More rail reforms needed
In a victory for rail safety, a new federal rule will require major freight railroads to maintain two-person crews on most routes. But lest anyone become too encouraged that Congress has finally gotten itself in gear on rail safety reform proposed after the Norfolk Southern derailment in East Palestine, this new rule was first proposed during the Obama administration.
Once the new rule was announced, U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg reminded us that a country like ours should not be satisfied with the average of nearly three derailments per day we experience now.
“When good safety rules have been put in place over the years, especially after high-profile incidents, we see derailments come down on mainline tracks. But as attention faded on those incidents, the railroad industry lobby was consistently able to weaken or delay important safety provisions,” Buttigieg said.
Meanwhile, U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and others continue working to pass a rail safety bill that was drafted in response to last year’s East Palestine incident.
It is unconscionable that politicians would let themselves be swayed by their “friends” in the railroad industry.
Our communities — and the railroads’ own employees — deserve better than that. Members of Congress and agency rulemakers must stop dragging their feet on continued railroad reforms.
