Federal and State Roles in Rail Safety.
Federal law mandates a National Rail Safety Program that is carried out, in part, through the issuance of federal safety requirements and through inspection efforts to monitor compliance with these requirements. The Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) and participating states conduct inspections and investigations as part of the National Rail Safety Program. Under state law, for the purposes of participating in the enforcement of federal rail safety regulations in cooperation with the FRA, the Utilities and Transportation Commission (UTC) is granted regulatory jurisdiction over the safety practices for railroad equipment, facilities, rolling stock, and operations. In this role, the UTC collects rail inspection information.
The UTC also inspects rail crossings to confirm they are designed and maintained for safe crossings, enforces railroad employee safety regulations, and funds rail crossing safety projects.
Rail Safety and Federal Preemption.
Federal law requires that laws, regulations, and orders related to railroad safety, as well as laws, regulations, and orders related to railroad security, be nationally uniform to the extent practicable. When the United States Department of Transportation prescribes regulations or issues orders that cover the subject matter of a state requirement that concerns rail safety, a state may adopt or continue to enforce an additional or more stringent law, regulation, or order when it:
Federal regulation prescribes minimum federal safety standards for certain rail equipment, including locomotive and safety appliance standards.
Train Length Restrictions.
No railroads engaged as common carriers in the transportation of freight or passengers may operate a train that exceeds 8,500 feet in length in the state, unless the operation of a train that exceeds this maximum length is approved by an order issued by the UTC. Trains originating from rail yards and terminals within the state mt comply with this requirement.
Trains entering the state that exceed 8,500 feet in length operated by railroad companies that have rail yards, terminals, or facilities located outside the state may continue to operate through the state unless the train stops to set out or add cars within the state. If a train stops for this purpose, it mt comply with this maximum length requirement.
The UTC may evaluate whether to authorize by order railroad carrier requests to operate trains that exceed 8,500 feet in length on specified routes up to a maximum of 10,000 feet in length, provided:
Authorizations granted by the UTC expire after three years and may be renewed. The UTC is authorized to establish, impose, and collect fees from railroad companies to recover expenditures for costs related to the consideration and review of initial and renewal requests to operate train lengths that exceed the permitted maximum.
Penalties for Violating Train Length Restriction.
Railroads that are engaged as common carriers in the transportation of freight or passengers that violate restrictions on the operation of trains longer than 8,500 feet are subject to fines of at least $25,000 for a first offense; $250,000 for a second offense; and for each subsequent offense, to a fine double the fine for the preceding offense. The UTC may reduce these fines for Class III railroad carriers (typically short line railroads) that are not owned by Class I railroads.
If a violation of a UTC order relating to train length results in a serio injury or fatality, the UTC may impose additional fines.
Severability Provision.
If any provision of the bill or its application is held invalid, the remainder of the bill and remaining applications of the provision are not affected.