No, Biden's New Rail Crew Mandate Doesn't Make 'Common Sense'
Requiring two-person crews on freight trains wouldn't have prevented the East Palestine disaster. It's simply a giveaway to Biden's labor union allies.

The 53-car freight train that derailed in East Palestine, Ohio, last year was operated by a crew of three men, none of whom were able to prevent the cascade of mechanical and communication failures that led to the unfortunate accident.
In response to that crash, the federal Department of Transportation announced on Tuesday a new policy requiring freight trains to operate with at least two-person crews—a mandate that the Biden administration says will enhance rail safety.
If you've passed first grade, you might now find yourself asking a rather basic question: Isn't three more than two?
Rest assured that it is. However, in Washington, the policy-making calculus often relies on fuzzy math that is heavily influenced by the pull of special interests and the strong sense of do-something-ism.
Both are on display in the new freight railroad mandate. The derailment in East Palestine was bad, and something must be done. This is something, so now it is being done—and bonus points can be scored because doing this specific thing will please the Biden administration's labor union allies, which have been lobbying the government for years to impose exactly this two-person crew mandate.
On Tuesday, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said it should be "common sense" that "large freight trains, some of which can be over three miles long, should have at least two crew members on board."
The length of the train has absolutely nothing to do with it, but Buttigieg is gesturing toward the idea that a second person on board could bring the train to a halt if the driver is somehow incapacitated. And, indeed, it was longstanding railroading practice to have multiple people in the cab of freight trains for exactly this reason.
These days, however, it is automation and not a backup engineer that is responsible for a dramatic decline in railway accidents and injuries. Thanks to positive train control (PTC)—essentially a computer-based override system that monitors speed and track signals to avert collisions, and which railroads have been mandated by Congress to use since 2008—rail accidents have fallen by 30 percent while employee injuries are down 40 percent since 2000, according to data from the Association of American Railroads (AAR), an industry group.
Additionally, Buttigieg's claim about "common sense" comports with neither the specifics of the East Palestine accident nor recent governmental reviews of the two-person crew mandate.
The Federal Railroad Administration spent three years investigating a proposed two-person crew mandate before concluding in 2019 that the rule was not "necessary or appropriate for railroad operations to be conducted safely," largely because of the safety gains already made by automation. More recently, Congress considered—but, notably, did not enact—a two-member crew mandate in the wake of the East Palestine derailment.
As for the the East Palestine incident, having a crew of 10 people driving the train likely wouldn't have made any difference. The crash was caused by an overheated wheel bearing, which failed and derailed the train as the crew was attempting to bring it to a stop. The three-person crew should have been alerted to the problem sooner, but at least one track-side detector meant to spot the wheel issue was not working properly.
Neither of those failures was the result of the crew on board the train, and neither point of failure would have been addressed by having additional crew members riding in the engine.
"Instead of prioritizing data-backed solutions to build a safer future for rail, FRA is looking to the past and upending the collective bargaining process," said Ian Jefferies, president and CEO of the AAR, in a statement about the new rules.
As Jefferies suggests, this looks a lot like a giveaway to the labor unions representing railroad employees. Going forward, they won't have to negotiate over how many crew members should have to be paid to sit in the engine of a freight train—they'll simply point to the federal regulation.
That will create some real costs for anyone shipping or receiving products via rail. A 2015 study funded by the AAR found that switching from two-person to one-person crews could save railroads $2.5 billion over a decade. Some of those savings are now likely to be consumed by the cost of paying for redundant crew members who don't make trains safer or more efficient.
"Railroad employee unions that promote these laws have two primary motivations. First, the unions fear that train automation technologies will, over time, replace their dues-paying members. Second, they'd like to have a government edict replace a matter that is normally subject to collective bargaining negotiations between the union and railroad management," wrote Marc Scribner, a senior transportation policy analyst at the Reason Foundation (which publishes this website), in 2021. "On the latter, it is quite rational for unions to lobby for government favoritism in labor-management relations. But on the former, forcing railroads to shoulder above-market labor costs in perpetuity is likely to ultimately backfire on union members by reducing rail's long-term competitiveness."
And if you're still not convinced that the two-member crew mandate has nothing to do with safety, here's one final thing to consider. Amtrak—which operates trains carrying human beings and therefore ought to be held to the highest scrutiny when it comes to safe operation—dropped its own two-member crew mandate over 40 years ago.
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I'm not convinced that holding up Amtrak as a paragon of rail company management practices is the winning argument you apparently believe it is.
But, other than that blurb about federal regulations improving safety over the past 20 years, I generally agree with the article's premises.
"It's simply a giveaway to Biden's labor union allies."
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The East Palestine incident has been overblown and over hyped. My Niece and her family live just outside of the evacuation zone. The biggest danger from that incident is the chance of getting run over or in a car accident with trial lawyer representatives trying to sign people up for lawsuits.
Biden has been a Muppet for the Unions since before he took office. Anybody doubting that just needs to look at the Teacher's Unions involvement with the "recovery" from COVID.
