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Post Info TOPIC: Frank Wilner (AAR/UTU) changes his tune on single person crews


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Frank Wilner (AAR/UTU) changes his tune on single person crews
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Risks of One-Man Rail Crews Debated in Wake of Disaster

The train hauling millions of gallons of crude oil that slammed into a Canadian town got there with a crew of one -- staffing permitted by law though opposed by labor leaders whove warned of the risks.

The union representing workers at Montreal Maine & Atlantic Railway Ltd. fought the company policy that allowed a solo operator to drive and park the train for the night and says the disaster points to the dangers of manpower cuts.

Quebec-Crash CEO Gets Threats, Keeps Crew on Trains
2:37

July 9 (Bloomberg) -- Edward Burkhardt, the chairman of the railroad whose deadly derailment gutted a Canadian town, talks about threats he has received after the accident that killed at least 13 people and planned operational changes at the railroad. Burkhardt, whose Rail World Inc. owns Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway Ltd., speaks with Bloomberg's Marley DelDuchetto Kayden in Rosemont, Illinois, before heading to the crash site in eastern Quebec. (Excerpts. Source: Bloomberg)

Its unfortunate that it takes such a terrible, terrible, terrible situation like this to realize how vulnerable we are in this country, Guy Farrell, assistant to the Quebec director of the United Steelworkers Union, said in an interview.

In the U.S., crews of at least two people are the norm -- down from five 50 years ago. Some non-union short-line railroads are using one-person crews and others are pushing to do so, Dennis Pierce, Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen national president, said.

Lawmaker Olivia Chow of the New Democratic Party, Canadas main opposition party, said in a statement today the government should ban one-person crews on trains carrying hazardous goods in response to the Quebec explosion.

Soaring Production

The safety of moving oil by train is drawing attention as production soars in areas not fully served by pipelines, such as North Dakotas Bakken Shale where the doomed Canadian train took on its freight. Carloads of crude and refined petroleum products carried by rail in the U.S. rose 47 percent this year through July 6 from the same period in 2012, according to the Association of American Railroads. In Canada, car loads of fuel and crude oil surged 74 percent in the first four months of this year, compared with the year-ago period, according to Statistics Canada.

Investigators are combing through the wreckage to determine how the MM&A train, with more than 70 tankers, rolled away from its parking spot July 6 after the engineer left it for the night. The train jumped the tracks as it reached Lac-Megantic, about 250 kilometers (155 miles) east of Montreal, incinerating 30 buildings in the towns center. Twenty people have been confirmed dead and scores more are missing and presumed dead.

Safer Crews

Edward Burkhardt, chief executive officer of closely held Rail World Inc., which owns the railroad, defended the use of a one-person crew even as he suggested that human error contributed to the accident.

We actually think one-man crews are safer than two man-crews because theres less distraction, Burkhardt said yesterday at a news conference in Lac-Megantic televised by CBC.

The engineer who left the train has been suspended because the police have talked about prosecuting him and they want him staying where he is, Burkhardt said. A United Steelworkers union official identified the engineer as Tom Harding of Farnham, Quebec.

We think he applied some handbrakes, Burkhardt said. The question is, did he apply enough of them? Hes told us that he applied 11 handbrakes and our general feeling now is that that is not true.

Burkhardt agreed this week to stop leaving trains unattended overnight.

Staffing Issues

The Quebec steelworkers union, which represents 75 MM&A employees, raised staffing issues in contract negotiations three times since the company took over the railroad in 2000, Farrell said. He blamed the Canadian federal government for allowing one-man crews.

In the U.S., while no regulation or law bans the use of one-person rail crews, regulations dictating what the engineer and conductor do in the locomotive effectively prohibit the practice. Collective bargaining agreements between more than a dozen rail-worker unions and the railroads who employ them have kept two operators in most trains running in the U.S.

Thats not enough for the two rail-operator unions, which four years ago petitioned the U.S. Federal Railroad Administration asking the regulator to prohibit one-person crews. The agency told the United Transportation Union and Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen in a November 2009 letter it had no factual evidence to support the prohibition against one-person crew operations.

Unsafe, Untenable

It is, in our opinion and the opinion of many, a very unsafe, untenable practice, said James Stem, national legislative director for the Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation unions transportation division, which was formerly the UTU.

Railroad workers were among the first laborers to be unionized in North America, winning the right to collectively bargain early in the last century. Deregulation that began in the 1980s in both Canada and the U.S. led to pressure for concessions on staffing that the railroads said were appropriate given advances in technology.

