch. 201
HMIS—Hazardous Materials Information
System
IDLH—immediate danger to life or health or
immediately dangerous to life or health
IFRA—Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
ISEA—International Safety Equipment
Association
ISO—International Organization for
Standardization
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
5114
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
LBIA—the former Locomotive (Boiler)
Inspection Act, repealed and reenacted as
positive law in 49 U.S.C. 20701–20703
LPG—liquefied petroleum gas
NIOSH—National Institute for Occupational
Safety and Health
NPRM—notice of proposed rulemaking
NS—Norfolk Southern Railway Company
NTSB—National Transportation Safety Board
O2—Oxygen
OMB—Office of Management and Budget
OSHA—Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
PHMSA—Pipeline and Hazardous Materials
Safety Administration
PIH material—poison inhalation hazard
material
ppm—parts per million
PTC—positive train control
RCO—remote control operator
RFID—radio frequency identification
RIA—Regulatory Impact Analysis
RSIA—Rail Safety Improvement Act of 2008,
Public Law 110–432, Division A
SBA—Small Business Administration
SCBA—self-contained breathing apparatus
SCSR—self-contained, self-rescuer
SNPRM—supplemental notice of proposed
rulemaking
T&E employees—train and engine service
employees
UP—Union Pacific Railroad Company
UTU—United Transportation Union
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose of Regulatory Action
B. Summary of Major Provisions
C. Costs and Benefits
II. Statutory Authority
III. Background
A. Accident History and NTSB
Recommendation R–05–17
B. FRA Sponsored Study
C. FRA’s 2016 Guidance for Developing an
EEBA Program
IV. Selection of the Appropriate EEBA by
Railroads
V. Provision of EEBAs to Covered Employees
VI. Information and Recommendations
Provided by the Railroad Industry and
Railroad Labor Organizations After the
Study
VII. Public Comment on the SNPRM, with
FRA’s Response
A. Introduction
B. Comments on the Preamble, with FRA’s
Response
C. Section-Specific Public Comments, with
FRA’s Response
1. Comments on § 227.201(a)(1), with
FRA’s Response
2. Comments on § 227.203(c), with FRA’s
Response
3. Comments on § 227.207, with FRA’s
Response
4. Comments on § 227.209, with FRA’s
Response
5. Comments on § 227.215, with FRA’s
Response
VIII. Section-by-Section Analysis
IX. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866 as Amended by
Executive Order 14094
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive
Order 13272
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
1. Statement of the need for, and objectives
of, the rule
2. Significant issues raised by public
comments
3. Response to comments filed by the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration
4. Description and estimate of the number
of small entities to which the rule will
apply
5. Description of the projected reporting,
recordkeeping, and other compliance
requirements of the rule
6. A description of the steps the agency has
taken to minimize the economic impact
on small entities
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. Analysis Under 1 CFR Part 51
J. Environmental Justice
K. Executive Order 13175 (Tribal
Consultation)
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose of Regulatory Action
After railroad worker fatalities
resulted from the inhalation of chlorine
gas following rail accidents in 2004 and
2005, NTSB issued a recommendation
that FRA require railroads to provide
emergency escape breathing apparatuses
(EEBAs) to their locomotive
crewmembers.1 Subsequently, in
October 2008, Congress enacted the
RSIA.2 Section 413 of the RSIA
mandated that FRA issue regulations
requiring railroads to provide EEBAs,
and training in their use, for train crews
in the locomotive cabs of any freight
train transporting a hazardous material
in commerce that would present an
inhalation hazard in the event of a
release. The purpose of this final rule is
to respond to that statutory mandate,
and it also responds to NTSB Safety
Recommendation R–05–17.3
FRA first issued an NPRM responsive
to the mandate of section 413 in October
2010.4 Based on the cost-benefit
analysis in the NPRM, and the
comments received in response to the
NPRM, FRA issued a guidance
document 5 rather than a final rule. FRA
1 NTSB Recommendation R–05–17. https://
www.ntsb.gov/investigations/AccidentReports/
Reports/RAR0504.pdf.
2 Public Law 110–432, Div. A, 122 Stat. 4848,
October 16, 2008 (49 U.S.C. 20166).
3 Collision of Norfolk Southern Freight Train 192
With Standing Norfolk Southern Local Train P22
With Subsequent Hazardous Materials Release at
Graniteville, South Carolina, January 6, 2005, which
is posted at https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/
AccidentReports/Reports/RAR0504.pdf.
4 75 FR 61386 (Oct. 5, 2010).
5 Federal Railroad Administration Guidance for
Developing an Atmosphere-Supplying Emergency
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
intended for railroads to use the
guidance document to develop EEBA
programs to protect railroad employees
involved in transporting hazardous
materials posing an inhalation hazard.
However, NTSB found that the guidance
document did not satisfy its
recommendation, and the statutory
mandate remained in place. FRA then
issued an SNPRM, with some revisions
to the NPRM, on March 22, 2023, to
open the matter again to public
comment. Having considered the public
comments on the SNPRM, FRA is
promulgating this final rule governing
the provision of EEBAs as required by
statute.
B. Summary of Major Provisions
This final rule amends subpart C of 49
CFR part 227 to require any freight
railroad to provide a covered employee
an appropriate atmosphere-supplying
EEBA when occupying a locomotive cab
of a train transporting a hazardous
material that would pose an inhalation
hazard if released during an accident.
Employees covered under this final rule
include train employees, their
supervisor, a deadheading employee,
and any other employee designated by
the railroad who is in the cab of a
locomotive. This this final rule
addresses the inhalation hazards
associated with the hazardous materials
that PHMSA identifies as ‘‘materials
poisonous by inhalation,’’ which are
commonly referred to as ‘‘PIH
materials’’ and are defined by PHMSA’s
Hazardous Materials Regulations as: (1)
a gas meeting the defining criteria in 49
CFR 173.115(c) (i.e., Division 2.3—Gas
poisonous by inhalation) and assigned
to Hazard Zone A, B, C, or D in
accordance with 49 CFR 173.116(a); (2)
a liquid, other than a mist, meeting the
defining criteria regarding inhalation
toxicity in 49 CFR 173.132(a)(1)(iii) and
assigned to Hazard Zone A or B in
accordance with 49 CFR 173.133(a); or
(3) any material identified as an
inhalation hazard by a special provision
in column 7 of the table in 49 CFR
172.101.6
This final rule requires railroads that
transport a PIH material on the general
railroad system of transportation to
establish and carry out programs for:
selection, procurement, and provision of
EEBAs; inspection, maintenance, and
replacement of EEBAs; and instruction
of employees in the use of EEBAs.
Railroads are required to identify
individual employees or positions to be
Escape Breathing Apparatus Program (Dec. 2016).
https://railroads.dot.gov/elibrary/federal-railroadadministration-guidance-developing-atmospheresupplying-emergency-escape.
6 49 CFR 171.8.
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
placed in their general EEBA programs
so that a sufficient number of EEBAs are
available and to ensure that the
identified employees or incumbents of
the identified positions know how to
use the devices. This final rule requires
railroads to provide for storage of EEBAs
in locomotive cabs to enable employees
to access the apparatus quickly in the
event of a release of a hazardous
material that poses an inhalation
hazard.
Because the new regulation is being
placed in 49 CFR part 227,
noncompliance with these regulations
may trigger enforcement action and
penalties as described in 49 CFR 227.9.
FRA is also making conforming changes,
minor corrections, and updates to some
of the existing provisions of part 227.
Further, FRA is removing the provision
at 49 CFR 227.7 on the preemptive effect
of part 227 as it is unnecessary because
it is duplicative of statutory law at 49
U.S.C. 20106 and case law. See Napier
v. Atlantic Coast Line R.R., 272 U.S.
605, 613; 47 S.Ct. 207, 210 (1926).
C. Costs and Benefits
FRA analyzed the economic impact of
this final rule. FRA estimated the costs
to be incurred by railroads and the
qualitative benefits of fewer injuries to
crewmembers from PIH material
releasing after an accident/incident.
This final rule requires that a railroad
provide an EEBA for each covered
employee in a locomotive cab on a
freight train transporting any PIH
material. These EEBAs will provide
neck and face coverage with respiratory
protection for the covered employees.
Railroads must also ensure that the
equipment is maintained and in proper
working condition. Finally, railroads are
required to train covered employees on
the use of the EEBAs. The main
objective of this final rule is to protect
covered employees from the risk of
exposure to PIH materials while the
employees are in the locomotive cab or
escaping from a hazardous materials
release posing an inhalation hazard.
Details on the estimated costs of this
final rule can be found in the Regulatory
Impact Analysis (RIA), which FRA has
prepared and placed in the docket
(FRA–2009–0044). The RIA presents
estimates of the costs likely to occur
over the first 10 years of the final rule.
The analysis includes estimates of costs
associated with the purchase of EEBAs
and installation, employee training, and
recordkeeping.
FRA has estimated costs for three
options that are permissible under the
final rule. These include:
• Option 1: Employee Assignment—EEBAs
are assigned to all covered employees and
considered part of their equipment.
• Option 2: Locomotive Assignment—
EEBAs are assigned to and kept in
locomotives.
• Option 3: Equipment Pooling—EEBAs
are pooled at rail yards and kept in storage
10-Year cost
($)
Category
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Option 1: Employee Assignment .........................................
Option 2: Locomotive Assignment .......................................
Option 3: Equipment Pooling ...............................................
92,327,892
107,153,842
33,546,542
Annualized 7%
($)
Annualized 3%
($)
79,247,309
91,909,968
27,116,550
86,066,845
99,855,523
30,415,557
11,283,034
13,085,912
3,860,787
10,089,660
11,706,114
3,565,631
7 A closed-circuit EEBA is a device designed for
use as respiratory protection during entry into
hazardous atmospheres that can be immediately
dangerous to life and health and are described as
an apparatus of the type in which the exhaled
breath is rebreathed by the wearer after the CO2 has
been effectively removed and oxygen concentration
restored to suitable levels.
Jkt 262001
II. Statutory Authority
Section 413 of the RSIA mandates that
the Secretary of Transportation
(Secretary) adopt regulations requiring
railroads to provide EEBAs for the train
crews in the locomotive cabs of any
freight train transporting a hazardous
material in commerce that would
present an inhalation hazard in the
event of a release. Specifically, the
statute instructs the Secretary to
prescribe regulations requiring railroads
to: (1) ensure that EEBAs affording
suitable ‘‘head and neck coverage with
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4700
For all three options, FRA developed
estimates using a closed-circuit EEBA.7
For the ‘‘Employee Assignment’’ option,
FRA estimates that the costs associated
with issuing each T&E employee (with
an estimated 60,000 T&E employees)
with an EEBA as their own personal
equipment. The ‘‘Locomotive
Assignment’’ option would require
installing EEBA devices in all
locomotives in a railroad’s fleet,
regardless of whether a locomotive is
part of a train that is transporting PIH
material. There are approximately
24,000 locomotives owned by Class I
railroads, and FRA estimates that at
least three apparatuses would have to be
installed in each locomotive, one
apparatus each for the conductor, the
engineer, and an additional covered
employee. In the ‘‘Equipment Pooling’’
option, FRA considered only having
EEBAs provided in trainsets that were
transporting PIH. EEBAs would be
brought on board after a determination
is made on a case-by-case basis.
FRA estimates the 10-year costs of the
final rule to be between $27.1 million to
$91.9 million, discounted at 7 percent.
The following table shows the total
costs of this final rule, over the 10-year
analysis period.
Total 10-Year Costs (2021 Dollars) 8
Present value
3%
($)
employees from PIH material releasing
after an accident/incident.
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
lockers where employees would check-in and
check-out the EEBA when PIH is being
hauled.
Present value
7%
($)
The benefits associated with this final
rule are qualitative in nature and relate
to the prevention of causalities and
injuries. This rule is expected to
improve railroad safety by ensuring that
all covered employees in locomotives
on freight trains transporting PIH
material can safely vacate the exposed
area if a PIH material release were to
occur. The primary benefits include
heightened safety for covered employees
and, as a result, earlier awareness/
notification to the public of any
catastrophic release of a PIH material.
Implementation of this rule should
mitigate the injuries to covered
VerDate Sep<11>2014
5115
Sfmt 4700
respiratory protection’’ are provided
‘‘for all crewmembers’’ in a locomotive
cab on a freight train transporting
‘‘hazardous materials that would pose
an inhalation hazard in the event of a
release;’’ (2) provide a place for
convenient storage of EEBAs in the
locomotive that will allow
‘‘crewmembers to access such apparatus
quickly;’’ (3) maintain EEBAs ‘‘in proper
working condition;’’ and (4) provide
crewmembers with appropriate
instruction in the use of EEBAs. The
Secretary has delegated the
responsibility to carry out his
responsibilities under this section of the
RSIA to the Administrator of FRA. 49
8 Numbers in this table and subsequent tables
may not sum due to rounding.
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
5116
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
CFR 1.89(b). Additionally, FRA is
issuing this final rule under the
authority of 49 U.S.C. 20103 and 20701–
20703, as delegated to the Administrator
of FRA pursuant to 49 CFR 1.89(a).
III. Background
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
A. Accident History and NTSB
Recommendation R–05–17
As noted in the 2010 NPRM,
historical data suggests limited train
crew injuries and fatalities related to the
catastrophic release of a PIH material; in
the last decade (2013 to 2022), there
were no PIH-related fatalities of, or
injuries to, T&E personnel.
While rail accidents involving the
release of PIH materials are rare; as
demonstrated by the June 2004 rail
accident in Macdona, Texas, and the
January 2005 accident in Graniteville,
South Carolina, such accidents can be
deadly to both the crew members
involved and others in the vicinity. Both
the Macdona and Graniteville accidents
involved the release of a PIH material
(chlorine) and both accidents resulted in
the deaths of crewmembers.
The collision near Macdona occurred
on June 28, 2004. According to the
NTSB’s report,9 a westbound freight
train traveling on the same main line
track as an eastbound freight train
struck the midpoint of the 123-car
eastbound train as it was leaving the
main line to enter a parallel siding. The
collision derailed the 4 locomotive units
and the first 19 cars of the westbound
train as well as 17 cars of the eastbound
train. As a result of the derailment and
pileup of railcars, the 16th car of the
westbound train, a pressure car loaded
with liquefied chlorine, was punctured.
Chlorine escaping from this car
immediately vaporized into a cloud of
chlorine gas that engulfed the accident
area to a radius of more than 700 feet.
Three people, including the conductor
of the westbound train and two local
residents, died as a result of chlorine gas
inhalation.
The Graniteville accident occurred on
January 6, 2005, when a freight train
encountered a switch that had been
improperly lined. The improperly lined
switch diverted the train from the main
line onto an industry track. Once on the
industry track, the train struck an
unoccupied, parked train. The collision
resulted in the derailment of two
locomotives and 16 freight cars on the
diverted train, as well as the locomotive
9 ‘‘Collision of Union Pacific Railroad Train
MHOTU–23 With BNSF Railway Company Train
MEAP–TUL–126–D With Subsequent Derailment
and Hazardous Materials Release, Macdona, Texas,
June 28, 2004,’’ Railroad Accident Report NTSB/
RAR–06/03, Washington, DC.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
and one of the two cars of the parked
train. There were three tank cars
containing chlorine among the derailed
cars on the diverted train. One of the
cars containing chlorine was breached
causing a release of chlorine gas, which
resulted in the train engineer and eight
other people dying from chlorine gas
inhalation.10
Following the Macdona and
Graniteville accidents, the NTSB issued
Safety Recommendation R–05–17 to
FRA recommending that FRA determine
the most effective methods of providing
emergency escape breathing apparatus
for all crewmembers on freight trains
carrying hazardous materials that would
pose an inhalation hazard in the event
of unintentional release, and then
require railroads to provide those
breathing apparatus to their
crewmembers along with appropriate
training.
B. FRA Sponsored Study
In response to NTSB Safety
Recommendation R–05–17, FRA
commissioned a study of EEBAs in
cooperation with the railroad industry
and railroad labor organizations. As part
of the study, FRA compiled factual
information, performed technical, risk,
and economic analyses, and made
recommendations on ‘‘the use of
[EEBAs] by train crews who may have
exposure to hazardous materials [that]
would pose an inhalation hazard in the
event of unintentional release.’’ The
study, published in 2009, provided
information and recommendations on
the use of EEBAs by train crews who
may be exposed to hazardous materials
that pose inhalation hazards. The study
concluded that railroads should
consider using EEBAs on trains
transporting hazardous materials that
pose an inhalation hazard.11 Part of the
preamble to this final rule draws from
the study; however, after further
consideration of the issues involved and
consultation with representatives of the
railroad industry and railroad labor
organizations (as discussed under
‘‘Section VII. Information and
Recommendations Provided by the
Railroad Industry and Railroad Labor
Organizations after the Study’’), FRA
has come to different conclusions on a
number of matters, including the
10 ‘‘Collision
of Norfolk Southern Freight Train
192 With Standing Norfolk Southern Local Train
P22 With Subsequent Hazardous Materials Release
at Graniteville, South Carolina, January 6, 2005,’’
Railroad Accident Report NTSB RAR–05/04,
Washington, DC.
11 See ‘‘Emergency Escape Breathing Apparatus,’’
FRA Office of Research and Development, Final
Report, May 2009, which is posted at https://
railroads.dot.gov/sites/fra.dot.gov/files/fra_net/
1419/ord0911.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
minimum breathing time that EEBAs
should provide, the analysis of different
methods of distribution of the devices,
and the costs and benefits of various
EEBA alternatives.
C. FRA’s 2016 Guidance for Developing
an EEBA Program
In December 2016, FRA published, in
the absence of a final rule, Guidance for
Developing an EEBA Program.12 This
provided guidance to railroads for
developing and implementing an
individualized EEBA program to protect
their crewmembers. The guidance
highlights factors to consider when
selecting an appropriate EEBA and
explains various components to
evaluate when developing an EEBA
program. However, the statutory
mandate remains in place, and NTSB
found that the Guidance did not satisfy
its recommendation. In addition, FRA is
unaware of the Guidance leading to any
railroad developing an EEBA program or
making EEBAs generally available to
their crewmembers.
IV. Selection of the Appropriate EEBA
by Railroads
As explained in the 2010 NPRM,
EEBAs are ‘‘respirators’’ and generally
there are two different types of
respirators: air-purifying and
atmosphere-supplying. Air-purifying
respirators remove specific air
contaminants by passing ambient air
through an air-purifying element, such
as an air-purifying filter, cartridge, or
canister. Atmosphere-supplying
respirators supply breathing air from a
source independent from the ambient
atmosphere. Types of atmospheresupplying respirators include airline
supplied-air respirators and SCBA units.
Based on the factors presented below,
FRA is requiring an atmospheresupplying respirator that provides
adequate head and neck protection as
well as giving sufficient time for its user
to escape an IDLH atmosphere.13
In the 2010 NPRM, FRA noted that it
was aware of three main organizations
that had promulgated standards
governing the use and maintenance of
respirators—NIOSH, OSHA, and the
ISO.14 Since issuance of the 2010
NPRM, FRA has become aware of a
12 Federal Railroad Administration Guidance for
Developing an Atmosphere-Supplying Emergency
Escape Breathing Apparatus Program (Dec. 2016).
https://railroads.dot.gov/elibrary/federal-railroadadministration-guidance-developing-atmospheresupplying-emergency-escape.
13 NIOSH defines an IDLH as ‘‘an atmosphere that
poses an immediate threat to life, would cause
irreversible adverse health effects, or would impair
an individual’s ability to escape from a dangerous
atmosphere.’’ See 29 CFR 1910.134(b).
14 75 FR 61386, 61390 (Oct. 5, 2010).
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
fourth organization, CEN, that has also
developed two relevant standards.
As explained in the 2010 NPRM,
NIOSH, located within the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention of the
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, worked with government and
industry partners to develop
certification standards for respirators.
The NIOSH regulations, codified at 42
CFR part 84, establish the requirements
for NIOSH certification of respirator
equipment. NIOSH has also developed
information on safe levels of exposure to
toxic materials and harmful physical
agents and issued recommendations for
respirator use.
ISO has also established standards for
respirator maintenance and use. ISO is
a network of national standards
institutes in 162 countries, including
the United States, through the American
National Standards Institute. ISO
develops international standards to
assist in ensuring the safe performance
of a wide range of EEBAs. While ISO is
not a government organization, it works
to establish performance standards that
have scientific and technological bases
while ensuring that products, falling
within its purview, are safe and reliable
for consumers. The organization has
promulgated ISO 23269–1:2008, ‘‘Ships
and marine technology—Breathing
apparatus for ships—Part 1: Emergency
escape breathing devices (EEBD) for
shipboard use, First Edition (2008–02–
01).’’ While ISO 23269–1:2008 is
directed towards EEBAs on ships and
marine technology, the standard can be
reasonably transferred to the railroad
environment. ISO 23269–1:2008
establishes performance specifications
for EEBAs that are intended to provide
air or oxygen to a user to facilitate
escape from accommodation and
machinery spaces, similar to a
locomotive cab, with a hazardous
atmosphere.15
CEN serves a similar purpose as ISO
in that it develops consensus standards
for European countries. In creating these
standards, CEN relies on the input of
technical experts, business and
consumer groups, and other societal
interest organizations. Additionally,
there is a measure of interconnectedness
between the ISO and CEN, as CEN has
entered into a cooperative agreement
with ISO to avoid duplicative standards.
15 However, as explained below, FRA believes
that the minimum breathing capacity allowed by
ISO 23269–1:2008, which is 10 minutes, is
insufficient for the anticipated use in a railroad
environment. As a result, the proposed rule requires
a minimum breathing capacity of 15 minutes,
which would be equally applicable to EEBAs
certified under the requirements of NIOSH. See 42
CFR part 84, or ISO 23269–1:2008.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
In the area of escape respirators, CEN
has developed two standards that
railroads could use to identify an
appropriate EEBA to provide to an
employee. The first standard establishes
requirements for approving closedcircuit escape respirators, see BS EN
13794:2002, ‘‘Respiratory Protective
Devices—Self-Contained, Closed-Circuit
Breathing Apparatus for Escape—
Requirements, Testing, Marking
(November 2002),’’ while the second
standard establishes requirements for
approving open-circuit escape
respirators, see BS EN 1146:2005,
‘‘Respiratory Protective Devices—SelfContained, Open-Circuit Compressed
Air Breathing Apparatus Incorporating a
Hood for Escape—Requirements,
Testing, Marking (February 2006).’’
While BS EN 13794:2002 and BS EN
1146:2005 are standards created for the
European market, FRA finds that
compliance with either standard would
be adequate to establish the reliability of
a device, subject to the provisions of
this regulation, specifically, 49 CFR
227.203, which is discussed in detail
below. See VIII. Public Comment on the
NPRM, with FRA’s Response and IX.
Section-by-Section Analysis.
Additionally, OSHA, located within
the U.S. Department of Labor, is
responsible for developing and
enforcing general workplace safety and
health regulations related to respiratory
protection. In furtherance of this
responsibility, OSHA has promulgated
extensive regulations governing the
maintenance, care, and use of
respirators of all types, including
emergency escape devices. See 29 CFR
1910.134.
In drafting this final rule, FRA
considered the comments submitted in
response to the SNPRM and the
requirements of both Federal agencies
(NIOSH and OSHA) as well as the ISO
and EN standards to assist in
determining the possible types of EEBAs
that may be used by railroad employees
covered under this rule. To determine
which type or types of EEBAs are
appropriate, FRA has looked to the
comprehensive selection process for
respirators developed by NIOSH.16 For
purposes of EEBAs deployed in the
railroad environment, the two major
NIOSH factors to consider in selecting a
respirator are to determine whether the
respirator is intended for: (1) use in an
oxygen-deficient atmosphere (i.e., less
than 19.5 percent O2); and (2) use in,
entry into, or escape from, unknown or
16 https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/docs/2005-100/
default.html.
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
5117
IDLH atmospheres (e.g., an emergency
situation).
FRA’s investigation into the
Graniteville accident found that the
concentration of the toxic chlorine
cloud over the accident site area was
estimated to be approximately 2,000
parts per million (ppm).17 OSHA
classifies chlorine as having an IDLH
level of 10 ppm. FRA roughly estimated
the distance between the final resting
spot of the breached chlorine tank car in
relation to the train crew, as well as the
wind speed and size of breach, to
determine that the chlorine plume
reached the crew within two minutes.
The coroner’s report on the eight
fatalities to persons who were not
railroad employees in the Graniteville
accident indicated that the primary
cause of death was asphyxia, or lack of
oxygen. The coroner listed the
engineer’s primary cause of death as
lactic acidosis. Exposure to chlorine gas
was attributed as the secondary cause of
all deaths in the accident. Under the
circumstances presented, it appears that
both NIOSH selection criteria were met.
There may have been an oxygendeficient atmosphere, and there
certainly was toxic-gas concentration
exceeding IDLH levels.
The Graniteville accident
demonstrated that railroad hazardous
material incidents (meaning collisions,
derailments, or other train accidents)
involving the catastrophic loss of certain
PIH materials have the potential to
release IDLH concentrations and/or
displace oxygen very quickly without
the crew’s knowledge. In such
circumstances, the crew may need to
respond to an incident by donning their
EEBAs even before assessing the damage
caused by an accident. Considering the
variables associated with the
transportation of hazardous materials
via rail and the potential hazards that
exist, FRA is, based on the NIOSH
selection criteria, proposing to require
that railroads provide an escape-type
respirator to covered employees.
The single function of escape-type
EEBAs is to allow sufficient time for an
individual working in a normally safe
environment to escape from suddenly
occurring respiratory hazards. Given
this function, the selection of the device
does not rely on assigned protection
factors designated by OSHA.18 Instead,
17 See R.L. Buckley, Detailed Numerical
Simulation of the Graniteville Train Collision,
Savannah River National Laboratory, Report
WSRC–MS–2005–00635 October 2005.
18 ‘‘Assigned protection factor’’ means the level of
safety that a respirator or a class of respirators is
expected to provide to employees. Assigned
protection factors were developed by OSHA to
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
Continued
26JAR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
5118
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
these escape-type respirators are
selected based on a consideration of the
time needed to escape in the event of
IDLH or oxygen-deficient conditions.
Pursuant to statutory requirements,
and as proposed in the 2010 NPRM and
2023 SNPRM, this final rule would
require providing a device with head
and neck coverage. Escape-type SCBA
devices are commonly used with fullface pieces or hoods. Such devices are
usually rated from 3- to 60-minute units
depending on the supply of air. The
following two types of atmospheresupplying SCBA would satisfy the
protection requirements of this
regulation:
• Open-Circuit SCBA. These are
typically classified as positive pressure,
open-circuit systems whereby the user
receives (inhales) clean air with 21
percent O2 from a compressed air
cylinder worn with a harness on the
back. The user’s exhaled breath contains
significant amounts (15 percent) of
unused oxygen that is vented to
atmosphere. Because much of the user’s
exhaled breath vents to atmosphere, the
size of open-circuit systems is larger
than that of closed-circuit systems.
Open-circuit SCBA systems may employ
full face masks or hoods and typically
require an airtight seal against the head,
face, or aural/nasal area.
• Rebreathers. These can be positivepressure or negative-pressure systems.
Classified as closed-circuit O2 systems,
rebreathers perform as their name
implies. The user rebreathes his or her
breath. A chemical scrubber removes
the CO2 from the user’s breath and
makes up metabolized O2 from a small
bottle of compressed 100-percent O2.
Because the user is rebreathing his or
her exhaled air containing 15 percent
oxygen, a rebreather is four times more
efficient than an open-circuit system. As
a result, such systems are capable of
either lasting much longer than opencircuit systems (if size were comparable)
or providing the same breathing
duration as an open-circuit system but
in a smaller package. Rebreathers may
be employed with full-face masks or
hoods. Negative pressure rebreathers do
not require a tight seal.
First responders (such as firefighters)
commonly use open-circuit positive
pressure SCBA systems for entering the
scene of an emergency event. However,
such devices may not be best situated to
the railroad environment. In addition to
being heavy and cumbersome from
incorporating a large, compressed air
designate to employers the proper type of device
that is required in selecting a respirator. According
to OSHA, assigned protection factors are not
applicable to respirators used solely for escape.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
cylinder mounted to a harness, they also
commonly incorporate use of a full-face
piece. Depending on the program
developed by each railroad, the
incorporation of a full-face piece may be
a logistically and economically difficult
undertaking. To be effective, a full-face
piece requires an airtight seal around
the user’s face, which means that each
user must be personally fitted for the
device. It also means the user must be
cleanly shaven or otherwise free of
excessive facial hair. The enforcement
of such a requirement would be difficult
at best.
FRA believes that hoods provide a
useful alternative to full-face masks
while protecting the face and neck.
Hoods are universal fitting devices and
can be used with open and closedcircuit SCBAs. Because they are
universal fitting, hoods do not require
personally fitting the user, and hoods
operate efficiently regardless of most
eyewear, facial features, or hair.
Significantly, hoods also allow the
wearer to communicate while using the
SCBA.
Experience has shown that a plume of
hazardous material can travel quickly.
As a result, it is vitally important that
the train crew has adequate breathing
time available to allow each member to
move a significant distance from the site
while being protected from the ambient
atmosphere. Because such incidents
will often result from a collision, as was
the case in Macdona and Graniteville,
consideration should be given to those
situations where additional time may be
used to assist or extricate fellow
crewmembers that may be hurt or
trapped. For example, if it takes 10
minutes to assist a fellow crewmember
and each is wearing a 15-minute opencircuit respirator, each crewmember is
left with five minutes to escape from
any plume that may be present.
Moreover, often individuals will have a
tendency to breathe rapidly and deeply
in stressful situations, which will
shorten the breathing time available in
a respirator. In selecting an EEBA with
sufficient breathing time, each railroad
should take into consideration these
factors and others that contribute to the
‘‘Murphy’s Law’’ effects of accidents
such as an incident occurring at night or
in tight terrain. As a result, FRA is
proposing to require that EEBAs being
provided to covered employees have at
least a 15-minute minimum breathing
capacity. Further, FRA encourages
railroads to consider EEBAs with a
longer breathing capacity, to provide an
extra margin for escape under stressful
circumstances.
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
V. Provision of EEBAs to Covered
Employees
FRA has decided not to mandate a
specific method by which railroads
must provide EEBAs to covered
employees. See discussion of covered
employees at IX. Section-by-Section
Analysis of §§ 227.201 and 227.211,
below. FRA recognizes that there are
differing methods for effectively
distributing suitable EEBAs among a
railroad’s covered employees, its
locomotive fleet, or both. Each of these
options has advantages and
disadvantages. Given these factors, FRA
believes that the regulation most
efficiently serves the RSIA mandate by
allowing each railroad to choose the
method of distribution that works for it
as long as: (1) covered employees are
provided with a suitable device while
they are in the locomotive cab of a
freight train transporting a PIH material;
and (2) transportation of a covered
hazardous material is not unduly
delayed, thereby posing additional risk,
particularly where the covered train (or
a locomotive intended to be used to
haul a covered train) is interchanged
from one railroad to another. See VII.
Information and Recommendations
Provided by the Railroad Industry and
Railroad Labor Organizations after the
Study, for relevant remarks. In the
following paragraphs, FRA discusses
five options available to railroads for
providing EEBAs to covered employees.
