96-32420. Railroad Accident Reporting  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 247 (Monday, December 23, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 67477-67491]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-32420]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    Federal Railroad Administration
    
    49 CFR Parts 219 and 225
    
    [FRA Docket No. RAR-4, Notice No. 16]
    RIN 2130-AB13
    
    
    Railroad Accident Reporting
    
    AGENCY: Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), Department of 
    Transportation (DOT).
    
    ACTION: Final rule; response to remaining issues in petitions for 
    reconsideration; and miscellaneous amendments.
    
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    SUMMARY: On June 18, November 22, and November 29, 1996, FRA published 
    final rules amending the railroad accident reporting regulations at 49 
    CFR Part 225. 61 FR 30940, 61 FR 59368, 61 FR 60632, respectively. 
    These final rules aim to minimize underreporting and inaccurate 
    reporting of those railroad injuries, illnesses, and accidents meeting 
    FRA reportability requirements; respond to some of the issues raised in 
    petitions for reconsideration of the final rule published June 18; and 
    also increase from $6,300 to $6,500 the monetary threshold for 
    reporting rail equipment accidents/incidents involving property damage 
    that occur on or after January 1, 1997.
        FRA now responds to the remaining issues raised in the petitions 
    for reconsideration, issues amendments addressing some of those 
    concerns, and makes minor technical amendments. The primary changes 
    involve the granting of partial relief to small railroads. In 
    particular, railroads that operate or own track on the general railroad 
    system of transportation but that have 15 or fewer employees covered by 
    the hours of service law and tourist railroads that operate or own 
    track only off the general system are excepted from the requirements to 
    record ``accountable'' injuries, illnesses, and rail equipment 
    accident/incidents and to adopt and comply with a complete Internal 
    Control Plan. (The excepted railroads must, however, have a harassment 
    and intimidation policy.) In addition, tourist railroads that operate 
    or own track only off the general system are excepted from part 225 
    requirements regarding most ``non-train incidents.''
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: January 1, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert L. Finkelstein, Staff Director, 
    Office of Safety Analysis, Office of Safety, FRA, 400 Seventh Street, 
    SW., Washington, DC 20590 (telephone 202-632-3386); or Nancy L. 
    Goldman, Trial Attorney, Office of Chief Counsel, FRA, 400 Seventh 
    Street, SW., Washington, DC 20590 (telephone 202-632-3167).
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On June 18, November 22, and November 29, 
    1996, FRA published final rules amending the railroad accident 
    reporting regulations at 49 CFR Part 225. 61 FR 30940, 61 FR 59368, 61 
    FR 60632, respectively. In response to the final rule published June 
    18, 1996, several railroads and railroad associations filed petitions 
    for reconsideration raising various concerns with its contents and its 
    implementation date of January 1, 1997.
        The final rule published on November 22, 1996, 61 FR 59368, 
    responded to certain issues raised in the petitions for reconsideration 
    and amended the requirements in Secs. 225.25(c) and 225.35 regarding 
    access by railroad employees and FRA representatives, respectively, to 
    certain railroad accident records and reports. This document responds 
    to the remaining issues and concerns stated in the petitions for 
    reconsideration.
    
    A. Summary of Remaining Concerns Raised in the Petitions for 
    Reconsideration and FRA's Responses to those Concerns
    
        FRA received petitions for reconsideration and requests to change 
    the effective date of the final rule from the Association of American 
    Railroads (AAR), The American Short Line Railroad Association (ASLRA), 
    Union Pacific Railroad Company (UP), CSX Transportation, Inc., Canadian 
    Pacific Railway, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation (BNSF), 
    Norfolk Southern Corporation, Consolidated Rail Corporation, Southern 
    Pacific Lines, the Association of Railway Museums, Inc. (ARM), the 
    Tourist Railroad Association (TRAIN), Maryland Midway Railway, Inc., 
    Delaware Otsego Corporation, The Everett Railroad Company, Crab Orchard 
    and Egyptian Railroad, Minnesota Commercial Railway Company, Angelina & 
    Neches River Railroad Company, and the City of Prineville Railway.
        Section 211.31 of FRA's rules of practice states that FRA must 
    decide to grant or deny, in whole or in part, each petition for 
    reconsideration not later than four months after receipt by FRA's 
    Docket Clerk. 49 CFR 211.31. In this case, FRA's decision on the 
    petitions for reconsideration is due no later than December 19, 1996. 
    If FRA grants a petition for reconsideration, a notice of this decision 
    must appear in the Federal Register. Id. To provide a fuller 
    explanation of the issues, this document addresses both grants and 
    denials of the petitions for reconsideration. Accordingly, a copy of 
    this document is being mailed to all petitioners.
    
    1. Section 225.33--Internal Control Plans
    
    a. Section 225.33--Implementation of an Internal Control Plan
        Section 225.33 mandates that each railroad ``adopt and comply with 
    a written Internal Control Plan (ICP) [to be] maintained at the office 
    where the railroad's reporting officer conducts his or her official 
    business.'' The ICP is to include, at a minimum, ten identified 
    components as outlined in Sec. 225.33 (a)(1) through (a)(10). Further, 
    the ICP must be amended, ``as necessary, to reflect any significant 
    changes to the railroad's internal reporting procedures.'' 49 CFR 
    225.33(a).
        ASLRA and most of its members, as well as ARM and TRAIN, request 
    relief from implementing an ICP. These
    
    [[Page 67478]]
    
    petitioners mainly assert that the final rule, as written, lacks 
    flexibility as to what must be contained in the railroad's ICP and how 
    the ICP must be structured. They also state that the rule fails to take 
    into account the vast differences between the requirements of large and 
    small railroads and thus request that they be allowed to develop their 
    own ICP appropriate to their specific reporting and recordkeeping 
    needs.
    
    Final Rule
    
        FRA has concluded that an ICP, while helpful to ensure that the 
    lines of communication between the various railroad departments are 
    maintained, is not essential in the case of extremely small railroads. 
    These railroads have very few personnel, and the recording and 
    reporting of accidents/incidents is usually done by one or two 
    individuals.
        Therefore, the applicability section of the final rule, Sec. 225.3, 
    is amended by adding Sec. 225.3(b) to except from the ICP requirements 
    outlined in Sec. 225.33(a) (3)--(10) the following: (i) railroads that 
    operate or own track on the general railroad system of transportation 
    that have 15 or fewer employees covered by the hours of service laws 
    (49 U.S.C. 21101-21107) and (ii) railroads that operate or own track 
    exclusively off the general railroad system of transportation. See 49 
    CFR Part 228, App. A for a discussion of covered employees. In 
    addition, since the introductory text of Sec. 225.33(a) states that 
    each ICP must contain ``each of the following ten components'' 
    (referring to paragraphs (a) (1) through (10)), the quoted text is 
    amended by removing the word ``ten,'' to avoid a contradiction between 
    Secs. 225.3(b) and 225.33(a).
        The excepted railroads must, however, adopt and comply with the 
    intimidation and harassment policies outlined in Sec. 225.33(a) (1) and 
    (2).
        FRA encourages these excepted railroads to review their current 
    accident reporting process to ensure that they are obtaining complete 
    and accurate data.
    b. Appendix A to Part 225--Civil Penalties Associated with the ICP
        The final rule published June 18, 1996, specifies three separate 
    civil penalties for violation of Sec. 225.33. 61 FR 30973; 49 CFR Part 
    225, Appendix A. If a railroad fails to adopt an ICP, then the railroad 
    is subject to the assessment of a civil monetary penalty in the amount 
    of $2,500 or, if the failure is willful, $5,000. (Appendix A to Part 
    225, applicable computer code: 225.33(1)). Also each railroad's 
    reporting error or omission arising from noncompliance with the ICP 
    subjects that railroad to the assessment of a civil monetary penalty in 
    the amount of $2,500 or, if willful, $5,000. (Appendix A to Part 225, 
    applicable computer code: 225.33(2)). Consequently, if a reporting 
    violation is found, then the railroad may be fined for both the 
    reporting violation and any departure from the ICP which resulted in 
    the reporting violation. However, if there is a reporting violation, 
    but FRA determines that the ICP was in fact followed by the railroad, 
    then just one violation may be written. Additionally, FRA may assess a 
    civil monetary penalty against any railroad employee, manager, or 
    supervisor who willfully causes a violation of any requirement of Part 
    225, including Sec. 225.33(a) (1) and (2), requiring adherence to the 
    railroad's intimidation and harassment policy and noninterference with 
    that policy. (Appendix A to Part 225, applicable computer code: 
    225.33(3)).
        ASLRA and its members oppose the multiple penalties associated with 
    the ICP and ask that FRA reconsider imposing these fines on small 
    railroads. The rationale for this objection seemingly stems from the 
    fact that FRA already may impose a civil penalty on the railroad for 
    inaccurate reporting. ASLRA states that a separate cumulative civil 
    penalty for failure to adopt the ICP and failure to comply with the 
    intimidation and harassment policy in the ICP is not necessary should 
    FRA grant its request to allow small railroads flexibility in writing 
    their ICPs.
    
    Final Rule
    
        The penalty provisions contained in 49 CFR 225.33, as specified in 
    Appendix A to Part 225, are not withdrawn. FRA believes that the 
    multiple penalties are important and necessary so that railroads take 
    the ICP seriously and follow the ICP to ensure accurate reporting. FRA 
    also believes that the availability of a monetary civil penalty is 
    necessary in order to compel the railroads to correct procedural 
    deficiencies and weaknesses in their ICPs. FRA may issue these civil 
    penalties pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 21301, 21302, and 21304.
        The General Accounting Office (GAO) studied FRA's railroad injury 
    and accident reporting data and issued a report in April 1989 (GAO/
    RCED-89-109) (hereinafter, ``GAO Audit'') that raised important 
    questions about the quality of railroad compliance with FRA's accident 
    reporting regulations. GAO found underreporting and inaccurate 
    reporting of injury and accident data for 1987 by the railroads it 
    audited. GAO recommended that railroads develop and comply with an ICP 
    and that FRA use its authority to cite those railroads for inaccurate 
    reporting arising from noncompliance with an ICP. GAO Audit at 29. 
    Civil monetary penalties will ensure that railroads are extremely 
    careful in drafting the ICP and in complying with the ICP. It is also 
    unlikely that all railroads, given the various pressures and structural 
    changes in the industry, would adhere to their ICPs consistently and 
    over an extended period of time without steady pressure from FRA.
    c. Section 225.33(a) (1) and (2)--Intimidation and Harassment Policy in 
    the ICP
        Section 225.33(a)(1) of the ICP requires that each railroad adopt a 
    policy statement which affirms that intimidation or harassment by any 
    officer, manager, supervisor, or employee of the railroad that aims to 
    undermine or negatively influence the treatment of persons with an 
    injury or illness or that adversely affects the reporting of such 
    injuries and illnesses will not be tolerated nor permitted and that 
    appropriate prescribed disciplinary action may be taken by the railroad 
    against such person committing the harassment or intimidation.
        Section 225.33(a)(2) requires each railroad to disseminate the 
    policy statement addressing intimidation and harassment to all 
    employees and supervisors and to all levels of railroad management. 
    Further, the railroad must have procedures in place to process 
    complaints that the railroad's intimidation and harassment policy has 
    been violated, and such procedures also be disseminated to all 
    employees and management or supervisory personnel. The railroad also 
    must provide ``whistle blower'' protection to any person subject to 
    this policy, and such policy must be disclosed to all railroad 
    employees, supervisors, and management.
        AAR asserts that intimidation and harassment policies outlined in 
    the ICP are invalid and unlawful because FRA did not give public notice 
    of such policies and provide the public the opportunity to comment. AAR 
    states that FRA should provide information supporting its belief that 
    intimidation and harassment are widespread and further request that FRA 
    use its civil penalty and disqualification powers to punish the bad 
    actors and not condemn the entire industry under general rulemaking.
    
