In 1994, Congress
passed legislation requiring regulations that permitted the
establishment of Quiet Zones at railroad grade crossings. It took over
10 years for the regulations to finally go into effect, and Richmond
acted quickly to establish Quiet Zones in areas where residents are
subjected to seemingly incessant horn honking, particularly at night.
The first Quiet Zone was established near Parchester Village earlier
this year, and other Quiet Zones are in process in south Richmond near
point Richmond and Marina Bay.
That’s the good news.
The bad news is that Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNSF) has simply
refused to recognize the legally established Quiet Zone in north
Richmond and is fighting tooth and nail the Quiet Zones in south
Richmond. To add insult to injury, the Federal Railroad Administration
(FRA), which is the only agency with enforcement power, appears to have
abdicated its responsibility by refusing to move expeditiously to do its
job of implementing and enforcing Quiet Zones.
After months of trying
to work with the FRA and BNSF cooperatively, I have become to believe
that this is simply not going to work, as the two entities appear to
have collaborated to totally sabotage the intent of Congress.
I believe the only way
to get any relief on this matter is to go back to Congress to request an
investigation into the matter and to find a way to force the FRA to
comply with its own regulations.
Attached to this email
is a PDF copy my letter to Senators Boxer and Feinstein and Congressman
Miller. There is also a copy on my letter as an MSWRD file, and I urge
you to cut and paste it into your own letter to send to these three
legislators.
Although not as
effective as a letter, you can also press “reply to all” and send a copy
of this email along with any of your own comments you wish to add to the
offices of Senators Boxer and Feinstein and Congressman Miller.
The text of my letter
is also copied below:
May 9, 2006
Senator Barbara Boxer
SH 112
Washington, DC 20510-0505
Senator Diane Feinstein
SH 331
Washington, DC 20510-0504
The Honorable George Miller
2205 RHOB
Washington, DC 20515-0507
Dear Legislators:
In light of discouraging encounters with
the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), and in light of the written
intention of Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railroad (BNSF) to ignore
Federal law, we respectfully solicit your able assistance with the FRA
in order to ensure that the quiet zone statutes, heretofore promulgated
in 1994, are fully supported by the FRA, that they are consistently and
promptly enforced, and that violations are promptly punished to the full
extent allowed by law. We require your support on several issues that
will be described in detail, below.
BACKGROUND
In the years leading up to 1972, the
United States had become concerned with the widespread harm being
generated in our ever increasingly industrialized and noisy society and
accordingly, Congress enacted the
Federal Noise Control Act.
42 USC §§4901 et. seq.
Correspondingly, California declared noise to be a special nuisance and
enacted The California Noise Control Act, Business & Professions Code
§§46000 et. Seq.
Railroad train horns were considered a
special problem and in November of 1994, Congress enacted Public Law
103-440 and it was codified as 49 USC §20153
et. seq., more commonly
known as the Train Horn Rule. This statute directed the Secretary of
Transportation and the FRA to issue regulations that would require the
sounding of locomotive horns at all public highway-rail grade crossings
and to provide exceptions under specific conditions and circumstances;
this statute permitted the creation of so called quiet zones in which
train horns would not be sounded except in case of emergency. These
regulations were to be completed and issued within 48 months. However,
it was not until December, 2003, that the Interim Final Rule was
published, and after several more delays, in April, 2004, the Final Rule
was published in the Federal Register as 49 CFR §§222
et seq. After the mandatory
365-day waiting period, the Final Rule went into effect in June 2005.
(Train Horn History and Timeline, Appendix 1) (The “Train Horn” Rule
Quick Facts, Appendix 2)
Beginning as early as 2001, several
citizens in Richmond, California, began lobbying the City Council to do
something about the noise of train horns which were present throughout
the city and which were thought to be a significant public health
hazard. The Department of Transportation (DOT) issued a document in
2002 that summarized the many adverse effects of transportation noise;
thus validating many of our concerns and confirming that the adverse
health effects of noise were known in the DOT. (General Health Effects
of Transportation Noise, Appendix 3)
On April 13, 2004, the Richmond City
Council passed a resolution, which, in part, directed the City Attorney
to create a quiet zone in
Richmond in the areas of Point Richmond,
Atchison Village, Marina Bay, Santa Fe, the Iron Triangle, Parchester
Village, Country Club Estates, Richmore Village, and other neighborhoods
adversely affected by train horns, under the provisions of
the new Final Train Horn Rule (49 CFR §§222
et seq.)
(Resolution of the City Council 62-04, Appendix 4).
At around this time, a number of concerned
citizens formed a private action group called
Households Opposed To Railroad Noise
(H.O.R.N.). Since then, a few members from H.O.R.N. have worked closely
with Wayne Nishioka (Assistant City Attorney) and Rich Davidson (City
Engineer) as a Committee to establish several quiet zones in three
different parts of the city. For a number of reasons, the Committee
decided to establish quiet zones in North Richmond first, and thereafter
to establish additional quiet zones in the west and southern parts of
the city.