Under this final rule, EEBAs may be
treated as part of an employee’s
permanently issued items, similar to eye
protection, radios, and lanterns. This
method of distribution would allow
railroads to permanently issue an EEBA
to each potentially covered employee
(e.g., for a freight railroad that regularly
hauls one or more PIH materials,
possibly all of its train employees). The
device would be in the user’s control at
all times, and each individual would be
responsible for having the device in his
or her possession. The carrier would
still be responsible for ensuring the state
of the equipment through an inspection
program; however, the company would
be relieved of most of the
responsibilities for EEBA management.
Theoretically, this option would tend to
result in better cared for equipment and
lower replacement costs. Moreover,
personal assignment allows for
customization of the EEBA. However,
permanently issuing EEBAs to
employees results in substantial costs.
Over a 10-year period, total costs would
be approximately $92 million. Other
negative aspects of treating EEBAs as a
permanently issued item include
difficulty in monitoring the condition of
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
the EEBA and ensuring that the required
EEBA is with the user at all times.
Additionally, permanently issuing the
EEBA would add to an already lengthy
list of items expected to be carried by
train employees.
Alternatively, EEBAs may also be
permanently assigned to an individual
as a dedicated personal item issued at
the start of each shift and recovered at
the end of each shift as part of the clockin/clock-out process. This method
allows for individual customization and
allows the EEBA to be with the user at
all times the user is on duty, while
supporting centralized inspection and
maintenance. However, the railroad may
experience greater costs due to the
increased size of its EEBA inventory
since all train employees who have the
potential to work in the locomotive cab
of a freight train transporting a PIH
material would require stocked EEBAs.
This alternative may also create
difficulties in the provision of EEBAs if
the train employees who must have
access to the EEBAs have more than one
on-duty location.
A third option is to treat EEBAs as
‘‘pool’’ items. The EEBAs would not be
assigned to a specific individual. They
would be issued at the start of each shift
and recovered at the end of each shift
as part of the clock-in/clock-out process.
This option supports centralized
inspection and maintenance while
minimizing number of EEBAs required,
which could reduce costs substantially.
FRA estimates that trains transporting
PIH materials amount to approximately
0.2 percent of all train traffic, as cars
carrying PIH materials are concentrated
in relatively few trains. If railroads
chose this option, they could stock
enough EEBAs to cover 10 percent of
the entire locomotive fleet for
approximately $33.5 million over a 10year period. Equipping enough EEBAs
to cover 10 percent of the entire
locomotive fleet should allow for every
locomotive that will be part of train
transporting a PIH material to be
equipped with the necessary devices for
each covered employee provided that
the railroads exercise adequate resource
management with respect to EEBAs.
This would ensure that the EEBA would
be with the user throughout his or her
entire shift. However, railroads likely
would have to allocate or build space at
one or more locations (depending on the
size of the railroad) to warehouse EEBAs
that are not being used by covered
employees. Moreover, an employee
must be assigned to monitor the
handing out and returning of devices.
This system also may have hidden costs,
such as losing the potential benefits of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
a sense of employee ‘‘ownership’’ if
EEBAs are treated as common property.
A fourth option is to have EEBAs
permanently mounted in each
locomotive cab in the railroad’s fleet.
This method would ensure that trains
transported by the railroad that include
a PIH material are always adequately
equipped, while supporting centralized
inspection and maintenance. The
negative aspects of permanently
mounting the EEBA selected by the
railroad in the cabs of the railroad’s
locomotive fleet include the increased
size of the railroad’s EEBA inventory if
non-covered consists would transport
the EEBAs and since EEBAs must be
provided for worst-case crewing
(including possible supernumerary
personnel such as deadheading
employees), increased management
burden for tracking/recovery, increased
management burden for item inspection
and maintenance, and unavailability of
customized EEBAs. Additionally, FRA
has estimated that the total 10-year cost
of outfitting all locomotives to be
approximately $106.8 million. These
estimates could be reduced if railroads
opted to dedicate a portion of their
locomotive fleet to service for trains
transporting PIH materials, subject to
balancing any impact on operating
efficiencies.
As discussed in section VII.
Information and Recommendations
Provided by the Railroad Industry and
Railroad Labor Organizations after the
Study, AAR has proposed that Class I
railroads interchanging locomotives
with each other will provide the same
type of EEBA while also using the same
method of equipping the locomotive,
which would expedite interchange
between two Class I railroads. However,
the option of permanently mounting a
specific type of EEBA within each
locomotive owned by a Class I railroad
could create delays at interchange if the
locomotives from nonparticipating
railroads also are offered in interchange
to Class I railroads to haul covered
trains. The delay could occur if the
nonparticipating railroad delivers a
locomotive in interchange that either
lacks an EEBA of any kind or that has
an EEBA that does not conform to the
type specified under the Class I
railroad’s general EEBA program under
§ 227.211.
A fifth option is for EEBAs to be
temporarily mounted in the locomotive
cab as the train containing a shipment
of PIH material is made up. Using this
option would help to minimize the
number of EEBAs required, while
ensuring that each consist containing a
PIH material is appropriately equipped.
It would also allow the railroad to cater
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
5119
efficiently to differing crew sizes.
Drawbacks with this method include
increased management burden for the
initial issue of EEBAs to the consist,
increased management burden for
tracking/recovery, increased
management burden for item inspection
and maintenance, and unavailability of
customized EEBAs.
FRA recognizes that these are only a
few of the numerous options for the
provision of EEBAs, each involving its
own considerations. Any of these
options (or combination of these
options), including options that have
not been discussed above, is acceptable
under this final rule, as long as a
suitable EEBA is provided by the
railroad to each covered employee while
they are in a locomotive cab of a
covered train and the transportation of
covered hazardous materials via rail is
not unduly delayed.
VI. Information and Recommendations
Provided by the Railroad Industry and
Railroad Labor Organizations After the
Study
As previously mentioned,
representatives of both the railroad
industry and railroad labor
organizations cooperated with the FRAsponsored study on the feasibility of
providing EEBAs to train crews, the
report of which was published in May
2009. AAR, UTU,19 and BLET also
exchanged information and ideas with
FRA on issues related to this
rulemaking, as summarized below.
In July 2009, prior to the publication
of the 2010 NPRM, representatives of
AAR briefed FRA with information on
AAR’s exploration of alternative ways
by which the rulemaking mandate
under section 413 of the RSIA might be
carried out. AAR has also offered
recommendations to FRA on issues
related to this rulemaking, including the
type of EEBA and the mode of providing
it that AAR thought would satisfy the
statutory mandate. Subsequently, in a
letter to FRA dated January 13, 2010,
AAR encouraged FRA to incorporate by
reference a draft specification
establishing guidelines for: (1) vendors
of EEBAs that would be used by Class
I railroads; (2) mounting EEBAs on
locomotives; and (3) requiring training
support.
FRA considered incorporating by
reference a finalized version of AAR’s
specification; however, FRA has
ultimately decided not to do so. Many
comments raised questions about the
details of the specification, and FRA
19 UTU is now part of the International
Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and
Transportation Workers (SMART).
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
5120
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
believes this final rule provides a clearer
standard for efficiently complying with
the RSIA mandate. Of course, AAR is
free to rely on a final specification to
normalize EEBAs among Class I
railroads, as long as the specification
complies with the requirements in
subpart C.
Additionally, in the course of drafting
the 2010 NPRM, FRA representatives
met with UTU and BLET representatives
on March 31, 2010, who briefed FRA on
issues related to the provision of EEBAs.
AAR was also in attendance at this
meeting. UTU felt that EEBAs should be
‘‘placed on all occupied locomotives
which operate over a corridor where
freight trains carry hazardous materials
that pose an inhalation hazard in the
event of a release.’’ Under UTU’s
recommendation, each occupied
locomotive would be required to have
working EEBAs—even if the occupied
locomotive is not part of a train carrying
PIH materials—as long the locomotive is
operating over a rail line that carries
such materials.
During the March 31, 2010, meeting,
UTU indicated that it opposed issuing
EEBAs as personal items. UTU felt that
adding an additional item to each train
employee’s required personal
equipment would unnecessarily burden
crewmembers. UTU was concerned with
not only the added weight, but also the
extra responsibility for care and
maintenance that would fall to train
employees in the event that EEBAs are
provided as personal equipment. It
contended that railroads are in a better
position than the employees to maintain
the devices.
Finally, UTU stressed that there must
be sufficient training of train employees
in the use of EEBAs. Such training
would ensure that train employees
would know how to use EEBAs if
presented with a situation in the field
where their use was required. UTU
expressed a strong desire for regular,
hands-on training with devices selected
by the railroads to achieve these ends.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
VII. Public Comment on the SNPRM,
With FRA’s Response
A. Introduction
FRA received 7 sets of comments on
the SNPRM from 8 different entities
(AAR and ASLRRA jointly submitted
comments), covering a broad spectrum
of interests which resulted in revisions
to this final rule. These commenters
included the railroad industry, a labor
organization, the NTSB, and concerned
individuals. In revising this final rule,
FRA has considered each issue raised by
the commenters, and it addresses those
issues in this section.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
B. Comments on the Preamble, With
FRA’s Response
AAR and ASLRRA argue that FRA has
not adequately accounted for the costs
of installation and recordkeeping
associated with the managing of an
EEBA program. They argue that FRA has
not properly accounted for tasks such as
developing and implementing testing
and inspection protocols for devices,
conducting scrap planning, tracking
pilferage or damage, anticipating future
EEBA purchases, assessing employee
turnover, identifying EEBA reallocation
needs, tracking wear and tear on
mounting systems, and developing and
implementing training for EEBA usage
and management. However, FRA
included these very considerations in
the cost estimates presented in the
SNPRM. FRA’s estimates were not
broken down into such granular detail,
but those same administrative and
management considerations were
included. AAR and ASLRRA
specifically point to the EEBA pooling
option (the lowest cost option) as having
the highest of these associated
administrative costs. In response, FRA
reexamined its initial administrative
and management costs estimates,
particularly as they relate to the EEBA
pooling option, to ensure they are being
properly accounted for and concluded
the original cost estimates were correct.
AAR and ASLRRA note that the
hazmat exposure resulting from the
2014 Texas incident addressed in the
SNPRM () was to battery acid, which is
not a PIH or an asphyxiant. FRA has
examined this incident and concluded
that AAR and ASLRRA are correct; this
was not a hazmat release where an
injury due to contact with the hazmat
would have been prevented by an EEBA
as contemplated in this rulemaking.
FRA has also reexamined the other
incident (2012, New Jersey) referred to
in the SNPRM and arrived at the same
conclusion. Accordingly, FRA has
removed both incidents from its
calculation of this rulemaking’s benefits.
AAR and ASLRRA also state that FRA
does not address effective usage rates for
EEBAs when determining the costs and
benefits. However, usage rates have no
impact on the costs and since FRA has
removed the two above incidents the
effective usage rate has no impact on the
estimated benefits either.
AAR and ASLRRA argue that
‘‘[r]ailroads are safer now than they
were when the RSIA was passed’’
stating that since 2008 there has been a
‘‘23 percent decrease in the mainline
accident rate’’ and that ‘‘hazmat
accident rates have declined by 55
percent’’ in the same period. They
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
contend that ‘‘operational changes
related to the implementation of
Positive Train Control, speed
restrictions that are required for trains
transporting poisonous-inhalationhazard (PIH) materials, and
improvements to tank cars have
substantially reduced the likelihood of a
PIH material release.’’ They also note
that in ‘‘the SNPRM, FRA adjusts its 10year benefit estimate downward from
$13.5 million to $63,720’’ and that this
‘‘amounts to an annualized societal
benefit estimate of only $6,138.’’ They
argue that FRA should not advance this
EEBA regulation and instead put its
resources toward continuing to
minimize the number and consequence
of rail accidents involving hazardous
materials. In response to these
comments, FRA notes that the RSIA
mandates that the Secretary adopt
regulations requiring railroads to
provide EEBAs for train crews
occupying locomotive cabs of any
freight train transporting a hazardous
material in commerce that would
present an inhalation hazard in the
event of a release. Given this statutory
mandate, FRA is issuing a rule that not
only considers the costs, but also
provides a mechanism to enhance safety
for railroad employees transporting
hazardous materials presenting an
inhalation hazard if a release occurs.
Moreover, FRA has recently undertaken
a number of rulemaking initiatives in a
variety of disciplines, including reengineering tank cars (in cooperation
with PHMSA), PTC, and amendments to
operating rules, all designed to improve
the safety of railroad operations, and
thus reduce the rate of incidents,
including those involving hazardous
materials. As with all complex systems,
however, there are occasions when
failures do occur. This final rule
provides an additional element of
protection for covered employees
should an accident with a PIH release
occur in the future. AAR and ASLRRA
also suggest that FRA has no reasonable
basis for issuing a final rule if, in FRA’s
analysis, the costs exceed the benefits.
However, a lack of quantifiable (i.e.,
monetized) benefits, or quantifiable
costs exceeding quantifiable benefits, is
not dispositive for an agency’s
rulemaking analysis. Indeed, OMB
Circular A–4 directs agencies to
describe benefits qualitatively when it is
not possible to quantify or monetize all
of a rule’s important benefits. Agencies
should also take other factors, such as
statutory mandates, into account when
comparing the anticipated costs and
benefits of a rulemaking. Here,
Congress, through the RSIA, established
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
a statutory mandate to promulgate
regulations that require railroads to
provide EEBAs for all crewmembers in
locomotive cabs on freight trains
carrying hazardous materials that would
pose an inhalation hazard in the event
of release and that alone provides a
reasonable basis for issuing this final
rule.
The individual commenter also states
that a new cost-benefit analysis should
be conducted. However, FRA already
conducted a new cost-benefit analysis in
the SNPRM and again analyzed the
costs and benefits in this final rule. The
same individual commenter also
questions whether the addition of
EEBAs to locomotive cabs will increase
the risk of fire. FRA has examined this
issue and found that EEBAs do not
themselves present a fire risk and that
their inclusion in a locomotives cab will
not increase its flammability.
AAR and ASLRRA also commented
on the deadlines for compliance which
are 12, 12, and 18 months respectively
for Class I, II, and III railroads. AAR and
ASLRRA argue that the timeline of the
2010 NPRM (24, 30, and 36 months
respectively) is more appropriate.
However, given the length of time since
the publication of the 2008 RSIA
mandate, 2010 NPRM, FRA’s issuance
of guidance in 2016, and the 2023
SNPRM, railroads have been on notice
about the need to provide EEBAs and
the lengthy timelines from the 2010
NPRM are no longer necessary.
AAR and ASLRRA’s comments
address concerns about the financial
impact of the RSIA mandate on small
entities in the railroad industry, which
they contend lack pricing power to pass
on the costs of this rule to their
customers and have small capital
budgets necessitating that other work,
such as track maintenance, will have to
be deferred to pay for it. AAR and
ASLRRA contend that while the initial
costs for Class III railroads may indeed
be modest, the ongoing costs for
inspection, maintenance, replacement,
and enforcement penalties will result in
permanent ongoing expenditures that
will be particularly impactful on small
railroads as they are likely to: (1) focus
on the purchase of EEBAs based on
crew terminals and number of
customers, (2) face higher costs than
estimated and have limited options to
benefit for bulk orders; and (3) face
disproportionately high training costs.
AAR and ASLRRA estimate that the
total compliance present costs 20 (at 7%)
to be borne by Class II and III railroads
at over $6.6 million, or over $945,000 on
20 AAR and ASLRRA developed this estimate
using an equipment pooling approach.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
an annualized basis. For just Class III
railroads, ASLRRA projects total present
costs (at 7%) to amount to almost $4.9
million, with the individual annualized
cost to each of the 110 impacted
railroads estimated to be $6,333 per
year, or more than four times the cost
estimated in the SNPRM. As such, AAR
and ASLRRA ask that FRA exercise its
discretion, in this particular instance, to
provide a ‘‘de minimis’’ exception for
railroad operations, similar to what FRA
provided for PTC requirements, to
exempt Class II and III railroads from
the requirement to provide EEBAs.
While FRA understands ALSRRA’s
concerns, the agency is constrained by
section 413 of the RSIA. Unlike with
PTC, Congress did not carve out an
exemption for Class II and Class III
railroads from the statutory
requirement. See section 104 of the
RSIA. Instead, Congress used broad
language that covers any railroad carrier
transporting hazardous materials that
would pose an inhalation hazard in the
event of release. In light of this
language, FRA cannot institute an
exception for Class II and III railroads
without congressional action.
Notwithstanding these constraints, FRA
has enacted measures to limit the costs
for railroads. In particular, FRA has
provided flexibility to allow railroads to
pursue the most cost-effective way to
provide EEBAs in accordance with the
statutory requirements and this final
rule. Additionally, small railroads could
consider pooling resources wherever
possible for requirements such as
periodic training. Indeed, many small
railroads are jointly owned by the same
holding companies making resource
pooling even easier. In light of the
concerns raised above, FRA has
reexamined its estimated costs for small
railroads to ensure that their unique
conditions are being properly accounted
for and concluded they have been.
C. Section-Specific Public Comments,
With FRA’s Response
FRA received comments on changes
to §§ 227.201(a)(1), 227.203(c), 227.207,
227.209, and 227.215 of the SNPRM.
1. Comments on § 227.201(a)(1), With
FRA’s Response
BRS and an individual commenter
suggested that EEBAs should also be
provided to employees working outside
the locomotive cab such as signalmen
and yard employees. In particular, BRS
suggests that signalmen would benefit
from EEBAs as they are among the first
responders to rail accidents and would
benefit from respiratory protection
systems in the event of a hazardous
material release.
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
5121
The RSIA established a statutory
mandate to promulgate regulations that
require railroads to provide EEBAs ‘‘for
all crewmembers in locomotive cabs on
freight trains carrying hazardous
materials that would pose an inhalation
hazard in the event of release.’’ If
Congress had wanted the Secretary to
promulgate more expansive regulations
covering areas outside the locomotive
cab, then it would have chosen different
language requiring that FRA cover
personnel in areas other than
locomotive cabs, including signalmen
and employees in rail yards. Since
Congress did not do so, FRA does not
propose to include requiring the
provision of EEBAs at strategically
placed locations in rail yards.
Furthermore, the purpose of EEBAs is to
allow railroad employees located in the
cab to better escape an accident, they
are not intended for use by responders.
However, the rule in no way prohibits
railroads from voluntarily distributing
EEBAs to their employees not covered
by this regulation.
AAR and ASLRRA argue that FRA has
exercised discretion beyond the
statutory mandate of the RSIA by
requiring that persons, other than solely
crewmembers, be provided EEBAs when
located in the locomotive cab of an inservice freight train transporting a PIH
material. FRA agrees that the RSIA’s
mandate is for an EEBA to be provided
‘‘for all crewmembers.’’ However, the
RSIA does not limit which railroad
employees in the cab of a locomotive
must be provided with an EEBA and
does not define crewmembers. FRA
considered worst-case crewing scenarios
that included possible supernumerary
personnel such as supervisors and
deadheading employees who might be
in the locomotive cab during a PIH
release and concluded that requiring the
railroads provide such employees with
EEBAs to be consistent with RSIA’s
mandate and in the general interest of
employee safety.
2. Comments on § 227.203(c), With
FRA’s Response
AAR and ASLRRA note that
§ 227.203(b) of the SNPRM proposed to
require railroads to use an EEBA
certified by NIOSH or meeting criteria
set by specified industry organizations.
Therefore, AAR and ASLRRA argue no
further showing of the adequacy of the
EEBA should be necessary and that
§ 227.203(c) should be deleted. FRA
disagrees because § 227.203(c) provides
considerations beyond the minimum
criteria required under the NIOSH, ISO,
or EN standard. For example, FRA has
concluded that the minimum breathing
capacity allowed by ISO 23269–1:2008,
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
5122
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
which is 10 minutes, is insufficient for
the anticipated use in a railroad
environment. As a result, this final rule
requires a minimum breathing capacity
of 15 minutes. FRA concluded, by the
same logic, that the considerations for
head and neck protection and
accommodations for eyeglasses and a
range of facial features contained in
§ 227.203(c) are necessary even if they
go beyond the NIOSH, ISO, or EN
standards. FRA is therefore keeping the
requirements in § 227.203(c).
3. Comments on § 227.207, With FRA’s
Response
AAR and ASLRRA comment that FRA
goes beyond the rulemaking discretion
afforded it in the RSIA in requiring pretrip inspections of EEBAs in
§ 227.207(a)(1) and that such
inspections would be overly
burdensome. AAR suggests that FRA
should rely instead on the periodic
inspections required in § 227.207(a)(2).
The RSIA requires that EEBAs be
maintained in proper working
condition. FRA considers pre-trip
inspections the most effective method of
ensuring compliance with this statutory
mandate because the final rule requires
that an EEBA for each employee will be
in the locomotive cab prior to departure.
For example, FRA can envision
scenarios where at least two crews
could be relying on locomotivemounted EEBAs and, absent a pre-trip
inspection, the second crew would have
no means to verify that the devices were
present and ready for service. Such
verification is essential to ensuring
equipment is properly maintained.
Therefore, FRA believes that the pre-trip
inspection requirement is fully
consistent with FRA’s authority under
the RSIA.
FRA also disagrees that the pre-trip
inspection is an overly burdensome
requirement. FRA expects that the pretrip inspection will be a quick check to
ensure that the appropriate
accompaniment of EEBAs is provided
and that those devices are charged to
provide a minimum 15-minute
breathing capacity, as well as any of
other necessary checks that the
manufacturer recommends. The nature
of this pre-trip inspection may be as
simple as visually inspecting and
verifying that the case has not been
tampered with and that all gauges and
other indicators are in an acceptable
range.
AAR and ASLRRA also oppose the
recordkeeping requirements in
§ 227.207 for the same reasons they
oppose § 227.207(a)(1) above. FRA’s
response is also the same; the RSIA
mandates that EEBAs be maintained in
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
proper working condition. Meeting this
mandate requires some level of
recordkeeping to ensure compliance.
While FRA views pre-trip inspection
records as necessary to ensure
compliance with the RSIA mandate, it
should be noted that the record of pretrip inspections, depending on the
device selected, may be as simple as the
check-off/initialed card used on fire
extinguishers. FRA also understands
that some of the Class I carriers are
considering using RFID tags to track and
record the inspection of individual
EEBA units. The use of this technology
could possibly minimize the inspection
and recordkeeping burden.
4. Comments on § 227.209, With FRA’s
Response
AAR and ASLRRA comment that
‘‘there is simply no requirement in the
statutory text and no functional safety
rationale for FRA to require all railroad
employees to be able to demonstrate
knowledge of EEBA selection criteria, as
proposed in § 227.209(2)(b)(6).’’ FRA
believes that a demonstration of
knowledge of EEBA selection criteria
would ensure that employees know the
purpose and limitations of the selected
EEBAs (minimum breathing time, that it
covers the full face, etc.). However, this
information is duplicative of the other
training requirements in § 227.209(2)(b)
and so FRA agrees with its removal.
5. Comments on § 227.215, With FRA’s
Response
AAR and ASLRRA comment that FRA
goes beyond the rulemaking discretion
afforded it in the RSIA in requiring that
records be kept as required in § 227.215.
The RSIA mandates that EEBAs be
provided to all crewmembers in the
locomotive cab of a freight train
transporting a hazardous material that
would pose an inhalation hazard in the
event of release and that all such
equipment be maintained in proper
working condition. Meeting this
mandate necessarily requires some level
of recordkeeping to ensure compliance
and § 227.215 simply lays out the
reasonable requirements for keeping and
making the records available.
VIII. Section-by-Section Analysis
PART 227—OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY
AND HEALTH IN THE LOCOMOTIVE
CAB
FRA is changing the name of the part
from ‘‘OCCUPATIONAL NOISE
EXPOSURE’’ to ‘‘OCCUPATIONAL
SAFETY AND HEALTH IN THE
LOCOMOTIVE CAB’’ in order to reflect
the broader subject matter of the part.
Previously, part 227 contained
regulations related only to dangers from
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
occupational noise exposure. Part 227 is
the best place to put the regulations
related to EEBAs because the
occupational noise regulations and the
EEBA regulations both concern dangers
to the occupational safety and health of
locomotive cab occupants. However, the
inclusion of the EEBA regulations
requires broadening the name of the part
to accurately capture the new subject
matter that is now covered in that part.
Subpart A—General
Section 227.1 Purpose and Scope
FRA amends this section to reflect the
expanded purpose and scope of this
part.
Section 227.3 Applicability
FRA amends this section so that
paragraphs (a) and (b) apply to subpart
B only and that the title mentioned,
‘‘Associate Administrator for Safety,’’ is
updated to reflect the current title,
‘‘Associate Administrator for Railroad
Safety/Chief Safety Officer.’’ New
paragraphs (c) and (d) define the types
of railroad operations to be covered by
subpart C. In particular, subpart C
applies to a railroad transporting an inservice freight train that carries a PIH
material on track that is part of the
general railroad system of
transportation. See 49 CFR part 209,
appendix A.21 It should be noted that,
with some exceptions, common carriers
by railroad have a ‘‘common carrier’’
obligation to accept for rail
transportation a PIH material if it is
properly prepared for transportation. If
a railroad accepts and transports a tank
car containing a load or residue 22 of a
PIH material in an in-service freight
train, even if the railroad has never done
so before, the railroad would become
subject to this rule. FRA realizes the
applicability of this rule to a company’s
first time transporting a PIH material in
a freight train could delay the
transportation of such material if the
company did not voluntarily take the
steps required by the rule (e.g.,
preparation of a general EEBA program,
procurement and distribution of EEBAs,
21 As noted in the SNPRM, FRA has removed
references to ‘‘asphyxiants’’ that were included in
the NPRM. The SNPRM explained the reasons for
not including simple asphyxiants (i.e., non-PIH
asphyxiants) as covered materials but invited public
comment on whether they should be included. 88
FR 17302 at 17312–17313 (Mar. 22, 2023). FRA
received only one comment on this issue, which
was supportive of removing asphyxiants from this
rule.
22 Residue means the hazardous material
remaining in a packaging, including a tank car, after
its contents have been unloaded to the maximum
extent practicable and before the packaging is either
refilled or cleaned of hazardous material and
purged to remove any hazardous vapors.
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
and instruction of employees in the
program) in advance. Further, a delay
related to compliance with this final
rule could conflict with the railroad’s
duty to expedite the transportation of
hazardous material, pursuant to the
Hazardous Materials Regulations at 49
CFR 174.14.
Section 227.5 Definitions
The rulemaking amends this section
to add definitions for key terms used in
subpart C. The terms defined are set
forth alphabetically. FRA intends these
definitions to clarify the meaning of the
terms for purposes of this part. Many of
these definitions have been taken from
the regulations issued by OSHA and
NIOSH and are widely used by safety
and health professionals, such as the
definition of ‘‘immediately dangerous to
life or health (IDLH).’’ A definition of
‘‘PIH material’’ is included in this final
rule to ensure that the universe of
materials covered by this regulation is
adequately described.
Section 227.15 Information Collection
FRA amends this section to note the
provisions of this part, including
subpart C, that have been reviewed and
approved by OMB for compliance with
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
See 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
Subpart B—Occupational Noise
Exposure for Railroad Operating
Employees
FRA is making minor corrections to
this subpart. The term ‘‘Class 1’’ is
removed wherever it appears and
replaced with the corrected term ‘‘Class
I.’’ The incorrect term appeared in, for
example, § 227.103(a)(1).
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Subpart C—Emergency Escape
Breathing Apparatus Standards
Section 227.201 Criteria for Requiring
Availability of EEBAs in the Locomotive
Cab
Section 227.201(a)(1) requires that an
EEBA be provided by a railroad to each
of its train employees, direct supervisors
of train employees, deadheading
employees, and any other employees
designated at the railroad’s discretion
and identified in writing whose duties
require regular work in the locomotive
cabs of in-service freight trains
transporting a PIH material. The EEBA
provided must have been selected in
accordance with the criteria in
§ 227.203. Moreover, the EEBA provided
shall have been inspected and
determined to be in proper working
condition under § 227.207.
Section 227.201(a)(2) prohibits
utilizing a locomotive to transport a PIH
material in an in-service freight train
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
unless each of the employees identified
in paragraph (a)(1) has access to an
EEBA that was selected in accordance
with § 227.203 and that has been
inspected and is in proper working
order pursuant to § 227.207. Paragraph
(a)(2) makes clear that it is not enough
for a railroad to merely issue an EEBA
to its employees, e.g., as a uniform item;
the employee must have access to the
EEBA in the cab of the covered train.
For instance, it is not a defense to a
violation of § 227.201(a)(2) that the
railroad provided the EEBA to the
employee and instructed the employee
to have it while in the cab, but the
employee lost or forgot it.
Section 227.201 also includes
exceptions to its general requirements in
paragraph (b). FRA excludes trains that
contain PIH materials exclusively in
intermodal containers from the
requirements in this section. Further,
employees who are involved in
activities, such as moving a locomotive
coupled to a car or group of cars
containing a PIH material within a
locomotive maintenance facility, or who
make incidental movements for the
purpose of inspection or maintenance,
are also exempted from coverage.
Paragraph (c) establishes that,
notwithstanding the exceptions
identified in § 227.201, any employee
who is found to have willfully tampered
with or vandalized an EEBA will be
subject to subpart C for enforcement
purposes. As a result, an employee to
whom the railroad is not required to
provide an EEBA may become subject to
this subpart by vandalizing or willfully
tampering with an EEBA.
Section 227.203 Criteria for Selecting
EEBAs
This section provides the
requirements for selecting an EEBA. See
general discussion at V. Selection of the
Appropriate EEBA by Railroads, above.
The requirements for selecting EEBAs
are based on the nature and extent of the
potential hazard to be faced. Due to the
varying modes of toxicity and physical
state of commodities carried by
railroads, the selection of EEBA types is
limited to those that supply a breathable
atmosphere to the wearer, rather than
types that simply filter out the toxic
material. Filtering EEBAs cannot
provide protection from gasses that can
displace oxygen in the atmosphere.
Filtering EEBAs approved for protection
against specific materials usually are not
approved for others of different
chemical characteristics and generally
have an upper concentration limit on
their protective capabilities.
Paragraph (a) of § 227.203 requires a
railroad to select an atmosphere-
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
5123
supplying EEBA that protects against all
PIH materials (including residues of
such commodities) that are being
transported by an in-service freight
train. To ensure that the EEBAs have
met a standard set of testing criteria,
paragraph (b) requires the selection of a
NIOSH-certified (42 CFR part 84) or
ISO-compliant (ISO 23269–1:2008)
EEBA, with 15-minute minimum
breathing capacity. In addition, FRA has
included language in paragraph (b) to
permit selection of devices that comply
with BS EN 13794:2002 or BS EN
1146:2005.
To ensure that the EEBA provides
adequate oxygen to allow train
employees to extricate themselves from
an IDLH atmosphere, FRA requires in
paragraph (c)(1) that the EEBA must
contain a minimum breathing capacity
of 15 minutes under § 227.207(a)(1).
In paragraph (c)(2), FRA addresses
head and neck protection. The EEBA
selected by a railroad must facilitate
escape from a hazardous atmosphere by
providing a means of protecting a user’s
nose and throat from inhalation hazards
while also protecting the user’s eyes
from irritation.
