Proposed Rule2023-10773

Certification of Signal Employees

Primary source

Metadata and text below are from the Federal Register, a public-domain U.S. government work. Always verify the official published version before relying on it for any legal matter.

Published
May 31, 2023

Issuing agencies

Transportation DepartmentFederal Railroad Administration

Abstract

FRA proposes regulations for the certification of signal employees, pursuant to the authority granted in section 402 of the Rail Safety Improvement Act of 2008.

Full Text

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<title>Federal Register, Volume 88 Issue 104 (Wednesday, May 31, 2023)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 104 (Wednesday, May 31, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 35632-35691]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2023-10773]



[[Page 35631]]

Vol. 88

Wednesday,

No. 104

May 31, 2023

Part V





Department of Transportation





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Federal Railroad Administration





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49 CFR Part 246





Certification of Signal Employees; Proposed Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 88 , No. 104 / Wednesday, May 31, 2023 / 
Proposed Rules

[[Page 35632]]


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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

Federal Railroad Administration

49 CFR Part 246

[Docket No. FRA-2022-0020, Notice No. 1]
RIN 2130-AC92


Certification of Signal Employees

AGENCY: Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), Department of 
Transportation (DOT).

ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM).

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SUMMARY: FRA proposes regulations for the certification of signal 
employees, pursuant to the authority granted in section 402 of the Rail 
Safety Improvement Act of 2008.

DATES: Comments on the proposed rule must be received by July 31, 2023. 
FRA will consider comments received after that date to the extent 
practicable.

ADDRESSES: Comments: Comments related to Docket No. FRA-2022-0020 may 
be submitted by going to <a href="https://www.regulations.gov">https://www.regulations.gov</a> and following the 
online instructions for submitting comments.
    Instructions: All submissions must include the agency name, docket 
number (FRA-2022-0020), and Regulatory Identification Number (RIN) for 
this rulemaking (2130-AC92). All comments received will be posted 
without change to <a href="https://www.regulations.gov">https://www.regulations.gov</a>; this includes any 
personal information. Please see the Privacy Act heading in the 
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this document for Privacy Act 
information related to any submitted comments or materials.
    Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or 
comments received, go to <a href="https://www.regulations.gov">https://www.regulations.gov</a> and follow the 
online instructions for accessing the docket.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gabe Neal, Staff Director, Signal, 
Train Control, and Crossings Division, U.S. Department of 
Transportation, Federal Railroad Administration, telephone: (816) 516-
7168, email: <a href="/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#d097b1b2b5fe9eb5b1bc90b4bfa4feb7bfa6"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="f9be989b9cd7b79c9895b99d968dd79e968f">[email&#160;protected]</span></a>; or Kathryn Gresham, Attorney Adviser, 
U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Railroad Administration, 
telephone: (202) 577-7142, email: <a href="/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#3f545e4b574d465111584d5a4c575e527f5b504b11585049"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="9ff4feebf7ede6f1b1f8edfaecf7fef2dffbf0ebb1f8f0e9">[email&#160;protected]</span></a>.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Abbreviations and Terms Used in This Document

AAR--Association of American Railroads
ASLRRA--American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association
CE--Categorical Exclusion
CFR--Code of Federal Regulations
DAC--Drug and alcohol counselor
DOT--United States Department of Transportation
EA--Environmental Assessment
EIS--Environmental Impact Statement
FRA--Federal Railroad Administration
IRFA--Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
NEPA--National Environmental Policy Act
NPRM--Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
OMB--United States Office of Management and Budget
PRA--The Paperwork Reduction Act
PTC--Positive Train Control
PV--Present Value
RIN--Regulatory Identification Number
RSAC--Railroad Safety Advisory Committee
RSIA--Rail Safety Improvement Act of 2008
SAP--Substance Abuse Professional
STB--The Surface Transportation Board
U.S.C.--United States Code