    Final Rule
    
        AAR's argument that FRA failed to give notice is without merit. The 
    Administrative Procedure Act (APA) (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) sets out 
    three
    
    [[Page 67479]]
    
    procedural requirements: the notice of the proposed rulemaking; the 
    opportunity for all interested persons to comment on the proposed rule; 
    and a concise general statement of the basis and purpose of the rule 
    ultimately adopted. 5 U.S.C. 553 (b),(c).
        Those requirements were served adequately here. The Notice of 
    Proposed Rulemaking made clear that the principal purpose of the 
    rulemaking was to enhance the accuracy of accident/incident reporting. 
    59 FR 42880 (Aug. 19, 1994). While the NPRM did not expressly discuss 
    intimidation and harassment, the NPRM did include a provision, 
    Sec. 225.33(a)(6), requiring:
    
        A description of the method by which all pertinent officers and 
    workers * * * are apprised of their responsibilities, including any 
    training necessary to make such officers and workers aware of the 
    duty of the railroad to report the information in question.
    
    59 FR 42897 (Aug. 19, 1994).
    
        Witnesses testifying in the proceeding addressed intimidation and 
    harassment because, to the degree such tactics succeed, they have an 
    obvious effect on the accuracy of reported data. That testimony clearly 
    relates to the purposes of proposed Sec. 225.33(a)(6) because it may be 
    fruitless for a worker to be aware of his or her responsibilities if he 
    or she is afraid to carry them out. FRA responded in the final rule by 
    acting to protect the accuracy and completeness of the data reported to 
    it and said so clearly in the final rule.
        Both intimidation and harassment were discussed at the rulemaking 
    hearings and at the public regulatory conference. Labor representatives 
    stated that intimidation and harassment of railroad employees exist and 
    that they manifest themselves in many different ways. First, due to the 
    railroads' desire to reduce the number of reportable injuries and 
    illnesses, many railroad employees are reluctant to seek needed medical 
    attention for fear of possible discipline or retaliation by their 
    employer. Second, many employees who are injured on the job fail to 
    report their injury to the railroad within the prescribed time period 
    because, at the time the injury was incurred, they believed it was 
    minor or insignificant. If and when the injury worsens, the employee is 
    reluctant to report the injury because he or she may be subject to 
    investigation or discipline, or both, for reporting late. Third, other 
    employees request medical treatment that would render the injury or 
    illness nonreportable to FRA, such as requesting that they be given 
    nonprescription medication, because of intimidation or harassment by 
    the employer. (Transcript (Tr.) November 2, 1994 at 154-156; Tr. 
    January 30, 1995 at 159, 161, 164, and 171. All accident reporting 
    hearing transcripts are referenced as ``Tr.'' with the date of the 
    hearing.)
        As is plainly evident, these comments expressly raise the employee 
    intimidation and harassment issue. Petitioners were represented at the 
    hearings in which testimony on these subjects was offered and had ample 
    opportunity to present evidence and reasoning of their own on these 
    subjects. Given the record in this proceeding, the logic was compelling 
    for FRA to act to prevent the frustration of the educational and 
    training purposes of Sec. 225.33(a)(6) and of the overall purpose of 
    obtaining complete and accurate data. The final rule's requirement for 
    an intimidation and harassment policy in the ICP is a ``logical 
    outgrowth'' of discussions and oral and written comments presented to 
    FRA. See AFL-CIO v. Donovan, 244 U.S. App. D.C. 255, 757 F.2d 330, 338 
    (D.C. Cir. 1985) (quoting United Steelworkers v. Marshall, 208 U.S. 
    App. D.C. 60, 647 F.2d 1189, 1221 (D.C. Cir. 1980). That FRA enunciated 
    the intimidation and harassment policy in the final rule is consistent 
    with the tenor of these discussions and comments at the proposal stage 
    and further indicates that FRA treated the notice and comment process 
    seriously.
    d. Request To Adopt AAR's Proposed Performance Standard in Lieu of the 
    ICP Requirement in Sec. 225.33
        Throughout the rulemaking process, AAR and its member railroads 
    suggested that FRA adopt a performance standard for determining and 
    measuring a railroad's compliance with reporting requirements instead 
    of the ICP mandated by FRA. The performance standard proposed by AAR 
    was based on methods selected from a set of statistical procedures 
    developed for use by the U.S. Military (MIL-STD-105E, 1989) as means of 
    statistically controlling process quality in a stable environment.
        AAR and its members repeatedly claim that the 1989 GAO audit report 
    on accident/incident reporting is outdated and that, therefore, the GAO 
    findings should not have been considered for this rulemaking. AAR also 
    asserts that FRA failed to give a reasoned explanation for its 
    rejection of AAR's proposed performance standard, and that the APA 
    requires FRA to do more than unquestioningly accept FRA's consultant's 
    conclusions criticizing AAR's proposal. AAR thus requests elimination 
    of the ICP and adoption of AAR's proposed performance standard.
    
    Final Rule
    
        FRA rejects use of AAR's proposed performance standard and retains 
    the mandatory requirement that railroads adopt and comply with an ICP 
    as delineated in Sec. 225.33. At base, AAR's complaint is that FRA did 
    not adopt the standard AAR prefers. The record, however, demonstrates 
    the superiority of the standard adopted for the purposes of this rule. 
    For a performance standard to be meaningful, it must be specific about 
    outcomes to be produced. FRA's ICP does this without imposing a 
    detailed standard plan on everyone. Moreover, the requirements related 
    to the ICP are performance standards, simply meaningful ones that the 
    railroads dislike.
        In FRA's initial review of the AAR's performance standard, FRA had 
    general doubts about the standard. In addition, FRA had already noticed 
    the problem of the dilution of the denominator and questioned whether 
    the standard would, in fact, achieve a 99-percent compliance rate. 
    Concerned about these problems, FRA hired an independent statistical 
    firm to review AAR's proposed performance standard. See firm's report, 
    appended to final rule published June 18, 1996, 61 FR 30973-30976. 
    FRA's independent evaluation of this firm's analysis and of AAR's 
    proposal shows that AAR's performance standard will not improve the 
    accuracy of the safety data.
        Among other things, AAR's proposed standard would draw no 
    distinction between a failure to report a minor accident and a failure 
    to report a major one or to report it accurately. Under that proposal, 
    so long as a railroad met the standard of accuracy in reporting the 
    number of accidents and incidents it had, the railroad could 
    inaccurately report the seriousness of its accidents and incidents with 
    impunity. That could introduce very serious distortions into FRA's 
    safety data, potentially making them far less accurate than they now 
    are. FRA concluded that AAR's proposed performance standard would erode 
    the integrity of FRA's safety data.
        Mr. Thomas Guins, Senior Program Manager, Engineering Economics, in 
    the Research & Test Department of AAR, provided a statement attached to 
    the AAR's petition for reconsideration which, among other things, 
    evaluates FRA's rejection of AAR's proposed performance standard. Mr. 
    Guins notes that FRA's consultant's objection to the sample-inclusion 
    process is justified. Mr. Guins offers a remedy where he suggests use 
    of a denominator that
    
    [[Page 67480]]
    
    would change from year to year based upon the previous year's 
    nonreportable cases. Guins at 3-4. The failure to include a denominator 
    is a serious omission. Furthermore, the base year Mr. Guins uses in his 
    example, 1995, could never be tested for the development of a 
    denominator the following year. The more that Mr. Guins tries to fix 
    the performance standard as proposed, the more complex it gets. This is 
    directly contrary to Mr. Guins' characterization of AAR's performance 
    standard as ``uncomplicated.'' Guins at 7.
        AAR also states that FRA's consultant raised an invalid objection 
    in that the sampling plan achieves only a 97-percent compliance rate. 
    AAR's proposed performance standard was based on a 99-percent 
    compliance rate. However, AAR admits that its plan would not provide 
    the 99-percent compliance level. AAR Petition at 20. The important 
    consideration is that a random sample of a large population has a 
    statistical error in predicting the actual number of defects in the 
    group from which the sample is taken; the answer could be plus or minus 
    two percent. When the desired outcome is 99 percent, by definition the 
    actual outcome could be below 99 percent. Mr. Guins' ``uncomplicated 
    performance standard'' gets more complex as he changes the sampling 
    plan to alter the shape of the Operating Characteristic Curve.
        In the preamble to the June 18 final rule, FRA stated that even if 
    AAR's proposed performance standard were to deal with some of FRA's 
    criticisms of it, the performance standard would still fail to meet the 
    main objective of the ICP--to improve the accuracy of the submitted 
    accident and injury reports. AAR's response to this is its admission 
    that the accuracy of the reports would still be in question. But, for 
    the sake of simplicity and to prove that its proposed performance 
    standard would work, AAR is willing to forgo the accuracy of the 
    submitted reports. AAR Petition at 21-22. AAR's approach does not 
    resolve the problem identified in the initial GAO report, i.e., how to 
    improve the accuracy of submitted reports. Throughout the rulemaking 
    hearings, public regulatory conference, and in written testimony, there 
    was no statement by AAR and member railroads that an independent audit 
    was conducted by any railroad to determine that proper and accurate 
    accident and incident reporting was being performed, nor did any 
    railroad state that even an internal audit was performed to determine 
    whether or not the GAO audit was in fact outdated. Based on subsequent 
    instances of inaccurate reporting identified during FRA inspection 
    activity, the GAO audit, and the absence of compelling evidence that 
    GAO erred, FRA concludes that the GAO audit is not outdated as claimed 
    by AAR and that it truly reflects that inaccurate reporting remains a 
    problem in the industry or could easily recur in the future.
        AAR also claimed that most of its members already had some sort of 
    ICP in place (Tr. January 30, 1995 at 100-101, 104-105). Yet, when FRA 
    asked these members to produce these plans, not a single railroad could 
    produce an ICP. Some railroads stated that they had memoranda or loose 
    instructions, or both, that were similar to an ICP, but these also were 
    not available for FRA review. Consequently, in order to assist the 
    industry, FRA developed criteria for a model ICP which ultimately 
    incorporated many of AAR's recommendations.
        FRA does agree with the statements of AAR and its member railroads, 
    that these railroads have ICPs in the form of memoranda and directives 
    which would satisfy most of the mandated ICP requirements in 
    Sec. 225.33. That is one more reason why AAR's insistence on the use of 
    a different performance standard, which would also require development 
    of an ICP, is unpersuasive, since the AAR performance standard audit 
    would consume considerable FRA inspector resources and would most 
    likely use additional railroad resources without improving the accuracy 
    of FRA's accident/incident data.
    e. Section 225.33(a)(9)--Annual Railroad Audit
        Section 225.33(a)(9) requires each railroad to provide a statement 
    that specifies the name and title of the railroad officer responsible 
    for auditing the performance of the reporting function; a statement of 
    the frequency (not less than once per calendar year) with which audits 
    are conducted; and identification of the site where the most recent 
    audit report may be found for inspection.
        AAR claims this provision has not been justified and that FRA never 
    responded to the railroads' concerns about this provision's rejection 
    of the self-critical analysis privilege. AAR cites a law review article 
    (96 Harv. L. Rev. 1083)(1983)), which notes that railroads regularly 
    investigate accidents involving their employees. After these internal 
    investigations are completed, outsiders may seek discovery of the 
    resulting analyses and, as a result, a privilege of self-critical 
    analysis has developed to shield certain self-analyses from discovery. 
    AAR analogizes this privilege to the self-audit requirement of the ICP, 
    i.e., that since each railroad must conduct at a minimum, one yearly 
    audit, the results of this audit should be privileged and not subject 
    to FRA review.
    