Section 227.205 Storage Facilities for
EEBAs
This section addresses the mandate in
the RSIA that the rule require railroads
to ‘‘provide convenient storage in each
freight train locomotive to enable
crewmembers to access such apparatus
quickly.’’ FRA has adapted the storage
requirements promulgated by OSHA at
29 CFR 1910.134(h)(2) to this final rule.
Section 227.207 Railroad’s Program
for Inspection, Maintenance, and
Replacement of EEBAs; Requirements
for Procedures
This section requires each railroad to
establish and carry out procedures
intended to ensure that EEBAs required
to be present in the locomotive cabs are
fully functional. This section is adapted
from OSHA’s inspection documentation
requirements. See 29 CFR
1910.134(h)(3)(iv). Since the EEBAs
selected may have differing
requirements for inspection,
maintenance, and replacement, this
section is, for the most part, written as
a general standard. However, minimum
repair and adjustment requirements also
have been adapted from OSHA’s
regulations. See 29 CFR 1910.134(h)(4).
In paragraph (b), FRA requires that
railroads create and maintain pre-trip
and periodic inspection records and
retain these records for a period of 92
days and one year, respectively.
Paragraph (d) requires railroads to create
and maintain an accurate record of all
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
5124
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
turn-ins, maintenance, repair, and
replacement of EEBAs required by
paragraph (c) of this section, including
EEBAs that are used; and retain these
records for three years.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Section 227.209 Railroad’s Program of
Instruction on EEBAs
This section identifies the elements of
the instructional program that the
railroad must establish and carry out for
train employees and other employees
who are part of the railroad’s general
EEBA program under § 227.211 and will
be provided with EEBAs. The elements
outlined in this section are partly
adapted from OSHA’s regulations. See
29 CFR 1910.134(k). The program
required by this section should be
considered the minimum, and the
railroads are encouraged to provide
additional relevant information
depending on the types of EEBAs
selected.
Paragraph (b) requires that any
railroad transporting a PIH material
provide sufficient training to its covered
employees. Such employees must be
able to demonstrate knowledge of why
an EEBA is necessary; how improper fit,
usage, or maintenance can compromise
the protective effect of an EEBA; the
limitations and capabilities of the type
of EEBA provided by the railroad,
including the timeframe for effective
use; how to deal with emergency
situations involving the use of EEBAs or
if an EEBA malfunctions; how to
inspect, put on, remove, and use an
EEBA, including the inspection of seals;
procedures for maintenance and storage
of EEBAs; employee responsibilities
under subpart C; employee rights
concerning access to records; and
identification of hazardous materials
that are classified as PIH materials. FRA
is particularly concerned that the
employees know the limitations of the
EEBAs provided so that the employees
can avoid circumstances that would
lead to reliance on the EEBAs for
conditions or time frames beyond the
EEBA’s capabilities.
This program may be integrated with
the railroad’s program of instruction on
the railroad’s operating rules required
by 49 CFR 217.11 or its program of
instruction for hazmat employees under
49 CFR 172.704. Under 49 CFR
172.704(a)(3)(ii), for example, hazmat
employees (which includes crews of
freight trains transporting hazardous
material), must receive ‘‘safety training’’
on means ‘‘to protect the employee from
the hazards associated with hazardous
materials to which they may be exposed
in the workplace, including special
measures the hazmat employer has
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
implemented to protect employees from
exposure.’’
Paragraph (c) establishes the timing of
the initial and refresher training. Initial
instruction must occur no later than 30
days prior to the date of compliance
with subpart C for the subject railroad.
New employees must receive initial
instruction either by 30 days before the
applicable date of compliance with
subpart C or prior to being assigned to
jobs where EEBAs are required to be
provided on a locomotive, whichever is
later. The initial instruction must be
supplemented with periodic instruction
at least once every three years.
Section 227.209(d) requires railroads
to create and maintain an accurate
record of employees instructed in
compliance with § 227.209; and retain
these records for at least three years.
Section 227.211 Requirement To
Implement a General EEBA Program;
Criteria for Placing Employees in the
General EEBA Program
In this section, FRA requires railroads
subject to subpart C to adopt and
comply with a general EEBA program to
ensure that the selection and
distribution of the EEBAs is done in a
technically appropriate, sustainable
manner and supported by a
comprehensive set of policies and
procedures, as discussed in detail at
section IV. FRA-Sponsored Study and
section V. Selection of the Appropriate
EEBA by Railroads, above. Many of the
procedures will likely be used as a basis
for aspects of the required instructional
program.
Paragraph (b)(1) requires that each
railroad’s general program identify the
railroad’s EEBA manager by title and
requires that the EEBA manager is
qualified to oversee the program.
Section 227.211(b)(4) requires the
following individuals to be placed in
the railroad’s general EEBA program: (1)
employees of railroads subject to this
subpart who perform service subject to
the provisions of the hours-of-service
law governing ‘‘train employees,’’ see 49
U.S.C. 21103, in the locomotive cabs of
freight trains that transport a PIH
material; (2) the direct supervisors of
these train employees; and (3) any
employees who deadhead in the
locomotive cabs of such trains. The term
‘‘train employee’’ refers to employees
who are engaged in functions
traditionally associated with train,
engine, and yard service; for example,
engineers, conductors, brakemen,
switchmen, and firemen. See 49 U.S.C.
21101(5); 49 CFR part 228, appendix A;
and 74 FR 30665, June 26, 2009.
A railroad may also identify other
employees and designate them in
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
writing to be included in its general
EEBA program. In making this
assessment, the railroad should consider
an employee’s work over the period of
a year. In doing so, the railroads must
consider how they use their workforces,
i.e., review the work that their
employees perform, determine which
employees will occupy the cab of the
locomotive of an in-service freight train
and therefore experience the risk of the
release of an inhalation-material from
the consist, and then place those
employees in the general EEBA
program.
Given the nature of the railroad
industry, FRA is aware that some of
these employees may not always work
in the cab. Due to longstanding labor
practices in the railroad industry
concerning seniority privileges and
concerning the ability of railroad
employees to bid for different work
assignments, these railroad employees
are likely to change jobs frequently and
to work for extended periods of time on
assignments that involve duties outside
the cab. For example, an employee
might start the year in a job that
involves mostly outside-the-cab work,
spend three months working primarily
inside the cab, and then return to
outside-the-cab work for the rest of the
year. In this type of situation, these
regulations govern the exposure of this
employee throughout the year despite
the fact that the employee only spent
three months inside the cab. This
employee is covered by this part
because he or she spent time, no matter
how little, in a locomotive cab where
the use of an EEBA may be required. As
a result, the railroad must ensure that
the employee is properly instructed in
how to inspect and use an EEBA and
provide an EEBA for those time periods
in which the employee is serving as a
train employee, as a direct supervisor of
a train employee, or in a capacity that
the railroad has determined, in its
discretion and designated in writing,
should be provided an EEBA while any
of these individuals is working in the
cab of the locomotive of an in-service
freight train transporting a PIH material.
Note that placement of an employee
in the railroad’s general EEBA program
means different things depending on the
nature of the program that the railroad
chooses to adopt. For example, if the
railroad’s program states that the
railroad will equip its fleet of
locomotives with sets of EEBAs
sufficient to accommodate the train
crew and possible deadheading train
employees, the railroad would have to
provide the EEBA to the employee in
that way, in the locomotive cab. On the
other hand, if the railroad’s program
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
states that the railroad will provide the
EEBA to the employee as part of his or
her personal equipment, the railroad
would have to provide the EEBA in that
manner. If the employee, for whatever
reason, did not have the EEBA with him
or her while in the locomotive cab, the
railroad would be prohibited from using
the locomotive by § 227.201(a)(2), which
bars using a locomotive to transport a
covered train if a covered employee
occupying the cab of the locomotive
does not have access to a working
EEBA. One constant is that all railroads,
subject to this part, are required to
instruct employees placed in their
general EEBA program in how to use
EEBAs; the provision on instruction at
§ 227.209 requires that all employees,
identified in § 227.211, be provided
instruction on EEBAs.
Finally, § 227.211(c) requires railroads
to maintain records concerning the
persons and positions designated to be
placed in its EEBA program and retain
these records for the duration of the
designation and for one year after the
designation has ended.
Section 227.213
Responsibilities
Employee’s
Since employees who must be
provided EEBAs are not always directly
supervised by managers who can ensure
the identified tasks are done at the
appropriate time and frequency, this
section establishes certain
responsibilities on the part of
employees. Some of these tasks may
involve making records of such tasks as
pre-trip inspections that must be done
to ensure the EEBAs are ready for use.
Additionally, FRA prohibits employees
from willfully tampering with or
vandalizing an EEBA in an attempt to
disable or damage the device. See 49
CFR part 209, appendix A, for definition
and discussion of ‘‘willfully.’’
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Section 227.215
General
Recordkeeping in
Section 227.215 sets out the general
recordkeeping provisions for subpart C.
Section 227.215(a) addresses the
availability of required records. Section
227.215(a) provides that records
required under this part, except for
records of pre-trip inspections, be kept
at system and division headquarters. It
requires that a railroad make all records
available for inspection and copying or
photocopying by representatives of FRA
upon request. The railroad must also
make an employee’s records available
for inspection and copying or
photocopying by that employee or such
person’s representative upon written
authorization by such employee.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
Section 227.215(b) permits required
records to be kept in electronic form.
These requirements are almost identical
to the electronic recordkeeping
requirements found in FRA’s existing
Track Safety Standards, 49 CFR
213.241(e). Section 227.215(b) allows
each railroad to design its own
electronic system as long as the system
meets the specified criteria in
§ 227.215(b)(1) through (5), which are
intended to safeguard the integrity and
authenticity of each record.
Section 227.217
Compliance Dates
The specific dates by which certain
groups of railroads are required to
comply are set forth in this section. FRA
recognizes that it will take time to
procure EEBAs, instruct employees on
their use, and outfit locomotives with
the appropriate equipment to carry the
devices. FRA staggers the compliance
dates based on the size of the railroad,
with larger railroads having to comply
earlier. Under the final rule, FRA
requires Class I railroads to be
compliant within 12 months of the
effective date of the final rule, with
required compliance following for Class
II railroads at 12 months and Class III
and other railroads at 18 months.
Section 227.219
Reference
Incorporation by
Because subpart C incorporates by
reference ISO 23269–1:2008, BS EN
13794:2002, and BS EN 1146:2005, FRA
is adding this section to comply with
the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and
1 CFR part 51. ISO 23269–1:2008
provides specifications for emergency
escape breathing devices intended to
supply air or oxygen needed to escape
from accommodation and machinery
spaces with a hazardous atmosphere. BS
EN 13794:2002 provides specifications
including requirements, testing, and
marking for self-contained closed-circuit
breathing apparatus intended for an
escape from a hazardous atmosphere.
BS EN 1146:2005 provides
specifications including requirements,
testing, and marking for self-contained
open-circuit compressed air breathing
apparatus incorporating a hood and
intended for an escape from a hazardous
atmosphere. They are reasonably
available to all interested parties online
at https://webstore.ansi.org/ and https://
shop.bsigroup.com, respectively.
Further, FRA will maintain copies of the
standards available for review at the
Federal Railroad Administration, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC
20590.
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
5125
IX. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866 as Amended
by Executive Order 14094
This final rule is not a significant
regulatory action within the meaning of
Executive Order 12866, as amended by
Executive Order 14094, ‘‘Modernizing
Regulatory Review,’’ 23 and DOT Order
2100.6A (‘‘Rulemaking and Guidance
Procedures’’). Details on the estimated
costs of this final rule can be found in
the RIA, which FRA has prepared and
placed in the docket (FRA–2009–0044).
FRA is issuing a final rule that
enables covered employees to wear
protective breathing apparatus in the
event of a catastrophic release of PIH
materials. This final rule requires that
an EEBA be provided for each covered
employee transporting PIH materials.
These EEBAs will provide neck and face
coverage with respiratory protection for
these crewmembers. Railroads must also
ensure that the equipment is maintained
and in proper working condition.
Finally, the final rule requires that
railroads train crewmembers how to use
the EEBAs.
The RIA presents estimates of the
costs likely to occur over the first 10
years of the final rule. The analysis
includes estimates of costs associated
with the purchase of EEBAs and
installation, employee training, and
recordkeeping.
FRA has estimated costs for three
options that are permissible under the
rule. These include:
• Option 1: Employee Assignment—EEBAs
are assigned to all relevant employees and
considered part of their equipment.
• Option 2: Locomotive Assignment—
EEBAs are assigned to and kept in
locomotives.
• Option 3: Equipment Pooling—EEBAs
are pooled at rail yards and kept in storage
lockers where employees would check-in and
check-out the EEBAs when PIH is being
hauled.
For all three options, estimates were
developed using a closed-circuit EEBA.
For the ‘‘Employee Assignment’’ option,
FRA estimates that the costs associated
with issuing each T&E employee
($60,000) with an EEBA as their own
personal equipment. The ‘‘Locomotive
Assignment’’ option would require
installing EEBAs in all locomotives in
the covered railroad’s fleet, regardless of
whether a locomotive is part of a train
that is transporting PIH material. There
are approximately 24,000 locomotives
owned by Class I railroads, and three
apparatuses would have to be installed
in each locomotive, one apparatus each
23 88 FR 21879 (April 6, 2023) located at https://
www.federalregister.gov/documents/2023/04/11/
2023-07760/modernizing-regulatory-review.
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
5126
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
for the conductor, the engineer, and a
supervisor. In the ‘‘Equipment Pooling’’
option, FRA considered only having
EEBAs provided in trainsets that were
transporting PIH. EEBAs would be
brought on board after a determination
is made on a case-by-case basis.
The analysis includes estimates of
costs associated with the purchase of
EEBAs and installation, employee
training, and recordkeeping.
FRA estimates the 10-year costs of the
final rule to be between $27.1 million
and $91.9 million, discounted at 7
percent. The following table shows the
total costs of this final rule, over the 10year analysis period.
TOTAL 10-YEAR COSTS
[2021 Dollars] 24
10-year cost
($)
Category
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Option 1: Employee Assignment .........................................
Option 2: Locomotive Assignment .......................................
Option 3: Equipment Pooling ...............................................
The benefits associated with this final
rule are qualitative in nature and relate
to the prevention of causalities and
injuries. This rule is expected to
improve railroad safety by ensuring that
all covered employees can safely vacate
the exposed area if a PIH material
release were to occur. The primary
benefits include heightened safety for
crewmembers and, as a result, earlier
awareness/notification to the public of
PIH releases. Implementation of this
rule should mitigate the injuries of
covered employees from PIH material
releasing after an accident/incident.
Although the monetary costs associated
with implementation of this rule would
exceed the correspondingly measured
benefits, under the RSIA, FRA must
require railroads to: (1) ensure that
EEBAs affording suitable ‘‘head and
neck coverage with respiratory
protection’’ are provided ‘‘for all
crewmembers’’ in a locomotive cab on
a freight train ‘‘carrying hazardous
materials that would pose an inhalation
hazard in the event of release;’’ (2)
provide a place for convenient storage of
EEBAs in the locomotive that will allow
‘‘crewmembers to access such apparatus
quickly;’’ (3) maintain EEBAs ‘‘in proper
working condition;’’ and (4) provide
crewmembers with appropriate
instruction in the use of EEBAs.
Additionally, OMB Circular A–4 directs
agencies to describe benefits
qualitatively when it is not possible to
quantify or monetize all of a rule’s
important benefits. Section 6 of the RIA
discusses non-quantifiable benefits.
FRA will not require a particular
method of deployment of EEBAs, but
rather leave that to the railroads’
discretion. In addition, railroads will be
allowed to select the type of apparatus
to use in their program (closed-circuit or
open-circuit). This allows railroads to
92,327,892
107,153,842
33,546,542
Present value
7% ($)
Present value
3% ($)
79,247,309
91,909,968
27,116,550
86,066,845
99,855,523
30,415,557
deploy EEBAs in the manner best suited
to their operations.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and
Executive Order 13272
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) and E.O. 13272 (67
FR 53461, Aug. 16, 2002) require agency
review of proposed and final rules to
assess their impacts on small entities.
FRA prepared this FRFA to evaluate the
impact of the final rule on small entities
and describe the effort to minimize the
adverse impact. The estimated costs on
small entities is not significant as it
represents less than one percent of
average annual revenue of affected
entities. Even if FRA uses the estimated
costs per small entity provided by
ASLRRA, as discussed in section 5
below, the impact would still not be
significant. Accordingly, the FRA
Administrator hereby certifies that this
rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
1. Statement of the Need for, and
Objectives of, the Rule
This final rule requires railroads to
provide an appropriate atmospheresupplying EEBA, in proper working
order, to train crewmembers, direct
supervisors of train crewmembers, and
certain other employees while these
employees are occupying cabs of freight
train locomotives transporting
hazardous material that would pose an
inhalation hazard in the event of release
during an accident. This includes
material poisonous by inhalation
(poisonous-inhalation-hazard or PIH
materials), gases poisonous by
inhalation, and certain other materials
classified as poisonous by inhalation.
EEBAs are intended to protect covered
employees from the risk of exposure to
such hazardous materials while the
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
11,283,034
13,085,912
3,860,787
Annualized
3% ($)
10,089,660
11,706,114
3,565,631
employees escape from the locomotive
cab during a catastrophic event.
The rule requires railroads that
transport PIH materials on the general
railroad system to establish and carry
out a series of programs for: inspection
and maintenance of the devices;
instruction of employees in the use of
the devices; and selection, procurement,
and provision of the devices. Railroads
are required to identify individual
employees or positions to be placed in
their EEBA programs so that enough
EEBAs are available and that those
employees know how to use the
devices. Finally, the rule requires that
convenient storage be provided for
EEBAs in the locomotive to enable
employees to access such apparatuses
quickly in the event of a release of a
hazardous material that poses an
inhalation hazard.
2. Significant Issues Raised by Public
Comments
FRA received several comments
related to the anticipated costs of this
rule. AAR and ASLRRA’s comments
address concerns about the financial
impact of the RSIA mandate on small
entities in the railroad industry, which
they contend lack pricing power to pass
on the costs of this rule to their
customers and have small capital
budgets necessitating that other work,
such as track maintenance, will have to
be deferred to pay for it. AAR and
ASLRRA stated that while the initial
costs for Class III railroads may indeed
be modest the ongoing costs for
inspection, maintenance, replacement,
and enforcement penalties will result in
permanent ongoing expenditures that
will be particularly impactful on small
railroads. The comment states that small
railroads will likely focus on the
purchase of EEBAs based on crew
terminals and number of customers, face
24 Numbers in this table and subsequent tables
may not sum due to rounding.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Annualized
7% ($)
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
higher costs than estimated, have
limited options to benefit for bulk
orders, and will face disproportionately
high training costs. AAR and ASLRRA
estimate that the total 10-year
compliance costs to be borne by Class II
and III railroads at over $6.6 million
(PV, 7 percent), or over $945,000 on an
annualized basis. For just Class III
railroads, ASLRRA projects total costs to
amount to almost $4.9 million (PV, 7
percent), with the individual annualized
cost to each of the 110 impacted
railroads estimated to be $6,333 per
year, or more than four times the cost
estimated in the SNPRM. As such, AAR
and ASLRRA ask that FRA exercise its
discretion, in this particular instance, to
provide a ‘‘de minimis’’ exception for
railroad operations, similar to what FRA
provided for PTC requirements, to
exempt Class II and III railroads from
the requirement to provide EEBAs.
FRA understands ALSRRA’s
concerns, but the agency is constrained
by section 413 of the RSIA. Unlike with
PTC, Congress did not carve out an
exemption for Class II and Class III
railroads from the statutory
requirement. See section 104 of the
RSIA. Instead, Congress used broad
language that covers any railroad carrier
transporting hazardous materials that
would pose an inhalation hazard in the
event of release. In light of this
language, FRA is constrained from
instituting an exception for Class II and
III railroads without congressional
action. Notwithstanding these
constraints, FRA has included measures
to limit the costs for railroads. In
particular, FRA will allow railroads to
pursue the most cost-effective way to
provide EEBAs in accordance with the
statutory and regulatory requirements.
Additionally, small railroads could
consider pooling resources wherever
possible for requirements such as
periodic training. Indeed, many small
railroads are jointly owned by the same
holding companies making resource
pooling even easier. In light of the
concerns raised above, FRA has
reexamined its estimated costs for small
railroads based on comments received
to the NPRM. In the regulatory impact
analysis for the final rule, FRA has
increased the cost estimate for Class III
railroads to purchase EEBAs since each
railroad may not purchase enough to
secure a bulk discount on pricing.
Therefore, FRA estimates that each
EEBA for Class III railroads will be
approximately $1,000, instead of $850
as was estimated in the RIA for the
proposed rule.
3. Response to Comments Filed by the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration
FRA did not receive a comment from
the Small Business Administration.
4. Description and Estimate of the
Number of Small Entities to Which the
Rule Will Apply
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
requires a review of proposed and final
rules to assess their impact on small
entities, unless the Secretary certifies
that the rule would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
‘‘Small entity’’ is defined in 5 U.S.C.
601 as a small business concern that is
independently owned and operated and
is not dominant in its field of operation.
The U.S. Small Business Administration
(SBA) has authority to regulate issues
related to small businesses, and
stipulates in its size standards that a
‘‘small entity’’ in the railroad industry is
a for-profit ‘‘line-haul railroad’’ that has
fewer than 1,500 employees, a ‘‘short
line railroad’’ with fewer than 1,500
employees, a ‘‘commuter rail system’’
with annual receipts of less than $47.0
million dollars, or a contractor that
performs support activities for railroads
with annual receipts of less than $34.0
million.25
Federal agencies may adopt their own
size standards for small entities in
consultation with SBA and in
conjunction with public comment.
5127
Under that authority, FRA has
published a statement of agency policy
that formally establishes ‘‘small
entities’’ or ‘‘small businesses’’ as
railroads, contractors, and hazardous
materials shippers that meet the revenue
requirements of a Class III railroad as set
forth in 49 CFR part 1201, General
Instruction 1–1, which is $20 million or
less in inflation-adjusted annual
revenues,26 and commuter railroads or
small governmental jurisdictions that
serve populations of 50,000 or less.27
FRA is using this definition for the final
rule.
When shaping the final rule, FRA
considered the impact that the final rule
will have on small entities. The final
rule will be applicable to all railroads
with locomotives that transport PIH
materials. FRA estimates there are 733
Class III railroads that operate on the
general system. These railroads are of
varying size, with some belonging to
larger holding companies. FRA is aware
of 110 Class III railroads that transport
PIH materials. The remaining Class III
railroads do not transport PIH, and thus
will not be impacted by this final rule.
5. Description of the Projected
Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements of the Rule
Class III Railroads will have all the
same requirements as larger railroads,
reduced for the estimated number of
locomotives and employees on Class III
railroads. Small railroads may not be
able to benefit from bulk discount rates
on EEBAs, so FRA has adjusted that cost
to not include the 15% discount for
Class III railroads. All other cost
components will be the same as larger
railroads.
The following table shows the
annualized cost for Class III railroads
over the 10-year analysis period. The
total estimated 10-year costs for Class III
railroads will be $1.1 million (PV, 7
percent) and the annualized cost for all
Class III railroads will be $151,467 (PV,
7 percent).
TOTAL 10-YEAR AND ANNUALIZED COSTS, CLASS III RAILROADS
Present value
(7%)
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Category
Annualized
(7%)
EEBA and Installation ..................................................................................................................................................
Training ........................................................................................................................................................................
Records ........................................................................................................................................................................
731,620
232,950
99,272
104,166
33,167
14,134
Total ......................................................................................................................................................................
1,063,841
151,467
25 U.S. Small Business Administration, ‘‘Table of
Small Business Size Standards Matched to North
American Industry Classification System Codes,
March 27, 2023. https://www.sba.gov/sites/sbagov/
files/2023-06/Table%20of%20Size%20Standards_
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
Effective%20March%2017%2C%202023%20%282
%29.pdf.
26 The Class III railroad revenue threshold is
$46.3 million or less, for 2022. https://
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
www.ecfr.gov/current/title-49/subtitle-B/chapter-X/
subchapter-C/part-1201.
27 See 68 FR 24891 (May 9, 2003) (codified at
appendix C to 49 CFR part 209).
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
5128
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
The industry trade organization
representing small railroads, ASLRRA,
reports the average freight revenue per
Class III railroad is $4.75 million. The
following table summarizes the average
annual costs and revenue for Class III
railroads.
AVERAGE CLASS III RAILROADS’ COSTS AND REVENUE
Total cost for class III
railroads, annualized 7%
Number of class III
railroads with PIH
Average annual cost per
class III railroad
($)
Average class III annual
revenue
($)
Average annual cost as a
percent of revenue
a
b
c=a÷b
d
e=c÷d
151,467
110
1,377
4,750,000
0.03%
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, 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. FRA has determined that the
final rule will not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the National
Government and the States, nor on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. In addition, FRA
has determined that this final rule will
not impose substantial direct
compliance costs on State and local
governments. Therefore, the
consultation and funding requirements
of Executive Order 13132 do not apply.
However, this final rule could have
preemptive effect by operation of law
under certain provisions of the Federal
railroad safety statutes, specifically a
provision of the former FRSA, repealed
and recodified at 49 U.S.C 20106, and
the former LBIA, repealed and
recodified at 49 U.S.C. 20701–20703.
See Public Law 103–272 (July 5, 1994).
A provision of the former FRSA
provides that States may not adopt or
continue in effect any law, regulation, or
order related to railroad safety or
security that covers the subject matter of
a regulation prescribed or order issued
by the Secretary of Transportation (with
respect to railroad safety matters) or the
Secretary of Homeland Security (with
respect to railroad security matters),
except when the State law, regulation,
28 FRA will be using the OMB control number
(OMB No. 2130–0620) that was issued when the
previous NPRM was published in 2010 for this
information collection request.
The average annual cost for a Class III
railroad impacted by this rule will be
$1,377. This represents a small
percentage (0.03%) of the average
annual revenue for a Class III railroad.
The estimates above show that the
burden on Class III railroads will not be
a significant economic burden.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
6. A Description of the Steps the Agency
Has Taken To Minimize the Economic
Impact on Small Entities
When developing the final rule, FRA
considered the impact that the final rule
will have on small entities. FRA has
included measures to limit the costs for
railroads. In particular, FRA will allow
railroads to pursue the most costeffective way to provide EEBAs in
accordance with the statutory and
regulatory requirements. Small railroads
could consider pooling resources
wherever possible for requirements such
as periodic training. Additionally, under
the final rule, FRA allows additional
time for Class III and other railroads to
implement the rule. Class III railroads
are allotted 18 months for
implementation rather than 12 months.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
or order qualifies under the ‘‘local safety
or security hazard’’ exception to section
20106. Moreover, the former LBIA has
been interpreted by the Supreme Court
as preempting the entire field of
locomotive safety. See Napier v.
Atlantic Coast R.R., 272 U.S. 605, 611;
47 S.Ct. 207, 209 (1926).
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 a provision of the former FRSA
and under the former LBIA.
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 OMB 28 under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.29
The information collection requirements
and the estimated time to fulfill each
requirement are as follows:
29 44
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
26JAR1
5129
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Respondent
universe
CFR section
Average time per
response
Total annual
burden
(hours)
Total cost
equivalent
(hours)
(A)
(B)
(C) = A * B
(D) = C *
wage 30
227.201(a)—Criteria for requiring availability of EEBAs in
the locomotive cab—Employees designated by the railroad in writing.
227.203(c)—Criteria for selecting EEBAs—Railroads to
document the adequacy of the EEBA and provide such
documentation for inspection to FRA upon request.
227.205(c)—Storage facilities for EEBAs—Railroads to
keep a copy of the instructions at their system headquarters for FRA inspection.
128 railroads ........
600 designations ..................
3 minutes ...........
30.00
$2,337.30
128 railroads ........
43 written justifications .........
2 hours ...............
86.00
6,700.26
128 railroads ........
43 instruction copies .............
1 minute .............
.72
56.10
227.207(a)—Railroad’s program for inspection, maintenance, and replacement of EEBAs; requirements for procedures—Written program for inspection, maintenance,
and replacement of EEBAs.
The paperwork burden for this requirement is covered under § 227.211.
—(b) Inspection procedures and records—Tag or label
that is attached to the storage facility for the EEBA
or kept with the EEBA or in inspection reports
stored as paper or electronic files.
—(d) Records of returns, maintenance, repair, and replacement—Recordkeeping and retention.
227.209(a)—Railroad’s program of instruction on EEBAs—
Written program of instruction on EEBAs.
—(d) Records of instruction—Railroad to maintain a
record of employees provided instruction in compliance with this section and retain these records for
three years 31.
—(d) Records of intervals for periodic instruction .........
227.211(a), (b) and (d)—Requirement to implement a general EEBA program; criteria for placing employees in the
general EEBA program—Comprehensive written program.
—(c) Records of positions or individuals or both in the
railroad’s general EEBA—Designated employees by
the railroad to be placed in its general EEBA program pursuant to § 227.211(b)(4).
128 railroads ........
10,000 inspection records ....
30 seconds ........
83.33
6,492.24
128 railroads ........
180 records ...........................
30 seconds ........
1.50
116.87
The paperwork burden for this requirement is covered under § 227.211.
128 railroads ........
20,000 initial training records
3 minutes ...........
1,000.00
62,670.00
128 railroads ........
2,000 refresher or new hire
training records.
45.67 written programs (2.33
Class I railroads’ programs
+ 42.33 Class II and III
railroads’ programs + 1 generic program developed
by ASLRRA).
3 minutes ...........
100.00
6,267.00
80 hours + 2
hours + 80
hours.
351.33
30,167.83
128 railroads ........
The paperwork burden for this requirement is covered under §§ 227.201 and 227.209.
227.213(a)(3)—Employee’s responsibilities—Notification to
railroad of EEBA failures and of use incidents in a timely
manner.
227.215(b)—Recordkeeping in general—Electronic records
to meet FRA requirements.
—(b)(5) Paper copies of electronic records and
amendments to those records are made available
for inspection and copying or photocopying by representatives of FRA.
128 railroads ........
1 notification .........................
1 minute .............
.02
1.25
18 railroads ..........
6 modified systems ...............
1 hour .................
6.00
467.46
128 railroads ........
43 copies ..............................
15 minutes .........
10.75
837.53
Total 32 ....................................................................
128 railroads ........
32,962 responses .................
N/A .....................
1,670
116,114
All estimates include the time for
reviewing instructions; searching
existing data sources; gathering or
maintaining the needed data; and
reviewing the information.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Total annual responses
F. Compliance With the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995
30 The dollar equivalent cost is derived from the
Surface Transportation Board’s Full Year Wage A&B
data series using the appropriate employee group
hourly wage rate that includes a 75-percent
overhead charge.
31 The associated burden related to employees’
training are calculated under the economic cost of
the regulation.
32 Totals may not add up due to rounding.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
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
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
that includes any Federal mandate that
may result in expenditure by State,
local, and tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100,000,000 or more (adjusted
annually for inflation) 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
such an expenditure, and thus
preparation of such a statement is not
required.
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
5130
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
G. Environmental Assessment
FRA has evaluated this final rule in
accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), the
Council of Environmental Quality’s
NEPA implementing regulations, and
FRA’s NEPA implementing regulations.
FRA has determined that this proposed
rule is categorically excluded from
environmental review and therefore
does not require the preparation of an
environmental assessment (EA) or
environmental impact statement (EIS).
