News & Reviews News Wire Rail labor seeks regulations to protect workers from technological advancements

Rail labor seeks regulations to protect workers from technological advancements

By Bill Stephens | November 21, 2024

The Transportation Trades Department of the AFL-CIO urges the Federal Railroad Administration and Congress to take action as railroads seek to roll out autonomous and automated systems

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A train passes through a tall, gray, open-ended shed
Norfolk Southern’s Digital Train Inspection Portal in Jackson, Ga., uses high resolution cameras and artificial intelligence to scan for signs of equipment problems on passing trains. Norfolk Southern

WASHINGTON — The Transportation Trades Department of the AFL-CIO, the umbrella group that includes all railroad labor unions, today urged Congress and federal regulators to protect workers whose jobs are affected by the rollout of automated and autonomous railroad technology.

In a broadside against technological advances — including automated track and train inspection systems, automated train dispatching software, the use of remote control locomotives on main line trackage, virtual block signal systems, automated locomotive smart cruise control, and Parallel Systems’ autonomous, battery-electric intermodal cars — the TTD said the Federal Railroad Administration should deny all railroad safety waiver requests that would permit the testing of “unproven technology.”

Waivers, which suspend certain FRA regulations to permit testing in conjunction with reduced inspection frequencies, have long been used to advance safety. A track inspection waiver granted to the Long Island Railroad in 1975, for example, is still in force.

In recent years, Class I railroads have used track and train inspection waivers to test automated equipment and scaled back visual inspections by railroaders. Under the Biden administration, the FRA has consistently denied or ignored requests for extensions of existing waivers or requests for new ones when organized labor has opposed them.

The railroads say they want to turn track and train inspectors into fixers rather than finders of defects in cases where technology can do a better job. The unions say the railroads aim to deploy tech to replace workers and further reduce already thin employment levels.

TTD also urged FRA to propose regulations covering new technology.

“It is imperative that the FRA promulgate new regulations to address the introduction of new technology, equipment, or software, whether it is new or newly put into service, to provide for the safety and general welfare of railroad workers and the public who would be affected by the introduction of those products,” TTD said.

The policy statement urges the incoming Trump administration to provide job guarantees and training programs for rail workers who may be affected by technology advancements and to ensure workers are consulted about how new technology is used.

“No one understands the realities of rail operations on the ground as well as frontline workers. Whether it be the deployment of new technologies, the crafting of new work rules, or the promulgation of new regulations, the meaningful inclusion of rail workers in these conversations and consideration of workers’ input is the only way to maintain and promote safety now and in the future,” TTD said.

5 thoughts on “Rail labor seeks regulations to protect workers from technological advancements

  1. Technology changes. We went through this previously with the unions fighting to keep a fireman in the diesel plus 2 brakemen–a crew of 5 on every freight.
    There might be a compromise where some of the effected jobs are changed or even collapsed when the person holding them leaves, including the RR doing buy-outs of jobs as was done the prior century.

  2. Look what the unions did to Boeing. Now they are laying off thousands of employees. The unions never complained about getting automated track machines with air conditioning. Give them a spike mall and tie tongs.

  3. How does the rail industry differ from many other areas of employment from fast food to aircraft production and stevedores. Another industry parallel to railroading is trucking, less than twenty % of truckers are unionized, and if they get automated and rail unions fight against it they may lose all the jobs of all their members.

  4. Supreme chutzpah! Imagine where we would have been without technological innovation: no diesels (no need for all the skilled laborers for steam locomotives), no trains even — unless carriages pulled by livestock, etc.

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