    Final Rule
    
        AAR's argument is without merit. The self-critical analysis 
    privilege is not recognized by many courts and, if recognized, it is in 
    the context of tort litigation, not administrative law. FRA believes 
    that it is necessary that railroads perform the required audit as a 
    means to ensure that the ICP delivers the desired outcome, i.e., 
    accurate reporting through effective communication amongst the various 
    railroad departments, and no public purpose would be served by 
    affording railroads a ``self-critical analysis'' privilege. The audit 
    allows railroads to identify problem areas and make the appropriate 
    changes or corrections to their internal control procedures.
        2. Definition of ``Establishment'' in Sec. 225.5 and Scope of the 
    Posting Requirement in Sec. 225.25(h)
        Section 225.5 defines an ``establishment'' as ``a single physical 
    location where workers report to work, where business is conducted or 
    where services or operations are performed, for example, an operating 
    division, general office, and major installation, such as a locomotive 
    or car repair or construction facility.''
        AAR and individual railroads state the importance of limiting the 
    definition of an ``establishment'' to the examples FRA used above and 
    to omit from the definition the terminology ``where workers report to 
    work.'' They state that the current definition is unlawful because 
    railroads will be vulnerable to ``second guessing'' by FRA inspectors 
    as to its meaning.
        Large railroads also criticized the description in Sec. 225.25(h) 
    of the requirement to post injury and illness lists at and for each 
    ``establishment.'' Here, the ``establishment'' where posting is 
    required is one that has been in continual operation for a minimum of 
    90 calendar days. Since large railroads could have numerous locations 
    where employees report to work or where business is conducted, these 
    railroads believe that the burden associated with posting injury and 
    illness data monthly at numerous small establishments would be great 
    and not justified by any safety benefit.
    
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    Final Rule
    
    Clarification of Definition of ``Establishment''
    
        Requests to limit the definition of an ``establishment'' to only 
    those examples in the definition are denied. However, the definition of 
    ``establishment'' in Sec. 225.5 is amended for clarification purposes. 
    As amended,
    
        Establishment means a single physical location where workers 
    report to work, where railroad business is conducted, or where 
    services or operations are performed. Examples are: a division 
    office, general office, repair or maintenance facility, major 
    switching yard or terminal. For employees who are engaged in 
    dispersed operations, such as signal or track maintenance workers, 
    an ``establishment'' is typically a location where work assignments 
    are initially made and oversight responsibility exists, e.g., the 
    establishment where the signal supervisor or roadmaster is located.
    
    Clarification of ``Establishment'' for Purposes of Posting the List of 
    Reportable Injuries and Illnesses
    
        FRA is also amending Sec. 225.25(h) in order to clarify its scope 
    and assist the industry in comprehending the scope of what types of 
    facilities qualify as an ``establishment'' for purposes of posting the 
    list of reportable injuries and illnesses.
        FRA realizes that it is not practical for railroads to physically 
    post the list of injuries and illnesses at and for all of the diverse 
    locations and centers where employees may report for assignments on a 
    monthly basis. Many of these facilities are only utilized for limited 
    periods of time, do not have a permanent staff assigned to them, or are 
    simply locations where workers go to pick up, or meet, an assignment. 
    At a minimum, listings must be posted at locations where railroad 
    employees who suffered reportable injures or illnesses could reasonably 
    expect to report sometime during a 12-month period and have the 
    opportunity to observe the posted list containing their reportable 
    injuries or illnesses. FRA does expect to find the required posting of 
    the reportable injuries and illnesses at and for each establishment on 
    bulletin boards or bulletin book locations where the railroad posts 
    company policies, e.g., the policy statement concerning harassment and 
    intimidation as required by the ICP; notices of changes to its 
    operating, general, or safety rules; and where informational notices, 
    such as job advertisements or local special instructions, are posted; 
    near or adjacent to postings required by other government agencies, 
    such as the federal minimum wage notice; or where the time-clock for 
    the establishment is located.
        The establishment at which the list of reportable injuries and 
    illnesses is posted may be a higher organizational facility, such as an 
    operating division headquarters; a major classification yard or 
    terminal headquarters; a major equipment maintenance or repair 
    installation, e.g., a locomotive or rail car repair or construction 
    facility; a railroad signal and maintenance-of-way division 
    headquarters; or a central location where track or signal maintenance 
    employees are assigned as a headquarters or where they receive work 
    assignments. These examples include facilities that are generally major 
    facilities of a permanent nature.
        There are endless examples of the types of locations that may 
    qualify as an establishment for purposes of Sec. 225.25(h). Some 
    illustrations: for a railroad without divisions or diverse departmental 
    headquarters, an ``establishment'' may be the system headquarters or 
    general office which is accessible to all employees; for train service 
    employees and crews, an ``establishment'' is a home terminal (as 
    commonly defined in collective bargaining agreements), but is not a 
    layover terminal, outlying support yard, or their away-from-home 
    terminal; for employees who are engaged in dispersed operations, such 
    as signal or track maintenance workers, the ``establishment'' is the 
    location where these employees regularly report for work assignments; 
    for railroad system track or signal maintenance or construction work 
    groups, who perform duties at various locations throughout a railroad 
    system, the ``establishment'' may be at the transient group's mobile 
    headquarters or it may be the location where job assignments and 
    postings are made (if the location is reasonably accessible to 
    employees).
        An ``establishment,'' for purposes of Sec. 225.25(h), would not 
    include remote locations where temporary construction or maintenance 
    work is in progress; outlying support or switching yards; or tie-up 
    points for road switch trains or work trains away from a home terminal.
    
    3. Section 225.25(h)--Monthly Posting of Reportable Injuries and 
    Illnesses
    
        As previously discussed under the definition of ``establishment,'' 
    Sec. 225.25(h) requires that each railroad post at each railroad 
    establishment a list of all injuries and illnesses reported for that 
    establishment in a conspicuous location, within 30 days after 
    expiration of the month during which the injuries/illnesses occurred, 
    if the establishment has been in continual operation for a minimum of 
    90 calendar days. If the establishment has not been in continual 
    operation for a minimum of 90 calendar days, the listing of all 
    injuries and occupational illnesses reported to FRA as having occurred 
    at the establishment shall be posted, within 30 days after the 
    expiration of the month during which the injuries and illnesses 
    occurred, at the next higher organizational level establishment.
        Most railroads assert that there is no safety justification for 
    this provision and that this requirement is therefore not necessary. 
    Many state that posting the list will reveal the identity of the 
    individuals involved, thereby invading their privacy rights. Some 
    railroads request that they should be allowed to ``electronically'' 
    post this information. ASLRA states that the monthly posting 
    requirement is superfluous and that the added paperwork burden is 
    significant.
    
    Final Rule
    
        The requirement to post the monthly list of reportable injuries and 
    illnesses at and for each defined establishment poses a minimal burden, 
    even for small railroads, which have few incidents which will fall into 
    this category. Although some railroads requested that they be allowed 
    to post this list ``electronically,'' many more railroads claimed that 
    they did not have the means or capability to post this information 
    electronically at and for each establishment.
        Since the monthly list of reportable injuries and illnesses does 
    not include the name of the injured or ill employee and since the list 
    will improve the accuracy of FRA's injury and illness data base, 
    thereby improving FRA's ability to shape the federal railroad safety 
    program so as to prevent and mitigate future injuries and illnesses, 
    the argument that privacy rights of the employee are invaded is without 
    merit. However, FRA is revising Sec. 225.25(h), by adding 
    Sec. 225.25(h)(15), to address any possible concerns with privacy 
    rights of the employee. Paragraph (15) provides that the railroad is 
    permitted to not post information on a reported injury or illness, if 
    the employee who incurred the injury or illness makes a request in 
    writing to the railroad's reporting officer that his or her particular 
    injury or illness not be posted.
        Some railroads reported to FRA that they have multiple locations 
    qualifying as an establishment that are in continual operation for a 
    minimum of 90 calendar days. These railroads requested some sort of 
    relief in Sec. 225.25(h)(12), which requires the signature of the 
    preparer on
    
    [[Page 67482]]
    
    the monthly list of reportable injuries and illnesses.
        In order to minimize the burden of requiring the preparer's 
    signature on each and every list for the railroad, FRA amends 
    Sec. 225.25(h)(12) so as to provide railroads with an alternative to 
    signing each establishment's monthly list. A railroad is provided the 
    option of not having the preparer's signature on the posted list of 
    reportable injuries and illnesses at any location away from the 
    reporting office. However, if the railroad chooses this option, then a 
    complete duplicate copy of the list of reportable injuries and 
    illnesses, by establishment, must be available for review at the 
    preparer's office. This duplicate copy must have a cover letter or 
    memorandum indicating the month to which the reportable injuries and 
    illnesses apply, and must have the name, title, and signature of the 
    preparing official. The preparer must mail or send by facsimile each 
    establishment's list of reportable injuries and illnesses in the time 
    frame prescribed in Sec. 225.25(h). This option will help alleviate the 
    time burden associated with signing each establishment's list while 
    ensuring that the preparer of all the lists accounts for the 
    information contained in the lists by providing his or her signature on 
    the cover memorandum. This list must contain all the information 
    required under Sec. 225.25(h) (1) through (14).
    
    4. Miscellaneous Other Concerns of Tourist and Museum Railroads
    
        Section 225.3 describes those railroads that must conform to and 
    comply with Part 225. Specifically, Sec. 225.3 states that Part 225
    
    applies to all railroads except--
        (a) A railroad that operates freight trains only on track inside 
    an installation which is not part of the general railroad system of 
    transportation or that owns no track except for track that is inside 
    an installation that is not part of the general railroad system of 
    transportation and used for freight operations.
        (b) Rail mass transit operations in an urban area that are not 
    connected with the general railroad system of transportation.
        (c) A railroad that exclusively hauls passengers inside an 
    installation that is insular or that owns no track except for track 
    used exclusively for the hauling of passengers inside an 
    installation that is insular. An operation is not considered insular 
    if one or more of the following exists on its line:
        (1) A public highway-rail grade crossing that is in use;
        (2) An at-grade rail crossing that is in use;
        (3) A bridge over a public road or waters used for commercial 
    navigation; or
        (4) A common corridor with a railroad, i.e., its operations are 
    within 30 feet of those of any railroad.
    
        In general, ARM and TRAIN request that the accident reporting 
    regulations should apply only to those railroads that are part of the 
    general railroad system of transportation. Further, they request a 
    separate rulemaking to define the limits of FRA authority over non-
    insular operations and within that limit, establish regulations that 
    are directed at substantive safety concerns, not paperwork requirements 
    like those found in Part 225.
        TRAIN questions, in general, FRA's legal authority to regulate non-
    general system railroads. TRAIN cites to case law and concludes that 
    ``before there can be any regulation of any private entity there must 
    be, at a minimum, some impact that entity has or is having on 
    interstate commerce. For the most part, that is not the case here,'' 
    ``here'' implying the tourist railroad industry. TRAIN Petition at 7.
        Further, TRAIN states that the safety record of its operations does 
    not justify increased FRA regulations and that FRA did not comply with 
    the provisions of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) because the 
    costs of implementing the regulations far outweigh any safety benefits. 
    TRAIN also disputes the estimated time burden and claims that the 
    regulatory impact analysis reflects an unclear understanding of the 
    requirements of the RFA.
        ARM alleges that FRA has excepted amusement park railroads per se 
    from Part 225 and that this exception is without merit because there is 
    no rational basis for differing treatment between museum or tourist 
    railroads, on the one hand, and amusement park railroads, on the other. 
    ARM claims that amusement park railroads actually pose a greater safety 
    risk and that FRA does not even know whether amusement park railroads 
    are dangerous.
        In general, TRAIN, ARM, and various small railroad petitioners 
    request elimination of all ``nonreporting'' requirements. For example, 
    in addition to ICP requirement discussed earlier in Section 1.a. of 
    this summary and the requirements to record ``accountables,'' to be 
    discussed in Section 5 of this summary, these petitioners seek to be 
    excepted from the following requirements for the following stated 
    reasons: (i) the requirement in Sec. 225.25(h) to post monthly a list 
    of all reportable injuries and illnesses at and for each establishment 
    since such reportable injuries and illnesses and accidents/incidents 
    are extremely rare for this industry; and (ii) the requirement to 
    report the number of miles operated (Item #7 on Form FRA F 6180.99--the 
    ``Batch Control Form for Magnetic Media'') since the apparent purpose 
    of this information is to allow comparisons to be made with numbers of 
    accidents and, since there are so few accidents amongst the historic 
    and tourist railroads, the information would be meaningless.
    
