Regional Rail engineers have asked federal regulators to
require SEPTA to follow a safety rule designed to limit fatigue.
SEPTA wants the Federal Railroad Administration to renew
a waiver that the transit agency has had from the work rule for two years.
The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen
asked the federal agency to deny SEPTA's request and hold a public hearing on
the issue, citing accidents at other railroads caused by fatigued engineers.
A sleep-deprived engineer was blamed for a fatal accident
in New York last year in which a Metro-North Railroad train derailed while
taking a 30 m.p.h. curve at 82 m.p.h., killing four people and injuring more
than 70.
"The industry has witnessed the inevitable and
undesirable outcome that occurs when an operation favors a culture that
prioritizes productivity before safety," union president Dennis Pierce
wrote to the Federal Railroad Administration. "The recent series of
accidents at Metro-North was preceded by a culture that placed productivity
ahead of safety policy."
"SEPTA has taken a similar course on productivity by
avoiding compliance" with the safety rule, Pierce said.
None of SEPTA's 200 engineers works a 40-hour week. Most
work six-day weeks, with the typical engineer working about 67 hours per week.
The Federal Railroad Administration requires two days off every 14 days.
Many engineers count on thousands of dollars in overtime
each year, and the union did not object in 2012 when SEPTA first sought the
waiver after the Federal Railroad Administration tightened hours-of-service
regulations.
The federal agency rule in dispute involves the time
employees spend traveling from home to start work somewhere other than their
usual assigned location.
The rule requires that time to be counted as paid work
time; SEPTA has been granted a waiver from that rule since 2012, allowing it to
reduce some engineers' paid hours and keep them from exceeding work-hour
limits.
SEPTA said the waiver was "in the best interests of
the riding public from both a service (more employees available for duty to
address service demands) and economic standpoint (reduced labor costs by
eliminating a potential need to hire additional employees)."
"Maintaining tight controls on labor expenses and
operating expenses is one way SEPTA manages to fulfill that obligation [to
operate efficiently]," SEPTA said in its request for the waiver extension.
"SEPTA estimates one additional crew costs
approximately $150,000 annually, so even one new employee could cost SEPTA
hundreds of thousands of dollars in labor expenses in a relatively short period
of time."
The union cited four incidents between Aug. 6 and Oct. 7
on SEPTA tracks in which engineers violated safety rules, prompting the Federal
Railroad Administration to launch an investigation after characterizing them as
"not a coincidence."
"The alarming number of non-coincidental events in
such a short time window is another indication that the overall culture at
SEPTA is trending toward the border of minimum safety standards," Pierce
wrote.
SEPTA officials said none of the incidents appeared to
involve fatigue or overwork issues, as the engineers involved had recently
returned from time-off periods ranging from 28 to 52 hours.
"We take safety very seriously," said deputy
general manager Jeffrey Knueppel. "We're looking at all of the events, and
we're not finding anything to suggest we have a fatigue problem."
"SEPTA employs a fatigue-analysis model that governs
our actions regarding crew assignments," Knueppel said. SEPTA also has
increased training classes to try to boost its number of engineers, Knueppel
said.
SEPTA needs 213 engineers to be fully staffed, but
typically operates with between 192 and 200. Because of retirements and other
attrition, SEPTA is losing about one engineer per month.
Thirteen people are in the current training class for
engineers, 10 more are to start training in January, and an additional 10 next
spring.
If SEPTA were able to operate with 213 engineers, it
could reduce the number of six-day runs from 72 percent of the total to 40
percent, said Ronald Hopkins, SEPTA assistant general manager of operations.
Source: Philly.com
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