With one of the busiest travel days of the year on the
horizon, SEPTA Union leaders are warning that some engineers are working too
many hours, putting riders in danger. SEPTA officials believe the warning is
unnecessary however.
“The locomotive engineers are working 14 hour days, six
days a week,” said Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen (BLET) vice
president Steve Bruno. “It’s something
of an unsafe condition and frankly it’s becoming dangerous.”
BLET and Trainmen Division 71, which represents 200 SEPTA
locomotive engineers, asked the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) to reject
SEPTA’s request for an extended waiver of safety rules, claiming SEPTA failed
to follow its own scheduling procedures. They also claimed the waiver would
decrease the amount of rest time available for train engineers.
“This is no way to run a railroad,” Bruno said. “Safety
has to come first – but SEPTA is more interested in cutting payroll costs. They
haven’t lived up to the promises they made when they got the first waiver;
there’s no reason to give them a second one.”
The Union also accused SEPTA of not following safety
rules for the engineers who fill in for sick and vacation coverage. BLET
National President Dennis Pierce wrote a letter to the FRA, claiming SEPTA has
systematically reduced “the number of locomotive engineer assignments while
simultaneously increasing the number of trains and route miles in the public
schedule.”
The Union claimed SEPTA is overworking its locomotive
engineers and that six-day workweeks are routine for them.
“We’re seeing a lot of engineers reporting for work
having had their sleep interrupted and frankly in an unrested and unsafe
condition,” Bruno said.
Last year four people died after a Metro-North Railroad
train derailed in New York. The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB)
blamed the accident on a sleep-deprived engineer who had a drastic shift in his
work schedule.
BLET officials told NBC10 they’ve linked several
accidents and violations to fatigued engineers.
SEPTA officials denied those claims however.
“Each one of those particular incidents, the individuals
that were involved in it had more than 24 hours off before working on that
particular day,” said SEPTA Official Ron Hopkins.
Hopkins said safety was SEPTA’s top priority. He also
told NBC10 SEPTA follows all federal regulations when it comes to worker
fatigue.
“We believe fatigue can be an issue,” Hopkins said. “So
we pay close attention to it when we do our scheduling of our regular runs.
Also we make sure that if there are any extra runs there’s a meeting held
between our management team as well as the union.”
SEPTA officials also told NBC10 they’re in the process of
hiring and training more engineers which they said would help reduce sixth days
and overtime issues.
Source: NBC10.com
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