Take a look at recent NLRB decisions for another example. Now their target is Boeing. That door plate came off because the fasteners used to hold it in place were either not installed or they came off. There should be a record of who installed those fasteners and probably a record of who inspected them. Neither record can be found. In any case that's on Boeing's Union employees. Funny how things like this always happen around negotiation time. That's gone on for years. By the way I have over ten years in the aviation industry, including working for a Boeing subcontractor.
“The East Palestine incident has been overblown and over hyped. My Niece and her family live just outside of the evacuation zone. The biggest danger from that incident is the chance of getting run over or in a car accident with trial lawyer representatives trying to sign people up for lawsuits…”
Similar to the fatalities at Fukushima:
“…It was the largest nuclear disaster since the Chernobyl disaster of 1986,[11] and the radiation released exceeded official safety guidelines. Despite this, there were no deaths caused by acute radiation syndrome. Given the uncertain health effects of low-dose radiation, cancer deaths cannot be ruled out.[12] However, studies by the World Health Organization and Tokyo University have shown that no discernible increase in the rate of cancer deaths is expected.[13] Predicted future cancer deaths due to accumulated radiation exposures in the population living near Fukushima have ranged[14] in the academic literature from none[15] to hundreds.[12]
Many deaths are attributed to the evacuation and subsequent long-term displacement following emergency mass evacuation.[16][17] For evacuation, the estimated number of deaths during and immediately after transit range from 34 to “greater than 50″.[13][18][19] The victims include hospital inpatients and elderly people at nursing facilities who died from causes such as hypothermia, deterioration of underlying medical problems, and dehydration. The old people and already sick, were more likely to be injured because of being relocated than damaged by radiation…”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukushima_Daiichi_nuclear_disaster_casualties
Yes, it’s Wiki, but you can check the links (I have, but can’t put the cursor on the specific one this evening).
Suffice to say, many more died from panic than acute radiation (the last = 0), and the predicted long-term deaths, like those at Hiroshima and Nagasaki have been shown to be gross overestimates (something like ~50 named, compared to thousands claimed).
"Now their target is Boeing. That door plate came off because the fasteners used to hold it in place were either not installed or they came off. There should be a record of who installed those fasteners and probably a record of who inspected them. Neither record can be found. In any case that’s on Boeing’s Union employees. "
The inspection should be done and signed off by a salaried (and therefore non-union) manager or engineer. The purpose of the inspection is as much to take liability off of the mechanic (most are represented by either UAW or IAM depending on the shop) and onto the corporation who covers the liability of their salaried employees (a big part of why there's no PE certification for aerospce, or if there is one, no engineer in the industry that I've ever met actually has it).
The lack of an available record on those planes seems to have a high probability of being a CYA maneuver on the part of someone fairly high up maybe choosing to allow some inspections go undone, or maybe the record shows a signoff by someone who was provably not on the site that day?
Definitely a CYA. Who did it? Could have been management or workers, but I think it's more likely management for reasons you stated.
The workers have no motive to "lose" the inspection records. Even if they don't install the bolts, the inspector is supposed to catch the mistake and have them re-do it until it's able to pass inspection for real. It's good for safety, in theory, but the real purpose (from the union POV) is to make someone other than the guy with the tool in his hand liable for the workmanship.
What really confuses me (thinking about it as an aerospace structural analysis engineer with 25+ years experience) about the door plug blowing out in flight is that the design on those plugs should have them installed in a manner where the cabin pressure would tend to push them against the surrounding airframe structure in a way which would enable two bolts with loose nuts to be sufficient to keep in place; I'd assume that the actual door units would be installed similarly, and it makes less sense to use different attach points for the filler "plugs" than what the door unit itself would use.
Surprised they don’t still have the coal shoveling guy onboard, and the dudes playing cards in the caboose.
Yeah, I'm shocked the union allows the fancy braking system on trains and doesn't demand each car have a brake man on duty.
They don't care! They don't have to ... they're the gubmint!
As the wife of a career railroad worker, I will go on record and say that 2 men crews have a lot of safety advantages over a single crew member train. I will also state that it was the unions who sold out that job with first 3, then 2, and now 1 man crew. The people at the head of the unions are just as bad as greedy CEOs of big business.
You might want to blame this on caving in to unions but it is actually the unions responsible for this in the first place.
It is the same policy that has destroyed our schools. Top heavy admin/overworked people that actually do shit. We need more money is always the answer. Where did that money go is always the easily answered question.
Is two drivers in the same automobile safer than one driver?
Yes! They carry out an animated conversation while driving down the highway and the spare driver drags the other one out of the wrecked vehicle after they crash.
^+1!
My spare driver usually opens a fresh road pop for me when I need it.
The two have different jobs. One operates the engine, the other handles communications with the dispatcher, reads the signals, and keeps the cargo log.
The point isn't about the number of people in the cab, you can put 50 guys in the cab and unless one of them is a Kryptonian they wouldn't have prevented the kinds of accidents the trains have had recently.
So what are these "safety advantages" that are so obvious to you but invisible to all the professionals (including the Federal Railroad Administration) who are responsible for finding them?