Categorical exclusions (CEs) are actions
identified in an agency’s NEPA
implementing procedures that do not
normally have a significant impact on
the environment and therefore do not
require either an EA or EIS. Specifically,
FRA has determined that this final rule
is categorically excluded from detailed
environmental review.
This rulemaking would not directly or
indirectly impact any environmental
resources and would not result in
significantly increased emissions of air
or water pollutants or noise. In
analyzing the applicability of a CE, FRA
must also consider whether unusual
circumstances are present that would
warrant a more detailed environmental
review. FRA has concluded that no such
unusual circumstances exist with
respect to this final rule and it meets the
requirements for categorical exclusion.
Pursuant to section 106 of the
National Historic Preservation Act and
its implementing regulations, FRA has
determined this undertaking has no
potential to affect historic properties.
FRA has also determined that this
rulemaking does not approve a project
resulting in a use of a resource protected
by section 4(f). Further, FRA reviewed
this final rulemaking and found it
consistent with Executive Order 14008,
‘‘Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home
and Abroad.’’
H. Energy Impact
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Executive Order 13211 requires
Federal agencies to prepare a Statement
of Energy Effects for any ‘‘significant
energy action’’ (66 FR 28355, May 22,
2001). FRA evaluated this final rule in
accordance with Executive Order 13211
and determined that this final rule is not
a ‘‘significant energy action’’ within the
meaning of Executive Order 13211.
I. Analysis Under 1 CFR Part 51
As required by 1 CFR 51.5, FRA has
summarized the standards it is
incorporating by reference in the
section-by-section analysis in this
preamble. These standards summarized
herein, are reasonably available to all
interested parties for inspection. Copies
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
can be obtained from the International
Organization for Standardization,
Chemin de Blandonnet 8, CP 401, 1214
Vernier, Geneva, Switzerland, telephone
+41–22–749–08–88 or https://
www.iso.org/standard/50245.html and
from the British Standards Institution,
12110 Sunset Hills Road, Suite 200,
Reston, VA 20190–5902, telephone:
800–862–4977 or https://
shop.bsigroup.com. They are also
available for inspection at the Federal
Railroad Administration, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC
20590; phone: (202) 493–6052; email:
FRALegal@dot.gov.
J. Environmental Justice
Executive Order 12898, ‘‘Federal
Actions to Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations,’’ requires
DOT agencies to achieve environmental
justice as part of their mission by
identifying and addressing, as
appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects, including
interrelated social and economic effects,
of their programs, policies, and
activities on minority populations and
low-income populations. DOT Order
5610.2C (‘‘U.S. Department of
Transportation Actions to Address
Environmental Justice in Minority
Populations and Low-Income
Populations’’) instructs DOT agencies to
address compliance with Executive
Order 12898 and requirements within
the DOT Order 5610.2C in rulemaking
activities, as appropriate, and also
requires consideration of the benefits of
transportation programs, policies, and
other activities where minority
populations and low-income
populations benefit, at a minimum, to
the same level as the general population
as a whole when determining impacts
on minority and low-income
populations.33 FRA has evaluated this
final rule under Executive Orders 12898
and 14096 and DOT Order 5610.2C and
has determined it will not cause
disproportionate and adverse human
health and environmental effects on
communities with environmental justice
concerns.
K. Executive Order 13175 (Tribal
Consultation)
FRA has evaluated this final rule in
accordance with the principles and
criteria contained in Executive Order
13175, ‘‘Consultation and Coordination
33 Executive Order 14096, ‘‘Revitalizing Our
Nation’s Commitment to Environmental Justice,’’
issued on April 26, 2023, supplements Executive
Order 12898, but is not currently referenced in DOT
Order 5610.2C.
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
with Indian Tribal Governments,’’ dated
November 6, 2000. The final rule would
not have a substantial direct effect on
one or more Indian tribes, would not
impose substantial direct compliance
costs on Indian tribal governments, and
would not preempt tribal laws.
Therefore, the funding and consultation
requirements of Executive Order 13175
do not apply, and a tribal summary
impact statement is not required.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 227
Hazardous materials transportation,
Incorporation by reference, Locomotive
noise control, Occupational safety and
health, Penalties, Railroad employees,
Railroad safety, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
The Final Rule
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, FRA amends part 227 of
chapter II, subtitle B of title 49 of the
Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 227—OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY
AND HEALTH IN THE LOCOMOTIVE
CAB
1. The authority citation for part 227
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 20103, 20103 note,
20166, 20701–20703, 21301, 21302, 21304;
28 U.S.C. 2461 note; and 49 CFR 1.89.
2. Revise the heading for part 227 to
read as set forth above.
■ 3. Revise § 227.1 to read as follows:
■
§ 227.1
Purpose and scope.
(a) General. The purpose of this part
is to protect the occupational safety and
health of certain employees who are
exposed to occupational dangers while
in the cab of the locomotive. This part
prescribes minimum Federal safety and
health standards for certain locomotive
cab occupants. This part does not
restrict a railroad or railroad contractor
from adopting and enforcing additional
or more stringent requirements.
(b) Subpart B of this part. The
purpose of subpart B is to protect the
occupational safety and health of
employees whose predominant noise
exposure occurs in the locomotive cab.
Subpart B prescribes minimum Federal
safety and health noise standards for
locomotive cab occupants.
(c) Subpart C of this part. The purpose
of subpart C is to protect the
occupational safety and health of train
employees and certain other employees
in the cab of the locomotive of a freight
train that is transporting a poison
inhalation hazard (PIH) material that, if
released due to a railroad accident/
incident, would pose an inhalation
hazard to the occupants. In particular,
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
subpart C is intended to protect these
employees from the risk of exposure to
the material while they are located in,
or during escape from, the locomotive
cab.
■ 4. Amend § 227.3 by revising
paragraphs (a), (b) introductory text, and
(b)(5) and adding paragraphs (c) and (d)
to read as follows:
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
§ 227.3
Application.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(b) of this section, subpart B of this part
applies to all railroads and contractors
to railroads.
(b) Subpart B of this part does not
apply to—
*
*
*
*
*
(5) Foreign railroad operations that
meet the following conditions:
Employees of the foreign railroad have
a primary reporting point outside of the
U.S. but are operating trains or
conducting switching operations in the
U.S.; and the government of that foreign
railroad has implemented requirements
for hearing conservation for railroad
employees; the foreign railroad
undertakes to comply with those
requirements while operating within the
U.S.; and FRA’s Associate
Administrator for Railroad Safety/Chief
Safety Officer determines that the
foreign requirements are consistent with
the purpose and scope of subpart B of
this part. A ‘‘foreign railroad’’ refers to
a railroad that is incorporated in a place
outside the U.S. and is operated out of
a foreign country but operates for some
distance in the U.S.
(c) Except as provided in paragraph
(d) of this section, subpart C of this part
applies to any railroad that operates a
freight train that transports a PIH
material, including a residue of such a
PIH material, on standard gage track that
is part of the general railroad system of
transportation.
(d) Subpart C of this part does not
apply to a railroad that operates only on
track inside an installation that is not
part of the general railroad system of
transportation.
■ 5. Amend § 227.5 by adding, in
alphabetical order, definitions for
‘‘Accident/incident’’, ‘‘Associate
Administrator for Railroad Safety/Chief
Safety Officer’’, ‘‘Atmosphere
immediately dangerous to life or health
(IDLH)’’, ‘‘Atmosphere-supplying
device’’, ‘‘Deadheading’’, ‘‘Division
headquarters’’, ‘‘Emergency escape
breathing apparatus or EEBA’’, ‘‘Freight
car’’, ‘‘Freight train’’, ‘‘Hazardous
material’’, ‘‘Hazmat employee’’, ‘‘In
service or in-service’’, ‘‘Intermodal
container’’, ‘‘ISO’’, ‘‘NIOSH’’, ‘‘PIH
material’’, ‘‘Residue’’, ‘‘State’’,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
5131
Hazardous material has the meaning
assigned to that term by § 171.8 of this
title.
Hazmat employee has the meaning
§ 227.5 Definitions.
assigned to that term by § 171.8 of this
*
*
*
*
*
title.
Accident/incident has the meaning
*
*
*
*
*
that is assigned to that term by § 225.5
In service or in-service when used in
of this chapter.
connection with a freight train, means
*
*
*
*
*
each freight train subject to this part
Associate Administrator for Railroad
unless the train—
Safety/Chief Safety Officer means the
(1) Is in a repair shop or on a repair
Associate Administrator for Railroad
track;
Safety/Chief Safety Officer, Federal
(2) Is on a storage track and its cars
Railroad Administration, 1200 New
are empty; or
(3) Has been delivered in interchange
Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC
but has not been accepted by the
20590.
Atmosphere immediately dangerous
receiving carrier.
Intermodal container means a freight
to life or health (IDLH) means an
container designed and constructed to
atmosphere that poses an immediate
permit it to be used interchangeably in
threat to life, would cause irreversible
two or more modes of transportation.
adverse health effects, or would impair
ISO means the International
an individual’s ability to escape from a
Organization for Standardization, a
dangerous atmosphere.
Atmosphere-supplying device means a network of national standards institutes
in 162 countries, including the United
respirator that supplies the respirator
States through the American National
user with breathing air from a source
Standards Institute, that develops
that is independent of the ambient
international standards to assist in
atmosphere. Such devices include
ensuring the safe performance of a wide
supplied-air respirators and selfrange of devices, including EEBAs.
contained breathing apparatus units.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
NIOSH means the National Institute
Deadheading means the physical
for Occupational Safety and Health, a
relocation of a train employee from one
point to another as a result of a railroad- Federal agency responsible for
conducting research and making
issued oral or written directive.
recommendations for the prevention of
*
*
*
*
*
work-related injury and illness, which is
Division headquarters means the
part of the Centers for Disease Control
location designated by the railroad
and Prevention in the U.S. Department
where a high-level operating manager
of Health and Human Services and
(e.g., a superintendent, division
which certifies industrial-type
manager, or equivalent), who has
respirators in accordance with the
jurisdiction over a portion of the
NIOSH respiratory regulations (42 CFR
railroad, has an office.
part 84).
Emergency escape breathing
apparatus or EEBA means an
*
*
*
*
*
atmosphere-supplying respirator device
PIH material means any of the
that is designed for use only during
hazardous materials that are a gas,
escape from a hazardous atmosphere.
liquid, or other material defined as a
‘‘material poisonous by inhalation’’ by
*
*
*
*
*
§ 171.8 of this title.
Freight car means a vehicle designed
to transport freight, or railroad
*
*
*
*
*
personnel, by rail and includes, but is
Residue has the meaning assigned to
not limited to, a—
the term by § 171.8 of this title.
(1) Box car;
*
*
*
*
*
(2) Refrigerator car;
State means a State of the United
(3) Ventilator car;
States of America or the District of
(4) Stock car;
Columbia.
(5) Gondola car;
Switching service means the
(6) Hopper car;
classification of freight cars according to
(7) Flat car;
commodity or destination; assembling
(8) Special car;
of cars for train movements; changing
(9) Caboose;
the position of cars for purposes of
(10) Tank car; and
loading, unloading, or weighing; placing
(11) Yard car.
of locomotives and cars for repair or
Freight train means one or more
storage; or moving of rail equipment in
locomotives coupled with one or more
connection with work service that does
freight cars, except during switching
not constitute a freight train movement.
service.
‘‘Switching service’’, ‘‘System
headquarters’’, ‘‘Train employee’’, and
‘‘United States’’ to read as follows:
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
5132
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
System headquarters means the
location designated by the railroad as
the general office for the railroad
system.
*
*
*
*
*
Train employee means an individual
who is engaged in or connected with the
movement of a train, including a
hostler, as defined in 49 U.S.C. 21101.
United States means all of the States
and the District of Columbia.
§ 227.7
[Removed and Reserved]
6. Remove and reserve § 227.7.
■ 7. Amend § 227.15 by revising
paragraph (b) to read as follows:
■
§ 227.15
Information collection.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The information collection
requirements are found in the following
sections: §§ 227.13, 227.103, 227.107,
227.109, 227.111, 227.117, 227.119,
227.121, 227.201, 227.203, 227.205,
227.207, 227.209, 227.211, 227.213, and
227.215.
■ 8. Amend § 227.103 by revising
paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) to read as
follows:
§ 227.103
Noise monitoring program.
(a) * * *
(1) Class I, passenger, and commuter
railroads no later than February 26,
2008.
(2) Railroads with 400,000 or more
annual employee hours that are not
Class I, passenger, or commuter
railroads no later than August 26, 2008.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 9. Amend § 227.109 by revising
paragraph (e)(2)(i) to read as follows:
§ 227.109
Audiometric testing program.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) For all employees without a
baseline audiogram as of February 26,
2007, Class I, passenger, and commuter
railroads, and railroads with 400,000 or
more annual employee hours shall
establish a valid baseline audiogram by
February 26, 2009; and railroads with
less than 400,000 annual employee
hours shall establish a valid baseline
audiogram by February 26, 2010.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. Amend § 227.119 by revising
paragraph (b)(2) to read as follows:
§ 227.119
Training program.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) For employees hired on or before
February 26, 2007, by Class I, passenger,
and commuter railroads, and railroads
with 400,000 or more annual employee
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
hours, by no later than February 26,
2009;
*
*
*
*
*
■ 11. Add subpart C, consisting of
§§ 227.201 through 227.219, to read as
follows:
Subpart C—Emergency Escape Breathing
Apparatus Standards
Sec.
227.201 Criteria for requiring availability of
EEBAs in the locomotive cab.
227.203 Criteria for selecting EEBAs.
227.205 Storage facilities for EEBAs.
227.207 Railroad’s program for inspection,
maintenance, and replacement of EEBAs;
requirements for procedures.
227.209 Railroad’s program of instruction
on EEBAs.
227.211 Requirement to implement a
general EEBA program; criteria for
placing employees in the general EEBA
program.
227.213 Employee’s responsibilities.
227.215 Recordkeeping in general.
227.217 Compliance dates.
227.219 Incorporation by reference.
Subpart C—Emergency Escape
Breathing Apparatus Standards
§ 227.201 Criteria for requiring availability
of EEBAs in the locomotive cab.
(a) In general. (1)(i) Except as
specified in paragraph (b) of this
section, a railroad is required to provide
an EEBA to each of the following of its
employees while the employee is
located in the cab of a locomotive of an
in-service freight train transporting a
PIH material, including a residue of a
PIH material:
(A) Any train employee;
(B) Any direct supervisor of the train
employee;
(C) Any employee who is
deadheading; and
(D) Any other employee designated by
the railroad in writing and at the
discretion of the railroad.
(ii) Each EEBA provided to an
employee identified in paragraph
(a)(1)(i) of this section must meet the
EEBA-selection criteria of § 227.203 and
must have been inspected and be in
working order pursuant to the
requirements of § 227.207 at the time
that the EEBA is provided to the
employee.
(2) Except as specified in paragraph
(b) of this section, a railroad shall not
use a locomotive to transport a PIH
material, including a residue of a PIH
material, in an in-service freight train
unless each of the employees identified
in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section
while occupying a locomotive cab of the
train has access to an EEBA that satisfies
the EEBA selection criteria in § 227.203
and that has been inspected and is in
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
working order pursuant to the
requirements in § 227.207.
(b) Exceptions. (1) A railroad is not
required to provide an EEBA, or make
accessible an EEBA, to an employee
while in the locomotive cab of an inservice freight train transporting a PIH
material if all of the PIH materials in the
train, including a residue of a PIH
material, are being transported in one or
more intermodal containers.
(2) This subpart does not apply to any
of the following:
(i) Employees who are moving a
locomotive or group of locomotives
coupled to a car or group of cars
transporting a PIH material, including a
residue of a PIH material, only within
the confines of a locomotive repair or
servicing area.
(ii) Employees who are moving a
locomotive or group of locomotives
coupled to a car or group of cars
transporting a PIH material, including a
residue of a PIH material for distances
of less than 100 feet for inspection or
maintenance purposes.
(c) Employee misconduct.
Notwithstanding any exceptions
identified in this subpart, any employee
who willfully tampers with or
vandalizes an EEBA shall be subject to
this subpart for purposes of enforcement
relating to § 227.213.
§ 227.203
Criteria for selecting EEBAs.
In selecting the appropriate EEBA to
provide to an employee, the railroad
shall do the following:
(a) Select an atmosphere-supplying
EEBA that protects against all PIH
materials (including their residue) that
are being transported by the freight train
while in service.
(b) Ensure that the type of respirator
selected meets the requirements of
paragraph (c)(1) of this section regarding
minimum breathing capacity and is—
(1) Certified for an escape only
purpose by NIOSH pursuant to 42 CFR
part 84; or
(2) Declared by the manufacturer,
based on verifiable testing by the
manufacturer or an independent third
party, to meet the criteria established by
one of the following:
(i) ISO 23269–1:2008 (incorporated by
reference, see § 227.219);
(ii) BS EN 13794:2002 (incorporated
by reference, see § 227.219); or
(iii) BS EN 1146:2005 (incorporated
by reference, see § 227.219).
(c) Document, and provide such
documentation for inspection by FRA
upon request, the rationale for the final
selection of an EEBA by addressing each
of the following concerns:
(1) Breathing time. Each EEBA must
be fully charged and contain a
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
minimum breathing capacity of 15
minutes at the time of the pre-trip
inspection required under
§ 227.207(a)(1).
(2) Head and neck protection. The
EEBA selected must provide a means of
protecting the individual’s head and
neck from the irritating effects of PIH
materials to facilitate escape.
(3) Accommodation for eyeglasses
and a range of facial features. The EEBA
selected must provide a means of
protecting each employee who is
required to be provided with the EEBA,
including those who wear glasses, and
allow for the reasonable accommodation
of each such employee’s facial features,
including facial hair.
§ 227.205
Storage facilities for EEBAs.
(a) A railroad may not use a
locomotive if it is part of an in-service
freight train transporting a PIH material,
including a residue of a PIH material,
and the locomotive cab is occupied by
an employee identified in
§ 227.201(a)(1)(i)(A) through (D) (subject
employee), unless the locomotive cab
has appropriate storage facilities to hold
the number of EEBAs required to be
provided.
(b) The storage facility for each
required EEBA must—
(1) Prevent deformation of the face
piece and exhalation valve, where
applicable;
(2) Protect the EEBA from incidental
damage, contamination, dust, sunlight,
extreme temperatures, excessive
moisture, and damaging chemicals;
(3) Provide each subject employee
located in the locomotive cab with
ready access to the EEBA during an
emergency; and
(4) Provide a means for each subject
employee to locate the EEBA under
adverse conditions such as darkness or
disorientation.
(c) A railroad must comply with the
applicable manufacturer’s instructions
for storage of each required EEBA and
must keep a copy of the instructions at
its system headquarters for FRA
inspection.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
§ 227.207 Railroad’s program for
inspection, maintenance, and replacement
of EEBAs; requirements for procedures.
(a) General. Each railroad shall
establish and comply with a written
program for inspection, maintenance,
and replacement of EEBAs that are
required under this subpart. The
program for inspection, maintenance,
and replacement of EEBAs shall be
maintained at the railroad’s system
headquarters and shall be amended, as
necessary, to reflect any significant
changes. This program shall include the
following procedures:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
(1) Procedures for performing and
recording a pre-trip inspection of each
EEBA that is required to be provided on
a locomotive being used to transport a
PIH material and procedures for
cleaning, replacing, or repairing each
required EEBA, if necessary, prior to its
being provided under § 227.201(a);
(2) Procedures for performing and
recording periodic inspections and
maintenance of each required EEBA in
a manner and on a schedule in
accordance with the manufacturer’s
recommendations; and
(3) Procedures for turning in and
obtaining a replacement for a defective,
failed, or used EEBA and for recording
those transactions.
(b) Inspection procedures and
records. (1) A railroad’s procedures for
pre-trip and periodic inspections of
EEBAs shall require that the following
information about each pre-trip and
periodic inspection be accurately
recorded on a tag or label that is
attached to the storage facility for the
EEBA or kept with the EEBA or in
inspection reports stored as paper or
electronic files:
(i) The name of the railroad
performing the inspection;
(ii) The date that the inspection was
performed;
(iii) The name and signature of the
individual who made the inspection;
(iv) The findings of the inspection;
(v) The required remedial action; and
(vi) A serial number or other means of
identifying the inspected EEBA.
(2) A railroad shall maintain an
accurate record of each pre-trip and
periodic inspection required by this
section. Pre-trip inspection records shall
be retained for a period of 92 days.
Periodic inspection records shall be
retained for a period of one year.
(c) Procedures applicable if EEBA
fails an inspection or is used. An EEBA
that fails an inspection required by this
section, is otherwise found to be
defective, or is used, shall be removed
from service and be discarded or
repaired, adjusted, or cleaned in
accordance with the following
procedures:
(1) Repair, adjustment, and cleaning
of EEBAs shall be done only by persons
who are appropriately trained to
perform such work and who shall use
only the EEBA manufacturer’s approved
parts designed to maintain the EEBA in
compliance with one of the following
standards:
(i) NIOSH at 42 CFR part 84;
(ii) ISO 23269–1:2008 (incorporated
by reference, see § 227.219);
(iii) BS EN 1146:2005 (incorporated
by reference, see § 227.219); or
(iv) BS EN 13794:2002 (incorporated
by reference, see § 227.219).
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
5133
(2) Repairs shall be made according to
the manufacturer’s recommendations
and specifications for the type and
extent of repairs to be performed.
(3) Where applicable, reducing and
admission valves, regulators, and alarms
shall be adjusted or repaired only by the
manufacturer or a technician trained by
the manufacturer.
(4) An EEBA may not be returned to
service unless it meets the requirements
in § 227.203.
(d) Records of returns, maintenance,
repair, and replacement. A railroad
shall—
(1) Maintain an accurate record of
return, maintenance, repair, or
replacement for each EEBA required by
this subpart; and
(2) Retain each of these records for
three years.
§ 227.209 Railroad’s program of
instruction on EEBAs.
(a) General. (1) A railroad shall adopt
and comply with its written program of
instruction on EEBAs for all of its
employees in its general EEBA program
under § 227.211 (subject employees).
The program of instruction shall be
maintained at the railroad’s system
headquarters and shall be amended, as
necessary, to reflect any significant
changes.
(2) This program may be integrated
with the railroad’s program of
instruction on operating rules under
§ 217.11 of this chapter or its program
of instruction for hazmat employees
under § 172.704 of this title. If the
program is not integrated with either of
these programs, it must be written in a
separate document that is available for
inspection by FRA.
(b) Subject matter. The railroad’s
program of instruction shall require that
the subject employees demonstrate
knowledge of at least the following:
(1) Why the EEBA is necessary and
how improper fit, usage, or maintenance
can compromise the protective effect of
the EEBA.
(2) The capabilities and limitations of
the EEBA, particularly the limited time
for use.
(3) How to use the EEBA effectively
in emergency situations, including
situations in which the EEBA
malfunctions.
(4) How to inspect, put on, remove,
and use the EEBA, and how to check the
seals of the EEBA.
(5) Procedures for maintenance and
storage of the EEBA that must be
followed.
(6) The requirements of this subpart
related to the responsibilities of
employees and the rights of employees
to have access to records.
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
5134
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
(7) The hazardous materials classified
as PIH materials.
(c) Dates of initial instruction and
intervals for periodic instruction. (1)
The instruction for current subject
employees shall be provided on an
initial basis no later than 30 days prior
to the date of compliance identified in
§ 227.217. Initial instruction of new
subject employees shall occur either 30
days prior to the date of compliance
identified in § 227.217 or before
assignment to jobs where the
deployment of EEBAs on a locomotive
is required, whichever is later.
(2) Initial instruction shall be
supplemented with periodic instruction
at least once every three years.
(d) Records of instruction. A railroad
shall maintain a record of employees
provided instruction in compliance
with this section and retain these
records for three years.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
§ 227.211 Requirement to implement a
general EEBA program; criteria for placing
employees in the general EEBA program.
(a) In general. A railroad shall adopt
and comply with a comprehensive,
written, general program to implement
this subpart that shall be maintained at
the railroad’s system headquarters. Each
railroad shall amend its general EEBA
program, as necessary, to reflect any
significant changes.
(b) Elements of the general EEBA
program and criteria for placing
employees in program. A railroad’s
general EEBA program shall—
(1) Identify the individual who
implements and manages the railroad’s
general EEBA program by title. The
individual must have suitable training
and sufficient knowledge, experience,
skill, and authority to enable him or her
to manage properly a program for
provision of EEBAs. If the individual is
not directly employed by the railroad,
the written program must identify the
business relationship of the railroad to
the individual fulfilling this role.
(2) Describe the administrative and
technical process for selection of EEBAs
appropriate to the hazards that may be
reasonably expected.
(3) Describe the process used to
procure and provide EEBAs in a manner
to ensure the continuous and ready
availability of an EEBA to each of the
railroad’s employees identified in
§ 227.201(a)(1)(i)(A) through (D) (while
actually occupying the locomotive cab
of a freight train in service transporting
a PIH material). This description shall
include—
(i) A description of the method used
for provision of EEBAs, including
whether the EEBAs are individually
assigned to employees, installed on
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Jkt 262001
locomotives as required equipment, or
provided by other means. If EEBAs are
installed on locomotives as required
equipment, the means of securement
shall be designated.
(ii) The decision criteria used by the
railroad to identify trains in which
provision of EEBAs is not required.
(iii) A description of what procedures
will govern the railroad at interchange
to ensure that the locomotive cab in
each in-service freight train transporting
a PIH material has an EEBA accessible
to each of the employees identified in
§ 227.201(a)(1)(i)(A) through (D) while
in the cab of the locomotive, including
what procedures are in place to ensure
that the EEBAs provided satisfy the
EEBA-selection criteria in § 227.203,
satisfy the EEBA-storage criteria in
§ 227.205, and have been inspected and
are in working order pursuant to the
requirements in § 227.207.
(4) Ensure that each of the following
employees, except those excluded by
§ 227.201(b), whose duties require
regular work in the locomotive cabs of
in-service freight trains transporting a
PIH material, including a residue of a
PIH material, has the required EEBA
available when they occupy the cab of
such a train and know how to use the
EEBA:
(i) Employees who perform service
subject to 49 U.S.C. 21103 (train
employees) on such trains;
(ii) Direct supervisors of train
employees on such trains;
(iii) Deadheading employees on such
trains; and
(iv) Any other employees designated
by the railroad in writing and at the
discretion of the railroad.
(c) Records of positions or individuals
or both in the railroad’s general EEBA
program. A railroad shall maintain a
record of all positions or individuals, or
both, who are designated by the railroad
to be placed in its general EEBA
program pursuant to paragraph (b)(4) of
this section. The railroad shall retain
these records for the duration of the
designation and for one year thereafter.
(d) Consolidated programs. A group of
two or more commonly controlled
railroads subject to this subpart may
request in writing that the Associate
Administrator for Railroad Safety/Chief
Safety Officer (Associate Administrator)
treat them as a single railroad for
purposes of adopting and complying
with the general EEBA program required
by this section. The request must list the
parent corporation that controls the
group of railroads and demonstrate that
the railroads operate in the United
States as a single, integrated rail system.
The Associate Administrator will notify
PO 00000
Frm 00048
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
the railroads of his or her decision in
writing.
§ 227.213
Employee’s responsibilities.
(a) An employee to whom the railroad
provides an EEBA shall—
(1) Participate in training under
§ 227.209;
(2) Follow railroad procedures to
ensure that the railroad’s EEBAs—
(i) Are maintained in a secure and
accessible manner;
(ii) Are inspected as required by this
subpart and the railroad’s program of
inspection; and
(iii) If found to be unserviceable upon
inspection, are turned in to the
appropriate railroad facility for repair,
periodic maintenance, or replacement;
and
(3) Notify the railroad of EEBA
failures and of use incidents in a timely
manner.
(b) No employee shall willfully
tamper with or vandalize an EEBA that
is provided pursuant to § 227.201(a) in
an attempt to disable or damage the
EEBA.
§ 227.215
Recordkeeping in general.
(a) Availability of records. (1) A
railroad shall make all records required
by this subpart available for inspection
and copying or photocopying to
representatives of FRA, upon request.
(2) Except for records of pre-trip
inspections of EEBAs under § 227.207,
records required to be retained under
this subpart must be kept at the system
headquarters and at each division
headquarters where the tests and
inspections are conducted.
(b) Electronic records. All records
required by this subpart may be kept in
electronic form by the railroad. A
railroad may maintain and transfer
records through electronic transmission,
storage, and retrieval provided that all
of the following conditions are met:
(1) The electronic system is designed
so that the integrity of each record is
maintained through appropriate levels
of security such as recognition of an
electronic signature, or other means,
which uniquely identify the initiating
person as the author of that record. No
two persons have the same electronic
identity.
(2) The electronic system ensures that
each record cannot be modified in any
way, or replaced, once the record is
transmitted and stored.
(3) Any amendment to a record is
electronically stored apart from the
record that it amends. Each amendment
to a record is uniquely identified as to
the individual making the amendment.
(4) The electronic system provides for
the maintenance of records as originally
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 18 / Friday, January 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
submitted without corruption or loss of
data.
(5) Paper copies of electronic records
and amendments to those records that
may be necessary to document
compliance with this subpart are made
available for inspection and copying or
photocopying by representatives of
FRA.
§ 227.217
Compliance dates.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Incorporation by reference.
Certain material is incorporated by
reference into this subpart with the
approval of the Director of the Federal
Register under 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1
CFR part 51. This incorporation by
reference (IBR) material is available for
inspection at the FRA and the National
Archives and Records Administration
(NARA). Contact FRA at: Federal
Railroad Administration, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC
20590; phone: (202) 493–6052; email:
FRALegal@dot.gov. For information on
the availability of this material at
NARA, visit www.archives.gov/federalregister/cfr/ibr-locations or email
fr.inspection@nara.gov. The material
may be obtained from the following
sources:
(a) The British Standards Institution,
12110 Sunset Hills Road, Suite 200,
Reston, VA 20190–5902, phone: 800–
862–4977; website: shop.bsigroup.com.
(1) BS EN 1146:2005, Respiratory
protective devices—Self-contained,
open-circuit compressed air breathing
apparatus incorporating a hood for
escape—requirements, testing, marking;
February 2, 2006; into §§ 227.203(b) and
227.207(c).
(2) BS EN 13794:2002, Respiratory
protective devices—Self-contained,
closed-circuit breathing apparatus for
escape—requirements, testing, marking,
November 26, 2002; into §§ 227.203(b)
and 227.207(c).
(b) International Organization for
Standardization, Chemin de Blandonnet
8, CP 401, 1214 Vernier, Geneva,
Switzerland; phone +41–22–749–08–88;
website: www.iso.org.
(1) ISO 23269–1:2008(E), Ships and
marine technology—Breathing
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:31 Jan 25, 2024
Issued in Washington, DC.
Amitabha Bose,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2024–01074 Filed 1–25–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–06–P
(a) Class I railroads subject to this
subpart are required to comply with this
subpart beginning no later than 12
months from March 26, 2024.
(b) Class II railroads subject to this
subpart are required to comply with this
subpart beginning no later than 12
months from March 26, 2024.
(c) Class III railroads subject to this
subpart and any other railroads subject
to this subpart are required to comply
with this subpart beginning no later
than 18 months from March 26, 2024.