    Final Rule
    
        Initially, FRA wants to make it clear that the accident reporting 
    regulations set forth in Part 225 have always applied to non-general 
    system, non-insular railroad operations, e.g., a tourist railroad that 
    has a public highway-rail grade crossing and that confines its 
    operations to an installation that is not part of the general system. 
    Further, FRA has legal authority to issue rules, as necessary, under 
    its general rulemaking authority at 49 U.S.C. 20103. FRA's conclusion 
    that the accident reporting rules are ``necessary'' for railroad safety 
    is based upon a careful analysis of applicable law and policy 
    considerations, and fully complies with the requirements of 49 U.S.C. 
    20103(a) and the APA.
    
    Partial Relief From Part 225 Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements
    
        FRA recognizes that small tourist operations are concerned with the 
    burdens, both in terms of time and expense, that are associated with 
    full implementation of the final rule. Based on additional analysis, 
    FRA concludes that it can grant some relief to certain small operations 
    without compromising the accuracy of its accident reporting data base. 
    Consequently, FRA amends Sec. 225.3, by adding Sec. 225.3(d), to except 
    all railroads that operate exclusively off the general system 
    (including off-the-general-system museum and tourist railroads) from 
    all Part 225 requirements to report or record injuries and illnesses 
    incurred by any classification of person, as defined on the ``Railroad 
    Injury and Illness (Continuation Sheet)'' (Form FRA F 6180.55a), that 
    result from a ``non-train incident,'' unless the non-train incident 
    involves in-service on-track railroad equipment. See definition of 
    ``non-train incident'' in Sec. 225.5.
        Railroads that are subject to Part 225 in the first place and that 
    operate exclusively off the general system must, however, continue to 
    comply with Part 225 requirements regarding reporting and recording 
    injuries and illnesses incurred by all classifications of persons that 
    are incurred as a result of a ``train accident,'' ``train incident,'' 
    or a small subset of ``non-train incidents'' that involve railroad 
    equipment in operation but not moving.
    
    [[Page 67483]]
    
        Example 1: a visitor or an employee of a non-insular, off-the-
    general-system museum railroad falls off a railroad car that is on 
    fixed display in the museum building and breaks his or her ankle. This 
    injury is classified as an injury from a ``non-train incident'' with 
    equipment not in railroad service and would, therefore, not be reported 
    to FRA.
        Example 2: a volunteer, while collecting tickets on a railroad car 
    for an excursion ride on a non-insular, off-the-general-system tourist 
    railroad, cuts his or her leg. This injury requires stitches even 
    though the car is not moving. This injury is classified as an injury 
    from a ``non-train incident'' with equipment that is in railroad 
    service and would, therefore, be reported to FRA.
    
    Tourist Railroads Required To Post Monthly List of Reportable Injuries 
    and Illnesses for Each Establishment
    
        Apart from railroads already excepted from Part 225 as a whole by 
    Sec. 225.3 (e.g., (i) plant railroads whose operations are confined to 
    their industrial installation and (ii) insular, off-the-general-system 
    tourist railroads), FRA does not believe that any railroad should be 
    excepted from the requirement to post the monthly list of reportable 
    injuries and illnesses at and for each establishment (Sec. 225.25(h)). 
    The requirements of Sec. 225.25(h) are discussed previously in great 
    detail in this preamble under the definition of ``establishment.''
        As explained in the preamble to the June 18 final rule, FRA wanted 
    railroad employees to have some opportunity to be involved in the 
    reporting process and to provide employees the chance to get a one-year 
    picture of reportable injuries and illnesses for the establishment 
    where they report to work. FRA is convinced that posting of this 
    monthly list of injuries and illnesses will improve the overall quality 
    of illness and injury data. Further, since small railroads and the 
    historic and museum rail industry stated they had few reportable 
    injuries and illnesses to report anyway, the burden to list such 
    reportable injuries and illnesses for each establishment will be 
    negligible.
    
    ``Batch Control Form for Magnetic Media'' (Form FRA F 6180.99)
    
        As to the tourist and museum railroads' concern with reporting the 
    ``number of miles operated'' on the ``Batch Control Form for Magnetic 
    Media'' (Form FRA F 6180.99), FRA reiterates that the Batch Control 
    Form is used only for those railroads who opt to report using magnetic 
    media or electronic submission. The information contained on the Batch 
    Control Form verifies the completeness and accuracy of the submittals. 
    Moreover, the data on the Batch Control Form is not used in any of 
    FRA's analyses or statistics.
    
    TRAIN's Constitutional Argument
    
        Turning to TRAIN's argument that FRA lacks the legal authority to 
    regulate non-general system, non-insular railroads, TRAIN alleges that 
    FRA's regulation of such railroads is in excess of its delegated 
    statutory authority under the Constitution. For the reasons briefly 
    stated in this preamble, FRA believes that non-general system, non-
    insular railroads are ``railroad carriers'' covered by the federal 
    railroad safety statutes under which the accident reporting rules were 
    promulgated and that to regulate non-general system, non-insular 
    railroads is permissible under the United States Constitution. FRA will 
    not address the relevant statutory language, legislative history, or 
    delegations since they are never raised by TRAIN, but will focus solely 
    on the TRAIN's Constitutional argument, that because of Constitutional 
    limits on the commerce powers of the Congress, FRA lacks the authority 
    under the Constitution to regulate non-general system, non-insular 
    railroads. TRAIN Petition at 3.
        The Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution provides: 
    ``The Congress shall have Power * * * To regulate Commerce with foreign 
    Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes. * * 
    *'' U.S. Const. Art. I, Sec. 8, cl. 3. Supreme Court decisions have 
    broadened the notion of interstate commerce to include those actions, 
    however local, which merely affect interstate commerce. The Court has 
    interpreted the Commerce Clause to include those entities whose 
    activities are strictly local but who are members of a class that 
    affect interstate commerce (Katzenbach v. McClung, 379 U.S. 294 (1964)) 
    or who are members of a class Congress seeks to regulate (Perez v. 
    United States, 402 U.S. 146 (1970)). Moreover, in Wickard v. Filburn, 
    317 U.S. 110 (1942), and in United States v. Darby, 312 U.S. 100 
    (1940), the Court said that Congress could reach those entities who are 
    representative of many others similarly situated even if their 
    individual activities do not particularly affect interstate commerce.
        Recent estimates show that American tourist railroads transport 
    some five million passengers each year. Some such railroads are 
    interstate lines; many are not. Some tourist railroads share trackage 
    rights with other passenger or freight railroads, while others are 
    stand-alone railroads with their own track. Some of them provide 
    excursions over scores, if not hundreds, of miles; others operate only 
    a few miles. Some travel at relatively high speeds, while others lumber 
    along at very leisurely rates. All comprise that class of railroad, the 
    tourist railroad, whose purpose is to provide recreational train trips 
    and whose very name (``tourist'') indicates that railroads in this 
    class hope to attract passengers from far and near, including those 
    from other states. Accordingly, FRA is authorized to regulate non-
    general system, non-insular railroads, including those that do not 
    particularly affect interstate commerce, because they are members of a 
    class of railroads that affect interstate commerce or are 
    representative of other similarly situated railroads.
        To support the position that FRA is empowered to regulate non-
    general system, non-insular railroads, FRA cites a case on point, 
    Historic Reader Foundation, Inc., Reader Industries, Inc., and Reader 
    Railroad v. Skinner, Civ. No. 91-1109 (W.D. Ark. Jan. 16, 1992) 
    (Reader). In that case, the plaintiffs asserted that Congress did not 
    intend to empower the FRA with the authority to regulate an intrastate 
    tourist railroad. Like many tourist railroads generally, the Reader 
    Railroad was a standard gage railroad line that provided excursion 
    service for passengers. The railroad consisted of the track right-of-
    way, concession pavilion and building, maintenance terminal, and 
    railroad machinery and equipment. Equipment included two steam 
    locomotives, three antiquated passenger cars, and one caboose. The 
    Reader offered round-trip excursions over 3.2 miles of track, and had 
    about one mile of side tracks. The route crossed one public highway. A 
    switch that allowed interchange with the Missouri Pacific Railroad and 
    provided a connection with the national railroad system was dismantled, 
    i.e., the Reader was a non-general system, non-insular railroad. Some 
    of the Reader's passengers came from outside of Arkansas, and Reader 
    published an advertisement brochure which was distributed both locally 
    as well as outside of Arkansas. Reader purchased supplies from outside 
    of the State in order to operate the railroad, including lubricating 
    oil, nuts, bolts, and paint.
        The District Court held that FRA was empowered to monitor such 
    operations to ensure the safety of the public and that Reader was 
    subject to regulation by FRA. In support of this holding the Court 
    noted,
    
    [i]t has long been settled that Congress' authority under the 
    Commerce Clause extends to intrastate economic activities that 
    affect interstate commerce. Garcia v. San
    
    [[Page 67484]]
    
    Antonio Metro. Transit Auth., 469 U.S. 528, 537 (1984); Hodel v. 
    Virginia Surface Mining & Recl. Assn, 452 U.S. 264, 276-277 (1981); 
    Heart of Atlanta Motel, Inc. v. United States, 370 U.S. 241, 258 
    (1964) * * *.
    
    Reader, p. 3. In sum, the Court found that the Reader Railroad affected 
    interstate commerce. Similarly, FRA is still empowered to regulate non-
    general-system, non-insular railroads as a class, since like the 
    Reader, they affect interstate commerce.
        To rebut this position, TRAIN relies primarily on the holding in 
    United States v. Lopez, __ U.S. __ (1995), 115 S.Ct. 1624 (1995), 131 
    L.Ed 2d 626 (1995) to support the proposition that FRA lacks 
    Constitutional authority to regulate non-general system railroad 
    operations. TRAIN Petition at 4. In Lopez, a local student, from a 
    local high school, carried a concealed handgun into his high school and 
    was subsequently charged with violating the Gun-Free School Zones Act 
    of 1990 (the Act), which forbade ``any individual knowingly to possess 
    a firearm at a place that [he] knows * * * is a school zone.'' 18 
    U.S.C. 922(q)(1)(A). TRAIN argues that the Court used a stricter 
    standard in its reasoning to determine whether the Act exceeded 
    Congress' commerce authority, that Congress may regulate under its 
    commerce power ``those activities having a substantial relation 
    [emphasis added] to interstate commerce, NLRB v. Jones & Laughlin Steel 
    Corp, 301 U.S. 1 at 37 (1937).'' TRAIN Petition at 6. Based upon this 
    stricter standard of the enterprise having to have a substantial 
    effect, rather than just an effect, on interstate commerce, TRAIN 
    argues, the Supreme Court concluded in Lopez that the Act exceeded 
    Congress' Commerce Clause authority. The Court reasoned that Section 
    922(q) was ``a criminal statute that by its terms had nothing to do 
    with ``commerce'' or any sort of any economic enterprise * * *. 115 
    S.Ct. 1630-1631.
        Even if ``substantial effect'' rather than ``effect'' is the 
    appropriate standard, the facts in Lopez are easily distinguished from 
    the facts whereby FRA regulates, as authorized by the federal railroad 
    safety statutes, non-general system, non-insular railroads. First, non-
    general system, non-insular railroads are generally commercial 
    enterprises, unlike a school playground, which is not an economic 
    enterprise. Second, the statute in question in Lopez was a criminal 
    law, an area traditionally left to the province of local and State 
    governments. Here, the relevant statutes are civil and deal with a 
    subject, railroad safety, that has traditionally been covered by 
    federal law. Third and most importantly, non-general system, non-
    insular railroads can, if not regulated, substantially affect 
    interstate commerce. FRA's criteria for insularity indicate the ways in 
    which non-insular railroads substantially affect interstate commerce. 
    See 49 CFR 225.3. For example, if the tracks of the non-general system 
    railroad cross a public road that is in use, the operation of the 
    railroad substantially affects interstate commerce in that a commercial 
    truck using the road could collide with one of the trains that operate 
    over the grade crossing. To give another illustration, if the tracks of 
    the non-general system railroad cross a river used for commercial 
    navigation, a derailment of one of the railroad's trains while it was 
    traversing the river could easily interfere with the free flow of barge 
    or other commercial traffic on the river. Accordingly, FRA believes 
    that TRAIN's Constitutional challenge to the validity of FRA's 
    authority to regulate non-general system, non-insular railroads is 
    without merit.
    
