Progress Through Unity

PEB No.248 Announced

The Executive Order established the Presidential Emergency Board effective July 16, 2015, and the Emergency Board will report its findings and recommendations for settlement to the President within thirty (30) days of its creation.

President Obama also announced that he intends to appoint the following members to Presidential Emergency Board No. 248:

  • Elizabeth C. Wesman – Chair, Presidential Emergency Board No. 248
  • Barbara Deinhardt – Member, Presidential Emergency Board No. 248
  • Ann Kenis – Member, Presidential Emergency Board No. 248

https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2015/07/15/president-obama-announces-presidential-emergency-board-names-members

Railroads take to prevent trains from speeding

Railroads take to prevent trains from speeding. The advisory is the latest in a series of steps FRA has taken to keep passenger railroads safe for the traveling public.

WASHINGTON — The Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) today issued a safety advisory recommending actions that passenger railroads take to prevent trains from speeding.  The advisory is the latest in a series of steps FRA has taken to keep passenger railroads safe for the traveling public.

“Today the FRA is taking a smart and targeted approach to addressing a major issue involved in recent passenger rail accidents,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx.  “Safety is our top priority at the Department, and today’s advisory is but one step we are taking to raise the bar on safety for passenger rail.”

The FRA recommends that passenger railroads immediately take the following actions to control passenger train speeds:

Identify locations where there is a reduction of more than 20 mph from the approach speed to a curve or bridge and the maximum authorized operating speed for passenger trains at that curve or bridge.

Modify Automatic Train Control (ATC) systems (if in use) to ensure compliance with speed limits.

If the railroad does not use ATC, ensure that all passenger train movements through the identified locations be made with a second qualified crew member in the cab of the controlling locomotive, or with constant communication between the locomotive engineer and an additional qualified and designated crewmember in the body of the train.

Install additional wayside signage alerting engineers and conductors of the maximum authorized passenger train speed throughout the passenger railroad’s system, with particular emphasis on additional signage at the identified locations.

“The FRA fully expects passenger railroads to take immediate action and implement these recommendations,” said Acting Federal Railroad Administrator Sarah Feinberg.  “We will continue to take action in the coming weeks to prevent human error from causing accidents and to keep passengers safe on the nation’s railroads.”

To view visit 

http://www.fra.dot.gov

Rail – Moving America Forward

 

The mission of the Federal Railroad Administration is to enable the safe, reliable, and efficient movement of people and goods for a strong America, now and in the future.

 

 

PTC Deadline

http://www.progressiverailroading.com/ptc/news/FRA-will-enforce-Dec-31-PTC-deadline-acting-administrator-says–44652

 

Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) officials believe the Dec. 31 deadline for railroads to implement positive train control (PTC) technology is an important federal mandate that the agency intends to enforce, FRA Acting Administrator Sarah Feinberg told a congressional committee on Tuesday.

Feinberg, who was testifying at a House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee hearing, said that PTC is the “single most important railroad safety technology development in more than a century,” and that her agency has been working diligently to help railroads with PTC planning and execution. She has established a PTC Implementation Team that is “aggressively managing” the progress toward implementation.

Although she believes Amtrak will meet its goal of completing PTC implementation along the Northeast Corridor by Dec. 31, she acknowledged that most railroads are not far enough along wit their PTC planning to meet the federal deadline.

A lack of public-sector funding for PTC installation may have caused “unwanted delays” in fully implementing the technology, she said in her written testimony. As part of the Obama administration’s proposed “GROW AMERICA” transportation funding proposal, the FRA is seeking $825 million to help commuter railroads meet their PTC costs, as well as additional funding for Amtrak to install PTC on its national network.

“Despite a lack of funding directed to commuter railroads, FRA is using the resources it has available now to assist railroads in implementing PTC,” she said. 

For example, FRA issued a $967.1 million loan through the Railroad Rehabilitation and Improvement Financing (RRIF) program to the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority to help pay for its PTC deployment, she noted.