§ 227.219
apparatus for ships—Part 1: Emergency
escape breathing devices (EEBD) for
shipboard use, First Edition, February 1,
2008; into §§ 227.203(b) and 227.207(c).
(2) [Reserved]
Jkt 262001
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 230306–0065; RTID 0648–
XD669]
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Pacific Cod by
Catcher Vessels Less Than 60 Feet
(18.3 Meters) Length Overall Using
Hook-and-Line or Pot Gear in the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; closure.
AGENCY:
NMFS is prohibiting directed
fishing for Pacific cod by catcher vessels
less than 60 feet (18.3 meters (m)) length
overall (LOA) using hook-and-line or
pot gear in the Bering Sea and Aleutian
Islands management area (BSAI). This
action is necessary to prevent exceeding
the 2024 Pacific cod total allowable
catch (TAC) allocated to catcher vessels
less than 60 feet (18.3 m) LOA using
hook-and-line or pot gear in the BSAI.
DATES: Effective 1200 hours, Alaska
local time (A.l.t.), January 25, 2024,
through 2400 hours, A.l.t., December 31,
2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Adam Zaleski, 907–586–7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS
manages the groundfish fishery in the
BSAI exclusive economic zone
according to the Fishery Management
Plan for Groundfish of the Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area
(FMP) prepared by the North Pacific
Fishery Management Council under
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act. Regulations governing fishing by
U.S. vessels in accordance with the FMP
appear at subpart H of 50 CFR part 600
and 50 CFR part 679.
The 2024 Pacific cod TAC allocated to
catcher vessels less than 60 feet (18.3 m)
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00049
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
5135
LOA using hook-and-line or pot gear in
the BSAI is 3,867 metric tons as
established by the final 2023 and 2024
harvest specifications for groundfish in
the BSAI (88 FR 14926, March 10,
2023), inseason adjustment (88 FR
88836, December 26, 2023) and
reallocation (89 FR 2176, January 12,
2024).
In accordance with § 679.20(d)(1)(iii),
the Administrator, Alaska Region,
NMFS (Regional Administrator), has
determined that the 2024 Pacific cod
TAC allocated as a directed fishing
allowance to catcher vessels less than 60
feet (18.3 m) LOA using hook-and-line
or pot gear in the BSAI will soon be
reached. Consequently, NMFS is
prohibiting directed fishing for Pacific
cod by catcher vessels less than 60 feet
(18.3 m) LOA using hook-and-line or
pot gear in the BSAI.
While this closure is effective the
maximum retainable amounts at
§ 679.20(e) and (f) apply at any time
during a trip.
Classification
NMFS issues this action pursuant to
section 305(d) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act. This action is required by 50 CFR
part 679, which was issued pursuant to
section 304(b), and is exempt from
review under Executive Order 12866.
Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), there
is good cause to waive prior notice and
an opportunity for public comment on
this action, as notice and comment
would be impracticable and contrary to
the public interest, as it would prevent
NMFS from responding to the most
recent fisheries data in a timely fashion
and would delay the closure of Pacific
cod by catcher vessels less than 60 feet
(18.3 m) LOA using hook-and-line or
pot gear in the BSAI. NMFS was unable
to publish a notice providing time for
public comment because the most
recent, relevant data only became
available as of January 23, 2024.
The Assistant Administrator for
Fisheries, NOAA also finds good cause
to waive the 30-day delay in the
effective date of this action under 5
U.S.C. 553(d)(3). This finding is based
upon the reasons provided above for
waiver of prior notice and opportunity
for public comment.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: January 23, 2024.
Everett Wayne Baxter,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2024–01692 Filed 1–25–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
E:\FR\FM\26JAR1.SGM
26JAR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 18 (Friday, January 26, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 5113-5135]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-01074]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Part 227
Docket No. FRA-2009-0044, Notice No. 2]
RIN 2130-AC14
Emergency Escape Breathing Apparatus Standards
AGENCY: Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: FRA is amending its regulations related to occupational noise
exposure in three ways. First, in response to a congressional mandate,
FRA is expanding those regulations to require that railroads provide an
appropriate atmosphere-supplying emergency escape breathing apparatus
to every train crew member and certain other employees while they are
occupying a locomotive cab of a freight train transporting a hazardous
material that would pose an inhalation hazard in the event of release
during an accident. Second, FRA is changing the name of this part of
its regulations from ``Occupational Noise Exposure'' to ``Occupational
Safety and Health in the Locomotive Cab'' to reflect the additional
subject matter of this final rule and to make other conforming
amendments. Third, FRA is removing the provision stating the preemptive
effect of this part of FRA's regulations because it is unnecessary.
DATES: This final rule is effective March 26, 2024. The incorporation
by reference of certain publications listed in this rule is approved by
the Director of the Federal Register as of March 26, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michael Watson, Occupational Safety
and Health Manager, Office of Railroad Safety, telephone 202-493-9544,
email: [email protected] or Richard Baxley, Attorney-Adviser,
Office of the Chief Counsel, telephone: 202-853-5053, email:
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Abbreviations and Terms Used in This Document
AAR--Association of American Railroads
AIHA--American Industrial Hygiene Association
ANSI--American National Standards Institute
ASLRRA--American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association
BLET--Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen
BNSF--BNSF Railway Company
BRS--Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen
BS--British Standards Institution
CEN--European Committee for Standardization
CFR--Code of Federal Regulations
CO2--carbon dioxide
DOT--U.S. Department of Transportation
EEBA--emergency escape breathing apparatus
EN--European standard
FRA--Federal Railroad Administration
FRSA--the former Federal Railroad Safety Act of 1970, repealed and
reenacted as positive law primarily at 49 U.S.C. ch. 201
HMIS--Hazardous Materials Information System
IDLH--immediate danger to life or health or immediately dangerous to
life or health
IFRA--Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
ISEA--International Safety Equipment Association
ISO--International Organization for Standardization
[[Page 5114]]
LBIA--the former Locomotive (Boiler) Inspection Act, repealed and
reenacted as positive law in 49 U.S.C. 20701-20703
LPG--liquefied petroleum gas
NIOSH--National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
NPRM--notice of proposed rulemaking
NS--Norfolk Southern Railway Company
NTSB--National Transportation Safety Board
O2--Oxygen
OMB--Office of Management and Budget
OSHA--Occupational Safety and Health Administration
PHMSA--Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration
PIH material--poison inhalation hazard material
ppm--parts per million
PTC--positive train control
RCO--remote control operator
RFID--radio frequency identification
RIA--Regulatory Impact Analysis
RSIA--Rail Safety Improvement Act of 2008, Public Law 110-432,
Division A
SBA--Small Business Administration
SCBA--self-contained breathing apparatus
SCSR--self-contained, self-rescuer
SNPRM--supplemental notice of proposed rulemaking
T&E employees--train and engine service employees
UP--Union Pacific Railroad Company
UTU--United Transportation Union
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose of Regulatory Action
B. Summary of Major Provisions
C. Costs and Benefits
II. Statutory Authority
III. Background
A. Accident History and NTSB Recommendation R-05-17
B. FRA Sponsored Study
C. FRA's 2016 Guidance for Developing an EEBA Program
IV. Selection of the Appropriate EEBA by Railroads
V. Provision of EEBAs to Covered Employees
VI. Information and Recommendations Provided by the Railroad
Industry and Railroad Labor Organizations After the Study
VII. Public Comment on the SNPRM, with FRA's Response
A. Introduction
B. Comments on the Preamble, with FRA's Response
C. Section-Specific Public Comments, with FRA's Response
1. Comments on Sec. 227.201(a)(1), with FRA's Response
2. Comments on Sec. 227.203(c), with FRA's Response
3. Comments on Sec. 227.207, with FRA's Response
4. Comments on Sec. 227.209, with FRA's Response
5. Comments on Sec. 227.215, with FRA's Response
VIII. Section-by-Section Analysis
IX. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866 as Amended by Executive Order 14094
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive Order 13272
1. Statement of the need for, and objectives of, the rule
2. Significant issues raised by public comments
3. Response to comments filed by the Chief Counsel for Advocacy
of the Small Business Administration
4. Description and estimate of the number of small entities to
which the rule will apply
5. Description of the projected reporting, recordkeeping, and
other compliance requirements of the rule
6. A description of the steps the agency has taken to minimize
the economic impact on small entities
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. Analysis Under 1 CFR Part 51
J. Environmental Justice
K. Executive Order 13175 (Tribal Consultation)
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose of Regulatory Action
After railroad worker fatalities resulted from the inhalation of
chlorine gas following rail accidents in 2004 and 2005, NTSB issued a
recommendation that FRA require railroads to provide emergency escape
breathing apparatuses (EEBAs) to their locomotive crewmembers.\1\
Subsequently, in October 2008, Congress enacted the RSIA.\2\ Section
413 of the RSIA mandated that FRA issue regulations requiring railroads
to provide EEBAs, and training in their use, for train crews in the
locomotive cabs of any freight train transporting a hazardous material
in commerce that would present an inhalation hazard in the event of a
release. The purpose of this final rule is to respond to that statutory
mandate, and it also responds to NTSB Safety Recommendation R-05-17.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ NTSB Recommendation R-05-17. https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/AccidentReports/Reports/RAR0504.pdf.
\2\ Public Law 110-432, Div. A, 122 Stat. 4848, October 16, 2008
(49 U.S.C. 20166).
\3\ Collision of Norfolk Southern Freight Train 192 With
Standing Norfolk Southern Local Train P22 With Subsequent Hazardous
Materials Release at Graniteville, South Carolina, January 6, 2005,
which is posted at https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/AccidentReports/Reports/RAR0504.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FRA first issued an NPRM responsive to the mandate of section 413
in October 2010.\4\ Based on the cost-benefit analysis in the NPRM, and
the comments received in response to the NPRM, FRA issued a guidance
document \5\ rather than a final rule. FRA intended for railroads to
use the guidance document to develop EEBA programs to protect railroad
employees involved in transporting hazardous materials posing an
inhalation hazard. However, NTSB found that the guidance document did
not satisfy its recommendation, and the statutory mandate remained in
place. FRA then issued an SNPRM, with some revisions to the NPRM, on
March 22, 2023, to open the matter again to public comment. Having
considered the public comments on the SNPRM, FRA is promulgating this
final rule governing the provision of EEBAs as required by statute.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 75 FR 61386 (Oct. 5, 2010).
\5\ Federal Railroad Administration Guidance for Developing an
Atmosphere-Supplying Emergency Escape Breathing Apparatus Program
(Dec. 2016). https://railroads.dot.gov/elibrary/federal-railroad-administration-guidance-developing-atmosphere-supplying-emergency-escape.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Summary of Major Provisions
This final rule amends subpart C of 49 CFR part 227 to require any
freight railroad to provide a covered employee an appropriate
atmosphere-supplying EEBA when occupying a locomotive cab of a train
transporting a hazardous material that would pose an inhalation hazard
if released during an accident. Employees covered under this final rule
include train employees, their supervisor, a deadheading employee, and
any other employee designated by the railroad who is in the cab of a
locomotive. This this final rule addresses the inhalation hazards
associated with the hazardous materials that PHMSA identifies as
``materials poisonous by inhalation,'' which are commonly referred to
as ``PIH materials'' and are defined by PHMSA's Hazardous Materials
Regulations as: (1) a gas meeting the defining criteria in 49 CFR
173.115(c) (i.e., Division 2.3--Gas poisonous by inhalation) and
assigned to Hazard Zone A, B, C, or D in accordance with 49 CFR
173.116(a); (2) a liquid, other than a mist, meeting the defining
criteria regarding inhalation toxicity in 49 CFR 173.132(a)(1)(iii) and
assigned to Hazard Zone A or B in accordance with 49 CFR 173.133(a); or
(3) any material identified as an inhalation hazard by a special
provision in column 7 of the table in 49 CFR 172.101.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ 49 CFR 171.8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This final rule requires railroads that transport a PIH material on
the general railroad system of transportation to establish and carry
out programs for: selection, procurement, and provision of EEBAs;
inspection, maintenance, and replacement of EEBAs; and instruction of
employees in the use of EEBAs. Railroads are required to identify
individual employees or positions to be
[[Page 5115]]
placed in their general EEBA programs so that a sufficient number of
EEBAs are available and to ensure that the identified employees or
incumbents of the identified positions know how to use the devices.
This final rule requires railroads to provide for storage of EEBAs in
locomotive cabs to enable employees to access the apparatus quickly in
the event of a release of a hazardous material that poses an inhalation
hazard.
Because the new regulation is being placed in 49 CFR part 227,
noncompliance with these regulations may trigger enforcement action and
penalties as described in 49 CFR 227.9. FRA is also making conforming
changes, minor corrections, and updates to some of the existing
provisions of part 227. Further, FRA is removing the provision at 49
CFR 227.7 on the preemptive effect of part 227 as it is unnecessary
because it is duplicative of statutory law at 49 U.S.C. 20106 and case
law. See Napier v. Atlantic Coast Line R.R., 272 U.S. 605, 613; 47
S.Ct. 207, 210 (1926).
C. Costs and Benefits
FRA analyzed the economic impact of this final rule. FRA estimated
the costs to be incurred by railroads and the qualitative benefits of
fewer injuries to crewmembers from PIH material releasing after an
accident/incident.
This final rule requires that a railroad provide an EEBA for each
covered employee in a locomotive cab on a freight train transporting
any PIH material. These EEBAs will provide neck and face coverage with
respiratory protection for the covered employees. Railroads must also
ensure that the equipment is maintained and in proper working
condition. Finally, railroads are required to train covered employees
on the use of the EEBAs. The main objective of this final rule is to
protect covered employees from the risk of exposure to PIH materials
while the employees are in the locomotive cab or escaping from a
hazardous materials release posing an inhalation hazard.
Details on the estimated costs of this final rule can be found in
the Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA), which FRA has prepared and placed
in the docket (FRA-2009-0044). The RIA presents estimates of the costs
likely to occur over the first 10 years of the final rule. The analysis
includes estimates of costs associated with the purchase of EEBAs and
installation, employee training, and recordkeeping.
FRA has estimated costs for three options that are permissible
under the final rule. These include:
Option 1: Employee Assignment--EEBAs are assigned to
all covered employees and considered part of their equipment.
Option 2: Locomotive Assignment--EEBAs are assigned to
and kept in locomotives.
Option 3: Equipment Pooling--EEBAs are pooled at rail
yards and kept in storage lockers where employees would check-in and
check-out the EEBA when PIH is being hauled.
For all three options, FRA developed estimates using a closed-
circuit EEBA.\7\ For the ``Employee Assignment'' option, FRA estimates
that the costs associated with issuing each T&E employee (with an
estimated 60,000 T&E employees) with an EEBA as their own personal
equipment. The ``Locomotive Assignment'' option would require
installing EEBA devices in all locomotives in a railroad's fleet,
regardless of whether a locomotive is part of a train that is
transporting PIH material. There are approximately 24,000 locomotives
owned by Class I railroads, and FRA estimates that at least three
apparatuses would have to be installed in each locomotive, one
apparatus each for the conductor, the engineer, and an additional
covered employee. In the ``Equipment Pooling'' option, FRA considered
only having EEBAs provided in trainsets that were transporting PIH.
EEBAs would be brought on board after a determination is made on a
case-by-case basis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ A closed-circuit EEBA is a device designed for use as
respiratory protection during entry into hazardous atmospheres that
can be immediately dangerous to life and health and are described as
an apparatus of the type in which the exhaled breath is rebreathed
by the wearer after the CO2 has been effectively removed
and oxygen concentration restored to suitable levels.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FRA estimates the 10-year costs of the final rule to be between
$27.1 million to $91.9 million, discounted at 7 percent. The following
table shows the total costs of this final rule, over the 10-year
analysis period.
Total 10-Year Costs (2021 Dollars) \8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Numbers in this table and subsequent tables may not sum due
to rounding.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
10-Year cost Present value Present value Annualized 7% Annualized 3%
Category ($) 7% ($) 3% ($) ($) ($)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Option 1: Employee Assignment... 92,327,892 79,247,309 86,066,845 11,283,034 10,089,660
Option 2: Locomotive Assignment. 107,153,842 91,909,968 99,855,523 13,085,912 11,706,114
Option 3: Equipment Pooling..... 33,546,542 27,116,550 30,415,557 3,860,787 3,565,631
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The benefits associated with this final rule are qualitative in
nature and relate to the prevention of causalities and injuries. This
rule is expected to improve railroad safety by ensuring that all
covered employees in locomotives on freight trains transporting PIH
material can safely vacate the exposed area if a PIH material release
were to occur. The primary benefits include heightened safety for
covered employees and, as a result, earlier awareness/notification to
the public of any catastrophic release of a PIH material.
Implementation of this rule should mitigate the injuries to covered
employees from PIH material releasing after an accident/incident.
II. Statutory Authority
Section 413 of the RSIA mandates that the Secretary of
Transportation (Secretary) adopt regulations requiring railroads to
provide EEBAs for the train crews in the locomotive cabs of any freight
train transporting a hazardous material in commerce that would present
an inhalation hazard in the event of a release. Specifically, the
statute instructs the Secretary to prescribe regulations requiring
railroads to: (1) ensure that EEBAs affording suitable ``head and neck
coverage with respiratory protection'' are provided ``for all
crewmembers'' in a locomotive cab on a freight train transporting
``hazardous materials that would pose an inhalation hazard in the event
of a release;'' (2) provide a place for convenient storage of EEBAs in
the locomotive that will allow ``crewmembers to access such apparatus
quickly;'' (3) maintain EEBAs ``in proper working condition;'' and (4)
provide crewmembers with appropriate instruction in the use of EEBAs.
The Secretary has delegated the responsibility to carry out his
responsibilities under this section of the RSIA to the Administrator of
FRA. 49
[[Page 5116]]
CFR 1.89(b). Additionally, FRA is issuing this final rule under the
authority of 49 U.S.C. 20103 and 20701-20703, as delegated to the
Administrator of FRA pursuant to 49 CFR 1.89(a).
III. Background
A. Accident History and NTSB Recommendation R-05-17
As noted in the 2010 NPRM, historical data suggests limited train
crew injuries and fatalities related to the catastrophic release of a
PIH material; in the last decade (2013 to 2022), there were no PIH-
related fatalities of, or injuries to, T&E personnel.
While rail accidents involving the release of PIH materials are
rare; as demonstrated by the June 2004 rail accident in Macdona, Texas,
and the January 2005 accident in Graniteville, South Carolina, such
accidents can be deadly to both the crew members involved and others in
the vicinity. Both the Macdona and Graniteville accidents involved the
release of a PIH material (chlorine) and both accidents resulted in the
deaths of crewmembers.
The collision near Macdona occurred on June 28, 2004. According to
the NTSB's report,\9\ a westbound freight train traveling on the same
main line track as an eastbound freight train struck the midpoint of
the 123-car eastbound train as it was leaving the main line to enter a
parallel siding. The collision derailed the 4 locomotive units and the
first 19 cars of the westbound train as well as 17 cars of the
eastbound train. As a result of the derailment and pileup of railcars,
the 16th car of the westbound train, a pressure car loaded with
liquefied chlorine, was punctured. Chlorine escaping from this car
immediately vaporized into a cloud of chlorine gas that engulfed the
accident area to a radius of more than 700 feet. Three people,
including the conductor of the westbound train and two local residents,
died as a result of chlorine gas inhalation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ ``Collision of Union Pacific Railroad Train MHOTU-23 With
BNSF Railway Company Train MEAP-TUL-126-D With Subsequent Derailment
and Hazardous Materials Release, Macdona, Texas, June 28, 2004,''
Railroad Accident Report NTSB/RAR-06/03, Washington, DC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Graniteville accident occurred on January 6, 2005, when a
freight train encountered a switch that had been improperly lined. The
improperly lined switch diverted the train from the main line onto an
industry track. Once on the industry track, the train struck an
unoccupied, parked train. The collision resulted in the derailment of
two locomotives and 16 freight cars on the diverted train, as well as
the locomotive and one of the two cars of the parked train. There were
three tank cars containing chlorine among the derailed cars on the
diverted train. One of the cars containing chlorine was breached
causing a release of chlorine gas, which resulted in the train engineer
and eight other people dying from chlorine gas inhalation.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ ``Collision of Norfolk Southern Freight Train 192 With
Standing Norfolk Southern Local Train P22 With Subsequent Hazardous
Materials Release at Graniteville, South Carolina, January 6,
2005,'' Railroad Accident Report NTSB RAR-05/04, Washington, DC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Following the Macdona and Graniteville accidents, the NTSB issued
Safety Recommendation R-05-17 to FRA recommending that FRA determine
the most effective methods of providing emergency escape breathing
apparatus for all crewmembers on freight trains carrying hazardous
materials that would pose an inhalation hazard in the event of
unintentional release, and then require railroads to provide those
breathing apparatus to their crewmembers along with appropriate
training.
B. FRA Sponsored Study
In response to NTSB Safety Recommendation R-05-17, FRA commissioned
a study of EEBAs in cooperation with the railroad industry and railroad
labor organizations. As part of the study, FRA compiled factual
information, performed technical, risk, and economic analyses, and made
recommendations on ``the use of [EEBAs] by train crews who may have
exposure to hazardous materials [that] would pose an inhalation hazard
in the event of unintentional release.'' The study, published in 2009,
provided information and recommendations on the use of EEBAs by train
crews who may be exposed to hazardous materials that pose inhalation
hazards. The study concluded that railroads should consider using EEBAs
on trains transporting hazardous materials that pose an inhalation
hazard.\11\ Part of the preamble to this final rule draws from the
study; however, after further consideration of the issues involved and
consultation with representatives of the railroad industry and railroad
labor organizations (as discussed under ``Section VII. Information and
Recommendations Provided by the Railroad Industry and Railroad Labor
Organizations after the Study''), FRA has come to different conclusions
on a number of matters, including the minimum breathing time that EEBAs
should provide, the analysis of different methods of distribution of
the devices, and the costs and benefits of various EEBA alternatives.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See ``Emergency Escape Breathing Apparatus,'' FRA Office of
Research and Development, Final Report, May 2009, which is posted at
https://railroads.dot.gov/sites/fra.dot.gov/files/fra_net/1419/ord0911.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. FRA's 2016 Guidance for Developing an EEBA Program
In December 2016, FRA published, in the absence of a final rule,
Guidance for Developing an EEBA Program.\12\ This provided guidance to
railroads for developing and implementing an individualized EEBA
program to protect their crewmembers. The guidance highlights factors
to consider when selecting an appropriate EEBA and explains various
components to evaluate when developing an EEBA program. However, the
statutory mandate remains in place, and NTSB found that the Guidance
did not satisfy its recommendation. In addition, FRA is unaware of the
Guidance leading to any railroad developing an EEBA program or making
EEBAs generally available to their crewmembers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Federal Railroad Administration Guidance for Developing an
Atmosphere-Supplying Emergency Escape Breathing Apparatus Program
(Dec. 2016). https://railroads.dot.gov/elibrary/federal-railroad-administration-guidance-developing-atmosphere-supplying-emergency-escape.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Selection of the Appropriate EEBA by Railroads
As explained in the 2010 NPRM, EEBAs are ``respirators'' and
generally there are two different types of respirators: air-purifying
and atmosphere-supplying. Air-purifying respirators remove specific air
contaminants by passing ambient air through an air-purifying element,
such as an air-purifying filter, cartridge, or canister. Atmosphere-
supplying respirators supply breathing air from a source independent
from the ambient atmosphere. Types of atmosphere-supplying respirators
include airline supplied-air respirators and SCBA units. Based on the
factors presented below, FRA is requiring an atmosphere-supplying
respirator that provides adequate head and neck protection as well as
giving sufficient time for its user to escape an IDLH atmosphere.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ NIOSH defines an IDLH as ``an atmosphere that poses an
immediate threat to life, would cause irreversible adverse health
effects, or would impair an individual's ability to escape from a
dangerous atmosphere.'' See 29 CFR 1910.134(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the 2010 NPRM, FRA noted that it was aware of three main
organizations that had promulgated standards governing the use and
maintenance of respirators--NIOSH, OSHA, and the ISO.\14\ Since
issuance of the 2010 NPRM, FRA has become aware of a
[[Page 5117]]
fourth organization, CEN, that has also developed two relevant
standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ 75 FR 61386, 61390 (Oct. 5, 2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As explained in the 2010 NPRM, NIOSH, located within the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention of the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services, worked with government and industry partners to develop
certification standards for respirators. The NIOSH regulations,
codified at 42 CFR part 84, establish the requirements for NIOSH
certification of respirator equipment. NIOSH has also developed
information on safe levels of exposure to toxic materials and harmful
physical agents and issued recommendations for respirator use.
ISO has also established standards for respirator maintenance and
use. ISO is a network of national standards institutes in 162
countries, including the United States, through the American National
Standards Institute. ISO develops international standards to assist in
ensuring the safe performance of a wide range of EEBAs. While ISO is
not a government organization, it works to establish performance
standards that have scientific and technological bases while ensuring
that products, falling within its purview, are safe and reliable for
consumers. The organization has promulgated ISO 23269-1:2008, ``Ships
and marine technology--Breathing apparatus for ships--Part 1: Emergency
escape breathing devices (EEBD) for shipboard use, First Edition (2008-
02-01).'' While ISO 23269-1:2008 is directed towards EEBAs on ships and
marine technology, the standard can be reasonably transferred to the
railroad environment. ISO 23269-1:2008 establishes performance
specifications for EEBAs that are intended to provide air or oxygen to
a user to facilitate escape from accommodation and machinery spaces,
similar to a locomotive cab, with a hazardous atmosphere.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ However, as explained below, FRA believes that the minimum
breathing capacity allowed by ISO 23269-1:2008, which is 10 minutes,
is insufficient for the anticipated use in a railroad environment.
As a result, the proposed rule requires a minimum breathing capacity
of 15 minutes, which would be equally applicable to EEBAs certified
under the requirements of NIOSH. See 42 CFR part 84, or ISO 23269-
1:2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CEN serves a similar purpose as ISO in that it develops consensus
standards for European countries. In creating these standards, CEN
relies on the input of technical experts, business and consumer groups,
and other societal interest organizations. Additionally, there is a
measure of interconnectedness between the ISO and CEN, as CEN has
entered into a cooperative agreement with ISO to avoid duplicative
standards. In the area of escape respirators, CEN has developed two
standards that railroads could use to identify an appropriate EEBA to
provide to an employee. The first standard establishes requirements for
approving closed-circuit escape respirators, see BS EN 13794:2002,
``Respiratory Protective Devices--Self-Contained, Closed-Circuit
Breathing Apparatus for Escape--Requirements, Testing, Marking
(November 2002),'' while the second standard establishes requirements
for approving open-circuit escape respirators, see BS EN 1146:2005,
``Respiratory Protective Devices--Self-Contained, Open-Circuit
Compressed Air Breathing Apparatus Incorporating a Hood for Escape--
Requirements, Testing, Marking (February 2006).'' While BS EN
13794:2002 and BS EN 1146:2005 are standards created for the European
market, FRA finds that compliance with either standard would be
adequate to establish the reliability of a device, subject to the
provisions of this regulation, specifically, 49 CFR 227.203, which is
discussed in detail below. See VIII. Public Comment on the NPRM, with
FRA's Response and IX. Section-by-Section Analysis.
Additionally, OSHA, located within the U.S. Department of Labor, is
responsible for developing and enforcing general workplace safety and
health regulations related to respiratory protection. In furtherance of
this responsibility, OSHA has promulgated extensive regulations
governing the maintenance, care, and use of respirators of all types,
including emergency escape devices. See 29 CFR 1910.134.
In drafting this final rule, FRA considered the comments submitted
in response to the SNPRM and the requirements of both Federal agencies
(NIOSH and OSHA) as well as the ISO and EN standards to assist in
determining the possible types of EEBAs that may be used by railroad
employees covered under this rule. To determine which type or types of
EEBAs are appropriate, FRA has looked to the comprehensive selection
process for respirators developed by NIOSH.\16\ For purposes of EEBAs
deployed in the railroad environment, the two major NIOSH factors to
consider in selecting a respirator are to determine whether the
respirator is intended for: (1) use in an oxygen-deficient atmosphere
(i.e., less than 19.5 percent O2); and (2) use in, entry
into, or escape from, unknown or IDLH atmospheres (e.g., an emergency
situation).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/docs/2005-100/default.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FRA's investigation into the Graniteville accident found that the
concentration of the toxic chlorine cloud over the accident site area
was estimated to be approximately 2,000 parts per million (ppm).\17\
OSHA classifies chlorine as having an IDLH level of 10 ppm. FRA roughly
estimated the distance between the final resting spot of the breached
chlorine tank car in relation to the train crew, as well as the wind
speed and size of breach, to determine that the chlorine plume reached
the crew within two minutes. The coroner's report on the eight
fatalities to persons who were not railroad employees in the
Graniteville accident indicated that the primary cause of death was
asphyxia, or lack of oxygen. The coroner listed the engineer's primary
cause of death as lactic acidosis. Exposure to chlorine gas was
attributed as the secondary cause of all deaths in the accident. Under
the circumstances presented, it appears that both NIOSH selection
criteria were met. There may have been an oxygen-deficient atmosphere,
and there certainly was toxic-gas concentration exceeding IDLH levels.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See R.L. Buckley, Detailed Numerical Simulation of the
Graniteville Train Collision, Savannah River National Laboratory,
Report WSRC-MS-2005-00635 October 2005.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Graniteville accident demonstrated that railroad hazardous
material incidents (meaning collisions, derailments, or other train
accidents) involving the catastrophic loss of certain PIH materials
have the potential to release IDLH concentrations and/or displace
oxygen very quickly without the crew's knowledge. In such
circumstances, the crew may need to respond to an incident by donning
their EEBAs even before assessing the damage caused by an accident.
Considering the variables associated with the transportation of
hazardous materials via rail and the potential hazards that exist, FRA
is, based on the NIOSH selection criteria, proposing to require that
railroads provide an escape-type respirator to covered employees.
The single function of escape-type EEBAs is to allow sufficient
time for an individual working in a normally safe environment to escape
from suddenly occurring respiratory hazards. Given this function, the
selection of the device does not rely on assigned protection factors
designated by OSHA.\18\ Instead,
[[Page 5118]]
these escape-type respirators are selected based on a consideration of
the time needed to escape in the event of IDLH or oxygen-deficient
conditions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ ``Assigned protection factor'' means the level of safety
that a respirator or a class of respirators is expected to provide
to employees. Assigned protection factors were developed by OSHA to
designate to employers the proper type of device that is required in
selecting a respirator. According to OSHA, assigned protection
factors are not applicable to respirators used solely for escape.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pursuant to statutory requirements, and as proposed in the 2010
NPRM and 2023 SNPRM, this final rule would require providing a device
with head and neck coverage. Escape-type SCBA devices are commonly used
with full-face pieces or hoods. Such devices are usually rated from 3-
to 60-minute units depending on the supply of air. The following two
types of atmosphere-supplying SCBA would satisfy the protection
requirements of this regulation:
Open-Circuit SCBA. These are typically classified as
positive pressure, open-circuit systems whereby the user receives
(inhales) clean air with 21 percent O2 from a compressed air
cylinder worn with a harness on the back. The user's exhaled breath
contains significant amounts (15 percent) of unused oxygen that is
vented to atmosphere. Because much of the user's exhaled breath vents
to atmosphere, the size of open-circuit systems is larger than that of
closed-circuit systems. Open-circuit SCBA systems may employ full face
masks or hoods and typically require an airtight seal against the head,
face, or aural/nasal area.