    ARM's Concerns About Amusement Park Railroads Excepted From Part 225
    
        ARM, an association of railroad museums, complains that FRA has 
    excluded amusement park railroads from Part 225 requirements without 
    sufficient reason. FRA addressed this issue at some length in the 
    preamble to the June 18 final rule. See 61 FR 30959-30960. Of course, 
    FRA's exclusion is not of amusement park railroads as such, but of 
    railroads with less than 24-inch track gage, which FRA considers 
    miniature or imitation railroads, and of insular tourist and museum 
    railroads that operate (or own track) exclusively off the general 
    system, regardless whether they operate in an amusement park. See 61 FR 
    30960 (June 18, 1996) and Sec. 225.3. Again, the excluded railroads are 
    excepted on the basis of their track gage or their insularity. ``[A] 
    tourist operation is insular if its operations were limited to a 
    separate enclave in such a way that there is no reasonable expectation 
    that the safety of any member of the public (except a business guest, a 
    licensee of the tourist operation or an affiliated entity, or a 
    trespasser) would be affected by the operation.'' 61 FR 30960 (June 18, 
    1996). FRA recognizes, however, that in practice, when the insularity 
    test is applied, many amusement park railroads are excluded. As 
    indicated in the preamble, insular amusement park railroads are 
    excepted on the additional basis of State and local regulation of these 
    entities as amusements. Id.
    
    5. Section 225.25 (a) Through (g)--Recording of ``Accountables''
    
        Section 225.25(f) requires each railroad to log each reportable and 
    each accountable rail equipment accident/incident as well as each 
    reportable and each accountable injury or illness not later than seven 
    working days after receiving information or acquiring knowledge that 
    such an injury or illness or rail equipment accident/incident has 
    occurred.
        Section 225.5 defines an ``accountable injury or illness'' as 
    encompassing ``any condition, not otherwise reportable, of a railroad 
    worker that is associated with an event, exposure, or activity in the 
    work environment that causes or requires the worker to be examined or 
    treated by a qualified health care professional. Such treatment would 
    usually occur at a location other than the work environment; however, 
    it may be provided at any location, including the work site.''
        Likewise, an ``accountable rail equipment accident/ incident'' is 
    defined in Sec. 225.5 as ``any event, not otherwise reportable, 
    involving the operation of on-track equipment that causes physical 
    damage to either the on-track equipment or the track upon which such 
    equipment was operated and that requires the removal or repair of rail 
    equipment from the track before any rail operations over the track can 
    continue. * * *''
        ASLRA and its members and the tourist and museum railroads request 
    that the requirements to record accountable injuries, illnesses, and 
    rail equipment accidents/incidents be eliminated because the 
    information to be gained concerning these nonreportable events is not 
    sufficient to outweigh the greatly increased recordkeeping and 
    administrative burden. They also claim that the injuries or illnesses 
    and rail equipment accidents/incidents that are not reportable to FRA 
    are relatively minor and insignificant and are simply not the kind of 
    data that can be expected to contribute in any meaningful way to 
    improve rail safety. TRAIN, ARM, and various small railroad petitioners 
    opposed the requirement in Sec. 225.25(d) to maintain the ``Initial 
    Rail Equipment Accident/Incident Record,'' indicating that too few such 
    accountable incidents occurred to warrant completion of this record by 
    this segment of the industry.
    
    Final Rule
    
        FRA amends the final rule by granting an exception to the 
    ``accountable'' recordkeeping requirements in Sec. 225.25(a) through 
    (g) for (i) railroads
    
    [[Page 67485]]
    
    that operate or own track on the general railroad system of 
    transportation that have 15 or fewer employees covered by 49 U.S.C. 
    21101-21107 (hours of service) and (ii) railroads that operate or own 
    track exclusively off the general system. (These railroads are referred 
    to as ``excepted railroads.'') This exception appears in the 
    ``Applicability'' section of the rule, Sec. 225.3(c). Railroads 
    operating or owning track exclusively off the general system maintain 
    routine records of casualties under the State workers compensation 
    system, and such records may be obtained by FRA pursuant to statutory 
    authority. Railroads operating or owning track on the general system 
    (both tourist or historical and shortline freight railroads) that have 
    15 or fewer employees covered by 49 U.S.C. 21101-21107 currently have 
    to make some type of record of injuries and illnesses in order to 
    determine whether or not the injury or illness is reportable to FRA. 
    Thus, these records should be adequate in lieu of a formal log pursuant 
    to Sec. 225.25(a) through(g).
        Note, however, that the excepted railroads must continue to comply 
    with the requirements in Sec. 225.25(a) through (g) regarding 
    reportable events. These railroads must complete and maintain the 
    Railroad Employee Injury or Illness Record (Form FRA F 6180.98) as 
    required under Sec. 225.25(a), or the alternative railroad-designed 
    record as described in Sec. 225.25(b), of all reportable injuries and 
    illnesses of its employees that arise from the operation of the 
    railroad for each railroad establishment where such employees report to 
    work.
        Likewise, the excepted railroads must continue to comply with the 
    requirement in Sec. 225.25(d) to complete and maintain the Initial Rail 
    Equipment Accident/Incident Record (Form FRA F 6180.97) or an 
    alternative railroad-designed record, as described in Sec. 225.25(e), 
    of all reportable collisions, derailments, fires, explosions, acts of 
    God, or other events involving the operation of railroad on-track 
    equipment, signals, track, or track equipment (standing or moving) that 
    result in damages to railroad on-track equipment, signals, tracks, 
    track structures, or roadbed for each railroad establishment where 
    workers report to work.
        Consequently, the excepted railroads shall enter each reportable 
    injury and illness and each reportable rail equipment accident/incident 
    on the appropriate record, as required by Sec. 225.25(a) through (e), 
    as early as practicable but no later than seven working days after 
    receiving information or acquiring knowledge that an injury or illness 
    or rail equipment accident/incident has occurred. See Sec. 225.25(f).
    
    6. Requested Delay in Effective Date Due to Extensive Reprogramming of 
    Computer Systems
    
        AAR and most individual railroads request that the effective date 
    of the rule, which is January 1, 1997, be delayed or changed to January 
    1, 1998. These petitioners claim that the data processing changes due 
    to new circumstance codes and the addition of new blocks for 
    information on the various forms will require at least six months to 
    complete. FRA understands the six months to run approximately from the 
    date that AAR's petition for reconsideration was received by FRA, i.e., 
    August 19, 1996. ASLRA requested that, due to the extensive amendments 
    to the accident reporting regulations, FRA push the effective date back 
    a year to January 1, 1998, and to phase or stagger implementation of 
    the rule, with an implementation date of January 1, 1998 for Class I 
    railroads; an implementation date of April 1, 1998 for Class II 
    railroads; and an implementation date of July 1, 1998 for Class III 
    railroads.
        Some railroads state that the new circumstance codes and special 
    study blocks will not improve safety data and that the new codes will 
    make it impossible to make historical comparisons with the old 
    occurrence codes.
    
    Final Decision
    
        FRA believes that reprogramming efforts can be accomplished in time 
    to meet the January 1, 1997 implementation date. Therefore, the 
    industry should plan to comply with the final rule on the original 
    effective date of January 1, 1997. Railroads were also encouraged to 
    comply by the original effective date in FRA's October 10, 1996, letter 
    to AAR and in FRA's November 22, 1996, Federal Register document (61 FR 
    59368). In that document, FRA denied requests to stay the effective 
    date of the final rule.
        Railroads should have begun software reprogramming efforts shortly 
    after publication of the final rule on June 18, 1996, in order to meet 
    the original effective date. However, in order to assist the industry, 
    FRA published a notice in the Federal Register on November 22, 1996 (61 
    FR 59485) which notified all concerned parties that FRA is in the 
    process of preparing custom software for reporting railroad accidents 
    and incidents. This software will be available to all reporting 
    railroads at no cost on January 1, 1997, and will facilitate production 
    of all the monthly reports and records required under the accident 
    reporting regulations, as amended in 61 FR 30940 (June 18, 1996), 61 FR 
    59368 (November 22, 1996), 61 FR 60632 (November 29, 1996), and the 
    present document. FRA will also have an electronic bulletin board for 
    submission of reports.
        In the NPRM, FRA expressed its concern to get more information 
    about the circumstances of the injury which could not be described 
    adequately by the data field ``occurrence code.'' The current FRA form 
    (Form FRA F 6180.55(a)--Railroad Injury and Illness Summary 
    (Continuation Sheet)), valid from 1975 to 1996) used the occurrence 
    code to describe what the injured person was doing at the time of the 
    injury. Instead of using the detailed occurrence codes, FRA found that 
    a large portion of the injury records used the various 
    ``miscellaneous'' occurrence codes to describe what the employee was 
    doing at the time the injury was incurred. This made injury analysis 
    and cost-benefit analysis very difficult because of incomplete 
    information. In the NPRM, FRA proposed revisions to Form FRA F 
    6180.55(a) that contained both the old occurrence codes and the new 
    ``circumstance codes.'' Initially FRA decided to keep both sets of 
    codes to allow historical comparisons. However, throughout the 
    rulemaking, AAR members objected to having both sets of codes as being 
    redundant and an additional burden. Now AAR members complain that use 
    of only the new circumstance codes is unacceptable because historical 
    comparisons will be lost.
        FRA made a conscious decision to retain the circumstance codes and 
    to delete the occurrence codes, because of the burden claimed by AAR 
    members. FRA is equally concerned that its decision to use only the new 
    circumstance codes may cause some loss of historical information, but 
    the occurrence codes were not providing the necessary information. 
    Thus, FRA will develop a ``bridging system'' to convert the new 
    circumstance codes to the old occurrence codes. FRA sought and will 
    continue to seek the advice and assistance of labor and the industry in 
    this effort. The new data base structure that FRA developed will still 
    have a data field to store the ``bridged'' occurrence code in the same 
    physical location as the old data base structure. This will allow 
    analysis of the changes and provide historical comparisons.
        Although railroads have had since June 18, 1996 to make changes to 
    their computer software to accommodate the
    
    [[Page 67486]]
    
    changes in the forms required by FRA, some railroads have requested 
    additional time for computer programming. For many of the reasons 
    suggested already, FRA believes that if railroads had begun their 
    programming efforts shortly after the rule was published, then there 
    would have been sufficient time to accommodate the programming.
        FRA is willing to make some accommodation for railroads that 
    generate their own monthly reports using their own custom computer 
    software. Railroads may continue to report using the ``old forms'' for 
    the first three months of 1997. However, the new forms must be used for 
    the April 1997 submissions. Railroads must refile the first three 
    months (January through March 1997) of reports using the new forms by 
    July 31, 1997. Failure to refile the forms would be treated as if no 
    reports were filed at all with FRA and that may be subject to 
    enforcement actions.
    