The second one can hold onto the wheel while the first one reaches into the back for another beer.
There is no “steering wheel” on the engine.
When you have a freight train that is sometimes more than a mile long, you have a person on either side that can look back as a train goes around a curve and see if something has gone wrong on a car further back (such as a shifted load on a flat bed) that has not yet set off an alarm. An engine that has both a conductor and an engineer has a person (conductor) whose specialty is communication with the dispatcher and the reading of the signals while the engineer is able to concentrate on the controls on the engine and watching for alarms.
Those guys must have better vision than eagles to see how the load is sitting on a car more than a mile away.
Why not cameras? We have them on doorbells now.
"I will go on record and say that 2 men crews have a lot of safety advantages over a single crew member train."
You can say it all you want, but that doesn't make it true.
Why continue to use 2-man flight crews on passenger airliners when there's a shortage of qualified pilots available to work then?
How many people are going to be required to tie a damsel to the railroad tracks is the important question? And will Dudley Do Right have to have a partner to rescue her?
They can't rescue her unless she's a he.
Equity forever!
If her name is Nell, only one Snidely Whiplash type fellow. Mother's Lament will be on call for the rescue. 🙂
Dudley already has a horse's ass, along with the rest of it. Is one Biden not enough?
Casey Jones you (and your co engineer) better watch your speed.
It's promoting problematic stereotypes unless it's Dudley that's tied to the tracks and being rescued by a handi-capable BIPOC gender-fluid Martian who presents as a pre-teen girl but identifies as a cat and was born with three sets of genitalia (two vaginas and one inverted penis). Something like what would result if Helen Keller, Rachel Maddow, and RuPaul were somehow combined into a single feminist super-being.
Remember that the greater the degree of the "rescue" involved, the more boxes the hero must have checked on their "intersectional bingo" card.
Amtrak does not run 1 crew member trains. Yes, only one in the cab but at least one conductor and probably another trainman back in even the shortest passenger train.
On a freight train, the second cab crew person can check on engine problems while running, assist in giving switching signals, and do other chores like replacing brake hoses that break while out on the road, and watch for dragging equipment and loose loads when passing other trains.
Wotta bunch of make-work! How much other unreliable equipment do those unions want?
Exactly
And it takes one of those crew member to be solely dedicated to answering all the dumbass questions passengers are constantly asking.
What dumb questions do the paying customers ask?
On Tuesday, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said it should be "common sense" that "large freight trains, some of which can be over three miles long, should have at least two crew members on board."
"Trains rhyme with planes," he continued, "so it's pretty much the same thing. Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to get back to my pedo chest-feeding. I'm on maternity leave don'tchaknow."
What happens next Dagny?
Imagine putting a 3 mile long train full of hazardous cargo in charge of one person because "well, two people didn't make it any safer so the second guy must be useless".
Tell that to the guy who has to walk the entire length of the train in the cold, the dark, on uneven footing (ballast) in order to find out why his train went into emergency and came to a screeching halt in the middle of nowhere. Now it's blocking city streets and the town fire department is screaming bloody murder.
If there were two people on board, you'd have an engineer at the controls and the conductor down at the street, and they could split the train to open the street while they figure out what went wrong. Or, if they had a derailment, the two crew members could work together to pull the train that's still on the tracks to a safe spot.
You might want to talk to some real railroaders. You'd quickly find out why even just two crew members isn't enough for a 3 mile long train with five 4400 HP locomotives up front, four more halfway back, and two pushing.
You really want to put only one person in charge of 48,000 HP of locomotives, 55,000 gallons of diesel fuel, and multiple tens of millions of dollars in cargo and capital equipment? In the middle of the night on poor rest? That's more idiotic than the setup we now have.
Exactly.
The second guy would need to be from Krypton to be of any use in the disasters we've seen so far.
Imagine a witless comment like this from Scarbo. Do you have any evidence for your bullshit other than you membership in the union?
"...You really want to put only one person in charge of 48,000 HP of locomotives, 55,000 gallons of diesel fuel, and multiple tens of millions of dollars in cargo and capital equipment? In the middle of the night on poor rest? That’s more idiotic than the setup we now have..."
Oh, oh! Look at bullshit with numbers!
Fuck off and die, shitbag.
Airplanes, ships, and automobiles are fast apporaching the point where pilots, captains, and drivers are no longer needed. Trains should be the easiest of all to automate.
I do not understand how mandating a 2 person crew is a "give away" to unions. I'm not aware of any freight train in this country operating with only 1 crewmember. All union contracts have at least an engineer and a conductor. Some still have a fireman requirement who is cross trained to take over one of the other jobs if needed.
All union contracts have at least an engineer and a conductor.
There's your answer.
It's the Biden rail service. Right, right?
Something about you didn't build that, Biden did! /s
F'ers think they own everything.
I thought PTC was only available in limited areas.
Is that incorrect?
The union stooges are still bemoaning the elimination of "Firemen," whose job was to shovel coal for the diesel-operated engines, and "brakemen," whose job it was to manually reset the now-automated brakes each time the train stopped.