Rebreathers. These can be positive-pressure or negative-
pressure systems. Classified as closed-circuit O2 systems,
rebreathers perform as their name implies. The user rebreathes his or
her breath. A chemical scrubber removes the CO2 from the
user's breath and makes up metabolized O2 from a small
bottle of compressed 100-percent O2. Because the user is
rebreathing his or her exhaled air containing 15 percent oxygen, a
rebreather is four times more efficient than an open-circuit system. As
a result, such systems are capable of either lasting much longer than
open-circuit systems (if size were comparable) or providing the same
breathing duration as an open-circuit system but in a smaller package.
Rebreathers may be employed with full-face masks or hoods. Negative
pressure rebreathers do not require a tight seal.
First responders (such as firefighters) commonly use open-circuit
positive pressure SCBA systems for entering the scene of an emergency
event. However, such devices may not be best situated to the railroad
environment. In addition to being heavy and cumbersome from
incorporating a large, compressed air cylinder mounted to a harness,
they also commonly incorporate use of a full-face piece. Depending on
the program developed by each railroad, the incorporation of a full-
face piece may be a logistically and economically difficult
undertaking. To be effective, a full-face piece requires an airtight
seal around the user's face, which means that each user must be
personally fitted for the device. It also means the user must be
cleanly shaven or otherwise free of excessive facial hair. The
enforcement of such a requirement would be difficult at best.
FRA believes that hoods provide a useful alternative to full-face
masks while protecting the face and neck. Hoods are universal fitting
devices and can be used with open and closed-circuit SCBAs. Because
they are universal fitting, hoods do not require personally fitting the
user, and hoods operate efficiently regardless of most eyewear, facial
features, or hair. Significantly, hoods also allow the wearer to
communicate while using the SCBA.
Experience has shown that a plume of hazardous material can travel
quickly. As a result, it is vitally important that the train crew has
adequate breathing time available to allow each member to move a
significant distance from the site while being protected from the
ambient atmosphere. Because such incidents will often result from a
collision, as was the case in Macdona and Graniteville, consideration
should be given to those situations where additional time may be used
to assist or extricate fellow crewmembers that may be hurt or trapped.
For example, if it takes 10 minutes to assist a fellow crewmember and
each is wearing a 15-minute open-circuit respirator, each crewmember is
left with five minutes to escape from any plume that may be present.
Moreover, often individuals will have a tendency to breathe rapidly and
deeply in stressful situations, which will shorten the breathing time
available in a respirator. In selecting an EEBA with sufficient
breathing time, each railroad should take into consideration these
factors and others that contribute to the ``Murphy's Law'' effects of
accidents such as an incident occurring at night or in tight terrain.
As a result, FRA is proposing to require that EEBAs being provided to
covered employees have at least a 15-minute minimum breathing capacity.
Further, FRA encourages railroads to consider EEBAs with a longer
breathing capacity, to provide an extra margin for escape under
stressful circumstances.
V. Provision of EEBAs to Covered Employees
FRA has decided not to mandate a specific method by which railroads
must provide EEBAs to covered employees. See discussion of covered
employees at IX. Section-by-Section Analysis of Sec. Sec. 227.201 and
227.211, below. FRA recognizes that there are differing methods for
effectively distributing suitable EEBAs among a railroad's covered
employees, its locomotive fleet, or both. Each of these options has
advantages and disadvantages. Given these factors, FRA believes that
the regulation most efficiently serves the RSIA mandate by allowing
each railroad to choose the method of distribution that works for it as
long as: (1) covered employees are provided with a suitable device
while they are in the locomotive cab of a freight train transporting a
PIH material; and (2) transportation of a covered hazardous material is
not unduly delayed, thereby posing additional risk, particularly where
the covered train (or a locomotive intended to be used to haul a
covered train) is interchanged from one railroad to another. See VII.
Information and Recommendations Provided by the Railroad Industry and
Railroad Labor Organizations after the Study, for relevant remarks. In
the following paragraphs, FRA discusses five options available to
railroads for providing EEBAs to covered employees.
Under this final rule, EEBAs may be treated as part of an
employee's permanently issued items, similar to eye protection, radios,
and lanterns. This method of distribution would allow railroads to
permanently issue an EEBA to each potentially covered employee (e.g.,
for a freight railroad that regularly hauls one or more PIH materials,
possibly all of its train employees). The device would be in the user's
control at all times, and each individual would be responsible for
having the device in his or her possession. The carrier would still be
responsible for ensuring the state of the equipment through an
inspection program; however, the company would be relieved of most of
the responsibilities for EEBA management. Theoretically, this option
would tend to result in better cared for equipment and lower
replacement costs. Moreover, personal assignment allows for
customization of the EEBA. However, permanently issuing EEBAs to
employees results in substantial costs. Over a 10-year period, total
costs would be approximately $92 million. Other negative aspects of
treating EEBAs as a permanently issued item include difficulty in
monitoring the condition of
[[Page 5119]]
the EEBA and ensuring that the required EEBA is with the user at all
times. Additionally, permanently issuing the EEBA would add to an
already lengthy list of items expected to be carried by train
employees.
Alternatively, EEBAs may also be permanently assigned to an
individual as a dedicated personal item issued at the start of each
shift and recovered at the end of each shift as part of the clock-in/
clock-out process. This method allows for individual customization and
allows the EEBA to be with the user at all times the user is on duty,
while supporting centralized inspection and maintenance. However, the
railroad may experience greater costs due to the increased size of its
EEBA inventory since all train employees who have the potential to work
in the locomotive cab of a freight train transporting a PIH material
would require stocked EEBAs. This alternative may also create
difficulties in the provision of EEBAs if the train employees who must
have access to the EEBAs have more than one on-duty location.
A third option is to treat EEBAs as ``pool'' items. The EEBAs would
not be assigned to a specific individual. They would be issued at the
start of each shift and recovered at the end of each shift as part of
the clock-in/clock-out process. This option supports centralized
inspection and maintenance while minimizing number of EEBAs required,
which could reduce costs substantially. FRA estimates that trains
transporting PIH materials amount to approximately 0.2 percent of all
train traffic, as cars carrying PIH materials are concentrated in
relatively few trains. If railroads chose this option, they could stock
enough EEBAs to cover 10 percent of the entire locomotive fleet for
approximately $33.5 million over a 10-year period. Equipping enough
EEBAs to cover 10 percent of the entire locomotive fleet should allow
for every locomotive that will be part of train transporting a PIH
material to be equipped with the necessary devices for each covered
employee provided that the railroads exercise adequate resource
management with respect to EEBAs. This would ensure that the EEBA would
be with the user throughout his or her entire shift. However, railroads
likely would have to allocate or build space at one or more locations
(depending on the size of the railroad) to warehouse EEBAs that are not
being used by covered employees. Moreover, an employee must be assigned
to monitor the handing out and returning of devices. This system also
may have hidden costs, such as losing the potential benefits of a sense
of employee ``ownership'' if EEBAs are treated as common property.
A fourth option is to have EEBAs permanently mounted in each
locomotive cab in the railroad's fleet. This method would ensure that
trains transported by the railroad that include a PIH material are
always adequately equipped, while supporting centralized inspection and
maintenance. The negative aspects of permanently mounting the EEBA
selected by the railroad in the cabs of the railroad's locomotive fleet
include the increased size of the railroad's EEBA inventory if non-
covered consists would transport the EEBAs and since EEBAs must be
provided for worst-case crewing (including possible supernumerary
personnel such as deadheading employees), increased management burden
for tracking/recovery, increased management burden for item inspection
and maintenance, and unavailability of customized EEBAs. Additionally,
FRA has estimated that the total 10-year cost of outfitting all
locomotives to be approximately $106.8 million. These estimates could
be reduced if railroads opted to dedicate a portion of their locomotive
fleet to service for trains transporting PIH materials, subject to
balancing any impact on operating efficiencies.
As discussed in section VII. Information and Recommendations
Provided by the Railroad Industry and Railroad Labor Organizations
after the Study, AAR has proposed that Class I railroads interchanging
locomotives with each other will provide the same type of EEBA while
also using the same method of equipping the locomotive, which would
expedite interchange between two Class I railroads. However, the option
of permanently mounting a specific type of EEBA within each locomotive
owned by a Class I railroad could create delays at interchange if the
locomotives from nonparticipating railroads also are offered in
interchange to Class I railroads to haul covered trains. The delay
could occur if the nonparticipating railroad delivers a locomotive in
interchange that either lacks an EEBA of any kind or that has an EEBA
that does not conform to the type specified under the Class I
railroad's general EEBA program under Sec. 227.211.
A fifth option is for EEBAs to be temporarily mounted in the
locomotive cab as the train containing a shipment of PIH material is
made up. Using this option would help to minimize the number of EEBAs
required, while ensuring that each consist containing a PIH material is
appropriately equipped. It would also allow the railroad to cater
efficiently to differing crew sizes. Drawbacks with this method include
increased management burden for the initial issue of EEBAs to the
consist, increased management burden for tracking/recovery, increased
management burden for item inspection and maintenance, and
unavailability of customized EEBAs.
FRA recognizes that these are only a few of the numerous options
for the provision of EEBAs, each involving its own considerations. Any
of these options (or combination of these options), including options
that have not been discussed above, is acceptable under this final
rule, as long as a suitable EEBA is provided by the railroad to each
covered employee while they are in a locomotive cab of a covered train
and the transportation of covered hazardous materials via rail is not
unduly delayed.
VI. Information and Recommendations Provided by the Railroad Industry
and Railroad Labor Organizations After the Study
As previously mentioned, representatives of both the railroad
industry and railroad labor organizations cooperated with the FRA-
sponsored study on the feasibility of providing EEBAs to train crews,
the report of which was published in May 2009. AAR, UTU,\19\ and BLET
also exchanged information and ideas with FRA on issues related to this
rulemaking, as summarized below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ UTU is now part of the International Association of Sheet
Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers (SMART).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In July 2009, prior to the publication of the 2010 NPRM,
representatives of AAR briefed FRA with information on AAR's
exploration of alternative ways by which the rulemaking mandate under
section 413 of the RSIA might be carried out. AAR has also offered
recommendations to FRA on issues related to this rulemaking, including
the type of EEBA and the mode of providing it that AAR thought would
satisfy the statutory mandate. Subsequently, in a letter to FRA dated
January 13, 2010, AAR encouraged FRA to incorporate by reference a
draft specification establishing guidelines for: (1) vendors of EEBAs
that would be used by Class I railroads; (2) mounting EEBAs on
locomotives; and (3) requiring training support.
FRA considered incorporating by reference a finalized version of
AAR's specification; however, FRA has ultimately decided not to do so.
Many comments raised questions about the details of the specification,
and FRA
[[Page 5120]]
believes this final rule provides a clearer standard for efficiently
complying with the RSIA mandate. Of course, AAR is free to rely on a
final specification to normalize EEBAs among Class I railroads, as long
as the specification complies with the requirements in subpart C.
Additionally, in the course of drafting the 2010 NPRM, FRA
representatives met with UTU and BLET representatives on March 31,
2010, who briefed FRA on issues related to the provision of EEBAs. AAR
was also in attendance at this meeting. UTU felt that EEBAs should be
``placed on all occupied locomotives which operate over a corridor
where freight trains carry hazardous materials that pose an inhalation
hazard in the event of a release.'' Under UTU's recommendation, each
occupied locomotive would be required to have working EEBAs--even if
the occupied locomotive is not part of a train carrying PIH materials--
as long the locomotive is operating over a rail line that carries such
materials.
During the March 31, 2010, meeting, UTU indicated that it opposed
issuing EEBAs as personal items. UTU felt that adding an additional
item to each train employee's required personal equipment would
unnecessarily burden crewmembers. UTU was concerned with not only the
added weight, but also the extra responsibility for care and
maintenance that would fall to train employees in the event that EEBAs
are provided as personal equipment. It contended that railroads are in
a better position than the employees to maintain the devices.
Finally, UTU stressed that there must be sufficient training of
train employees in the use of EEBAs. Such training would ensure that
train employees would know how to use EEBAs if presented with a
situation in the field where their use was required. UTU expressed a
strong desire for regular, hands-on training with devices selected by
the railroads to achieve these ends.
VII. Public Comment on the SNPRM, With FRA's Response
A. Introduction
FRA received 7 sets of comments on the SNPRM from 8 different
entities (AAR and ASLRRA jointly submitted comments), covering a broad
spectrum of interests which resulted in revisions to this final rule.
These commenters included the railroad industry, a labor organization,
the NTSB, and concerned individuals. In revising this final rule, FRA
has considered each issue raised by the commenters, and it addresses
those issues in this section.
B. Comments on the Preamble, With FRA's Response
AAR and ASLRRA argue that FRA has not adequately accounted for the
costs of installation and recordkeeping associated with the managing of
an EEBA program. They argue that FRA has not properly accounted for
tasks such as developing and implementing testing and inspection
protocols for devices, conducting scrap planning, tracking pilferage or
damage, anticipating future EEBA purchases, assessing employee
turnover, identifying EEBA reallocation needs, tracking wear and tear
on mounting systems, and developing and implementing training for EEBA
usage and management. However, FRA included these very considerations
in the cost estimates presented in the SNPRM. FRA's estimates were not
broken down into such granular detail, but those same administrative
and management considerations were included. AAR and ASLRRA
specifically point to the EEBA pooling option (the lowest cost option)
as having the highest of these associated administrative costs. In
response, FRA reexamined its initial administrative and management
costs estimates, particularly as they relate to the EEBA pooling
option, to ensure they are being properly accounted for and concluded
the original cost estimates were correct.
AAR and ASLRRA note that the hazmat exposure resulting from the
2014 Texas incident addressed in the SNPRM () was to battery acid,
which is not a PIH or an asphyxiant. FRA has examined this incident and
concluded that AAR and ASLRRA are correct; this was not a hazmat
release where an injury due to contact with the hazmat would have been
prevented by an EEBA as contemplated in this rulemaking. FRA has also
reexamined the other incident (2012, New Jersey) referred to in the
SNPRM and arrived at the same conclusion. Accordingly, FRA has removed
both incidents from its calculation of this rulemaking's benefits. AAR
and ASLRRA also state that FRA does not address effective usage rates
for EEBAs when determining the costs and benefits. However, usage rates
have no impact on the costs and since FRA has removed the two above
incidents the effective usage rate has no impact on the estimated
benefits either.
AAR and ASLRRA argue that ``[r]ailroads are safer now than they
were when the RSIA was passed'' stating that since 2008 there has been
a ``23 percent decrease in the mainline accident rate'' and that
``hazmat accident rates have declined by 55 percent'' in the same
period. They contend that ``operational changes related to the
implementation of Positive Train Control, speed restrictions that are
required for trains transporting poisonous-inhalation-hazard (PIH)
materials, and improvements to tank cars have substantially reduced the
likelihood of a PIH material release.'' They also note that in ``the
SNPRM, FRA adjusts its 10-year benefit estimate downward from $13.5
million to $63,720'' and that this ``amounts to an annualized societal
benefit estimate of only $6,138.'' They argue that FRA should not
advance this EEBA regulation and instead put its resources toward
continuing to minimize the number and consequence of rail accidents
involving hazardous materials. In response to these comments, FRA notes
that the RSIA mandates that the Secretary adopt regulations requiring
railroads to provide EEBAs for train crews occupying locomotive cabs of
any freight train transporting a hazardous material in commerce that
would present an inhalation hazard in the event of a release. Given
this statutory mandate, FRA is issuing a rule that not only considers
the costs, but also provides a mechanism to enhance safety for railroad
employees transporting hazardous materials presenting an inhalation
hazard if a release occurs. Moreover, FRA has recently undertaken a
number of rulemaking initiatives in a variety of disciplines, including
re-engineering tank cars (in cooperation with PHMSA), PTC, and
amendments to operating rules, all designed to improve the safety of
railroad operations, and thus reduce the rate of incidents, including
those involving hazardous materials. As with all complex systems,
however, there are occasions when failures do occur. This final rule
provides an additional element of protection for covered employees
should an accident with a PIH release occur in the future. AAR and
ASLRRA also suggest that FRA has no reasonable basis for issuing a
final rule if, in FRA's analysis, the costs exceed the benefits.
However, a lack of quantifiable (i.e., monetized) benefits, or
quantifiable costs exceeding quantifiable benefits, is not dispositive
for an agency's rulemaking analysis. Indeed, OMB Circular A-4 directs
agencies to describe benefits qualitatively when it is not possible to
quantify or monetize all of a rule's important benefits. Agencies
should also take other factors, such as statutory mandates, into
account when comparing the anticipated costs and benefits of a
rulemaking. Here, Congress, through the RSIA, established
[[Page 5121]]
a statutory mandate to promulgate regulations that require railroads to
provide EEBAs for all crewmembers in locomotive cabs on freight trains
carrying hazardous materials that would pose an inhalation hazard in
the event of release and that alone provides a reasonable basis for
issuing this final rule.
The individual commenter also states that a new cost-benefit
analysis should be conducted. However, FRA already conducted a new
cost-benefit analysis in the SNPRM and again analyzed the costs and
benefits in this final rule. The same individual commenter also
questions whether the addition of EEBAs to locomotive cabs will
increase the risk of fire. FRA has examined this issue and found that
EEBAs do not themselves present a fire risk and that their inclusion in
a locomotives cab will not increase its flammability.
AAR and ASLRRA also commented on the deadlines for compliance which
are 12, 12, and 18 months respectively for Class I, II, and III
railroads. AAR and ASLRRA argue that the timeline of the 2010 NPRM (24,
30, and 36 months respectively) is more appropriate. However, given the
length of time since the publication of the 2008 RSIA mandate, 2010
NPRM, FRA's issuance of guidance in 2016, and the 2023 SNPRM, railroads
have been on notice about the need to provide EEBAs and the lengthy
timelines from the 2010 NPRM are no longer necessary.
AAR and ASLRRA's comments address concerns about the financial
impact of the RSIA mandate on small entities in the railroad industry,
which they contend lack pricing power to pass on the costs of this rule
to their customers and have small capital budgets necessitating that
other work, such as track maintenance, will have to be deferred to pay
for it. AAR and ASLRRA contend that while the initial costs for Class
III railroads may indeed be modest, the ongoing costs for inspection,
maintenance, replacement, and enforcement penalties will result in
permanent ongoing expenditures that will be particularly impactful on
small railroads as they are likely to: (1) focus on the purchase of
EEBAs based on crew terminals and number of customers, (2) face higher
costs than estimated and have limited options to benefit for bulk
orders; and (3) face disproportionately high training costs. AAR and
ASLRRA estimate that the total compliance present costs \20\ (at 7%) to
be borne by Class II and III railroads at over $6.6 million, or over
$945,000 on an annualized basis. For just Class III railroads, ASLRRA
projects total present costs (at 7%) to amount to almost $4.9 million,
with the individual annualized cost to each of the 110 impacted
railroads estimated to be $6,333 per year, or more than four times the
cost estimated in the SNPRM. As such, AAR and ASLRRA ask that FRA
exercise its discretion, in this particular instance, to provide a ``de
minimis'' exception for railroad operations, similar to what FRA
provided for PTC requirements, to exempt Class II and III railroads
from the requirement to provide EEBAs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ AAR and ASLRRA developed this estimate using an equipment
pooling approach.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While FRA understands ALSRRA's concerns, the agency is constrained
by section 413 of the RSIA. Unlike with PTC, Congress did not carve out
an exemption for Class II and Class III railroads from the statutory
requirement. See section 104 of the RSIA. Instead, Congress used broad
language that covers any railroad carrier transporting hazardous
materials that would pose an inhalation hazard in the event of release.
In light of this language, FRA cannot institute an exception for Class
II and III railroads without congressional action. Notwithstanding
these constraints, FRA has enacted measures to limit the costs for
railroads. In particular, FRA has provided flexibility to allow
railroads to pursue the most cost-effective way to provide EEBAs in
accordance with the statutory requirements and this final rule.
Additionally, small railroads could consider pooling resources wherever
possible for requirements such as periodic training. Indeed, many small
railroads are jointly owned by the same holding companies making
resource pooling even easier. In light of the concerns raised above,
FRA has reexamined its estimated costs for small railroads to ensure
that their unique conditions are being properly accounted for and
concluded they have been.
C. Section-Specific Public Comments, With FRA's Response
FRA received comments on changes to Sec. Sec. 227.201(a)(1),
227.203(c), 227.207, 227.209, and 227.215 of the SNPRM.
1. Comments on Sec. 227.201(a)(1), With FRA's Response
BRS and an individual commenter suggested that EEBAs should also be
provided to employees working outside the locomotive cab such as
signalmen and yard employees. In particular, BRS suggests that
signalmen would benefit from EEBAs as they are among the first
responders to rail accidents and would benefit from respiratory
protection systems in the event of a hazardous material release.
The RSIA established a statutory mandate to promulgate regulations
that require railroads to provide EEBAs ``for all crewmembers in
locomotive cabs on freight trains carrying hazardous materials that
would pose an inhalation hazard in the event of release.'' If Congress
had wanted the Secretary to promulgate more expansive regulations
covering areas outside the locomotive cab, then it would have chosen
different language requiring that FRA cover personnel in areas other
than locomotive cabs, including signalmen and employees in rail yards.
Since Congress did not do so, FRA does not propose to include requiring
the provision of EEBAs at strategically placed locations in rail yards.
Furthermore, the purpose of EEBAs is to allow railroad employees
located in the cab to better escape an accident, they are not intended
for use by responders. However, the rule in no way prohibits railroads
from voluntarily distributing EEBAs to their employees not covered by
this regulation.
AAR and ASLRRA argue that FRA has exercised discretion beyond the
statutory mandate of the RSIA by requiring that persons, other than
solely crewmembers, be provided EEBAs when located in the locomotive
cab of an in-service freight train transporting a PIH material. FRA
agrees that the RSIA's mandate is for an EEBA to be provided ``for all
crewmembers.'' However, the RSIA does not limit which railroad
employees in the cab of a locomotive must be provided with an EEBA and
does not define crewmembers. FRA considered worst-case crewing
scenarios that included possible supernumerary personnel such as
supervisors and deadheading employees who might be in the locomotive
cab during a PIH release and concluded that requiring the railroads
provide such employees with EEBAs to be consistent with RSIA's mandate
and in the general interest of employee safety.
2. Comments on Sec. 227.203(c), With FRA's Response
AAR and ASLRRA note that Sec. 227.203(b) of the SNPRM proposed to
require railroads to use an EEBA certified by NIOSH or meeting criteria
set by specified industry organizations. Therefore, AAR and ASLRRA
argue no further showing of the adequacy of the EEBA should be
necessary and that Sec. 227.203(c) should be deleted. FRA disagrees
because Sec. 227.203(c) provides considerations beyond the minimum
criteria required under the NIOSH, ISO, or EN standard. For example,
FRA has concluded that the minimum breathing capacity allowed by ISO
23269-1:2008,
[[Page 5122]]
which is 10 minutes, is insufficient for the anticipated use in a
railroad environment. As a result, this final rule requires a minimum
breathing capacity of 15 minutes. FRA concluded, by the same logic,
that the considerations for head and neck protection and accommodations
for eyeglasses and a range of facial features contained in Sec.
227.203(c) are necessary even if they go beyond the NIOSH, ISO, or EN
standards. FRA is therefore keeping the requirements in Sec.
227.203(c).
3. Comments on Sec. 227.207, With FRA's Response
AAR and ASLRRA comment that FRA goes beyond the rulemaking
discretion afforded it in the RSIA in requiring pre-trip inspections of
EEBAs in Sec. 227.207(a)(1) and that such inspections would be overly
burdensome. AAR suggests that FRA should rely instead on the periodic
inspections required in Sec. 227.207(a)(2).
The RSIA requires that EEBAs be maintained in proper working
condition. FRA considers pre-trip inspections the most effective method
of ensuring compliance with this statutory mandate because the final
rule requires that an EEBA for each employee will be in the locomotive
cab prior to departure. For example, FRA can envision scenarios where
at least two crews could be relying on locomotive-mounted EEBAs and,
absent a pre-trip inspection, the second crew would have no means to
verify that the devices were present and ready for service. Such
verification is essential to ensuring equipment is properly maintained.
Therefore, FRA believes that the pre-trip inspection requirement is
fully consistent with FRA's authority under the RSIA.
FRA also disagrees that the pre-trip inspection is an overly
burdensome requirement. FRA expects that the pre-trip inspection will
be a quick check to ensure that the appropriate accompaniment of EEBAs
is provided and that those devices are charged to provide a minimum 15-
minute breathing capacity, as well as any of other necessary checks
that the manufacturer recommends. The nature of this pre-trip
inspection may be as simple as visually inspecting and verifying that
the case has not been tampered with and that all gauges and other
indicators are in an acceptable range.
AAR and ASLRRA also oppose the recordkeeping requirements in Sec.
227.207 for the same reasons they oppose Sec. 227.207(a)(1) above.
FRA's response is also the same; the RSIA mandates that EEBAs be
maintained in proper working condition. Meeting this mandate requires
some level of recordkeeping to ensure compliance. While FRA views pre-
trip inspection records as necessary to ensure compliance with the RSIA
mandate, it should be noted that the record of pre-trip inspections,
depending on the device selected, may be as simple as the check-off/
initialed card used on fire extinguishers. FRA also understands that
some of the Class I carriers are considering using RFID tags to track
and record the inspection of individual EEBA units. The use of this
technology could possibly minimize the inspection and recordkeeping
burden.
4. Comments on Sec. 227.209, With FRA's Response
AAR and ASLRRA comment that ``there is simply no requirement in the
statutory text and no functional safety rationale for FRA to require
all railroad employees to be able to demonstrate knowledge of EEBA
selection criteria, as proposed in Sec. 227.209(2)(b)(6).'' FRA
believes that a demonstration of knowledge of EEBA selection criteria
would ensure that employees know the purpose and limitations of the
selected EEBAs (minimum breathing time, that it covers the full face,
etc.). However, this information is duplicative of the other training
requirements in Sec. 227.209(2)(b) and so FRA agrees with its removal.
5. Comments on Sec. 227.215, With FRA's Response
AAR and ASLRRA comment that FRA goes beyond the rulemaking
discretion afforded it in the RSIA in requiring that records be kept as
required in Sec. 227.215. The RSIA mandates that EEBAs be provided to
all crewmembers in the locomotive cab of a freight train transporting a
hazardous material that would pose an inhalation hazard in the event of
release and that all such equipment be maintained in proper working
condition. Meeting this mandate necessarily requires some level of
recordkeeping to ensure compliance and Sec. 227.215 simply lays out
the reasonable requirements for keeping and making the records
available.
VIII. Section-by-Section Analysis
PART 227--OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH IN THE LOCOMOTIVE CAB
FRA is changing the name of the part from ``OCCUPATIONAL NOISE
EXPOSURE'' to ``OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH IN THE LOCOMOTIVE CAB''
in order to reflect the broader subject matter of the part. Previously,
part 227 contained regulations related only to dangers from
occupational noise exposure. Part 227 is the best place to put the
regulations related to EEBAs because the occupational noise regulations
and the EEBA regulations both concern dangers to the occupational
safety and health of locomotive cab occupants. However, the inclusion
of the EEBA regulations requires broadening the name of the part to
accurately capture the new subject matter that is now covered in that
part.
Subpart A--General
Section 227.1 Purpose and Scope
FRA amends this section to reflect the expanded purpose and scope
of this part.
Section 227.3 Applicability
FRA amends this section so that paragraphs (a) and (b) apply to
subpart B only and that the title mentioned, ``Associate Administrator
for Safety,'' is updated to reflect the current title, ``Associate
Administrator for Railroad Safety/Chief Safety Officer.'' New
paragraphs (c) and (d) define the types of railroad operations to be
covered by subpart C. In particular, subpart C applies to a railroad
transporting an in-service freight train that carries a PIH material on
track that is part of the general railroad system of transportation.
See 49 CFR part 209, appendix A.\21\ It should be noted that, with some
exceptions, common carriers by railroad have a ``common carrier''
obligation to accept for rail transportation a PIH material if it is
properly prepared for transportation. If a railroad accepts and
transports a tank car containing a load or residue \22\ of a PIH
material in an in-service freight train, even if the railroad has never
done so before, the railroad would become subject to this rule. FRA
realizes the applicability of this rule to a company's first time
transporting a PIH material in a freight train could delay the
transportation of such material if the company did not voluntarily take
the steps required by the rule (e.g., preparation of a general EEBA
program, procurement and distribution of EEBAs,
[[Page 5123]]
and instruction of employees in the program) in advance. Further, a
delay related to compliance with this final rule could conflict with
the railroad's duty to expedite the transportation of hazardous
material, pursuant to the Hazardous Materials Regulations at 49 CFR
174.14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ As noted in the SNPRM, FRA has removed references to
``asphyxiants'' that were included in the NPRM. The SNPRM explained
the reasons for not including simple asphyxiants (i.e., non-PIH
asphyxiants) as covered materials but invited public comment on
whether they should be included. 88 FR 17302 at 17312-17313 (Mar.
22, 2023). FRA received only one comment on this issue, which was
supportive of removing asphyxiants from this rule.
\22\ Residue means the hazardous material remaining in a
packaging, including a tank car, after its contents have been
unloaded to the maximum extent practicable and before the packaging
is either refilled or cleaned of hazardous material and purged to
remove any hazardous vapors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 227.5 Definitions
The rulemaking amends this section to add definitions for key terms
used in subpart C. The terms defined are set forth alphabetically. FRA
intends these definitions to clarify the meaning of the terms for
purposes of this part. Many of these definitions have been taken from
the regulations issued by OSHA and NIOSH and are widely used by safety
and health professionals, such as the definition of ``immediately
dangerous to life or health (IDLH).'' A definition of ``PIH material''
is included in this final rule to ensure that the universe of materials
covered by this regulation is adequately described.
Section 227.15 Information Collection
FRA amends this section to note the provisions of this part,
including subpart C, that have been reviewed and approved by OMB for
compliance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. See 44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.
Subpart B--Occupational Noise Exposure for Railroad Operating Employees
FRA is making minor corrections to this subpart. The term ``Class
1'' is removed wherever it appears and replaced with the corrected term
``Class I.'' The incorrect term appeared in, for example, Sec.
227.103(a)(1).
Subpart C--Emergency Escape Breathing Apparatus Standards
Section 227.201 Criteria for Requiring Availability of EEBAs in the
Locomotive Cab
Section 227.201(a)(1) requires that an EEBA be provided by a
railroad to each of its train employees, direct supervisors of train
employees, deadheading employees, and any other employees designated at
the railroad's discretion and identified in writing whose duties
require regular work in the locomotive cabs of in-service freight
trains transporting a PIH material. The EEBA provided must have been
selected in accordance with the criteria in Sec. 227.203. Moreover,
the EEBA provided shall have been inspected and determined to be in
proper working condition under Sec. 227.207.
