Tuesday, September
03, 2002 - The Hayward (CA) Daily Review
Engineers steam over
remote-control trains
SAN JOSE -- Like a
life-sized model railroad, Union Pacific has begun
shuttling
remote-control trains -- including those carrying hazardous waste
-- around its San
Jose and Oakland rail yards and the Caltrain main line.
The technology has
spurred a bitter fight between a union and U.P., both
locally and
nationally, over the safety of the system and the future of
hundreds of
engineers, whose jobs will become obsolete.
The Brotherhood of
Locomotive Engineers complains the remote-control
operators receive
scant training -- just over two weeks. In contrast,
engineers train for
a minimum of eight months and must receive federal
certification.
They say, in
essence, U.P. is replacing them with less-experienced,
less-skilled and
cheaper workers, which could spell disaster on the rails.
"Unless there's
a public outcry and this thing gets stopped, someone will
get hurt,"
said Bob Atchison, a
Caltrain engineer.
"It's
unsettling when someone with two weeks of training is running a
locomotive."
Atchison, an Amtrak
employee, objects to remote-control trains running on
the same tracks as
Caltrain. U.P. officials have done test runs between San
Jose and Lawrence on
the Caltrain tracks late at night.
U.P. officials say
the remote-control technology actually improves safety
and will save them
money in the highly competitive shipping market by
allowing the
railroad to shrink its work force.
It plans to transfer
nearly 30 Bay Area engineers to other sites or jobs as
the remote-control
technology gets up and running.
After deploying the
system at its rail yards in the Midwest earlier this
year, U.P.
began using remote control
at Oakland and San Jose in mid-August. A
half-dozen other
U.S.
railroads are also
installing the systems.
"If this were
something completely new, there would be sympathy for the
engineers'
position," said Mike Furtney, a Western region spokesman for
U.P.. "But
remote technology has been used for two decades and has made
rail yards in Canada
safer."
Remote-control
trains have been in operation in Canada since 1989. In yards
where the technology
was employed, accidents fell 44 percent over the last
four years,
according to the American Association of Railroads.
And Federal Railroad
Administration officials say the technology has
performed flawlessly
in the United States, where it has been in limited use
for years.
"We have no
reports of serious incidents regarding remote control," said
Warren Flatau, a
spokesman for the administration.
Union officials
dispute the administration's claim.
They tie seven
accidents in the United States to the use of remote-control
technology,
including one March crash in Indiana where an engineer leaped
to safety just
before a remote-control train struck his engine.
They said during the
accident the remote-control train did not respond to
its operator's
commands.
The FRA, which
investigates rail accidents, did not have a record of the
Indiana crash,
Flatau said after conducting a cursory search.
The remote-control
setup is familiar to hobbyists. An operator uses a
portable control
with a radio transmitter to send signals to the locomotive
about speed and
direction. A computer on board processes the commands.
The system has
built-in safeguards. If the control box tilts at more than a
45-degree angle (in
case an operator falls over) an alarm sounds and the
train automatically
stops.
Likewise, if the
transmitter loses contact with the engine, the train
immediately grinds
to a halt.
Furtney said U.P.
plans to use the remote control trains in its rail yards,
not intercity runs.
Caltrain officials
said they will wait until they see how remote control
performs before
rendering a final verdict.
"We will be
working with U.P. on how the technology will be implemented,"
said Jayme Maltbie,
a Caltrain spokeswoman. "But we always want to offer
the safest possible
service for our customers."