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Railroads renew push for 1-person crews

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Posted by zugmann on Thursday, October 10, 2019 10:07 PM

Euclid

Here is some commentary on one-person crews versus two-person crews:

https://reason.org/commentary/one-person-rail-crews-can-safely-operate-trains/

 

Commentary by a right-wing lobbyist group disguising themselves as "libertarian". 

 

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

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Posted by Euclid on Thursday, October 10, 2019 7:55 PM

Here is some commentary on one-person crews versus two-person crews:

https://reason.org/commentary/one-person-rail-crews-can-safely-operate-trains/

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Posted by jeffhergert on Thursday, October 10, 2019 4:31 PM

There is a 'close call' report available to some of the railroad industry. 

https://www.fra.dot.gov/Page/P0733 

 

About the only railroads participating are passenger railroads.  A few freight carriers, but not the Class 1 carriers, have joined.  I do recall we had such a program available once, but I don't know if it's still in use.  Probably costs too much to collect the information and what's the use if you can't fire someone?

Jeff

 

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Posted by rdamon on Thursday, October 10, 2019 4:11 PM

The "NASA Form"

https://asrs.arc.nasa.gov/

 

CONFIDENTIALITY AND INCENTIVES TO REPORT

Pilots, air traffic controllers, flight attendants, mechanics, ground personnel, and others involved in aviation operations submit reports to the ASRS when they are involved in, or observe, an incident or situation in which aviation safety may have been compromised. All submissions are voluntary.

Reports sent to the ASRS are held in strict confidence. More than one million reports have been submitted to date and no reporter's identity has ever been breached by the ASRS. ASRS de-identifies reports before entering them into the incident database. All personal and organizational names are removed. Dates, times, and related information, which could be used to infer an identity, are either generalized or eliminated.

The FAA offers ASRS reporters further guarantees and incentives to report. It has committed itself not to use ASRS information against reporters in enforcement actions. It has also chosen to waive fines and penalties, subject to certain limitations, for unintentional violations of federal aviation statutes and regulations which are reported to ASRS. The FAA's initiation, and continued support of the ASRS program and its willingness to waive penalties in qualifying cases is a measure of the value it places on the safety information gathered, and the products made possible, through incident reporting to the ASRS.

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Posted by Juniata Man on Thursday, October 10, 2019 4:01 PM

Euclid

Well sure, a near miss could be described as an accident that never happened.  But the argument in the courts is about what the data shows in how many accidents would be prevented by two people in the cab instead of one person.  Nobody is going to win that argument by just saying the two people in the cab is safer than one because it prevents accidents every day.  I don’t see any reason why that could not prevent an accident.  But to win the case, a large number of accidents prevented will have to be cited with solid evidence.

Otherwise, if it is just a matter of looking back on your life and counting accidents that never happened because they were prevented from happening by extra eyes or whatever; anyone can tally up as many accidents that never happened as they want to.  There is no way they can be challenged on the validity of that sort of data. 

So, with a motive to count a large number of accidents that never happened, a large count of accidents will be considered biased testimony and will not be admitted to the court deciding the benefit of two-man crews compared to one man crews.  That’s all I am saying.  

 

 

I think you make a valid point.  Unfortunately; I also think that railroad disciplinary procedures would serve to prevent train crews from reporting “accidents that didn’t happen”.

I have a vague recollection of reading someplace that the FAA has an anonymous “near accident” reporting process for flight crews and air traffic controllers.  The idea is these folks can report personal lapses that didn’t end badly so the FAA can study the near misses and try to find ways to prevent them.  And; since the process is anonymous; the individual reporting the near miss needn’t fear disciplinary action.

Perhaps something like this might work in the railroad industry as well?

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Posted by Flintlock76 on Thursday, October 10, 2019 3:56 PM

Concerning data, here's a story from World War One.

At the beginning of the war for a year afterward there were a tremendous amount of casualties from head wounds, no wonder consider the sheer amount of metal flying around the first of the modern battlefields.

So, helmets were adopted, the French first, then the British, then the Germans.  The British army checked wound reports to see how effective the helmets were, and to their consternation they found the reports of head wounds went up. 