Recently, Congress members and other stakeholders have asked FRA to address their concerns about their ability to meet the Dec. 31 deadline. The agency has proposed that it be granted authority to review, approve and certify PTC safety plans on an individual basis to ensure that railroads are “raising the bar on safety” as they continue taking steps toward PTC implementation, Feinberg said.

FRA officials are discussing internally about how the agency will enforce the Dec. 31 deadline, and what potential penalties for exceeding the deadline might be, Feinberg testified, in response to a committee member’s question. Penalties could range from little enforcement all the way up to daily civil penalties, she said.

“Some railroads have behaved better than others,” when it comes to making progress toward PTC implementation, Feinberg testified.

The June 2 hearing was called to review the May 12 Amtrak derailment in Philadelphia that killed eight passengers and injured 200. The National Transportation Safety Board’s investigation into the cause is continuing, but speed is considered a factor in the accident.

The train was traveling more than twice the posted speed limit when it derailed. An NTSB member said the day after the incident that he believed PTC would have prevented the accident if the technology had been activated along the track where the derailment occurred.

 

FRA Emergency Order

http://www.fra.dot.gov/eLib/details/L16390#p1_z5_gD_lPR

 

http://www.fra.dot.gov/eLib/details/L16390#p1_z5_gD_lPR

Download (PDF, 465KB)

 

Railroad Retirement Information

Attached is some important information concerning Railroad Retirement benefits, its recommended everyone visit https://secure.rrb.gov/MainLine/PINPassword/acknowledgement.asp?App=NewPassword  to set up your account and request a password. This will expedite any claims you have and also has many useful tools including determining your future annuity.

Download (PDF, 140KB)

Download (PDF, 145KB)

Negotiating Steps under the Railway Labor Act

FYI – This is a synopsis of the applicable procedures to negotiating a contract under the Railway Labor Act. Refer to the RLA itself for exact guidance.

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Lackawanna Cutoff Update

From By Larry Higgs | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

Construction has begun on the first commuter train line to Sussex County in decades as rails are being installed that will extend service to Andover.

The first 4.25 miles of track have been installed on the former Lackawanna Cutoff, as part of the first phase of the project to restore 7.3 miles of track between the Port Morris rail yards and Andover Township, said William Smith, NJ Transit spokesman.

The cutoff would connect to NJ Transit’s existing Morris & Essex lines at Port Morris Junction in Roxbury, and to Mid-Town Direct service to New York in Dover. [Read more…]

New FRA Administrator Named

WASHINGTON – U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx announced today that Department of Transportation Chief of Staff Sarah Feinberg will serve as Acting Administrator of the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA). She succeeds Joseph C. Szabo who was appointed and confirmed as the agency’s twelfth Administrator is 2009. Szabo stepped down as the agency’s head last Friday. [Read more…]

Reporting Threshold Remains at 2014 Level

Federal Register /Vol. 79, No. 247 /Wednesday, December 24, 2014 /Rules and Regulations 77397

In this rule, FRA is keeping the monetary threshold for CY 2015, at $10,500, the same as the monetary threshold for CY 2014. FRA is maintaining the reporting threshold at the CY 2014 level, because, in part, wage data for the second-quarter of 2014 (the data used to calculate the threshold) was abnormally high due to large, lump sum retroactive payments of wage increases resulting from labor contract agreements affecting several railroads. FRA believes the data does not accurately reflect the changes in labor costs for CY 2014

2015 Mileage Rate Increased to 57.5 cents per mile

Dear Sisters and Brothers:

The Internal Revenue Service issued the 2015 standard mileage rates used to calculate the deductible costs of operating an automobile for business.  Beginning on January 1, 2015 the standard rates for the use of a car will be 57.5 cents per mile for business miles driven.

Therefore, I am authorizing automobile mileage allowance consistent with the maximum rate set by the Internal Revenue Service (Notice 2014-79 in IRB 2014-53), effective January 1, 2015.  The automobile rate will be increased by one and one-half cent, from 56 cents per mile to 57.5 cents per mile.

Fraternally Yours,

John Previsich

President-Transportation Division