Section 227.201(a)(2) prohibits utilizing a locomotive to transport
a PIH material in an in-service freight train unless each of the
employees identified in paragraph (a)(1) has access to an EEBA that was
selected in accordance with Sec. 227.203 and that has been inspected
and is in proper working order pursuant to Sec. 227.207. Paragraph
(a)(2) makes clear that it is not enough for a railroad to merely issue
an EEBA to its employees, e.g., as a uniform item; the employee must
have access to the EEBA in the cab of the covered train. For instance,
it is not a defense to a violation of Sec. 227.201(a)(2) that the
railroad provided the EEBA to the employee and instructed the employee
to have it while in the cab, but the employee lost or forgot it.
Section 227.201 also includes exceptions to its general
requirements in paragraph (b). FRA excludes trains that contain PIH
materials exclusively in intermodal containers from the requirements in
this section. Further, employees who are involved in activities, such
as moving a locomotive coupled to a car or group of cars containing a
PIH material within a locomotive maintenance facility, or who make
incidental movements for the purpose of inspection or maintenance, are
also exempted from coverage.
Paragraph (c) establishes that, notwithstanding the exceptions
identified in Sec. 227.201, any employee who is found to have
willfully tampered with or vandalized an EEBA will be subject to
subpart C for enforcement purposes. As a result, an employee to whom
the railroad is not required to provide an EEBA may become subject to
this subpart by vandalizing or willfully tampering with an EEBA.
Section 227.203 Criteria for Selecting EEBAs
This section provides the requirements for selecting an EEBA. See
general discussion at V. Selection of the Appropriate EEBA by
Railroads, above. The requirements for selecting EEBAs are based on the
nature and extent of the potential hazard to be faced. Due to the
varying modes of toxicity and physical state of commodities carried by
railroads, the selection of EEBA types is limited to those that supply
a breathable atmosphere to the wearer, rather than types that simply
filter out the toxic material. Filtering EEBAs cannot provide
protection from gasses that can displace oxygen in the atmosphere.
Filtering EEBAs approved for protection against specific materials
usually are not approved for others of different chemical
characteristics and generally have an upper concentration limit on
their protective capabilities.
Paragraph (a) of Sec. 227.203 requires a railroad to select an
atmosphere-supplying EEBA that protects against all PIH materials
(including residues of such commodities) that are being transported by
an in-service freight train. To ensure that the EEBAs have met a
standard set of testing criteria, paragraph (b) requires the selection
of a NIOSH-certified (42 CFR part 84) or ISO-compliant (ISO 23269-
1:2008) EEBA, with 15-minute minimum breathing capacity. In addition,
FRA has included language in paragraph (b) to permit selection of
devices that comply with BS EN 13794:2002 or BS EN 1146:2005.
To ensure that the EEBA provides adequate oxygen to allow train
employees to extricate themselves from an IDLH atmosphere, FRA requires
in paragraph (c)(1) that the EEBA must contain a minimum breathing
capacity of 15 minutes under Sec. 227.207(a)(1).
In paragraph (c)(2), FRA addresses head and neck protection. The
EEBA selected by a railroad must facilitate escape from a hazardous
atmosphere by providing a means of protecting a user's nose and throat
from inhalation hazards while also protecting the user's eyes from
irritation.
Section 227.205 Storage Facilities for EEBAs
This section addresses the mandate in the RSIA that the rule
require railroads to ``provide convenient storage in each freight train
locomotive to enable crewmembers to access such apparatus quickly.''
FRA has adapted the storage requirements promulgated by OSHA at 29 CFR
1910.134(h)(2) to this final rule.
Section 227.207 Railroad's Program for Inspection, Maintenance, and
Replacement of EEBAs; Requirements for Procedures
This section requires each railroad to establish and carry out
procedures intended to ensure that EEBAs required to be present in the
locomotive cabs are fully functional. This section is adapted from
OSHA's inspection documentation requirements. See 29 CFR
1910.134(h)(3)(iv). Since the EEBAs selected may have differing
requirements for inspection, maintenance, and replacement, this section
is, for the most part, written as a general standard. However, minimum
repair and adjustment requirements also have been adapted from OSHA's
regulations. See 29 CFR 1910.134(h)(4).
In paragraph (b), FRA requires that railroads create and maintain
pre-trip and periodic inspection records and retain these records for a
period of 92 days and one year, respectively. Paragraph (d) requires
railroads to create and maintain an accurate record of all
[[Page 5124]]
turn-ins, maintenance, repair, and replacement of EEBAs required by
paragraph (c) of this section, including EEBAs that are used; and
retain these records for three years.
Section 227.209 Railroad's Program of Instruction on EEBAs
This section identifies the elements of the instructional program
that the railroad must establish and carry out for train employees and
other employees who are part of the railroad's general EEBA program
under Sec. 227.211 and will be provided with EEBAs. The elements
outlined in this section are partly adapted from OSHA's regulations.
See 29 CFR 1910.134(k). The program required by this section should be
considered the minimum, and the railroads are encouraged to provide
additional relevant information depending on the types of EEBAs
selected.
Paragraph (b) requires that any railroad transporting a PIH
material provide sufficient training to its covered employees. Such
employees must be able to demonstrate knowledge of why an EEBA is
necessary; how improper fit, usage, or maintenance can compromise the
protective effect of an EEBA; the limitations and capabilities of the
type of EEBA provided by the railroad, including the timeframe for
effective use; how to deal with emergency situations involving the use
of EEBAs or if an EEBA malfunctions; how to inspect, put on, remove,
and use an EEBA, including the inspection of seals; procedures for
maintenance and storage of EEBAs; employee responsibilities under
subpart C; employee rights concerning access to records; and
identification of hazardous materials that are classified as PIH
materials. FRA is particularly concerned that the employees know the
limitations of the EEBAs provided so that the employees can avoid
circumstances that would lead to reliance on the EEBAs for conditions
or time frames beyond the EEBA's capabilities.
This program may be integrated with the railroad's program of
instruction on the railroad's operating rules required by 49 CFR 217.11
or its program of instruction for hazmat employees under 49 CFR
172.704. Under 49 CFR 172.704(a)(3)(ii), for example, hazmat employees
(which includes crews of freight trains transporting hazardous
material), must receive ``safety training'' on means ``to protect the
employee from the hazards associated with hazardous materials to which
they may be exposed in the workplace, including special measures the
hazmat employer has implemented to protect employees from exposure.''
Paragraph (c) establishes the timing of the initial and refresher
training. Initial instruction must occur no later than 30 days prior to
the date of compliance with subpart C for the subject railroad. New
employees must receive initial instruction either by 30 days before the
applicable date of compliance with subpart C or prior to being assigned
to jobs where EEBAs are required to be provided on a locomotive,
whichever is later. The initial instruction must be supplemented with
periodic instruction at least once every three years.
Section 227.209(d) requires railroads to create and maintain an
accurate record of employees instructed in compliance with Sec.
227.209; and retain these records for at least three years.
Section 227.211 Requirement To Implement a General EEBA Program;
Criteria for Placing Employees in the General EEBA Program
In this section, FRA requires railroads subject to subpart C to
adopt and comply with a general EEBA program to ensure that the
selection and distribution of the EEBAs is done in a technically
appropriate, sustainable manner and supported by a comprehensive set of
policies and procedures, as discussed in detail at section IV. FRA-
Sponsored Study and section V. Selection of the Appropriate EEBA by
Railroads, above. Many of the procedures will likely be used as a basis
for aspects of the required instructional program.
Paragraph (b)(1) requires that each railroad's general program
identify the railroad's EEBA manager by title and requires that the
EEBA manager is qualified to oversee the program.
Section 227.211(b)(4) requires the following individuals to be
placed in the railroad's general EEBA program: (1) employees of
railroads subject to this subpart who perform service subject to the
provisions of the hours-of-service law governing ``train employees,''
see 49 U.S.C. 21103, in the locomotive cabs of freight trains that
transport a PIH material; (2) the direct supervisors of these train
employees; and (3) any employees who deadhead in the locomotive cabs of
such trains. The term ``train employee'' refers to employees who are
engaged in functions traditionally associated with train, engine, and
yard service; for example, engineers, conductors, brakemen, switchmen,
and firemen. See 49 U.S.C. 21101(5); 49 CFR part 228, appendix A; and
74 FR 30665, June 26, 2009.
A railroad may also identify other employees and designate them in
writing to be included in its general EEBA program. In making this
assessment, the railroad should consider an employee's work over the
period of a year. In doing so, the railroads must consider how they use
their workforces, i.e., review the work that their employees perform,
determine which employees will occupy the cab of the locomotive of an
in-service freight train and therefore experience the risk of the
release of an inhalation-material from the consist, and then place
those employees in the general EEBA program.
Given the nature of the railroad industry, FRA is aware that some
of these employees may not always work in the cab. Due to longstanding
labor practices in the railroad industry concerning seniority
privileges and concerning the ability of railroad employees to bid for
different work assignments, these railroad employees are likely to
change jobs frequently and to work for extended periods of time on
assignments that involve duties outside the cab. For example, an
employee might start the year in a job that involves mostly outside-
the-cab work, spend three months working primarily inside the cab, and
then return to outside-the-cab work for the rest of the year. In this
type of situation, these regulations govern the exposure of this
employee throughout the year despite the fact that the employee only
spent three months inside the cab. This employee is covered by this
part because he or she spent time, no matter how little, in a
locomotive cab where the use of an EEBA may be required. As a result,
the railroad must ensure that the employee is properly instructed in
how to inspect and use an EEBA and provide an EEBA for those time
periods in which the employee is serving as a train employee, as a
direct supervisor of a train employee, or in a capacity that the
railroad has determined, in its discretion and designated in writing,
should be provided an EEBA while any of these individuals is working in
the cab of the locomotive of an in-service freight train transporting a
PIH material.
Note that placement of an employee in the railroad's general EEBA
program means different things depending on the nature of the program
that the railroad chooses to adopt. For example, if the railroad's
program states that the railroad will equip its fleet of locomotives
with sets of EEBAs sufficient to accommodate the train crew and
possible deadheading train employees, the railroad would have to
provide the EEBA to the employee in that way, in the locomotive cab. On
the other hand, if the railroad's program
[[Page 5125]]
states that the railroad will provide the EEBA to the employee as part
of his or her personal equipment, the railroad would have to provide
the EEBA in that manner. If the employee, for whatever reason, did not
have the EEBA with him or her while in the locomotive cab, the railroad
would be prohibited from using the locomotive by Sec. 227.201(a)(2),
which bars using a locomotive to transport a covered train if a covered
employee occupying the cab of the locomotive does not have access to a
working EEBA. One constant is that all railroads, subject to this part,
are required to instruct employees placed in their general EEBA program
in how to use EEBAs; the provision on instruction at Sec. 227.209
requires that all employees, identified in Sec. 227.211, be provided
instruction on EEBAs.
Finally, Sec. 227.211(c) requires railroads to maintain records
concerning the persons and positions designated to be placed in its
EEBA program and retain these records for the duration of the
designation and for one year after the designation has ended.
Section 227.213 Employee's Responsibilities
Since employees who must be provided EEBAs are not always directly
supervised by managers who can ensure the identified tasks are done at
the appropriate time and frequency, this section establishes certain
responsibilities on the part of employees. Some of these tasks may
involve making records of such tasks as pre-trip inspections that must
be done to ensure the EEBAs are ready for use. Additionally, FRA
prohibits employees from willfully tampering with or vandalizing an
EEBA in an attempt to disable or damage the device. See 49 CFR part
209, appendix A, for definition and discussion of ``willfully.''
Section 227.215 Recordkeeping in General
Section 227.215 sets out the general recordkeeping provisions for
subpart C. Section 227.215(a) addresses the availability of required
records. Section 227.215(a) provides that records required under this
part, except for records of pre-trip inspections, be kept at system and
division headquarters. It requires that a railroad make all records
available for inspection and copying or photocopying by representatives
of FRA upon request. The railroad must also make an employee's records
available for inspection and copying or photocopying by that employee
or such person's representative upon written authorization by such
employee.
Section 227.215(b) permits required records to be kept in
electronic form. These requirements are almost identical to the
electronic recordkeeping requirements found in FRA's existing Track
Safety Standards, 49 CFR 213.241(e). Section 227.215(b) allows each
railroad to design its own electronic system as long as the system
meets the specified criteria in Sec. 227.215(b)(1) through (5), which
are intended to safeguard the integrity and authenticity of each
record.
Section 227.217 Compliance Dates
The specific dates by which certain groups of railroads are
required to comply are set forth in this section. FRA recognizes that
it will take time to procure EEBAs, instruct employees on their use,
and outfit locomotives with the appropriate equipment to carry the
devices. FRA staggers the compliance dates based on the size of the
railroad, with larger railroads having to comply earlier. Under the
final rule, FRA requires Class I railroads to be compliant within 12
months of the effective date of the final rule, with required
compliance following for Class II railroads at 12 months and Class III
and other railroads at 18 months.
Section 227.219 Incorporation by Reference
Because subpart C incorporates by reference ISO 23269-1:2008, BS EN
13794:2002, and BS EN 1146:2005, FRA is adding this section to comply
with the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part 51. ISO 23269-
1:2008 provides specifications for emergency escape breathing devices
intended to supply air or oxygen needed to escape from accommodation
and machinery spaces with a hazardous atmosphere. BS EN 13794:2002
provides specifications including requirements, testing, and marking
for self-contained closed-circuit breathing apparatus intended for an
escape from a hazardous atmosphere. BS EN 1146:2005 provides
specifications including requirements, testing, and marking for self-
contained open-circuit compressed air breathing apparatus incorporating
a hood and intended for an escape from a hazardous atmosphere. They are
reasonably available to all interested parties online at https://webstore.ansi.org/ and https://shop.bsigroup.com, respectively.
Further, FRA will maintain copies of the standards available for review
at the Federal Railroad Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE,
Washington, DC 20590.
IX. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866 as Amended by Executive Order 14094
This final rule is not a significant regulatory action within the
meaning of Executive Order 12866, as amended by Executive Order 14094,
``Modernizing Regulatory Review,'' \23\ and DOT Order 2100.6A
(``Rulemaking and Guidance Procedures''). Details on the estimated
costs of this final rule can be found in the RIA, which FRA has
prepared and placed in the docket (FRA-2009-0044).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ 88 FR 21879 (April 6, 2023) located at https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2023/04/11/2023-07760/modernizing-regulatory-review.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FRA is issuing a final rule that enables covered employees to wear
protective breathing apparatus in the event of a catastrophic release
of PIH materials. This final rule requires that an EEBA be provided for
each covered employee transporting PIH materials. These EEBAs will
provide neck and face coverage with respiratory protection for these
crewmembers. Railroads must also ensure that the equipment is
maintained and in proper working condition. Finally, the final rule
requires that railroads train crewmembers how to use the EEBAs.
The RIA presents estimates of the costs likely to occur over the
first 10 years of the final rule. The analysis includes estimates of
costs associated with the purchase of EEBAs and installation, employee
training, and recordkeeping.
FRA has estimated costs for three options that are permissible
under the rule. These include:
Option 1: Employee Assignment--EEBAs are assigned to
all relevant employees and considered part of their equipment.
Option 2: Locomotive Assignment--EEBAs are assigned to
and kept in locomotives.
Option 3: Equipment Pooling--EEBAs are pooled at rail
yards and kept in storage lockers where employees would check-in and
check-out the EEBAs when PIH is being hauled.
For all three options, estimates were developed using a closed-
circuit EEBA. For the ``Employee Assignment'' option, FRA estimates
that the costs associated with issuing each T&E employee ($60,000) with
an EEBA as their own personal equipment. The ``Locomotive Assignment''
option would require installing EEBAs in all locomotives in the covered
railroad's fleet, regardless of whether a locomotive is part of a train
that is transporting PIH material. There are approximately 24,000
locomotives owned by Class I railroads, and three apparatuses would
have to be installed in each locomotive, one apparatus each
[[Page 5126]]
for the conductor, the engineer, and a supervisor. In the ``Equipment
Pooling'' option, FRA considered only having EEBAs provided in
trainsets that were transporting PIH. EEBAs would be brought on board
after a determination is made on a case-by-case basis.
The analysis includes estimates of costs associated with the
purchase of EEBAs and installation, employee training, and
recordkeeping.
FRA estimates the 10-year costs of the final rule to be between
$27.1 million and $91.9 million, discounted at 7 percent. The following
table shows the total costs of this final rule, over the 10-year
analysis period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Numbers in this table and subsequent tables may not sum due
to rounding.
Total 10-Year Costs
[2021 Dollars] \24\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
10-year cost Present value Present value Annualized 7% Annualized 3%
Category ($) 7% ($) 3% ($) ($) ($)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Option 1: Employee Assignment... 92,327,892 79,247,309 86,066,845 11,283,034 10,089,660
Option 2: Locomotive Assignment. 107,153,842 91,909,968 99,855,523 13,085,912 11,706,114
Option 3: Equipment Pooling..... 33,546,542 27,116,550 30,415,557 3,860,787 3,565,631
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The benefits associated with this final rule are qualitative in
nature and relate to the prevention of causalities and injuries. This
rule is expected to improve railroad safety by ensuring that all
covered employees can safely vacate the exposed area if a PIH material
release were to occur. The primary benefits include heightened safety
for crewmembers and, as a result, earlier awareness/notification to the
public of PIH releases. Implementation of this rule should mitigate the
injuries of covered employees from PIH material releasing after an
accident/incident. Although the monetary costs associated with
implementation of this rule would exceed the correspondingly measured
benefits, under the RSIA, FRA must require railroads to: (1) ensure
that EEBAs affording suitable ``head and neck coverage with respiratory
protection'' are provided ``for all crewmembers'' in a locomotive cab
on a freight train ``carrying hazardous materials that would pose an
inhalation hazard in the event of release;'' (2) provide a place for
convenient storage of EEBAs in the locomotive that will allow
``crewmembers to access such apparatus quickly;'' (3) maintain EEBAs
``in proper working condition;'' and (4) provide crewmembers with
appropriate instruction in the use of EEBAs. Additionally, OMB Circular
A-4 directs agencies to describe benefits qualitatively when it is not
possible to quantify or monetize all of a rule's important benefits.
Section 6 of the RIA discusses non-quantifiable benefits. FRA will not
require a particular method of deployment of EEBAs, but rather leave
that to the railroads' discretion. In addition, railroads will be
allowed to select the type of apparatus to use in their program
(closed-circuit or open-circuit). This allows railroads to deploy EEBAs
in the manner best suited to their operations.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive Order 13272
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) and
E.O. 13272 (67 FR 53461, Aug. 16, 2002) require agency review of
proposed and final rules to assess their impacts on small entities. FRA
prepared this FRFA to evaluate the impact of the final rule on small
entities and describe the effort to minimize the adverse impact. The
estimated costs on small entities is not significant as it represents
less than one percent of average annual revenue of affected entities.
Even if FRA uses the estimated costs per small entity provided by
ASLRRA, as discussed in section 5 below, the impact would still not be
significant. Accordingly, the FRA Administrator hereby certifies that
this rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
1. Statement of the Need for, and Objectives of, the Rule
This final rule requires railroads to provide an appropriate
atmosphere-supplying EEBA, in proper working order, to train
crewmembers, direct supervisors of train crewmembers, and certain other
employees while these employees are occupying cabs of freight train
locomotives transporting hazardous material that would pose an
inhalation hazard in the event of release during an accident. This
includes material poisonous by inhalation (poisonous-inhalation-hazard
or PIH materials), gases poisonous by inhalation, and certain other
materials classified as poisonous by inhalation. EEBAs are intended to
protect covered employees from the risk of exposure to such hazardous
materials while the employees escape from the locomotive cab during a
catastrophic event.
The rule requires railroads that transport PIH materials on the
general railroad system to establish and carry out a series of programs
for: inspection and maintenance of the devices; instruction of
employees in the use of the devices; and selection, procurement, and
provision of the devices. Railroads are required to identify individual
employees or positions to be placed in their EEBA programs so that
enough EEBAs are available and that those employees know how to use the
devices. Finally, the rule requires that convenient storage be provided
for EEBAs in the locomotive to enable employees to access such
apparatuses quickly in the event of a release of a hazardous material
that poses an inhalation hazard.
2. Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments
FRA received several comments related to the anticipated costs of
this rule. AAR and ASLRRA's comments address concerns about the
financial impact of the RSIA mandate on small entities in the railroad
industry, which they contend lack pricing power to pass on the costs of
this rule to their customers and have small capital budgets
necessitating that other work, such as track maintenance, will have to
be deferred to pay for it. AAR and ASLRRA stated that while the initial
costs for Class III railroads may indeed be modest the ongoing costs
for inspection, maintenance, replacement, and enforcement penalties
will result in permanent ongoing expenditures that will be particularly
impactful on small railroads. The comment states that small railroads
will likely focus on the purchase of EEBAs based on crew terminals and
number of customers, face
[[Page 5127]]
higher costs than estimated, have limited options to benefit for bulk
orders, and will face disproportionately high training costs. AAR and
ASLRRA estimate that the total 10-year compliance costs to be borne by
Class II and III railroads at over $6.6 million (PV, 7 percent), or
over $945,000 on an annualized basis. For just Class III railroads,
ASLRRA projects total costs to amount to almost $4.9 million (PV, 7
percent), with the individual annualized cost to each of the 110
impacted railroads estimated to be $6,333 per year, or more than four
times the cost estimated in the SNPRM. As such, AAR and ASLRRA ask that
FRA exercise its discretion, in this particular instance, to provide a
``de minimis'' exception for railroad operations, similar to what FRA
provided for PTC requirements, to exempt Class II and III railroads
from the requirement to provide EEBAs.
FRA understands ALSRRA's concerns, but the agency is constrained by
section 413 of the RSIA. Unlike with PTC, Congress did not carve out an
exemption for Class II and Class III railroads from the statutory
requirement. See section 104 of the RSIA. Instead, Congress used broad
language that covers any railroad carrier transporting hazardous
materials that would pose an inhalation hazard in the event of release.
In light of this language, FRA is constrained from instituting an
exception for Class II and III railroads without congressional action.
Notwithstanding these constraints, FRA has included measures to limit
the costs for railroads. In particular, FRA will allow railroads to
pursue the most cost-effective way to provide EEBAs in accordance with
the statutory and regulatory requirements. Additionally, small
railroads could consider pooling resources wherever possible for
requirements such as periodic training. Indeed, many small railroads
are jointly owned by the same holding companies making resource pooling
even easier. In light of the concerns raised above, FRA has reexamined
its estimated costs for small railroads based on comments received to
the NPRM. In the regulatory impact analysis for the final rule, FRA has
increased the cost estimate for Class III railroads to purchase EEBAs
since each railroad may not purchase enough to secure a bulk discount
on pricing. Therefore, FRA estimates that each EEBA for Class III
railroads will be approximately $1,000, instead of $850 as was
estimated in the RIA for the proposed rule.
3. Response to Comments Filed by the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration
FRA did not receive a comment from the Small Business
Administration.
4. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which
the Rule Will Apply
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 requires a review of
proposed and final rules to assess their impact on small entities,
unless the Secretary certifies that the rule would not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
``Small entity'' is defined in 5 U.S.C. 601 as a small business concern
that is independently owned and operated and is not dominant in its
field of operation. The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) has
authority to regulate issues related to small businesses, and
stipulates in its size standards that a ``small entity'' in the
railroad industry is a for-profit ``line-haul railroad'' that has fewer
than 1,500 employees, a ``short line railroad'' with fewer than 1,500
employees, a ``commuter rail system'' with annual receipts of less than
$47.0 million dollars, or a contractor that performs support activities
for railroads with annual receipts of less than $34.0 million.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ U.S. Small Business Administration, ``Table of Small
Business Size Standards Matched to North American Industry
Classification System Codes, March 27, 2023. https://www.sba.gov/sites/sbagov/files/2023-06/Table%20of%20Size%20Standards_Effective%20March%2017%2C%202023%20%282%29.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal agencies may adopt their own size standards for small
entities in consultation with SBA and in conjunction with public
comment. Under that authority, FRA has published a statement of agency
policy that formally establishes ``small entities'' or ``small
businesses'' as railroads, contractors, and hazardous materials
shippers that meet the revenue requirements of a Class III railroad as
set forth in 49 CFR part 1201, General Instruction 1-1, which is $20
million or less in inflation-adjusted annual revenues,\26\ and commuter
railroads or small governmental jurisdictions that serve populations of
50,000 or less.\27\ FRA is using this definition for the final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ The Class III railroad revenue threshold is $46.3 million
or less, for 2022. https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-49/subtitle-B/chapter-X/subchapter-C/part-1201.
\27\ See 68 FR 24891 (May 9, 2003) (codified at appendix C to 49
CFR part 209).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
When shaping the final rule, FRA considered the impact that the
final rule will have on small entities. The final rule will be
applicable to all railroads with locomotives that transport PIH
materials. FRA estimates there are 733 Class III railroads that operate
on the general system. These railroads are of varying size, with some
belonging to larger holding companies. FRA is aware of 110 Class III
railroads that transport PIH materials. The remaining Class III
railroads do not transport PIH, and thus will not be impacted by this
final rule.
5. Description of the Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements of the Rule
Class III Railroads will have all the same requirements as larger
railroads, reduced for the estimated number of locomotives and
employees on Class III railroads. Small railroads may not be able to
benefit from bulk discount rates on EEBAs, so FRA has adjusted that
cost to not include the 15% discount for Class III railroads. All other
cost components will be the same as larger railroads.
The following table shows the annualized cost for Class III
railroads over the 10-year analysis period. The total estimated 10-year
costs for Class III railroads will be $1.1 million (PV, 7 percent) and
the annualized cost for all Class III railroads will be $151,467 (PV, 7
percent).
Total 10-Year and Annualized Costs, Class III Railroads
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Present value Annualized
Category (7%) (7%)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
EEBA and Installation...................... 731,620 104,166
Training................................... 232,950 33,167
Records.................................... 99,272 14,134
----------------------------
Total.................................. 1,063,841 151,467
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 5128]]
The industry trade organization representing small railroads,
ASLRRA, reports the average freight revenue per Class III railroad is
$4.75 million. The following table summarizes the average annual costs
and revenue for Class III railroads.
Average Class III Railroads' Costs and Revenue
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total cost for class Average annual cost Average annual cost
III railroads, Number of class III per class III Average class III as a percent of
annualized 7% railroads with PIH railroad ($) annual revenue ($) revenue
a b c = a / b d e = c / d
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
151,467 110 1,377 4,750,000 0.03%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The average annual cost for a Class III railroad impacted by this
rule will be $1,377. This represents a small percentage (0.03%) of the
average annual revenue for a Class III railroad. The estimates above
show that the burden on Class III railroads will not be a significant
economic burden.
6. A Description of the Steps the Agency Has Taken To Minimize the
Economic Impact on Small Entities
When developing the final rule, FRA considered the impact that the
final rule will have on small entities. FRA has included measures to
limit the costs for railroads. In particular, FRA will allow railroads
to pursue the most cost-effective way to provide EEBAs in accordance
with the statutory and regulatory requirements. Small railroads could
consider pooling resources wherever possible for requirements such as
periodic training. Additionally, under the final rule, FRA allows
additional time for Class III and other railroads to implement the
rule. Class III railroads are allotted 18 months for implementation
rather than 12 months.
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, 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. FRA has determined
that the final rule will not have substantial direct effects on the
States, on the relationship between the National Government and the
States, nor on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government. In addition, FRA has determined that this
final rule will not impose substantial direct compliance costs on State
and local governments. Therefore, the consultation and funding
requirements of Executive Order 13132 do not apply. However, this final
rule could have preemptive effect by operation of law under certain
provisions of the Federal railroad safety statutes, specifically a
provision of the former FRSA, repealed and recodified at 49 U.S.C
20106, and the former LBIA, repealed and recodified at 49 U.S.C. 20701-
20703. See Public Law 103-272 (July 5, 1994). A provision of the former
FRSA provides that States may not adopt or continue in effect any law,
regulation, or order related to railroad safety or security that covers
the subject matter of a regulation prescribed or order issued by the
Secretary of Transportation (with respect to railroad safety matters)
or the Secretary of Homeland Security (with respect to railroad
security matters), except when the State law, regulation, or order
qualifies under the ``local safety or security hazard'' exception to
section 20106. Moreover, the former LBIA has been interpreted by the
Supreme Court as preempting the entire field of locomotive safety. See
Napier v. Atlantic Coast R.R., 272 U.S. 605, 611; 47 S.Ct. 207, 209
(1926).
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 a provision of the former FRSA and under the former LBIA.
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 OMB \28\ under the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995.\29\ The information collection requirements and the
estimated time to fulfill each requirement are as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ FRA will be using the OMB control number (OMB No. 2130-
0620) that was issued when the previous NPRM was published in 2010
for this information collection request.
\29\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
[[Page 5129]]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total annual Total cost
CFR section Respondent universe Total annual responses Average time per burden equivalent
response (hours) (hours)
(A)..................... (B)..................... (C) = A * B (D) = C *
wage \30\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
227.201(a)--Criteria for requiring 128 railroads................. 600 designations........ 3 minutes............... 30.00 $2,337.30
availability of EEBAs in the
locomotive cab--Employees designated
by the railroad in writing.
227.203(c)--Criteria for selecting 128 railroads................. 43 written 2 hours................. 86.00 6,700.26
EEBAs--Railroads to document the justifications.
adequacy of the EEBA and provide such
documentation for inspection to FRA
upon request.
227.205(c)--Storage facilities for 128 railroads................. 43 instruction copies... 1 minute................ .72 56.10
EEBAs--Railroads to keep a copy of
the instructions at their system
headquarters for FRA inspection.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
227.207(a)--Railroad's program for The paperwork burden for this requirement is covered under Sec. 227.211.
inspection, maintenance, and
replacement of EEBAs; requirements
for procedures--Written program for
inspection, maintenance, and
replacement of EEBAs.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(b) Inspection procedures and 128 railroads................. 10,000 inspection 30 seconds.............. 83.33 6,492.24
records--Tag or label that is records.
attached to the storage facility
for the EEBA or kept with the
EEBA or in inspection reports
stored as paper or electronic
files.
--(d) Records of returns, 128 railroads................. 180 records............. 30 seconds.............. 1.50 116.87
maintenance, repair, and
replacement--Recordkeeping and
retention.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
227.209(a)--Railroad's program of The paperwork burden for this requirement is covered under Sec. 227.211.
instruction on EEBAs--Written program
of instruction on EEBAs.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(d) Records of instruction-- 128 railroads................. 20,000 initial training 3 minutes............... 1,000.00 62,670.00
Railroad to maintain a record of records.
employees provided instruction in
compliance with this section and
retain these records for three
years \31\.
--(d) Records of intervals for 128 railroads................. 2,000 refresher or new 3 minutes............... 100.00 6,267.00
periodic instruction. hire training records.
227.211(a), (b) and (d)--Requirement 128 railroads................. 45.67 written programs 80 hours + 2 hours + 80 351.33 30,167.83
to implement a general EEBA program; (2.33 Class I hours.
criteria for placing employees in the railroads' programs +
general EEBA program--Comprehensive 42.33 Class II and III
written program. railroads' programs + 1
generic program
developed by ASLRRA).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(c) Records of positions or The paperwork burden for this requirement is covered under Sec. Sec. 227.201 and 227.209.
individuals or both in the
railroad's general EEBA--
Designated employees by the
railroad to be placed in its
general EEBA program pursuant to
Sec. 227.211(b)(4).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
227.213(a)(3)--Employee's 128 railroads................. 1 notification.......... 1 minute................ .02 1.25
responsibilities--Notification to
railroad of EEBA failures and of use
incidents in a timely manner.