"What the bloody hell did we bother to manufacture and issue helmets for if we're having more head wounds now?"

Then they looked a little closer.  Deaths from head wounds earlier weren't reported as such, they were just reported as "Died from Wounds."  After the helmets were issued the deaths from head wounds went down dramatically, the increase in head wounds reported were just that, head wounds, not deaths.  The wounded men would have been dead without those helmets.  That  explained it!

So, the moral of the story is, don't jump to conclusions just looking at stats, look a little closer, and with a good dose of common sense.  

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Posted by Euclid on Thursday, October 10, 2019 1:27 PM

Well sure, a near miss could be described as an accident that never happened.  But the argument in the courts is about what the data shows in how many accidents would be prevented by two people in the cab instead of one person.  Nobody is going to win that argument by just saying the two people in the cab is safer than one because it prevents accidents every day.  I don’t see any reason why that could not prevent an accident.  But to win the case, a large number of accidents prevented will have to be cited with solid evidence.

Otherwise, if it is just a matter of looking back on your life and counting accidents that never happened because they were prevented from happening by extra eyes or whatever; anyone can tally up as many accidents that never happened as they want to.  There is no way they can be challenged on the validity of that sort of data. 

So, with a motive to count a large number of accidents that never happened, a large count of accidents will be considered biased testimony and will not be admitted to the court deciding the benefit of two-man crews compared to one man crews.  That’s all I am saying.  

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Posted by jeffhergert on Thursday, October 10, 2019 12:54 PM

Even with PTC, there are times when two sets of eyes may be needed.  It's when running with PTC under restricted speed conditions.  We have a few locations, and I bet just about all railroaders also have them, where curves to the right have obstructed views for what ever reason.  The person on the conductor's side can see better than the engineer.  It's all about sight distance, and at restricted speed PTC doesn't know anything, except maybe a hand throw switch might not be lined properly.  Nothing about equipment or a red flag or fusee ahead of it.

Jeff 

 

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Posted by tree68 on Thursday, October 10, 2019 12:42 PM

Euclid
I understand why accidents that never happened don't get reported.  I am just wondering how one defines an accident that never happened. 

Ever stop at the top of the stairs and realize that, because perhaps you weren't paying full attention to where you were walking, one more step and you'd have been at the bottom of the stairs in a heap?  And probably hurting.

Bingo.  Near miss.

It is a question we ask sometimes about our fire prevention efforts.  It's not likely we'll ever find out about the kid who turned the pot handle in so little brother wouldn't grab it and end up burned.

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Posted by charlie hebdo on Thursday, October 10, 2019 12:31 PM

"Proving" the negative is always hard.  A parallel example from retailing (never resolved, ttbomk),  is how many sales are lost because of the lack of sufficient sales staff. 

 

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Posted by ChuckCobleigh on Thursday, October 10, 2019 12:29 PM

Deggesty
We can also remember the incident which brought about the knee-jerk reaction declaring that certain stretches of railroad must have a positive control of trains.

And perhaps we can note that one-person head-end crews are now standard in passenger service, and perhaps extrapolate the experience there to the much-busier freight service?

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Posted by zugmann on Thursday, October 10, 2019 12:03 PM

Euclid
I understand why accidents that never happened don't get reported. I am just wondering how one defines an accident that never happened.

close call?  near miss?

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

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Posted by Euclid on Thursday, October 10, 2019 12:01 PM

Flintlock76
 
zugmann

 

 
Euclid
If potential accidents were prevented by two sets of eyes, but never documented, how do we know such events happened?

 

 

really? 

 

I mean, really?

 

 

 

Look at it this way.

If a child chases a ball out from two parked cars, and you stop in time without hitting the said child, do you report it?

If someone runs a stop sign and you manage to avoid them, do you report that? (Maybe.)

If you're on a long, tiring drive and you nod off, but catch yourself before you put the car in a ditch, do you report that?

Of course you don't.

Hence the supposition that railroad accidents that have been prevented by having two people in the don't get reported, because there's no need to.  

 

 

I understand why accidents that never happened don't get reported.  I am just wondering how one defines an accident that never happened. 