Table of Contents for Supplementary Information

I. Executive Summary
II. Legal Authority
III. Background
IV. Section-by-Section Analysis
V. Regulatory Impact and Notices
    A. Executive Order 12866
    B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive Order 13272
    C. Paperwork Reduction Act
    D. Federalism Implications
    E. International Trade Impact Assessment
    F. Environmental Impact
    G. Executive Order 12898 (Environmental Justice)
    H. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
    I. Energy Impact
    J. Privacy Act Statement
    K. Executive Order 13175 (Tribal Consultation)

I. Executive Summary

Purpose of the Regulatory Action

    FRA proposes to require railroads to develop programs for the 
certification of signal employees and to submit those written 
certification programs to FRA for approval prior to implementation. 
Signal employees are responsible for the installation, testing, 
troubleshooting, repair, and maintenance of railroad signal systems 
which, for purposes of this proposed rule, include highway-rail and 
pathway grade crossing warning systems, unusual contingency detection 
devices, broken rail detection systems, power-assisted switches, and 
switch point indicators.
    Under this proposed rule, railroads would be required to verify and 
document that each signal employee \1\ has the requisite knowledge, 
skills, safety record, and abilities to safely perform all of the 
safety-related signal employee duties mandated by Federal laws and 
regulations, prior to certification. In addition, railroads would be 
required to have formal processes for revoking certification (either 
temporarily or permanently) for signal employees who violate specified 
minimum requirements.
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    \1\ Although ``signal employees'' are also referred to as 
``signalmen,'' those terms are synonymous.
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    FRA is proposing this regulation in response to the Rail Safety 
Improvement Act of 2008 (RSIA), which required the Secretary of 
Transportation (Secretary) to submit a report to Congress addressing 
whether certification of ``certain crafts or classes'' of railroad 
employees or contractors, including signal employees, was necessary to 
``reduce the number and rate of accidents and incidents or to improve 
railroad safety.'' If the Secretary determined it was necessary to 
require the certification of certain crafts or classes to improve 
railroad safety, section 402 of the RSIA authorized the Secretary to 
prescribe such regulations.
    The Secretary submitted a report to Congress on November 4, 
2015,\2\ stating that, based on FRA's preliminary research, signal 
employees were one of the most viable candidate railroad crafts for 
certification, particularly with the introduction of Positive Train 
Control (PTC) technology. Given the safety critical role of signal 
employees in facilitating safe railroad operations, FRA determined that 
railroad safety is expected to be improved if signal employees were 
required to satisfy certain standards and be certified by each railroad 
whose signal systems they install, troubleshoot, repair, test, or 
maintain.
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    \2\ A copy of this November 4, 2015 Report to Congress has been 
posted in the rulemaking docket at: <a href="https://www.regulations.gov/document/FRA-2022-0020-0001">https://www.regulations.gov/document/FRA-2022-0020-0001</a>.
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Summary of Major Provisions

    This proposed rule would require railroads to develop written 
programs for certifying individuals who work as signal employees on 
their territories and to submit those written certification programs to 
FRA for approval prior to implementation. FRA would issue a letter to 
the railroad when it approves a certification program that explains the 
basis for approval and a program would not be considered approved until 
the approval letter is issued.
    FRA is proposing to require Class I railroads (including the 
National Railroad Passenger Corporation), and railroads providing 
commuter service, to submit their written certification programs to FRA 
no later than eight (8) months after the final rule effective date. 
Class II and Class III railroads would be

[[Page 35633]]