    7. Definition of ``Qualified Health Care Professional''
    
        Section 225.5 defines a ``qualified health care professional'' 
    (QHCP) as ``a health care professional operating within the scope of 
    his or her license, registration, or certification. For example, an 
    otolaryngologist is qualified to diagnose a case of noise-induced 
    hearing loss and identify potential causal factors, but may not be 
    qualified to diagnose a case of repetitive motion injuries.''
        AAR and individual railroads state that FRA has failed to give an 
    explanation for maintaining its definition of a ``qualified health care 
    professional.'' These railroads were troubled by the proposed 
    definition, believing that railroad employees should be diagnosed and 
    treated only by licensed physicians or by personnel under a licensed 
    physician's direction.
    
    Final Rule
    
        Requests to limit the definition of a ``qualified health care 
    professional'' to licensed physicians are denied. As stated in the 
    preamble to the final rule, many reportable injuries and illnesses can 
    be treated by a QHCP who is not a physician (one who holds an M.D.). 
    Likewise, a physician (M.D.) may perform first aid treatment. Given the 
    possibilities, FRA believed that limiting the definition of QHCP to 
    encompass only physicians would result in underreporting of injuries 
    and illnesses that require more than first aid treatment. Thus, the 
    definition of a QHCP is retained; however, additional examples of a 
    QHCP are added to the definition to assist the industry in 
    comprehending the scope of what types of individuals qualify as QHCPs. 
    In particular, the definition of a QHCP is amended to state that ``[i]n 
    addition to physicians, the term `qualified health care professional' 
    includes members of other occupations associated with patient care and 
    treatment * * * .'' Examples include chiropractors, podiatrists, 
    physician's assistants, psychologists, and dentists.
    
    8. Executive Order 12866
    
        AAR asserts that FRA has not based the final rule on Executive 
    Order (EO) 12866 in that FRA ignored its own analysis of the GAO audit; 
    that FRA stated during the rulemaking process that the accident/
    incident data base is already accurate; that the E.O. directs agencies 
    to use performance standards; that the benefits of the final rule do 
    not justify the costs and burdens associated with its implementation; 
    and finally, that FRA failed to restrict promulgation of rules to those 
    ``made necessary by compelling public need, such as, material failures 
    of private markets to protect or improve the health and safety of the 
    public.''
    
    FRA Response
    
        FRA complied with E.O. 12866. The final rule was considered 
    ``nonsignificant'' under the E.O. FRA stated in the preamble to the 
    final rule published in June 18, 1996, that the qualitative benefits as 
    a result of the final rule, i.e., the collection of consistent and 
    uniform data and the value of well focused regulatory decisions and 
    properly targeted compliance activities, far exceed the costs 
    associated with the rule. 61 FR 30965-30966.
        The Federal Government, private organizations, and individuals make 
    decisions on the basis of the ``perceived risks.'' The statistics 
    produced by the requirements of this rule are used to communicate the 
    risks involved (i) in transporting goods and services, and passengers 
    on rail, (ii) with working on a railroad, and (iii) with living or 
    commuting near rail lines or crossings. Thus, these statistics are used 
    to form ``perceptions'' of related risks. With increased accuracy of 
    accident and injury data, effective risk-based decisions can be made by 
    FRA. FRA intends to increase the accuracy of these statistics and to 
    provide the public the most accurate information through issuance of 
    the final rules on railroad accident reporting. Hence, FRA has found 
    promulgation of this rule to be necessary in order to continue 
    protecting the public's health and safety.
        As discussed in the preamble to the final rule published on June 
    18, 1996, and in this preamble, FRA noted that the industry conducted 
    no independent audits to determine the accuracy of railroad reporting. 
    61 FR 30965. Nor did any railroad do an independent internal audit to 
    determine whether or not the GAO audit was in fact outdated. Id. FRA's 
    reasoning for rejection of AAR's proposed performance standard has been 
    previously discussed in this preamble.
        Below is a discussion of AAR's economics-related criticisms.
    
    9. Regulatory Impact Analysis
    
        AAR provided numerous criticisms concerning FRA's regulatory impact 
    analysis (RIA) for the railroad accident reporting final rule. 
    Initially, FRA wishes to emphasize that Executive Order 12866 does not 
    create any rights and that FRA's RIA and its response to AAR's 
    criticisms of the RIA do not constitute a final agency action subject 
    to review. Nevertheless, FRA chooses to expound on many of AAR's 
    invalid criticisms.
        AAR states that FRA's RIA ``does not even attempt to assess the 
    serious damage to a railroad's treasury resulting from the rule's 
    attempt to favor railroad adversaries in litigation.'' AAR Petition at 
    28. There was no attempt to favor any private litigants, and the 
    portion of the rule on which AAR based its concern has already been 
    addressed. 61 FR 59368 (Nov. 22, 1996).
        AAR also noted that ``the Analysis fails to account for the 
    significant costs that arise from FRA's new definition of `accountable' 
    equipment accidents (section 225.5).'' AAR Petition at 28, footnote 22.
        FRA's definition of ``accountable'' in Sec. 225.5 clearly notes 
    that although these rail equipment accidents/incidents are not 
    reportable to FRA, there should be physical damage such that the 
    equipment requires removal from the track or repair before any railroad 
    operation over the track can continue. Thus, an ``accountable'' rail 
    equipment accident/incident, if not tended to, would disrupt railroad 
    service. 61 FR 30968. FRA's RIA for the final rule noted that railroads 
    claimed that they currently collect this information in order to 
    determine whether a rail equipment accident/incident is reportable to 
    FRA. Therefore, this is, or should be, a practice of the industry prior 
    to this rulemaking. If railroads do not collect such information, then 
    it would be very difficult to determine whether an accident/incident is
    
    [[Page 67487]]
    
    reportable. FRA needs such records to ensure that all of the rail 
    equipment accidents/incidents that meet reportability requirements are 
    in fact reported to FRA. Further, FRA granted the railroads' request 
    that they be allowed the option to design their own ``Initial Rail 
    Equipment Accident/Incident Record'' (Form FRA F 6180.97) and 
    ``Railroad Employee Injury and/or Illness Record'' (Form FRA F 
    6180.98). See Sec. 225.25 (b) and (e).
        Mr. Guins notes that ``[b]ecause of the additional, extensive 
    detail FRA adds to its ICP mandate over and above railroads' existing 
    plans, one Class 1 road has estimated the one-time cost to comply with 
    the ICP section of this rule will require a minimum of 217 hours to 
    write the plan. (Tr. October 5, 1994, at 99).'' Guins at 9. When this 
    comment was made at the October 5th public hearing, FRA also requested 
    details on how these estimates were developed. FRA again requested 
    further details on such estimates at the Portland, Oregon hearing held 
    on November 2, 1994 (Tr. November 2, 1994, at 98). However, the 
    railroad providing these comments never submitted any details on this 
    calculation. If the railroad industry and its representative 
    organizations are going to provide such criticisms of FRA analyses, 
    then they should respond to such requests for details on how such 
    industry estimates are calculated. FRA's RIA provides sufficient detail 
    in its estimates and calculations so that readers can recreate the 
    final numbers. The industry should extend the same courtesy to FRA.
        Mr. Guins also notes that AAR estimates the cost to create an ICP 
    meeting FRA requirements for the Class I railroads at $54,684, compared 
    to FRA's figured cost of $14,500. Guins at 9. This is not correct. 
    FRA's estimate for the Class I railroads is actually $21,940. FRA 
    estimated $14,850 for the ICP, and $7,440 for the ``Procedure to 
    Process Complaints'' which is part of the ICP. RIA at 13 and Exhibit 4. 
    Thus, the estimates provided by Mr. Guins for the development of an ICP 
    are severely inflated.
        AAR and its member railroads claimed that they already had an ICP 
    for accident/incident reporting. Some claimed that it was not formal, 
    but instead consisted of a series of memoranda and directives held by 
    the railroad's reporting officer. Mr. Guins' response begs the 
    question: what is the quality of the railroad's ICP? Beyond the 
    requirements to develop the intimidation and harassment policy, the ICP 
    requires the railroads to have an effective communication system 
    between the various offices and the reporting officer; a system to 
    audit the process annually; and an organization chart. Mr. Guins notes 
    that one railroad would require a minimum of 217 hours to write an ICP. 
    Guins at 9. That is almost 5\1/2\ weeks of effort for that which the 
    railroads said they already had or would have to do in order to be in 
    compliance with the AAR's proposed performance standard. If the member 
    railroads already have a system in place to accomplish this, why would 
    it take more than a week to consolidate the information into one 
    document?
        Mr. Guins also addresses software programming costs associated with 
    the special study blocks (SSB). Guins at 9-10. Nearly all the reporting 
    forms were modified, and any railroad that uses a computer to store 
    accident/incident data, will have to modify its data bases, even 
    without the SSBs. FRA estimates that railroads need to add only two 
    additional fields for storing the SSBs in the rail equipment and 
    highway-rail accident/incident data bases. The annual storage costs for 
    these data elements are less than ten cents. To illustrate this cost, 
    FRA provides the following: BNSF had 1478 rail equipment and highway-
    rail accident/incident reports in 1995. This equates to 59,120 
    characters of storage for the SSBs. Current costs for a two-gigabyte 
    (2,000,000,000) disk drive is approximately $300. The cost of storing 
    the additional information for BNSF for calendar year 1995 would have 
    been $0.09.
        With any change in a computer data base there must be a 
    corresponding change in computer software. If the only change was the 
    addition of the SSBs, then some of the estimates for reprogramming the 
    system would be accurate. However, reprogramming the computer systems 
    would still be required because of various changes to other required 
    forms. Adding two fixed-length character fields that have no editing 
    requirements for the SSBs will barely affect the cost of the 
    reprogramming effort.
        Mr. Guins also finds fault with FRA's estimate of $15,000 per Class 
    I railroad for modifications to railroad software programming related 
    to the changes in the various FRA forms. Guins at 11. AAR's estimates 
    vary between $80,000 and $125,000. FRA believes that these estimates 
    for reprogramming are unfounded. For three of the four monthly forms, 
    the changes are minor. FRA acknowledges that one form, the ``Railroad 
    Injury and Illness Summary (Continuation Sheet)'' (Form FRA F 
    6180.55a), will require a major change. However, this is not a complex 
    form. As discussed earlier, FRA has developed a complete software 
    system for railroads to use at no charge to the railroad. This software 
    is far more extensive in features than the software railroads were 
    going to develop. Given current software technology, it is difficult to 
    imagine the estimated expense and time that large railroads are 
    alleging it would take to accomplish these changes. FRA's software will 
    include ``lookup'' tables (with ``wildcard'' searches); edits and 
    cross-field edits; multiform cross- references; ``help'' screens; a 
    built-in facsimile (FAX) transfer; a bulletin board for electronic 
    transfer; backup and recovery utilities; and a report generator. It 
    even includes the FRA Guide for Preparing Accidents/Incidents Reports, 
    by section, when the help key is activated.
        In general, AAR criticizes FRA cost-burden estimates associated 
    with the amendments to the final rule. In response, FRA points out that 
    it only estimates the costs for the amendments to the rule and not the 
    total burden for performing a function. This is noted in the RIA's 
    ``Assumptions'' section. RIA at 5. Thus, when the industry is already 
    performing a function, whether it is customary practice or an FRA 
    requirement, and there is a regulatory change that causes this impact 
    to go up or down, then FRA credits or debits only the change in the 
    burden.
        Mr. Guins further finds fault with FRA's data-entry costs savings 
    associated with electronic submission of reports where he states that 
    ``this rule is not needed to permit electronic reporting, at least not 
    to the extent proposed. It is my understanding that at least one 
    railroad is currently reporting accident data electronically to the 
    FRA.'' Guins at 12. The final rule, for the first time, permits the 
    option of submitting the reports and updates and amendments to the 
    reports by way of magnetic media, or by means of electronic submission 
    over telephone lines or other means, in lieu of submitting the required 
    information on paper. FRA's benefits for this option are based on cost 
    estimates for data entry that will be electronically submitted by those 
    railroads opting to submit data electronically for other reasons. In 
    other words, the benefit, i.e., the reduction in data entry costs, 
    assumes that any railroad that chooses to submit data electronically 
    will do so for its own reasons, and thus will make the decision on its 
    own without a government mandate. If FRA were to mandate that railroads 
    submit data via magnetic media, then almost all of the costs would be 
    added to the total costs, and all of the estimated benefits would be 
    added to the total benefits.
    
