Los Angeles Times
September 19, 2003
Railroad Told to Get Back on Track
State regulators call on Union Pacific to bolster its safety practices after a
series of incidents.
By Kurt Streeter
Times Staff Writer
Responding to a series of recent accidents and near misses involving Union
Pacific trains in California - including two this month when freight cars almost
crashed into Metrolink trains in Los Angeles - state officials criticized the
Omaha-based railroad Thursday and called on it to improve its safety practices.
"We do not appreciate trains in our rivers, our backyards or running
uncontrolled through our neighborhoods, our intersections and past our schools,"
Richard Clark, director of rail safety for the Public Utilities Commission, said
as he addressed the PUC board at the commission's monthly meeting in San
Francisco.
On June 20, a Union Pacific train broke loose at a rail yard in Montclair and
traveled out of control for about 30 miles at speeds greater than 80 mph before
derailing in a Commerce neighborhood. Nobody was killed, although the crashing
train and cargo crushed several houses.
Since then, Clark said, Union Pacific trains have been involved in five more
serious incidents in California.
The PUC is so concerned about Union Pacific's performance in California that
Clark and PUC board President Michael Peavey held an emergency telephone meeting
last week with the head of the Federal Railroad Administration and Union
Pacific's operations director.
During the phone call, Clark said, he and Peavey told Union Pacific that the
commission would step up its monitoring of the company's tracks and trains in
California, and that Union Pacific should do more to prevent accidents or near
misses.
Clark said he wants Union Pacific to increase its testing of train operators and
workers to ensure that they are staying alert and know all the safety rules.
The federal government, not the state, is charged with regulating interstate
commerce, but PUC officials said they would pressure the Federal Railroad
Administration to penalize Union Pacific if they were not satisfied with the
company's efforts.
"It is an intolerable situation to see the behavior that is going on with UP
continue," Peavey said. "I think there is a permissive culture that tolerates
cutting corners in the name of costs."
Union Pacific spokeswoman Kathryn Blackwell said the company had stepped up its
safety efforts in California since the Commerce crash.
Union Pacific is installing devices that can derail runaway trains before they
leave rail yards, and the company is ratcheting up its review of operation
policies, Blackwell said.
"You don't have an accident like what we had in Commerce and take it lightly,"
she said. "Ours has been a full-court press of safety education and follow-up."
At Thursday's meeting, Clark outlined a string of accidents and narrowly averted
collisions involving Union Pacific trains in California since the Commerce
incident.
In July, a Union Pacific train rammed into an Amtrak train in Sacramento, and
six cars derailed into a river in Dunsmuir. On Sept. 7, two Union Pacific trains
derailed in Riverside County.
Of most concern to the PUC were two recent incidents in Los Angeles. On the
morning of Sept. 12, a Union Pacific train ran a stop signal in Chatsworth.
Clark said the half-mile-long train stopped just 1,800 feet from a Metrolink
commuter train that was rightfully on the track. The Metrolink train was
carrying a crew, but no passengers.
Two days earlier, an eight-car Union Pacific train carrying a 700-ton load of
grain broke loose from a rail yard in Commerce about 6:30 a.m. In that case, the
freight train began sliding without brakes toward a Metrolink train with more
than 300 people aboard about six miles away.
The freight train stopped only after a railroad worker climbed aboard and
applied hand brakes to each car. That action averted a potential disaster, Clark
said, because there was a "clear path of destruction between the two" trains.
Warren Flatau, a Washington-based spokesman for the Federal Railroad
Administration, said his agency was auditing Union Pacific's operations in Los
Angeles and Northern California.
Clark, of the PUC, acknowledged that the railroad is working on improving
safety, but he remained skeptical.
"We are concerned about their culture," he said. "As to what is being done to
change the culture, well, that is another kettle of fish."
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