required to submit their written certification plans sixteen (16) 
months after the final rule effective date. New railroads that begin 
operation after the final rule effective date would be required to 
submit their written certification programs to FRA and obtain FRA 
approval before installing their signal systems and commencing 
operations. In addition, railroads seeking to materially modify their 
FRA-approved certification programs would be required to obtain FRA 
approval prior to modifying their programs.
    Railroads would be required to evaluate certification candidates in 
multiple areas, including prior safety conduct as a motor vehicle 
operator, prior safety conduct with other railroads, substance abuse 
disorders and alcohol/drug rules compliance, and vision and hearing 
acuity.
    The proposed rule also contains minimum requirements for the 
training provided to candidates for signal employee certification. 
These proposed requirements are intended to ensure signal employees 
receive sufficient training before they are certified to work on signal 
systems. These proposed requirements are also intended to ensure that 
certified signal employees periodically receive recurring training on 
railroad signal system standards, test procedures, operating rules and 
procedures, and orders governing the installation, operation, testing, 
troubleshooting, repair, and maintenance of railroad signal systems, as 
well as comprehensive training on new signal systems and technology 
before they are introduced on the railroads where they work.
    With the exception of individuals designated as certified signal 
employees prior to FRA approval of the railroad's signal employee 
certification program, the proposed rule would prohibit railroads from 
certifying signal employees for intervals longer than three (3) years. 
This three-year limitation, which would be consistent with the 36-month 
maximum period for certifying locomotive engineers in 49 CFR 240.217(c) 
and the 36-month maximum period for certifying conductors in 49 CFR 
240.201(c), would allow for periodic re-evaluation of certified signal 
employees to verify their continued compliance with FRA's minimum 
safety requirements.
    Subpart D of this proposed rule addresses the process and criteria 
for denying and revoking certification. Proposed Sec.  246.301 
describes the process a railroad would be required to undergo before it 
denies an individual certification or recertification. This process 
would include providing the certification candidate with the 
information that forms the basis for the denial decision and giving the 
candidate an opportunity to rebut such evidence. When a railroad denies 
an individual certification or recertification, it must issue its 
decision in writing and the decision must comply with certain 
requirements provided in the proposed rule.
    A railroad could only revoke a signal employee's certification if 
one of eleven events occurs. Generally, for the first revocable event 
that is not related to a signal employee's use of drugs or alcohol, the 
individual's certification would be revoked for 30 days. If an 
individual accumulates more of these violations in a given time period, 
the revocation period (period of ineligibility) would become 
increasingly longer.
    If a railroad acquires reliable information that a certified signal 
employee has violated an operating rule or practice requiring 
decertification under the proposed rule, it must suspend the signal 
employee's certification immediately while it determines whether 
certification revocation is warranted. In such circumstances, signal 
employees would be entitled to a hearing. Similar to a railroad's 
decision to deny an individual certification, a railroad's decision to 
revoke a signal employee's certification would be required to comply 
with certain requirements. Finally, if an intervening cause prevented 
or materially impaired a signal employee's ability to comply with a 
railroad operating rule or practice, the railroad would not revoke the 
signal employee's certification.
    Subpart E of this proposed rule discusses the dispute resolution 
process for individuals who wish to challenge a railroad's decision to 
deny certification, deny recertification, or revoke certification. This 
dispute resolution process mirrors the process used for locomotive 
engineers and conductors under 49 CFR parts 240 and 242, respectively.
    Finally, the proposed rule contains two appendices. Appendix A 
discusses the procedures that a person seeking certification or 
recertification should follow to furnish a railroad with information 
concerning their motor vehicle driving record. Appendix B provides 
guidance on the procedures railroads should employ in administering the 
vision and hearing requirements under Sec. Sec.  246.117 and 246.118.

Costs and Benefits

    FRA analyzed the economic impact of this proposed rule. FRA 
estimated the costs estimated to be incurred by railroads and the 
Government. FRA also estimated the benefits of fewer signal employee-
caused accidents.
    FRA is proposing regulations establishing a formal certification 
process for railroad signal employees. As part of that process, 
railroads would be required to develop a program meeting specific 
requirements for training current and prospective signal employees, 
documenting and verifying that the holder of the certificate has 
achieved certain training and proficiency, and creating a comprehensive 
record, including of safety compliance infractions, that other 
railroads can review when considering individuals for certification.
    This proposed regulation would ensure that signal employees are 
properly trained, are qualified to perform their duties, and meet 
Federal safety standards. Additionally, this proposed regulation is 
expected to improve railroad safety by reducing the rate of accidents/
incidents.
    FRA estimates the 10-year costs of the proposed rule to be $8.3 
million, discounted at 7 percent. The estimated annualized costs would 
be $1.2 million discounted at 7 percent. The following table shows the 
total costs of this proposed rule, over the 10-year analysis period.

