Published on June 22nd, 2022 📆 | 5990 Views ⚑
0TTD and Union Pacific disagree over safety technology deployment
The debate about how to manage visual inspections in the face of advances in safety technology continues. This time itâs railroad carmen defending the importance of visual inspections for brake testing and maintenance.
Union members are responding to Union Pacificâs request to the Federal Railroad Administration to extend a waiver governing UPâs test program for wheel temperature detectors (WTDs).Â
UP (NYSE: UNP) is asking FRA to allow the use of WTDs on intermodal trains operated on segments of UPâs system, as well as extend the distance at which visual inspections would be performed. UP has been using WTDs under normal operating and traffic conditions between the coal mines of Wyomingâs Powder River Basin and an unloading facility at White Bluff, Arkansas.Â
But union members say UPâs goal is to reduce visual inspections and save on overhead costs.
WTDs are âactually a useful device thatâs clearly valuable as a complement to the inspections, but [the technology is] really about detecting the temperature on the rail,â Regan told FreightWaves. WTDs have âto be used as a complement to the inspections. A person is trained to see where there might be a defect, where there could be a problem down the road and what might need to be improved or upgraded or replaced in the near future. This device cannot do that.â
TTD also argued in a February letter to FRA that UP failed to gather and provide any evidence for review that the waiver should be renewed.
âWithout any useful data from UPâs Test Waiver Committee to support the extension, we do not believe that the continued use of WTD technology is a safe and acceptable substitute for physical inspections by trained Carmen,â Regan said in the February letter.
Regan told FreightWaves that FRA rejected UPâs waiver extension requests in 2014, 2017 and 2021.Â
FRA said its safety board denied UPâs petition in July 2021 because the railroad did not provide sufficient data and analysis fully demonstrating the claimed safety benefits.Â
âWe think that the focus of bringing new technology into a centuries old industry like railroading ⌠[should be] on making railroads safer. It has to be a complement to what the workers do. It has to make it so that employees who are highly trained and highly skilled at what they do are given additional tools to do their jobs in the safest possible manner,â Regan said.
He continued, âWe welcome these changes. We want to make our job safer. We want to make sure that the union that the workers have every tool at their disposal to do their jobs appropriately. But this is not the way to do that. Asking for waivers is not the way to do it properly and to make sure that itâs implemented in a responsible way.â
The debate over WTDs is similar to the one that unionized maintenance-of-way employees are having with the railroads over how the railroads should deploy track geometry technology, a component of automated track inspections. They contend that BNSFâs (NYSE: BRK.K) request to FRA to expand that technologyâs deployment to two additional territories is an opportunity to reduce the number of visual inspections within those territories.
Union Pacific defends use of WTDs
But UP says WTD technology has caught defects that visual inspections have missed.
âThe use of technology is an opportunity for Union Pacific to improve on its strong safety record. Our initial findings indicate that wheel temperature detectors identify more defects than traditional detection methods, which translates into a safer operation for both the public and our employees,â UP told FreightWaves.
âThe use of this technology will not eliminate visual inspections by trained personnel. The wheel temperature detectors change the frequency of when a test is required, eliminating unnecessary brake tests and allowing our inspectors and train crews to focus attention on those brakes that warrant attention,â UP said.
The Association of American Railroads, which has lent its support to UPâs waiver requests, said it supports its membersâ desire to pursue safety enhancing technologies such as WTDs.
WTDs identify cars with ineffective brakes at a higher rate than a manually performed intermediate brake test, AAR said. As a result, the technology expedites the repair or replacement of thousands of freight car brakes that might not have otherwise been immediately identified under existing FRA regulations.Â
AAR also said that all cars identified by a wheel temperature detector had already passed a manually-performed FRA initial terminal brake test.
FRA is still reviewing UPâs waiver. But it has said that there is nothing to prevent a railroad from employing WTDs or âhot wheel detectorsâ to ensure brake health effectiveness. Such systems can accurately determine if brakes are working properly in real time, according to FRA.
Click here for more FreightWaves articles by Joanna Marsh.
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