The unions have a history of arguing for the maintenance of crew sizes and the creation of positions, Gary Chaison, a labor-law professor at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, said in an interview. The railroads are becoming more powerful. The railway unions are still in retreat.

Labor Laws

Fifty years ago, trains were operated with five-person crews, which were downsized from the earlier days when rail workers shoveled coal to power engines and had to climb to rail roofs to turn discs to operate brakes, said Frank Wilner, a railroad economist and the author of Understanding the Railway Labor Act about the history of rail labor laws.

Two-person crews make sense both because theres a lot for conductors to do such as monitoring signals telling rail operators when to stop or slow and because a second person is a backstop against inevitable human error, Wilner said in an interview.

If you have two people monitoring each other, such as ensuring handbrakes are properly set, catastrophe can be avoided, he said.

Two-person crews have been the norm since the early 1990s, said Pierce, with the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen.

In the U.S., large railroads, which include Warren Buffetts Burlington Northern Santa Fe and Union Pacific Corp. (UNP), have consistently pushed for crew size reductions for decades and last unsuccessfully pushed for single-man operations in certain settings in negotiations for a 2007 labor agreement, Pierce said in an e-mail.

Requests Considered

Short-line railroads, the smallest type of railroad in the U.S., is the group pushing for one-person crews with some non-unionized short lines running one-person crews now, he said.

One other railroad operating in Canada, Quebec North Shore and Labrador, has sought permission to use one-person crews, though others are considering it, according to Transport Canada, the regulator that oversees railways.

To qualify they must have technology in place to support one-person crews, and must coordinate with municipalities along their routes to ensure they can clear blocked crossings and respond to emergencies, Maryse Durette, a spokeswoman for Transport Canada, said in an e-mail.

The Federal Railroad Administration, the unit of the U.S. Transportation Department that regulates rail safety, doesnt mandate the number of crew members on a train, Kevin Thompson, a spokesman, said. In almost every case crews include an engineer to operate and a conductor to manage the train, he said in an e-mail.

Since 2004, accidents have declined by 43 percent while highway-rail grade crossing accidents have fallen by 34 percent. Last year was the safest year in railroading history, Thompson said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Jim Efstathiou Jr. in New York at jefstathiou@bloomberg.net; Angela Greiling Keane in Washington at agreilingkea@bloomberg.net



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Frank N. Wilner

Frank N. Wilner

 

Frank N. Wilner is author of six books, including, Amtrak: Past, Present, Future; Understanding the Railway Labor Act; and, Railroad Mergers: History, Analysis, Insight. He earned undergraduate and graduate degrees in economics and labor relations from Virginia Tech. He has been assistant vice president, policy, for the Association of American Railroads; a White House appointed chief of staff at the Surface Transportation Board; and director of public relations for the United Transportation Union. He is a past president of the Association of Transportation Law Professionals.



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unionman

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Date: 12:21 PM, 07/03/07
 

Troll,
You just talked me into a yes vote.


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Troll wrote:

Frank N. Wilner

Frank N. Wilner

 

Frank N. Wilner is author of six books, including, Amtrak: Past, Present, Future; Understanding the Railway Labor Act; and, Railroad Mergers: History, Analysis, Insight. He earned undergraduate and graduate degrees in economics and labor relations from Virginia Tech. He has been assistant vice president, policy, for the Association of American Railroads; a White House appointed chief of staff at the Surface Transportation Board; and director of public relations for the United Transportation Union. He is a past president of the Association of Transportation Law Professionals.


 http://www.ble-t.org/pr/news/newsflash.asp?id=4089

 



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Thank you Troll for that very infomative article. My beginning
on the railroad in 1973, 5-man crews were the norm in train
service and 4-man switchcrews. I have seen the decimation
of the railroad jobs in the last 40 years. Since the insurance
companies rule the world I think they are going to shift more
toward 2-man crews minimum on oil-trains in the future
for a start. As a "what if" in this disaster, what if the the runaway
train was a coal train coming down the hill at 60mph and
derailed in the middle of town. Some have speculated what
caused the big fire/explosion was actually the runaway train
crashing into propane tanks that were on a siding in town.
If the propane tankcars werent there maybe none of these
tankcars of crude oil would have ignited as they derailed.
Just so many things that could have gone another way.

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Troll wrote:
unionman

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Critical

Posts: 27
Date: 12:21 PM, 07/03/07
 

Troll,
You just talked me into a yes vote.

 I can't remember that far back, was this CUM?



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Yes

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