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Posted by Flintlock76 on Thursday, October 10, 2019 11:54 AM

zugmann

 

 
Euclid
If potential accidents were prevented by two sets of eyes, but never documented, how do we know such events happened?

 

 

really? 

 

I mean, really?

 

Look at it this way.

If a child chases a ball out from two parked cars, and you stop in time without hitting the said child, do you report it?

If someone runs a stop sign and you manage to avoid them, do you report that? (Maybe.)

If you're on a long, tiring drive and you nod off, but catch yourself before you put the car in a ditch, do you report that?

Of course you don't.

Hence the supposition that railroad accidents that have been prevented by having two people in the don't get reported, because there's no need to.  

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Posted by zugmann on Thursday, October 10, 2019 11:48 AM

Euclid
If potential accidents were prevented by two sets of eyes, but never documented, how do we know such events happened?

 

really? 

 

I mean, really?

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any

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Posted by Euclid on Thursday, October 10, 2019 11:47 AM

Overmod
 
Euclid
What are some examples of two persons preventing an accident that would have happened with just one person in the cab?

A big problem is that some very large number of potential accidents that were stopped by having 'two sets of eyes' were never documented for the simple reason they never progressed to accidents. 

 

If potential accidents were prevented by two sets of eyes, but never documented, how do we know such events happened?

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Posted by Deggesty on Thursday, October 10, 2019 11:41 AM

Overmod named some incidents which may have been avoided had there been two peop0le in the cab. We can also remember the incident which brought about the knee-jerk reaction declaring that certain stretches of railroad must have a positive control of trains.

Johnny

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Posted by zardoz on Thursday, October 10, 2019 11:16 AM

Euclid
Why would a two-person crew be safer than a one-person crew?

Do you really need to ask that? After everything you've read on these forum pages, it would seem fairly obvious. Sure, 2-person crews aren't the answer to "total" safety, but as Overmod stated above, the incidents that were prevented by the second person are undocumented; but I assure you they do happen.

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Posted by Overmod on Thursday, October 10, 2019 10:48 AM

Euclid
What are some examples of two persons preventing an accident that would have happened with just one person in the cab?

This is a bit difficult to answer, although there are some historical documented examples in various contexts.  A big problem is that some very large number of potential accidents that were stopped by having 'two sets of eyes' were never documented for the simple reason they never progressed to accidents. 

It's of course much easier to identify single-manned accidents that would not have happened with two-man crewing.  Arguably the Bostian wreck with Amtrak 188 wouldn't have, and perhaps 502 in Washington (the assumption is two watchful independent crew, not simply a cluster of bodies that is only half a word).  I'd suspect some other high-profile supposed goofs would have been likewise averted: Metro North at Spuyten Duyvil and that guy slamming the buffers at Hoboken recently being two prime instances.  Lac Megantic almost goes without saying.

There are likewise examples where it didn't matter: the disaster with freak asphyxiation on an early F unit; a few Penn Central-era wrecks where everyone apparently fell asleep at the same time; the Amtrak wreck at Cayce; the opposing crews of head-ons close to sidings and the like.

To me, much of this converges on the idea that having an engineer running the train who is rested, alert, relatively undistracted and not subject to injury; and someone else in the cab aware of what's going on as the engineer runs the train; are reasonable things to provide.  And my approach to 'single-manning' on the consist addresses that.

 

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Posted by Euclid on Thursday, October 10, 2019 10:20 AM

Why would a two-person crew be safer than a one-person crew? 

What are some examples of two persons preventing an accident that would have happened with just one person in the cab?

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Railroads renew push for 1-person crews
Posted by zardoz on Thursday, October 10, 2019 10:14 AM

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/railroads-renew-push-one-man-192334789.html

 

The sixth paragraph from the article:

Earlier this year, the Federal Railroad Administration abandoned a proposed rule to require two-man crews because it said there wasn't enough evidence to show they are safer.

Further in the article: 
The railroad industry has emphasized that crash data doesn't show that two-man crews are safer than one-person crews.

I wonder what is being used as "data" to "prove" that the two-person crew isn't safer; It might make for an interesting read.

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