                                         Total 10-Year Discounted Costs
                                               [2020 dollars] \3\
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                                                   Present value   Present value   Annualized 7%   Annualized 3%
                    Category                          7% ($)          3% ($)            ($)             ($)
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Development of Certification Program............       1,140,385       1,168,920         162,365         137,033
Certification Eligibility Requirements..........          87,507         100,380          12,459          11,768
Recertification Eligibility Requirements........         203,790         259,653          29,015          30,439

[[Page 35634]]

 
Training........................................       2,079,835       2,379,911         296,122         278,998
Knowledge Testing...............................         746,865         898,884         106,337         105,377
Vision and Hearing..............................       1,097,523       1,320,891         156,263         154,849
Monitoring Operational Performance..............         832,102         994,414         118,473         116,576
Railroad Oversight Responsibilities.............         267,530         326,714          38,090          38,301
Certification Card..............................         103,175         124,175          14,690          14,557
Petitions and Hearings..........................          42,451          50,731           6,044           5,947
Government Administrative Cost..................       1,653,360       1,914,063         235,401         224,387
                                                 ---------------------------------------------------------------
    Total.......................................       8,277,337       9,566,001       1,178,507       1,121,427
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    This rule would reduce the likelihood of an accident occurring due 
to signal employee error. FRA has analyzed accidents over the past 10 
years to categorize those where signal employee training and 
certification would have impacted the accident. FRA then estimated 
benefits based on that analysis.
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    \3\ Numbers in this table and subsequent tables may not sum due 
to rounding.
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    The following table shows the estimated 10-year quantifiable 
benefits of the proposed rule. The total 10-year estimated benefits 
would be $2.9 million (PV, 7%) and annualized benefits would be $0.4 
million (PV, 7%).

                                        Total 10-Year Discounted Benefits
                                                 [2020 dollars]
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                                                   Present value   Present value   Annualized 7%   Annualized 3%
                    Category                          7% ($)          3% ($)            ($)             ($)
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Grade Crossing Accidents........................       1,766,028       2,064,676         251,443         242,043
Train Accidents/Incidents.......................         989,123       1,156,391         140,829         135,564
Business Benefits from Fewer Activation Failures         159,526         186,503          22,713          21,864
                                                 ---------------------------------------------------------------
    Total.......................................       2,914,678       3,407,570         414,985         399,471
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    This proposed rule would also provide unquantifiable benefits. FRA 
has quantified the monetary impact from accidents which is reported on 
FRA accident forms. However, some accident costs are not required to be 
reported on FRA accident forms (e.g., environmental impact). That 
impact may account for additional benefits not quantified in this 
analysis. If these costs were realized, accidents affected by this 
proposed rulemaking could have much greater economic impact than 
estimated quantitative benefit estimates.
    There is also a chance of a high impact event due to signal 
employee error. This could involve fatalities, injuries, and 
environmental damage, as well as impact railroads, communities, and the 
public. FRA has not estimated the likelihood of such an accident, but 
this proposed rule is expected to reduce the risk of an accident of 
that magnitude.

II. Legal Authority

    Pursuant to the Rail Safety Improvement Act of 2008, Public Law 
110-432, sec. 402, 122 Stat. 4884 (Oct. 16, 2008) (hereinafter 
``RSIA''), the Secretary of Transportation (Secretary) was required to 
submit a report to Congress addressing whether certification of certain 
crafts or classes of employees, including signal repair and maintenance 
employees, was necessary to reduce the number and rate of accidents and 
incidents or to improve railroad safety.\4\ If the Secretary determined 
it was necessary to require the certification of certain crafts or 
classes of employees to reduce the number and rate of accidents and 
incidents or to improve railroad safety, section 402 of the RSIA stated 
the Secretary may prescribe such regulations. The Secretary delegated 
this authority to the Federal Railroad Administrator. 49 CFR 1.89. In 
response to the RSIA, the Secretary submitted a report to Congress on 
November 4, 2015, stating that, based on FRA's preliminary research, 
dispatchers and signal employees were potentially the most viable 
candidate railroad crafts for certification. Based on the analysis in 
Section III below, the Federal Railroad Administrator has determined 
that it is necessary to require the certification of signal employees 
to improve railroad safety.
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    \4\ See also 49 U.S.C. 20103 (providing FRA's general authority 
to ``prescribe regulations and issue orders for every area of 
railroad safety'').
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III. Background