    [[Page 67488]]
    
        In addition, when FRA first estimated this savings, it did not even 
    take into account its own efforts to create and provide software for 
    the industry. As stated previously in this preamble, FRA has contracted 
    to develop a personal computer (PC) based software program for smaller 
    railroads to use for collecting and reporting accident and injury 
    statistics to FRA. This software, Accident/Incident Report Generator 
    (AIRG), will produce all the monthly reports and records required by 
    the final rule and will be ready for general use as of January 1, 1997. 
    FRA will provide this software free of charge to any railroad choosing 
    the magnetic media/electronic transfer option. Therefore, the savings 
    from reduced data entry for FRA will probably be larger and realized 
    sooner than estimated in the final rule's RIA. This cost is also FRA's 
    and not the Class I railroads'.
        Mr. Guins also criticizes FRA's estimated savings from the 
    reduction in FRA Operating Practices Inspector's time where he states 
    ``[t]he Analysis provides no insight as how this savings was calculated 
    nor what activities currently performed by the inspectors will no 
    longer be required.'' Guins at 13. The final rule requires ICPs, and 
    FRA inspectors have access to review the railroad's ICP. 49 CFR 225.35. 
    FRA's RIA notes that the savings associated with development of an ICP 
    are based on an estimated savings of about five percent of the time 
    inspectors now spend on Part 225 audits. RIA at 27 and Exhibit 11. 
    Access to a written ICP will provide FRA inspectors with a road map of 
    where to look for information and will save these inspectors 
    considerable time in deciphering the unwritten ways of how each 
    railroad functions in the accident reporting arena. FRA additionally 
    provided a detailed exhibit in the RIA detailing the calculation of 
    this benefit. RIA at Exhibit 11.
        FRA's experience with Part 225 audits and assessments more than 
    confirms the need for ICPs. It also confirms that FRA inspectors will 
    save time conducting future audits because of better and quicker access 
    to needed information.
    
    10. Necessity of the Rule; Other Miscellaneous Criticisms
    
        AAR asserts that the final rule is ``unlawful because there has 
    been no threshold finding--and none can be made--that a significant 
    risk justifies the rule.'' AAR Petition at 29. Further, AAR contends 
    that FRA has authority to issue only those rules that are ``necessary'' 
    to railroad safety, i.e., necessary to require a finding that a 
    significant risk to safe operations exists. Id. AAR claims that FRA has 
    not made any threshold finding that a significant risk exists. AAR 
    Petition at 30-31. AAR specifically cites the following FRA findings 
    and statements to support this conclusion:
    
        (1) The industry is already ``performing at high safety levels'' 
    (60 Fed. Reg. 59637) and the rule has ``minimal safety 
    implications'' (61 Fed. Reg. 23441).
        (2) The last four years (1992-95) have been the safest in 
    railroad history. [No citation is offered by AAR].
        (3) The 1989 GAO report to which FRA's rule responds is based on 
    accident data that is almost a decade old and ``most of the missing 
    accident reports [found by GAO] were `fender-benders' and * * * the 
    unreported injuries were minor.'' (59 Fed. Reg. 42881). The report 
    did not involve ``major occurrences, either in terms of injuries or 
    accidents.'' (Tr. January 30, 1995 at 77-78.)
        (4) Even though the GAO criticisms were not significant, FRA did 
    act to improve reporting [by issuing the proposed rule (59 FR 
    42881)]. * * *
        (5) FRA reported in 1994 that, based on its own review of all 
    major railroads and a sampling of smaller roads, railroads ``have 
    generally improved their internal control procedures and their 
    accident/incident reporting.'' (59 Fed. Reg. 42882).
        (6) The result is a reporting system already in place with an 
    ``accurate data base'' [Tr. January 30, 1995 at 78] that produces 
    reports that ``fairly reflect the true pattern of accident 
    causation'' [Statement of FRA Administrator before the Subcommittee 
    on Surface Transportation of the Senate Committee on Commerce, 
    Science, and Transportation, June 14, 1994 at 4].
        (7) GAO recommended that railroads have internal control 
    procedures for reporting. [I]n 1994, * * * FRA [stated that it] 
    found that all Class I's and 95 percent of other railroads utilize 
    an internal control plan (FRA 1994 Regulatory Impact Analysis at 
    10).
    
    AAR Petition at 31-32.
        Finally, AAR states that FRA never acknowledged the railroads' 
    recommendation that the final rule include language that an employee's 
    failure to provide employers sufficient access to medical information, 
    that is reasonably necessary for the railroads to make reportability 
    decisions, be made a defense to the assessment of a civil penalty for 
    failing to report the injury or illness. AAR Petition at 16-17.
    
    FRA Response
    
        FRA has discussed many of the foregoing criticisms earlier in this 
    preamble. FRA offers and reiterates that the 1989 GAO report 
    specifically found problems with the quality of railroads' accident/
    incident and injury/illness reports and with the fact that many 
    accidents and injuries were not being reported to FRA. FRA 
    investigations since that time have disclosed additional problems on 
    individual railroads, and recurrence of those problems should be 
    expected absent effective countermeasures. FRA needs the best available 
    safety data so that it can integrate accident and injury data to target 
    problem areas and locations. Moreover, railroads may utilize these same 
    safety data to better define where its resources, both monetary and 
    personnel, should be distributed.
        The limitation on FRA's power to issue rules is found in its 
    general rulemaking authority at 49 U.S.C. 20103. This section limits 
    FRA to issue rules that are ``necessary,'' considering relevant safety 
    information. Complete and accurate safety data are necessary for 
    effective safety regulations. That is so obvious, that it is puzzling 
    why anyone would question it. Executive Order 12866 provided that costs 
    and benefits of a rule shall be understood to include both quantifiable 
    costs and qualitative measures of costs that are difficult to quantify, 
    but nevertheless essential to consider. FRA's rule maximizes net 
    benefits and imposes the least burden on the industry.
        It has always been FRA's policy to forgo assessing a civil penalty 
    in instances where an employee fails to cooperate with railroad 
    management to provide requested medical documentation to assist the 
    railroad in rendering its decision on the reportability of the injury 
    or illness. This policy is also elucidated in the FRA Guide for 
    Preparing Accidents/Incidents Reports.
    
    11. Data Elements on FRA Accident/Incident Forms
    
        UP's petition highlighted two issues of particular concern. First, 
    UP sees no reason behind the ``narrative'' block of information, block 
    ``5a'' on the ``Railroad Injury and Illness Summary (Continuation 
    Sheet)'' (Form FRA F 6180.55a). UP claims that ``FRA will not be able 
    to perform any analysis using the narrative information, and neither 
    will the carriers. The requirement merely requires unnecessary manual 
    intervention in the reporting process and reams of additional paper.'' 
    UP Petition at 8.
        UP also sees no reason for the special study blocks (SSBs), two 
    entries on block ``49'' on the ``Rail Equipment Accident/ Incident 
    Report'' (Form FRA F 6180.54). UP fails ``to see how any meaningful 
    data can be reported on only two lines. Moreover, even if usable data 
    would be drawn from the block, it would not be of assistance for 
    current safety issues.'' Id. UP asserts that instead of the SSBs, FRA 
    should request special study data ``from individual railroads outside 
    of the formal accident/
    
    [[Page 67489]]
    
    incident reporting system, as FRA does today.'' Id.
        ASLRA's petition has attached to it Exhibit A, which contains a 
    short statement from Mr. Dean McAllister, Director of Safety and 
    Quality with Rail Management & Consulting Corporation. Most of Mr. 
    McAllister's issues have already been addressed in this preamble. 
    However, he recommends that the ``Highway-Rail Grade Crossing Accident/
    Incident Report'' (Form FRA F 6180.57) should provide space for a 
    sketch of the crossing. ``Unless a sketch area is provided, it will be 
    necessary for us to fill out two forms as this information is required 
    by ourselves and insurance underwriters.'' McAllister at 2.
    
    FRA Response
    
        In response to UP, the block for a narrative on the ``Rail 
    Equipment Accident/Incident Report'' (Form FRA F 6180.54) has been on 
    this form since 1975. The information in the ``narrative'' block is 
    keyed in and becomes part of FRA's data base. The narrative is printed, 
    and FRA conducts ``key word'' searches on the narrative to select 
    records for subsequent analysis. For example, a key word search could 
    be ``diesel fuel.'' It should also be noted that the new narrative 
    block on ``Railroad Injury and Illness Summary (Continuation Sheet)'' 
    (Form FRA F 6180.55a) and on the ``Highway-Rail Grade Crossing 
    Accident/Incident Report'' (Form FRA F 6180.57) are required to be 
    completed only when the codes on the forms do not adequately describe 
    the injury or accident, respectively. 61 FR 30948,30952 (June 18, 
    1996). The information on the narratives should not be summary, but 
    should contain specific detail on the accident or injury so as to 
    provide FRA and railroads using these fields better information.
        The SSBs on the ``Rail Equipment Accident/Incident Report'' (Form 
    FRA F 6180.54) and on the ``Highway-Rail Grade Crossing Accident/
    Incident Report'' (Form FRA F 6180.57) will provide FRA with valuable 
    information. To this end, FRA has redesigned its data bases such that 
    all the new information requests are found at the end or bottom of the 
    existing records, so as to minimize the reprogramming of existing 
    programs. Railroads that use computers already have to redesign their 
    data bases to accommodate the new data elements. Further, railroads may 
    want to collect injury and accident information utilizing the SSBs. The 
    40 characters of data also could be in a series of codes. This much is 
    certain: it is easier to include the SSBs now, when the data bases have 
    to be redesigned, than in the future, as a separate item.
        As to Mr. McAllister's request to include a sketch on the 
    ``Highway-Rail Grade Crossing Accident/Incident Report'' (Form FRA F 
    6180.57), he asserts that inclusion of a sketch would reduce the number 
    of forms he is obligated to complete for insurance underwriters. First, 
    this request was never made during the proposal stage of the 
    rulemaking, although this form and others were discussed in detail in 
    the NPRM and public hearings. Second, storing pictorial data on a 
    computer would be very expensive and would prohibit individuals without 
    advanced software from retrieving the information. Finally, expanding 
    the current form would be a major expense to railroads both in terms of 
    paperwork burden and in retraining of personnel, both of which Mr. 
    McAllister complained about in his statement.
    
    B. Technical Amendments
    
        Section 225.19(c) is amended to reflect that the reporting 
    threshold for calendar year 1991-1996 is $6,300 and for calendar year 
    1997 is $6,500. This revision was inadvertently omitted from the final 
    rule published November 22, 1996,and is necessary to provide a proper 
    cross-reference for the definition of ``Train accident'' in FRA's 
    alcohol and drug regulations (49 CFR 219.5). 61 FR 60632, 60634. In 
    addition, the definition of ``Reporting threshold'' in 49 CFR 219.5 is 
    revised to reflect that the primary source of the reporting threshold 
    is Sec. 225.19(e), rather than Sec. 225.19(c). 61 FR 60634 (Nov. 29, 
    1996).
        Further, paragraph (4) of the definition of ``Accident/ incident'' 
    is corrected by removing the words ``of a railroad employee'' from the 
    phrase ``Occupational illness of a railroad employee.'' 49 CFR 225.5. 
    This change eliminates an inadvertent inconsistency between that 
    paragraph and the definition of ``Occupational illness'' in the same 
    section, which includes ``any person who falls under the definition for 
    the classifications of Worker on Duty--Employee, Worker on Duty--
    Contractor, and Worker on Duty--Volunteer * * *.'' Finally, a pronoun 
    reference in Sec. 225.27(a) is corrected.
    
