A federal transportation agency is holding a public
hearing Tuesday to review SEPTA's waiver of A federal transportation agency is
holding a public hearing Tuesday to review SEPTA's waiver of nationally
mandated safety rules after one of the transit agency's unions called attention
to the engineers' potentially dangerously long shifts and work weeks.
"Public safety is at risk, so a public hearing is
absolutely necessary," said Steve Bruno, the Brotherhood of Locomotive
Engineers and Trainmen's (BLET) national vice president. "There's no
margin of error when it comes to running a railroad the right way."
The union's president, Dennis Pierce, sent a letter to
the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) requesting a review of SEPTA.
Pierce said SEPTA has increased the number of trains and
route miles traveled while cutting back on the number of engineers scheduled
since receiving a safety waiver in October 2012.
The waiver allows SEPTA to stretch workdays and cut
into the rest time of engineers --some who are already working 14-hour days and
6-day weeks, according to BLET.
"Forcing engineers to operate trains with
insufficient rest creates a known -- and preventable -- risk to passengers and
crew members," a BLET news release said. "Most other regional
commuter railroads work engineers on a 5-day a week schedule with shorter
workdays."
SEPTA officials have not yet responded to requests for
comment.
The public hearing is set to begin at 10 a.m. Tuesday in
the first floor conference room at the Baldwin Town at 1510 Chester Pike in
Crum Lynne, Pennsylvania. The hearing comes a week after a deadly commuter train crash killed six people and injured 15
others in New York.
Source: NBC10.com
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