House rail safety hearing highlights new legislation
Nehls: U.S. Rep. Troy Nehls (R-Texas) discusses a new rail safety bill during a hearing by the House Railroad, Pipelines,and Hazardous Materials Subcommittee on Tuesday, July 23. (Photo: from House video)
Nehls: U.S. Rep. Troy Nehls (R-Texas) discusses a new rail safety bill during a hearing by the House Railroad, Pipelines,and Hazardous Materials Subcommittee on Tuesday, July 23. (Photo: from House video)

This story originally appeared on Trains.com

WASHINGTON — Legislators used a House subcommittee hearing on railroad safety Tuesday to highlight a new rail safety bill. But committee members and witnesses including regulators, union representatives, and the House member representing East Palestine questioned the rail industry’s own safety efforts.

The revised bill, the Railroad Safety Enhancement Act (H.R. 8996), was introduced July 11, according to the House website, although the full text was only made available today. It is sponsored by U.S. Reps. Troy Nehls (R-Texas), the chair of the Railroads, Pipelines, and Hazardous Materials Subcommittee, which held Tuesday’s hearing, and Seth Moulton (D-Mass.). In his prepared hearing remarks, Nehls highlighted four additions to the Railway Safety Act introduced in the Senate last year, and eventually passed in modified form by the Commerce Committee [see “Railway Safety Act advances …,” Trains News Wire, May 10, 2023]

  • It would require all Class I railroads to join the Federal Railroad Administration’s Confidential Close Call Reporting System for two years.

  • It requires states to notify first responders of the AskRail app, which provides information about train consists, and would create a pilot program to address connectivity problems for the app along the rail network.

  • It would authorize an additional $1 billion for the Railroad Grade Crossing Elimination Program.

  • It authorizes $100 million annually for a FRA grant program to install railcar telematics systems and gateway devices on cars carrying hazardous materials.

Nehls pointed out during Tuesday’s hearing that the bill retains the two-person crew requirement, an aspect highlighted when the Teamsters Union announced its support for the bill this evening. A union press release said the legislation “includes several Teamsters priorities, such as requiring a qualified engineer and conductor on most freight trains and providing essential equipment to roadway workers to ensure protections from being struck by trains and other railroad vehicles while working on track.”

The Senate version of the safety bill has languished because of Republican opposition to some provisions — the two-person crew requirement among them — but Nehls made his pitch to overcome similar resistance in the House.

“I am going to speak directly to my Republican colleagues on the committee,” he said. “The Railway Safety Act in the Senate is supported by President Trump and is authored by Vice Presidential nominee Senator Vance. … Taking Senator Vance’s bill and adding these four safety provisions makes this a very good rail safety bill and I humbly ask for your support because it’s the right thing to do.”