    C. Regulatory Impact
    
    Executive Order 12866 and DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures
    
        The amendments to the final rule have been evaluated in accordance 
    with existing regulatory policies and procedures and are considered to 
    be a nonsignificant regulatory action under DOT policies and procedures 
    (44 FR 11034; Feb. 26, 1979). The amendments to the final rule also 
    have been reviewed under Executive Order 12866 and are also considered 
    ``nonsignificant'' under that Order.
        The amendments to the final rule will decrease some of the impacts 
    from that in the final rules published on June 18, November 22, and 
    November 29, 1996. 61 FR 30940, 61 FR 59368, 61 FR 60632, respectively. 
    This is especially true for the paperwork related burdens on some small 
    entities. In addition, FRA's decision to produce its own personal 
    computer (PC)-based software and provide it free of charge to any 
    railroad will effectively increase the quantity of accident/incident 
    reporting that will be performed through electronic means. Thus, the 
    savings, that FRA expects to receive from a decrease in its dataentry 
    costs, are also expected to increase above the original estimates that 
    FRA provided in its Regulatory Impact Analysis for the final rule 
    published on June 18, 1996.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) 
    requires a review of rules to assess their impact on small entities, 
    unless the Secretary certifies that the rule will not have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
        The amendments to Part 225 in this document will effectively reduce 
    the impact on some small entities. Railroads that operate off the 
    general railroad system of transportation have been excepted from some 
    requirements. Thus, the economic impact on tourist or excursion 
    railroads that do not operate on the general system is reduced from 
    that expected from the final rules published on June 18, November 22, 
    and November 29, 1996. 61 FR 30940, 61 FR 59368, 61 FR 60632, 
    respectively. In addition, railroads that operate on the general system 
    that have 15 or fewer employees covered by the hours of service law, 
    have also been excepted from some requirements. This will reduce the 
    expected burden on a large number of small entities.
        FRA has concluded that the amendments to the final rule will 
    decrease the economic impact from that estimated in the final rules 
    published on June 18, November 22, and November 29, 1996. 61 FR 30940, 
    61 FR 59368, 61 FR 60632, respectively. Therefore, the amendments to 
    the final rule in this document will have a positive economic impact on 
    these small entities since the final rule, as amended in this document, 
    effectively excepts a large number of
    
    [[Page 67490]]
    
    small entities from some paperwork requirements.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The information collection requirements contained in the June 18, 
    1996 final rule, entitled Railroad Accident Reporting (61 FR 30940), 
    were approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-13) under control number 
    2130-0500 and are enforceable as approved. The approval will expire on 
    August 31, 1999. Four of the several rules to amend 49 CFR Part 225 
    published together in this issue of the Federal Register, contain 
    amendments to the approved information collections, while one adds a 
    new information collection requirement. These revisions are subject to 
    review by OMB under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
        Section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 
    U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)) requires Federal agencies to provide a 60-day 
    notice in the Federal Register concerning each collection of 
    information. To comply with this requirement, FRA is contemporaneously 
    publishing a notice in the Federal Register. A description of the 
    information collection requirements is shown in this notice along with 
    an estimate of the annual reporting and recordkeeping burden. Should 
    any respondents have comments on these information collection 
    requirements, they should respond to the addresses located in that 
    notice.
        FRA is not authorized to impose a penalty on persons for violating 
    information collection requirements which do not display a current OMB 
    control number, if required. FRA intends to obtain current OMB control 
    numbers for any new or revised information collection requirements 
    resulting from this rulemaking action. Once OMB approval is received, 
    the OMB control number will be announced by separate notice in the 
    Federal Register.
    
    Environmental Impact
    
        The amendments will not have any identifiable environmental impact.
    
    Federalism Implications
    
        The amendments to the final rule will not have a substantial effect 
    on the States, on the relationship between the national government and 
    the States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among 
    the various levels of government. Thus, in accordance with Executive 
    Order 12612, preparation of a Federalism Assessment is not warranted.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    49 CFR Part 219
    
        Alcohol abuse, Drug abuse, Railroad safety.
    
    49 CFR Part 225
    
        Railroad safety, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    The Final Rule
    
        In consideration of the foregoing, FRA amends Parts 219 and 225, 
    Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations to read as follows:
    
    PART 219--[AMENDED]
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 219 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 20103, 20107, 20111, 20112, 20113, 20140, 
    21301, 21304; and 49 CFR 1.49(m).
    
        2. In Sec. 219.5, the definition of Reporting threshold is amended 
    by removing ``Sec. 225.19(c)'' in the first sentence and by adding, in 
    its place, ``Sec. 225.19(e)''.
    
    PART 225--[AMENDED]
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 225 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 20103, 20107, 20901, 20902, 21302, 21311; 
    49 U.S.C. 103; 49 CFR 1.49 (c), (g), and (m).
    
        2. Section 225.3 is amended by redesignating the introductory text 
    as paragraph (a) introductory text and revising it to read as set forth 
    below: by redesignating paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) introductory text 
    as paragraphs (a) (1), (2), and (3), respectively; by redesignating 
    paragraphs (c) (1), (2), (3), and (4) as paragraphs (a)(3) (i), (ii), 
    (iii), nad (iv), respectively; and by adding new paragraphs (b), (c), 
    and (d) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 225.3  Applicability.
    
        (a) Except as provided in paragraphs (b), (c), and (d), this part 
    applies to all railroads except--
    * * * * *
        (b) The Internal Control Plan requirements in Sec. 225.33(a)(3) 
    through (10) do not apply to--
        (1) Railroads that operate or own track on the general railroad 
    system of transportation that have 15 or fewer employees covered by the 
    hours of service law (49 U.S.C. 21101-21107) and
        (2) Railroads that operate or own track exclusively off the general 
    system.
        (c) The recordkeeping requirements regarding accountable injuries 
    and illnesses and accountable rail equipment accidents/incidents found 
    in Sec. 225.25(a) through (g) do not apply to--
        (1) Railroads that operate or own track on the general railroad 
    system of transportation that have 15 or fewer employees covered by the 
    hours of service law (49 U.S.C. 21101-21107) and
        (2) Railroads that operate or own track exclusively off the general 
    system.
        (d) All requirements in this part to record or report an injury or 
    illness incurred by any classification of person that results from a 
    non-train incident do not apply to railroads that operate or own track 
    exclusively off the general railroad system of transportation, unless 
    the non-train incident involves in- service on-track equipment.
        3. Section 225.5 is amended by revising paragraph (4) in the 
    definition of Accident/incident, by revising the definition of 
    Establishment, and by adding one sentence to the end of the definition 
    of Qualified health care professional to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 225.5  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        Accident/incident means:
    * * * * *
        (4) Occupational illness.
    * * * * *
        Establishment means a single physical location where workers report 
    to work, where railroad business is conducted, or where services or 
    operations are performed. Examples are: a division office, general 
    office, repair or maintenance facility, major switching yard or 
    terminal. For employees who are engaged in dispersed operations, such 
    as signal or track maintenance workers, an ``establishment'' is 
    typically a location where work assignments are initially made and 
    oversight responsibility exists, e.g., the establishment where the 
    signal supervisor or roadmaster is located.
    * * * * *
        Qualified health care professional * * * In addition to licensed 
    physicians, the term ``qualified health care professional'' includes 
    members of other occupations associated with patient care and treatment 
    such as chiropractors, podiatrists, physician's assistants, 
    psychologists, and dentists.
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 225.19  [Amended]
    
        4. Section 225.19(c) is amended by adding after the phrase ``that 
    result in damages greater than the current reporting threshold'' the 
    following: ``(i.e., $6,300 for calendar years 1991 through 1996 and 
    $6,500 for calendar year 1997)''.
        5. The introductory text of Sec. 225.25(h) is amended by removing 
    the first and
    
    [[Page 67491]]
    
    second sentences and adding, in their place, the following:
    
    
    Sec. 225.25   Recordkeeping.
    
    * * * * *
        (h) Except as provided in paragraph(h)(15) of this section, a 
    listing of all injuries and occupational illnesses reported to FRA as 
    having occurred at an establishment shall be posted in a conspicuous 
    location at that establishment, within 30 days after the expiration of 
    the month during which the injuries and illnesses occurred, if the 
    establishment has been in continual operation for a minimum of 90 
    calendar days. If the establishment has not been in continual operation 
    for a minimum of 90 calendar days, the listing of all injuries and 
    occupational illnesses reported to FRA as having occurred at the 
    establishment shall be posted, within 30 days after the expiration of 
    the month during which the injuries and illnesses occurred, in a 
    conspicuous location at the next higher organizational level 
    establishment, such as one of the following: an operating division 
    headquarters; a major classification yard or terminal headquarters; a 
    major equipment maintenance or repair installation, e.g., a locomotive 
    or rail car repair or construction facility; a railroad signal and 
    maintenance-of-way division headquarters; or a central location where 
    track or signal maintenance employees are assigned as a headquarters or 
    receive work assignments. These examples include facilities that are 
    generally major facilities of a permanent nature where the railroad 
    generally posts or disseminates company informational notices and 
    policies, e.g., the policy statement in the internal control plan 
    required by Sec. 225.33 concerning harassment and intimidation. At a 
    minimum, ``establishment'' posting is required and shall include 
    locations where a railroad reasonably expects its employees to report 
    during a 12-month period and to have the opportunity to observe the 
    posted list containing any reportable injuries or illnesses they have 
    suffered during the applicable period. * * *
    * * * * *
        6. The introductory text of Sec. 225.25(h) is further amended by 
    removing the last sentence and adding, in its place, the following:
    
    
    Sec. 225.25   Recordkeeping.
    
    * * * * *
        (h) * * * The listing shall contain, at a minimum, the information 
    specified in paragraphs(h)(1) through (14) of this section.
    * * * * *
        7. In Sec. 225.25, paragraphs(h)(12) and (13) are revised and new 
    paragraph(h)(15) is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 225.25   Recordkeeping.
    
    * * * * *
        (h) * * *
        (12) Preparer's name, title, telephone number with area code, and 
    signature (or, in lieu of signing each establishment's list of 
    reportable injuries and illnesses, the railroad's preparer of this 
    monthly list may sign a cover sheet or memorandum which contains a list 
    of each railroad establishment for which a monthly list of reportable 
    injuries and illnesses has been prepared. This cover memorandum shall 
    be signed by the preparer and shall have attached to it a duplicate 
    copy of each establishment's list of monthly reportable injuries and 
    illnesses. The preparer of the monthly lists of reportable injuries and 
    illnesses shall mail or send by facsimile each establishment's list to 
    the establishment in the time frame prescribed in paragraph (h) of this 
    section.); and
        (13) Date the record was completed.
    * * * * *
        (15) The railroad is permitted not to post information on an injury 
    or illness only if the employee who incurred the injury or illness 
    makes a request in writing to the railroad's reporting officer that his 
    or her particular injury or illness not be posted.
    
    
    Sec. 225.27   [Amended]
    
        8. The second sentence of Sec. 225.27(a) is amended by removing the 
    words ``they relate'' and adding, in their place, ``it relates''.
    
    
    Sec. 225.33   [Amended]
    
        9. The third sentence of the introductory text of Sec. 225.33(a) is 
    amended by removing the word ``ten''.
    
        Issued in Washington, D.C., on December 16, 1996.
    Jolene M. Molitoris,
    Federal Railroad Administrator.
    [FR Doc. 96-32420 Filed 12-20-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-06-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
1/1/1997
Published:
12/23/1996
Department:
Federal Railroad Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule; response to remaining issues in petitions for reconsideration; and miscellaneous amendments.
Document Number:
96-32420
Dates:
January 1, 1997.
Pages:
67477-67491 (15 pages)
Docket Numbers:
FRA Docket No. RAR-4, Notice No. 16
RINs:
2130-AB13
PDF File:
96-32420.pdf
CFR: (6)
49 CFR 225.3
49 CFR 225.5
49 CFR 225.19
49 CFR 225.25
49 CFR 225.27
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