By Joan Lowry
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Only a handful of railroads are close to meeting a deadline this year to install safety technology that can prevent many crashes, including derailments due to excessive speed like the deadly Amtrak crash in Philadelphia in May, according to a government report released.
Only three railroads have submitted safety plans to the government, a necessary step before they can put the technology — positive train control, or PTC — into operation, the Federal Railroad Administration report said.
They are BNSF Railway, the nation’s second largest freight railroad, and two commuter railroads — Metrolink in the Los Angeles area, and the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority in the Philadelphia area.
Amtrak hasn’t submitted a plan, but railroad officials have said they expect to meet the Dec. 31 deadline.
Some railroads are lagging far behind. Union Pacific, the nation’s largest freight railroad, which runs through Tucson, hasn’t equipped any of its 6,532 locomotives with the technology, according to the report.
None of Norfolk Southern’s 3,400 locomotives are equipped, either.
The type of PTC being put into place by most railroads relies on GPS, wireless radio and computers to monitor train position and automatically stop or slow trains in danger of derailing because they’re traveling too fast, are about to collide with another train or are about to enter an area where crews are working.
A rail safety law passed by Congress in 2008 gave railroads seven years to install the technology.
PTC is expensive; many railroads were late getting started; and many also ran into unanticipated difficulties acquiring the radio spectrum necessary to make the technology work, and getting government permission to erect antennas along tracks. Railroads have been urging Congress to delay the deadline.
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