1. Roles and Responsibilities of Signal Employees

    Railroad signal employees play an integral role in ensuring the 
safety of railroad operations, as well as the safety of highway 
motorists. They are responsible for the installation, testing, 
troubleshooting, repair, and maintenance of signal systems, as defined 
in proposed 49 CFR 246.7, which railroads utilize to direct train 
movements. Signal employees must also use specialized test and 
maintenance equipment to complete safety critical

[[Page 35635]]

tasks on mechanical, electrical, and electronic signal equipment.
    The work performed by signal employees can generally be divided 
into two categories: construction and maintenance. On larger railroads, 
some signal employees work in groups (often referred to as ``gangs'') 
under the direct supervision and oversight of an experienced signal 
employee to construct, install, and upgrade signal systems and signal 
system subsystems and components. Some signal employees also work in 
``gangs'' under the direct supervision and oversight of an experienced 
signal employee to make repairs to the signal system, while other 
signal employees (often referred to as ``signal maintainers'') are 
tasked with inspecting and testing signal systems and performing minor 
and emergency repairs as needed.
    The implementation of complex PTC system technology requires 
increasingly sophisticated work by signal employees. PTC systems 
provide another layer of safety to existing signal systems, many of 
which have been place for many decades. In addition, PTC systems are 
interoperable with each other, as well as with existing signal systems. 
Therefore, signal employees need to understand the relationship between 
signal and PTC systems and the communication medium and how these 
systems operate, function, and react to a myriad of circumstances. 
Signal systems and PTC systems are also continually upgraded, so the 
development and implementation of these systems need to be properly 
understood and monitored by both FRA and railroad signal employees.

2. FRA History of Certification

    On January 4, 1987, an Amtrak train collided with a Conrail train 
in Chase, Maryland, resulting in 16 deaths and 174 injuries. At the 
time, it was the deadliest train accident in Amtrak's history. The 
subsequent investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board 
concluded that the probable cause of the accident was the impairment of 
the Conrail engineer who was under the influence of marijuana at the 
time of the collision.\5\
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    \5\ Railroad Accident Report: Rear-end Collision of Amtrak 
Passenger Train 94, the Colonial and Consolidated Rail Corporation 
Freight Train ENS-121, on the Northeast Corridor, Chase, Maryland, 
January 4, 1987 (144 Nat'l Transp. Safety Bd. 1988).
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    Following this accident, Congress passed the Rail Safety 
Improvement Act of 1988, Public Law 100-342, 4, 102 Stat. 624, 625 
(1988), which instructed the Secretary of Transportation (Secretary) to 
``issue such rules, regulations, orders, and standards as may be 
necessary to establish a program requiring the licensing or 
certification of any operator of a locomotive, including any locomotive 
engineer.'' On June 19, 1991, FRA published a final rule establishing a 
certification system for locomotive engineers and requiring railroads 
to ensure that they only certify individuals who met minimum 
qualification standards.\6\ In order to minimize governmental 
intervention, FRA opted for a certification system where the railroads 
issue the certificates as opposed to a government-run licensing system. 
This final rule, published in 49 CFR part 240 (part 240), created 
certification requirements for engineers that addressed various areas 
including vision and hearing acuity; training, knowledge, and 
performance skills; and prior safety conduct.
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    \6\ 56 FR. 28227 (June 19, 1991).
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    Seventeen years later, Congress passed the RSIA, which mandated the 
creation of a certification system for conductors. On November 9, 2011, 
FRA published a final rule requiring railroads to have certification 
programs for conductors and to ensure that all certified conductors 
satisfy minimum Federal safety standards.\7\ The conductor 
certification rule, published in 49 CFR part 242 (part 242), was 
largely modeled after part 240 with some deviations based on the 
different job classifications. Part 242 also included some 
organizational improvements which made the regulation more streamlined 
than part 240.
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    \7\ 76 FR 69801 (Nov. 9, 2011).
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3. Statutory Background for Signal Employee Certification