227.215(b)--Recordkeeping in general-- 18 railroads.................. 6 modified systems...... 1 hour.................. 6.00 467.46
Electronic records to meet FRA
requirements.
--(b)(5) Paper copies of 128 railroads................. 43 copies............... 15 minutes.............. 10.75 837.53
electronic records and amendments
to those records are made
available for inspection and
copying or photocopying by
representatives of FRA.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total \32\.................... 128 railroads................. 32,962 responses........ N/A..................... 1,670 116,114
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All estimates include the time for reviewing instructions;
searching existing data sources; gathering or maintaining the needed
data; and reviewing the information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ The dollar equivalent cost is derived from the Surface
Transportation Board's Full Year Wage A&B data series using the
appropriate employee group hourly wage rate that includes a 75-
percent overhead charge.
\31\ The associated burden related to employees' training are
calculated under the economic cost of the regulation.
\32\ Totals may not add up due to rounding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
F. Compliance With the 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 $100,000,000 or more (adjusted
annually for inflation) 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 such an expenditure, and thus
preparation of such a statement is not required.
[[Page 5130]]
G. Environmental Assessment
FRA has evaluated this final rule in accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), the Council of Environmental Quality's
NEPA implementing regulations, and FRA's NEPA implementing regulations.
FRA has determined that this proposed rule is categorically excluded
from environmental review and therefore does not require the
preparation of an environmental assessment (EA) or environmental impact
statement (EIS). Categorical exclusions (CEs) are actions identified in
an agency's NEPA implementing procedures that do not normally have a
significant impact on the environment and therefore do not require
either an EA or EIS. Specifically, FRA has determined that this final
rule is categorically excluded from detailed environmental review.
This rulemaking would not directly or indirectly impact any
environmental resources and would not result in significantly increased
emissions of air or water pollutants or noise. In analyzing the
applicability of a CE, FRA must also consider whether unusual
circumstances are present that would warrant a more detailed
environmental review. FRA has concluded that no such unusual
circumstances exist with respect to this final rule and it meets the
requirements for categorical exclusion.
Pursuant to section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act
and its implementing regulations, FRA has determined this undertaking
has no potential to affect historic properties. FRA has also determined
that this rulemaking does not approve a project resulting in a use of a
resource protected by section 4(f). Further, FRA reviewed this final
rulemaking and found it consistent with Executive Order 14008,
``Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad.''
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). FRA evaluated this final rule in accordance
with Executive Order 13211 and determined that this final rule is not a
``significant energy action'' within the meaning of Executive Order
13211.
I. Analysis Under 1 CFR Part 51
As required by 1 CFR 51.5, FRA has summarized the standards it is
incorporating by reference in the section-by-section analysis in this
preamble. These standards summarized herein, are reasonably available
to all interested parties for inspection. Copies can be obtained from
the International Organization for Standardization, Chemin de
Blandonnet 8, CP 401, 1214 Vernier, Geneva, Switzerland, telephone +41-
22-749-08-88 or https://www.iso.org/standard/50245.html and from the
British Standards Institution, 12110 Sunset Hills Road, Suite 200,
Reston, VA 20190-5902, telephone: 800-862-4977 or https://shop.bsigroup.com. They are also available for inspection at the
Federal Railroad Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington,
DC 20590; phone: (202) 493-6052; email: [email protected].
J. Environmental Justice
Executive Order 12898, ``Federal Actions to Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations,'' requires
DOT agencies to achieve environmental justice as part of their mission
by identifying and addressing, as appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or environmental effects, including
interrelated social and economic effects, of their programs, policies,
and activities on minority populations and low-income populations. DOT
Order 5610.2C (``U.S. Department of Transportation Actions to Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations'') instructs DOT agencies to address compliance with
Executive Order 12898 and requirements within the DOT Order 5610.2C in
rulemaking activities, as appropriate, and also requires consideration
of the benefits of transportation programs, policies, and other
activities where minority populations and low-income populations
benefit, at a minimum, to the same level as the general population as a
whole when determining impacts on minority and low-income
populations.\33\ FRA has evaluated this final rule under Executive
Orders 12898 and 14096 and DOT Order 5610.2C and has determined it will
not cause disproportionate and adverse human health and environmental
effects on communities with environmental justice concerns.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Executive Order 14096, ``Revitalizing Our Nation's
Commitment to Environmental Justice,'' issued on April 26, 2023,
supplements Executive Order 12898, but is not currently referenced
in DOT Order 5610.2C.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
K. Executive Order 13175 (Tribal Consultation)
FRA has evaluated this final rule in accordance with the principles
and criteria contained in Executive Order 13175, ``Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments,'' dated November 6, 2000.
The final rule would not have a substantial direct effect on one or
more Indian tribes, would not impose substantial direct compliance
costs on Indian tribal governments, and would not preempt tribal laws.
Therefore, the funding and consultation requirements of Executive Order
13175 do not apply, and a tribal summary impact statement is not
required.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 227
Hazardous materials transportation, Incorporation by reference,
Locomotive noise control, Occupational safety and health, Penalties,
Railroad employees, Railroad safety, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
The Final Rule
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, FRA amends part 227 of
chapter II, subtitle B of title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations
as follows:
PART 227--OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH IN THE LOCOMOTIVE CAB
0
1. The authority citation for part 227 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 20103, 20103 note, 20166, 20701-20703,
21301, 21302, 21304; 28 U.S.C. 2461 note; and 49 CFR 1.89.
0
2. Revise the heading for part 227 to read as set forth above.
0
3. Revise Sec. 227.1 to read as follows:
Sec. 227.1 Purpose and scope.
(a) General. The purpose of this part is to protect the
occupational safety and health of certain employees who are exposed to
occupational dangers while in the cab of the locomotive. This part
prescribes minimum Federal safety and health standards for certain
locomotive cab occupants. This part does not restrict a railroad or
railroad contractor from adopting and enforcing additional or more
stringent requirements.
(b) Subpart B of this part. The purpose of subpart B is to protect
the occupational safety and health of employees whose predominant noise
exposure occurs in the locomotive cab. Subpart B prescribes minimum
Federal safety and health noise standards for locomotive cab occupants.
(c) Subpart C of this part. The purpose of subpart C is to protect
the occupational safety and health of train employees and certain other
employees in the cab of the locomotive of a freight train that is
transporting a poison inhalation hazard (PIH) material that, if
released due to a railroad accident/incident, would pose an inhalation
hazard to the occupants. In particular,
[[Page 5131]]
subpart C is intended to protect these employees from the risk of
exposure to the material while they are located in, or during escape
from, the locomotive cab.
0
4. Amend Sec. 227.3 by revising paragraphs (a), (b) introductory text,
and (b)(5) and adding paragraphs (c) and (d) to read as follows:
Sec. 227.3 Application.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, subpart B
of this part applies to all railroads and contractors to railroads.
(b) Subpart B of this part does not apply to--
* * * * *
(5) Foreign railroad operations that meet the following conditions:
Employees of the foreign railroad have a primary reporting point
outside of the U.S. but are operating trains or conducting switching
operations in the U.S.; and the government of that foreign railroad has
implemented requirements for hearing conservation for railroad
employees; the foreign railroad undertakes to comply with those
requirements while operating within the U.S.; and FRA's Associate
Administrator for Railroad Safety/Chief Safety Officer determines that
the foreign requirements are consistent with the purpose and scope of
subpart B of this part. A ``foreign railroad'' refers to a railroad
that is incorporated in a place outside the U.S. and is operated out of
a foreign country but operates for some distance in the U.S.
(c) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, subpart C
of this part applies to any railroad that operates a freight train that
transports a PIH material, including a residue of such a PIH material,
on standard gage track that is part of the general railroad system of
transportation.
(d) Subpart C of this part does not apply to a railroad that
operates only on track inside an installation that is not part of the
general railroad system of transportation.
0
5. Amend Sec. 227.5 by adding, in alphabetical order, definitions for
``Accident/incident'', ``Associate Administrator for Railroad Safety/
Chief Safety Officer'', ``Atmosphere immediately dangerous to life or
health (IDLH)'', ``Atmosphere-supplying device'', ``Deadheading'',
``Division headquarters'', ``Emergency escape breathing apparatus or
EEBA'', ``Freight car'', ``Freight train'', ``Hazardous material'',
``Hazmat employee'', ``In service or in-service'', ``Intermodal
container'', ``ISO'', ``NIOSH'', ``PIH material'', ``Residue'',
``State'', ``Switching service'', ``System headquarters'', ``Train
employee'', and ``United States'' to read as follows:
Sec. 227.5 Definitions.
* * * * *
Accident/incident has the meaning that is assigned to that term by
Sec. 225.5 of this chapter.
* * * * *
Associate Administrator for Railroad Safety/Chief Safety Officer
means the Associate Administrator for Railroad Safety/Chief Safety
Officer, Federal Railroad Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590.
Atmosphere immediately dangerous to life or health (IDLH) means an
atmosphere that poses an immediate threat to life, would cause
irreversible adverse health effects, or would impair an individual's
ability to escape from a dangerous atmosphere.
Atmosphere-supplying device means a respirator that supplies the
respirator user with breathing air from a source that is independent of
the ambient atmosphere. Such devices include supplied-air respirators
and self-contained breathing apparatus units.
* * * * *
Deadheading means the physical relocation of a train employee from
one point to another as a result of a railroad-issued oral or written
directive.
* * * * *
Division headquarters means the location designated by the railroad
where a high-level operating manager (e.g., a superintendent, division
manager, or equivalent), who has jurisdiction over a portion of the
railroad, has an office.
Emergency escape breathing apparatus or EEBA means an atmosphere-
supplying respirator device that is designed for use only during escape
from a hazardous atmosphere.
* * * * *
Freight car means a vehicle designed to transport freight, or
railroad personnel, by rail and includes, but is not limited to, a--
(1) Box car;
(2) Refrigerator car;
(3) Ventilator car;
(4) Stock car;
(5) Gondola car;
(6) Hopper car;
(7) Flat car;
(8) Special car;
(9) Caboose;
(10) Tank car; and
(11) Yard car.
Freight train means one or more locomotives coupled with one or
more freight cars, except during switching service.
Hazardous material has the meaning assigned to that term by Sec.
171.8 of this title.
Hazmat employee has the meaning assigned to that term by Sec.
171.8 of this title.
* * * * *
In service or in-service when used in connection with a freight
train, means each freight train subject to this part unless the train--
(1) Is in a repair shop or on a repair track;
(2) Is on a storage track and its cars are empty; or
(3) Has been delivered in interchange but has not been accepted by
the receiving carrier.
Intermodal container means a freight container designed and
constructed to permit it to be used interchangeably in two or more
modes of transportation.
ISO means the International Organization for Standardization, a
network of national standards institutes in 162 countries, including
the United States through the American National Standards Institute,
that develops international standards to assist in ensuring the safe
performance of a wide range of devices, including EEBAs.
* * * * *
NIOSH means the National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health, a Federal agency responsible for conducting research and making
recommendations for the prevention of work-related injury and illness,
which is part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and which certifies
industrial-type respirators in accordance with the NIOSH respiratory
regulations (42 CFR part 84).
* * * * *
PIH material means any of the hazardous materials that are a gas,
liquid, or other material defined as a ``material poisonous by
inhalation'' by Sec. 171.8 of this title.
* * * * *
Residue has the meaning assigned to the term by Sec. 171.8 of this
title.
* * * * *
State means a State of the United States of America or the District
of Columbia.
Switching service means the classification of freight cars
according to commodity or destination; assembling of cars for train
movements; changing the position of cars for purposes of loading,
unloading, or weighing; placing of locomotives and cars for repair or
storage; or moving of rail equipment in connection with work service
that does not constitute a freight train movement.
[[Page 5132]]
System headquarters means the location designated by the railroad
as the general office for the railroad system.
* * * * *
Train employee means an individual who is engaged in or connected
with the movement of a train, including a hostler, as defined in 49
U.S.C. 21101.
United States means all of the States and the District of Columbia.
Sec. 227.7 [Removed and Reserved]
0
6. Remove and reserve Sec. 227.7.
0
7. Amend Sec. 227.15 by revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 227.15 Information collection.
* * * * *
(b) The information collection requirements are found in the
following sections: Sec. Sec. 227.13, 227.103, 227.107, 227.109,
227.111, 227.117, 227.119, 227.121, 227.201, 227.203, 227.205, 227.207,
227.209, 227.211, 227.213, and 227.215.
0
8. Amend Sec. 227.103 by revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 227.103 Noise monitoring program.
(a) * * *
(1) Class I, passenger, and commuter railroads no later than
February 26, 2008.
(2) Railroads with 400,000 or more annual employee hours that are
not Class I, passenger, or commuter railroads no later than August 26,
2008.
* * * * *
0
9. Amend Sec. 227.109 by revising paragraph (e)(2)(i) to read as
follows:
Sec. 227.109 Audiometric testing program.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) For all employees without a baseline audiogram as of February
26, 2007, Class I, passenger, and commuter railroads, and railroads
with 400,000 or more annual employee hours shall establish a valid
baseline audiogram by February 26, 2009; and railroads with less than
400,000 annual employee hours shall establish a valid baseline
audiogram by February 26, 2010.
* * * * *
0
10. Amend Sec. 227.119 by revising paragraph (b)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 227.119 Training program.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) For employees hired on or before February 26, 2007, by Class I,
passenger, and commuter railroads, and railroads with 400,000 or more
annual employee hours, by no later than February 26, 2009;
* * * * *
0
11. Add subpart C, consisting of Sec. Sec. 227.201 through 227.219, to
read as follows:
Subpart C--Emergency Escape Breathing Apparatus Standards
Sec.
227.201 Criteria for requiring availability of EEBAs in the
locomotive cab.
227.203 Criteria for selecting EEBAs.
227.205 Storage facilities for EEBAs.
227.207 Railroad's program for inspection, maintenance, and
replacement of EEBAs; requirements for procedures.
227.209 Railroad's program of instruction on EEBAs.
227.211 Requirement to implement a general EEBA program; criteria
for placing employees in the general EEBA program.
227.213 Employee's responsibilities.
227.215 Recordkeeping in general.
227.217 Compliance dates.
227.219 Incorporation by reference.
Subpart C--Emergency Escape Breathing Apparatus Standards
Sec. 227.201 Criteria for requiring availability of EEBAs in the
locomotive cab.
(a) In general. (1)(i) Except as specified in paragraph (b) of this
section, a railroad is required to provide an EEBA to each of the
following of its employees while the employee is located in the cab of
a locomotive of an in-service freight train transporting a PIH
material, including a residue of a PIH material:
(A) Any train employee;
(B) Any direct supervisor of the train employee;
(C) Any employee who is deadheading; and
(D) Any other employee designated by the railroad in writing and at
the discretion of the railroad.
(ii) Each EEBA provided to an employee identified in paragraph
(a)(1)(i) of this section must meet the EEBA-selection criteria of
Sec. 227.203 and must have been inspected and be in working order
pursuant to the requirements of Sec. 227.207 at the time that the EEBA
is provided to the employee.
(2) Except as specified in paragraph (b) of this section, a
railroad shall not use a locomotive to transport a PIH material,
including a residue of a PIH material, in an in-service freight train
unless each of the employees identified in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this
section while occupying a locomotive cab of the train has access to an
EEBA that satisfies the EEBA selection criteria in Sec. 227.203 and
that has been inspected and is in working order pursuant to the
requirements in Sec. 227.207.
(b) Exceptions. (1) A railroad is not required to provide an EEBA,
or make accessible an EEBA, to an employee while in the locomotive cab
of an in-service freight train transporting a PIH material if all of
the PIH materials in the train, including a residue of a PIH material,
are being transported in one or more intermodal containers.
(2) This subpart does not apply to any of the following:
(i) Employees who are moving a locomotive or group of locomotives
coupled to a car or group of cars transporting a PIH material,
including a residue of a PIH material, only within the confines of a
locomotive repair or servicing area.
(ii) Employees who are moving a locomotive or group of locomotives
coupled to a car or group of cars transporting a PIH material,
including a residue of a PIH material for distances of less than 100
feet for inspection or maintenance purposes.
(c) Employee misconduct. Notwithstanding any exceptions identified
in this subpart, any employee who willfully tampers with or vandalizes
an EEBA shall be subject to this subpart for purposes of enforcement
relating to Sec. 227.213.
Sec. 227.203 Criteria for selecting EEBAs.
In selecting the appropriate EEBA to provide to an employee, the
railroad shall do the following:
(a) Select an atmosphere-supplying EEBA that protects against all
PIH materials (including their residue) that are being transported by
the freight train while in service.
(b) Ensure that the type of respirator selected meets the
requirements of paragraph (c)(1) of this section regarding minimum
breathing capacity and is--
(1) Certified for an escape only purpose by NIOSH pursuant to 42
CFR part 84; or
(2) Declared by the manufacturer, based on verifiable testing by
the manufacturer or an independent third party, to meet the criteria
established by one of the following:
(i) ISO 23269-1:2008 (incorporated by reference, see Sec.
227.219);
(ii) BS EN 13794:2002 (incorporated by reference, see Sec.
227.219); or
(iii) BS EN 1146:2005 (incorporated by reference, see Sec.
227.219).
(c) Document, and provide such documentation for inspection by FRA
upon request, the rationale for the final selection of an EEBA by
addressing each of the following concerns:
(1) Breathing time. Each EEBA must be fully charged and contain a
[[Page 5133]]
minimum breathing capacity of 15 minutes at the time of the pre-trip
inspection required under Sec. 227.207(a)(1).
(2) Head and neck protection. The EEBA selected must provide a
means of protecting the individual's head and neck from the irritating
effects of PIH materials to facilitate escape.
(3) Accommodation for eyeglasses and a range of facial features.
The EEBA selected must provide a means of protecting each employee who
is required to be provided with the EEBA, including those who wear
glasses, and allow for the reasonable accommodation of each such
employee's facial features, including facial hair.
Sec. 227.205 Storage facilities for EEBAs.
(a) A railroad may not use a locomotive if it is part of an in-
service freight train transporting a PIH material, including a residue
of a PIH material, and the locomotive cab is occupied by an employee
identified in Sec. 227.201(a)(1)(i)(A) through (D) (subject employee),
unless the locomotive cab has appropriate storage facilities to hold
the number of EEBAs required to be provided.
(b) The storage facility for each required EEBA must--
(1) Prevent deformation of the face piece and exhalation valve,
where applicable;
(2) Protect the EEBA from incidental damage, contamination, dust,
sunlight, extreme temperatures, excessive moisture, and damaging
chemicals;
(3) Provide each subject employee located in the locomotive cab
with ready access to the EEBA during an emergency; and
(4) Provide a means for each subject employee to locate the EEBA
under adverse conditions such as darkness or disorientation.
(c) A railroad must comply with the applicable manufacturer's
instructions for storage of each required EEBA and must keep a copy of
the instructions at its system headquarters for FRA inspection.
Sec. 227.207 Railroad's program for inspection, maintenance, and
replacement of EEBAs; requirements for procedures.
(a) General. Each railroad shall establish and comply with a
written program for inspection, maintenance, and replacement of EEBAs
that are required under this subpart. The program for inspection,
maintenance, and replacement of EEBAs shall be maintained at the
railroad's system headquarters and shall be amended, as necessary, to
reflect any significant changes. This program shall include the
following procedures:
(1) Procedures for performing and recording a pre-trip inspection
of each EEBA that is required to be provided on a locomotive being used
to transport a PIH material and procedures for cleaning, replacing, or
repairing each required EEBA, if necessary, prior to its being provided
under Sec. 227.201(a);
(2) Procedures for performing and recording periodic inspections
and maintenance of each required EEBA in a manner and on a schedule in
accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations; and
(3) Procedures for turning in and obtaining a replacement for a
defective, failed, or used EEBA and for recording those transactions.
(b) Inspection procedures and records. (1) A railroad's procedures
for pre-trip and periodic inspections of EEBAs shall require that the
following information about each pre-trip and periodic inspection be
accurately recorded on a tag or label that is attached to the storage
facility for the EEBA or kept with the EEBA or in inspection reports
stored as paper or electronic files:
(i) The name of the railroad performing the inspection;
(ii) The date that the inspection was performed;
(iii) The name and signature of the individual who made the
inspection;
(iv) The findings of the inspection;
(v) The required remedial action; and
(vi) A serial number or other means of identifying the inspected
EEBA.
(2) A railroad shall maintain an accurate record of each pre-trip
and periodic inspection required by this section. Pre-trip inspection
records shall be retained for a period of 92 days. Periodic inspection
records shall be retained for a period of one year.
(c) Procedures applicable if EEBA fails an inspection or is used.
An EEBA that fails an inspection required by this section, is otherwise
found to be defective, or is used, shall be removed from service and be
discarded or repaired, adjusted, or cleaned in accordance with the
following procedures:
(1) Repair, adjustment, and cleaning of EEBAs shall be done only by
persons who are appropriately trained to perform such work and who
shall use only the EEBA manufacturer's approved parts designed to
maintain the EEBA in compliance with one of the following standards:
(i) NIOSH at 42 CFR part 84;
(ii) ISO 23269-1:2008 (incorporated by reference, see Sec.
227.219);
(iii) BS EN 1146:2005 (incorporated by reference, see Sec.
227.219); or
(iv) BS EN 13794:2002 (incorporated by reference, see Sec.
227.219).
(2) Repairs shall be made according to the manufacturer's
recommendations and specifications for the type and extent of repairs
to be performed.
(3) Where applicable, reducing and admission valves, regulators,
and alarms shall be adjusted or repaired only by the manufacturer or a
technician trained by the manufacturer.
(4) An EEBA may not be returned to service unless it meets the
requirements in Sec. 227.203.
(d) Records of returns, maintenance, repair, and replacement. A
railroad shall--
(1) Maintain an accurate record of return, maintenance, repair, or
replacement for each EEBA required by this subpart; and
(2) Retain each of these records for three years.
Sec. 227.209 Railroad's program of instruction on EEBAs.
(a) General. (1) A railroad shall adopt and comply with its written
program of instruction on EEBAs for all of its employees in its general
EEBA program under Sec. 227.211 (subject employees). The program of
instruction shall be maintained at the railroad's system headquarters
and shall be amended, as necessary, to reflect any significant changes.
(2) This program may be integrated with the railroad's program of
instruction on operating rules under Sec. 217.11 of this chapter or
its program of instruction for hazmat employees under Sec. 172.704 of
this title. If the program is not integrated with either of these
programs, it must be written in a separate document that is available
for inspection by FRA.
(b) Subject matter. The railroad's program of instruction shall
require that the subject employees demonstrate knowledge of at least
the following:
(1) Why the EEBA is necessary and how improper fit, usage, or
maintenance can compromise the protective effect of the EEBA.
(2) The capabilities and limitations of the EEBA, particularly the
limited time for use.
(3) How to use the EEBA effectively in emergency situations,
including situations in which the EEBA malfunctions.
(4) How to inspect, put on, remove, and use the EEBA, and how to
check the seals of the EEBA.
(5) Procedures for maintenance and storage of the EEBA that must be
followed.
(6) The requirements of this subpart related to the
responsibilities of employees and the rights of employees to have
access to records.
[[Page 5134]]
(7) The hazardous materials classified as PIH materials.
(c) Dates of initial instruction and intervals for periodic
instruction. (1) The instruction for current subject employees shall be
provided on an initial basis no later than 30 days prior to the date of
compliance identified in Sec. 227.217. Initial instruction of new
subject employees shall occur either 30 days prior to the date of
compliance identified in Sec. 227.217 or before assignment to jobs
where the deployment of EEBAs on a locomotive is required, whichever is
later.
(2) Initial instruction shall be supplemented with periodic
instruction at least once every three years.
(d) Records of instruction. A railroad shall maintain a record of
employees provided instruction in compliance with this section and
retain these records for three years.
Sec. 227.211 Requirement to implement a general EEBA program;
criteria for placing employees in the general EEBA program.
(a) In general. A railroad shall adopt and comply with a
comprehensive, written, general program to implement this subpart that
shall be maintained at the railroad's system headquarters. Each
railroad shall amend its general EEBA program, as necessary, to reflect
any significant changes.
(b) Elements of the general EEBA program and criteria for placing
employees in program. A railroad's general EEBA program shall--
(1) Identify the individual who implements and manages the
railroad's general EEBA program by title. The individual must have
suitable training and sufficient knowledge, experience, skill, and
authority to enable him or her to manage properly a program for
provision of EEBAs. If the individual is not directly employed by the
railroad, the written program must identify the business relationship
of the railroad to the individual fulfilling this role.
(2) Describe the administrative and technical process for selection
of EEBAs appropriate to the hazards that may be reasonably expected.
(3) Describe the process used to procure and provide EEBAs in a
manner to ensure the continuous and ready availability of an EEBA to
each of the railroad's employees identified in Sec.
227.201(a)(1)(i)(A) through (D) (while actually occupying the
locomotive cab of a freight train in service transporting a PIH
material). This description shall include--
(i) A description of the method used for provision of EEBAs,
including whether the EEBAs are individually assigned to employees,
installed on locomotives as required equipment, or provided by other
means. If EEBAs are installed on locomotives as required equipment, the
means of securement shall be designated.
(ii) The decision criteria used by the railroad to identify trains
in which provision of EEBAs is not required.
(iii) A description of what procedures will govern the railroad at
interchange to ensure that the locomotive cab in each in-service
freight train transporting a PIH material has an EEBA accessible to
each of the employees identified in Sec. 227.201(a)(1)(i)(A) through
(D) while in the cab of the locomotive, including what procedures are
in place to ensure that the EEBAs provided satisfy the EEBA-selection
criteria in Sec. 227.203, satisfy the EEBA-storage criteria in Sec.
227.205, and have been inspected and are in working order pursuant to
the requirements in Sec. 227.207.
(4) Ensure that each of the following employees, except those
excluded by Sec. 227.201(b), whose duties require regular work in the
locomotive cabs of in-service freight trains transporting a PIH
material, including a residue of a PIH material, has the required EEBA
available when they occupy the cab of such a train and know how to use
the EEBA:
(i) Employees who perform service subject to 49 U.S.C. 21103 (train
employees) on such trains;
(ii) Direct supervisors of train employees on such trains;
(iii) Deadheading employees on such trains; and
(iv) Any other employees designated by the railroad in writing and
at the discretion of the railroad.
(c) Records of positions or individuals or both in the railroad's
general EEBA program. A railroad shall maintain a record of all
positions or individuals, or both, who are designated by the railroad
to be placed in its general EEBA program pursuant to paragraph (b)(4)
of this section. The railroad shall retain these records for the
duration of the designation and for one year thereafter.
(d) Consolidated programs. A group of two or more commonly
controlled railroads subject to this subpart may request in writing
that the Associate Administrator for Railroad Safety/Chief Safety
Officer (Associate Administrator) treat them as a single railroad for
purposes of adopting and complying with the general EEBA program
required by this section. The request must list the parent corporation
that controls the group of railroads and demonstrate that the railroads
operate in the United States as a single, integrated rail system. The
Associate Administrator will notify the railroads of his or her
decision in writing.
Sec. 227.213 Employee's responsibilities.
(a) An employee to whom the railroad provides an EEBA shall--
(1) Participate in training under Sec. 227.209;
(2) Follow railroad procedures to ensure that the railroad's
EEBAs--
(i) Are maintained in a secure and accessible manner;
(ii) Are inspected as required by this subpart and the railroad's
program of inspection; and
(iii) If found to be unserviceable upon inspection, are turned in
to the appropriate railroad facility for repair, periodic maintenance,
or replacement; and
(3) Notify the railroad of EEBA failures and of use incidents in a
timely manner.
(b) No employee shall willfully tamper with or vandalize an EEBA
that is provided pursuant to Sec. 227.201(a) in an attempt to disable
or damage the EEBA.
Sec. 227.215 Recordkeeping in general.
(a) Availability of records. (1) A railroad shall make all records
required by this subpart available for inspection and copying or
photocopying to representatives of FRA, upon request.
(2) Except for records of pre-trip inspections of EEBAs under Sec.
227.207, records required to be retained under this subpart must be
kept at the system headquarters and at each division headquarters where
the tests and inspections are conducted.
(b) Electronic records. All records required by this subpart may be
kept in electronic form by the railroad. A railroad may maintain and
transfer records through electronic transmission, storage, and
retrieval provided that all of the following conditions are met:
(1) The electronic system is designed so that the integrity of each
record is maintained through appropriate levels of security such as
recognition of an electronic signature, or other means, which uniquely
identify the initiating person as the author of that record. No two
persons have the same electronic identity.
(2) The electronic system ensures that each record cannot be
modified in any way, or replaced, once the record is transmitted and
stored.
(3) Any amendment to a record is electronically stored apart from
the record that it amends. Each amendment to a record is uniquely
identified as to the individual making the amendment.
(4) The electronic system provides for the maintenance of records
as originally
[[Page 5135]]
submitted without corruption or loss of data.
(5) Paper copies of electronic records and amendments to those
records that may be necessary to document compliance with this subpart
are made available for inspection and copying or photocopying by
representatives of FRA.
Sec. 227.217 Compliance dates.
(a) Class I railroads subject to this subpart are required to
comply with this subpart beginning no later than 12 months from March
26, 2024.
(b) Class II railroads subject to this subpart are required to
comply with this subpart beginning no later than 12 months from March
26, 2024.
(c) Class III railroads subject to this subpart and any other
railroads subject to this subpart are required to comply with this
subpart beginning no later than 18 months from March 26, 2024.
Sec. 227.219 Incorporation by reference.
Certain material is incorporated by reference into this subpart
with the approval of the Director of the Federal Register under 5
U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part 51. This incorporation by reference (IBR)
material is available for inspection at the FRA and the National
Archives and Records Administration (NARA). Contact FRA at: Federal
Railroad Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC
20590; phone: (202) 493-6052; email: [email protected]. For information
on the availability of this material at NARA, visit www.archives.gov/federal-register/cfr/ibr-locations or email [email protected]. The
material may be obtained from the following sources:
(a) The British Standards Institution, 12110 Sunset Hills Road,
Suite 200, Reston, VA 20190-5902, phone: 800-862-4977; website:
shop.bsigroup.com.
(1) BS EN 1146:2005, Respiratory protective devices--Self-
contained, open-circuit compressed air breathing apparatus
incorporating a hood for escape--requirements, testing, marking;
February 2, 2006; into Sec. Sec. 227.203(b) and 227.207(c).
(2) BS EN 13794:2002, Respiratory protective devices--Self-
contained, closed-circuit breathing apparatus for escape--requirements,
testing, marking, November 26, 2002; into Sec. Sec. 227.203(b) and
227.207(c).
(b) International Organization for Standardization, Chemin de
Blandonnet 8, CP 401, 1214 Vernier, Geneva, Switzerland; phone +41-22-
749-08-88; website: www.iso.org.
(1) ISO 23269-1:2008(E), Ships and marine technology--Breathing
apparatus for ships--Part 1: Emergency escape breathing devices (EEBD)
for shipboard use, First Edition, February 1, 2008; into Sec. Sec.
227.203(b) and 227.207(c).
(2) [Reserved]
Issued in Washington, DC.
Amitabha Bose,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2024-01074 Filed 1-25-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-06-P