PROBLEMS
North
Quiet Zone
Following some unavoidable delays, since
everyone was unsure of the new procedures, a quiet zone, encompassing
two grade crossings, was established in North Richmond according to the
provisions of 49 CFR §§222 et seq.
Thereafter, BNSF sent a letter to the FRA indicating it did not intend
to abide by the quiet zone (BNSF Letter, Appendix 5). The FRA’s
response indicated that compliance was not voluntary and that
noncompliance could result in financial civil penalties. (FRA Letter,
Appendix 6)
Before the quiet zone was implemented,
several of the citizens who lived in the Northern area of Richmond began
keeping detailed records of the dates, times, and the number of times
the horns were sounded in the various locations that were to become part
of the quiet zone. This established a baseline pattern of horn use.
Since the quiet zone was lawfully established, more than two months ago,
citizens have continued to keep detailed records that have been
forwarded to the City Attorney’s Office. There is essentially no change
in the pattern of horn blowing when one compares the records pre and
post-establishment of quiet zone. This information has been sent to the
FRA, which, thus far, has not taken any steps to enforce its own rules.
(FRA Letter, Appendix 7)
Several conversations between members of
the FRA and the Assistant City Attorney have suggested that a number of
cumbersome, bureaucratic, and tortuous steps must be followed before the
FRA would be willing to enforce its own rules. The FRA has accepted
that citizens were monitoring the quiet zone for violations; however, in
our view, monitoring should be the responsibility of the FRA. It is
curious that, on the one hand the FRA has accepted the fact that
citizens monitor the railroad for compliance, while on the other the FRA
has now indicated that such monitoring would be insufficient proof of a
violation. It seems that the FRA staff is either contradicting itself
or is confused; whatever the case, the result is frustrating to
citizens. Thus, the will of the people and the will of the Congress are
again being held hostage by inactivity of a Federal agency. One must
ask why, with all the documentation that has been presented, are the
mandatory financial penalties not being assessed against BNSF? Why
cannot the FRA send its own observers to the site? The FRA could
confirm the validity of the reported violations within a few days.
We were subsequently further apprised that
the FRA assembles all violations for the entire Western region and meets
with the railroads about twice a year to negotiate various fines with
the railroads. In the initial phases of enforcement of this new rule,
such meetings do not seem to be the most meaningful or effective way to
assess fines for quiet zone violations. At the very least, such informal
summary disposition of complaints has sent an unmistakable message to
the railroads that they can pretty much do as they please. Without the
statutory penalties as prescribed by Congress, the railroads have little
or no incentive to obey the law and observe the quiet zones.
Despite their importance in the history of
our country, despite their wealth, despite their powerful lobbies, and
despite their very deep pockets, the railroads are not above the law.
The fact that they would go on record as having decided, arbitrarily, to
ignore a clearly defined Federal law relating to quiet zones makes one
wonder what other Federal laws might they have decided to disobey or
ignore? It does not give us confidence in their honesty or credibility.
South
Quiet Zones
Once the Train Horn Rule went into effect,
we began the process of establishing quiet zones in other parts of
Richmond. Part of the process involves the use of a so-called Quiet
Zone Calculator that resides on the FRA web site. It calls for train
counts, vehicle counts, and other numerical data that had to be
collected from several sources. It also calls for the DOT Crossing
Number, a unique identifier for each grade crossing in the United
States. Some of these numbers either were not in the system or were
incorrect. Without them, one cannot do the calculations required to
determine whether or not the crossing can be qualified as a quiet zone.
It is curious that the FRA has not updated the Crossing Numbers in the
12 years that it has worked on the Train Horn Rule. The FRA certainly
knew these numbers would be required to create a quiet zone. We have
been repeatedly assured that this information was being added to the
system as quickly as possible, however, more than 5 months have passed
and we are told that the update is still ostensibly being processed. In
the meantime, the train horns continue to blow their peace-shattering
horns, disrupting sleep, raising blood pressure, and producing all the
other unwanted adverse effects on the health of Richmond’s Citizens that
are expressly prohibited by both State and Federal statutes.
Requests
Therefore, H.O.R.N. and the citizens of
Richmond, California, call upon the Senators, Representatives, and other
administrators to investigate these irregularities, delays, bureaucratic
obfuscations, and other dilatory tactics, and what appears to be willful
disobedience of a Federal law, to encourage by all appropriate means an
appropriate, expeditious, equitable, vigorous, and meaningful action
from the FRA.
The citizens of Richmond, California,
expect the FRA to exert its authority and expertise, together with the
resolve of the Congress to ensure compliance with the Train Horn Rules.
Obviously, there is a clear and well-documented pattern of violations by
BNSF. As concerned, law abiding, and taxpaying Americans, we would like
to see the railroads sanctioned, in accordance with the penalties
outlined in the Final Rule. The citizens of Richmond have waited 12
years after the statute (49 USC §20153
et. Seq) was enacted--any
further delay is both unconscionable and a mockery of American justice.
Sincerely,
Tom Butt
source for this page:
http://www.tombutt.com/forum/2006/060521.htm