1 / 24

Railway Crossing Safety: Challenges and Opportunities

Railway Crossing Safety: Challenges and Opportunities. Wendy A. Tadros, Chair Transportation Safety Board of Canada Operation Lifesaver 20 th Annual Seminar September 16, 2008 Aylmer, Que bec. Operation Lifesaver and the TSB Common Goals . Improve railway safety

kamella
Download Presentation

Railway Crossing Safety: Challenges and Opportunities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Railway Crossing Safety: Challenges and Opportunities Wendy A. Tadros, Chair Transportation Safety Board of Canada Operation Lifesaver 20th Annual Seminar September 16, 2008 Aylmer, Quebec

  2. Operation Lifesaver and the TSB Common Goals • Improve railway safety • Finding deficiencies in the system • Raising public awareness of risks and what to do to mitigate them

  3. Presentation Outline • Overview of statistics • Look at railway crossing accident investigations in progress • Progress on recommendations from previous crossing and trespassing accidents

  4. Ongoing Investigations • Pincourt, Quebec, December 17, 2007Collision with tractor trailer at crossing • St-Arsène, Quebec, January 19, 2008Collision with passenger minivan at crossing • Mallorytown, Ontario, July 15, 2008Collision with tractor trailer at crossing

  5. Pincourt, Quebec

  6. Pincourt, QuebecQuestions Asked by the Board • Is emergency contact information at crossings adequate? • Should driver training manuals contain information on contacting railways in an emergency? • Should roadway vehicle presence detectors be fitted at high-risk crossings? • How should emergencies be broadcast?

  7. St-Arsène, Quebec

  8. St-Arsène, QuebecIssues Under Consideration • Deficiencies found with warning systems at this crossing • Transport Canada’s process to upgrade crossing warning systems

  9. Mallorytown, Ontario

  10. Kingston, Ontario, May 2002TSB Lowboy Crossing Simulation

  11. Mallorytown, OntarioIssues Under Consideration • Construction standards for high-speed main line crossings • Lowboy trailer design • Driver awareness • Emergency and roadway signage

  12. Progress on Recommendations • Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, May 1990Pedestrian trespassing onto railway bridge • Bowmanville, Ontario, November 1999 Collision with tractor-trailer at farm crossing • Brockville, Ontario, February 2005 Fatal pedestrian collision at crossing

  13. Carleton UniversityMay 24, 1990

  14. Carleton University Recommendations • Minimum standards for barriers to prevent trespassing • Better regulation to enable law enforcement deterrent action against railway trespassing Action taken • Contraventions Act allows for law enforcement to issue fines for trespassing

  15. Carleton UniversityAction Still Pending • Access Control Regulations drafted by TC, but are not yet in force Regulatory Changes Moving at a Glacial Pace • Measures to mitigate the risk not put in place • Regulatory process too slow

  16. Bowmanville, OntarioNovember 23, 1999

  17. Bowmanville, OntarioExample of Farm Crossing

  18. Bowmanville, Ontario Recommendations • That TC enact regulations for higher farm/private crossing standards as soon as possible • TC and CN close or improve private/farm crossings along the Kingston Subdivision Action taken • Improvements were made to crossings and some crossings were closed

  19. Bowmanville, OntarioAction Still Pending • Regulations on horizontal alignment not yet in force • New grade crossing regulations in drafting stage for 19 years • Slow pace of regulatory change is a safety issue in and of itself

  20. Brockville, OntarioFebruary 17, 2005

  21. Brockville, Ontario • Classic second-train accident • Pedestrians not as well-protected as vehicles • Similar accident not far from this one in 1995 • Many other communities with busy multi-track main lines

  22. Brockville, Ontario Recommendations • That TC assess and make public risks to pedestrians for second-train accidents at all multi-track crossings • That TC work with railways and communities to develop solutions to prevent pedestrian/train accidents Action taken • TC will improve high-risk pedestrian crossings as resources permit • TC developed Pedestrian Safety at Crossing Guide to help educate Canadians of risks

  23. Conclusion • Railway crossing accidents involve many factors • More work needs to be done: • Technological solutions • Further public education • Development and enactment of improved regulations • Operation Lifesaver is an important avenue for education about risk prevention near railway crossings www.tsb.gc.ca

More Related