    In addition to requiring certification for conductors, the RSIA 
required the Secretary to submit a report to Congress addressing 
whether certain other railroad crafts or classes of employees would 
benefit from certification. Specifically, section 402(b) of the RSIA 
requires that the Secretary issue a report to Congress ``about whether 
the certification of certain crafts or classes of railroad carrier or 
railroad carrier contractor or subcontractor employees is necessary to 
reduce the number and rate of accidents and incidents or to improve 
railroad safety.'' As part of that report, section 402(c) specifically 
requires the Secretary to consider ``signal repair and maintenance 
employees'' as one of the railroad crafts for certification.
    After identifying a railroad craft or class for which certification 
is necessary, pursuant to the report to Congress discussed above, 
section 402(d) authorizes the Secretary to ``prescribe regulations 
requiring the certification of certain crafts or classes of employees 
that the Secretary determines . . . are necessary to reduce the number 
and rate of accidents and incidents or to improve railroad safety.''

4. Report to Congress

    On November 4, 2015, the Secretary submitted the report to Congress 
required under the RSIA. The report stated that, based on FRA's 
preliminary research, dispatchers and signal repair employees were the 
most viable candidates for certification, particularly with the 
introduction of Positive Train Control (PTC) technology. In reaching 
this determination with respect to signal employees, the Secretary 
cited a variety of factors.
    The report noted that signal employees perform safety-sensitive 
work as shown by signal employees being covered under the Hours of 
Service laws. Signal employees are also subject to regular and pre-
employment random drug and alcohol testing. In 2012 and 2013, signal 
employees had a positive drug testing rate that was considerably higher 
than that of their train and engine service counterparts. Annual drug 
and alcohol testing data submitted to FRA in 2012 and 2013 showed a 
0.75-percent random positive drug rate for signal employees, as 
compared to a 0.30-percent random positive drug rate for train and 
engine service employees.\8\
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    \8\ Testing results submitted to FRA in 2020 and 2021 showed a 
0.81-percent random violation (drug and alcohol positives and 
refusals) rate and a 0.79-percent pre-employment violation rate for 
signal employees, as compared to a 0.49-percent random positive drug 
testing rate and a 0.55-percent pre-employment positive drug testing 
rate for train and engine service employees.
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    The report also noted that the greatest proportion of contractors 
covered under the Hours of Service laws are signal employees, who tend 
to switch employers more frequently than other crafts of employees. In 
addition, the report noted that frequent job-hopping by signal 
employees makes it even more important to track their violations and 
any disqualifications that may result. However, 49 CFR parts 240 and 
242 require a five-year alcohol and drug background check, as well as 
disqualification of employees for specified alcohol and drug test 
violations and for refusing such testing. If such requirements are 
included in a signal employee certification program, they could help 
prevent signal employees with active substance abuse disorders from 
``job hopping'' from one employer to another and reduce the safety risk 
of having individuals with

[[Page 35636]]

untreated substance abuse disorders working as signal employees.
    Another important factor in the report was the nature of the work 
signal employees perform on wayside signal and train control systems, 
which are safety-critical for freight and passenger rail operations. 
The report noted that, in the coming decade, the rail industry will 
likely lose many experienced signal employees to retirement, while 
growth in freight, commuter, and intercity passenger rail will require 
that more signal employees are hired and trained.
    The report also summarized the challenges posed by PTC system 
implementation, while noting the ``increasingly sophisticated work'' 
involved in the implementation of complex PTC system technology by 
signal employees.\9\ In particular, the report noted that ``signal 
employees will be required to differentiate between a vital and non-
vital PTC system \10\ and to address the technicalities of using 
standalone or overlay PTC systems.'' \11\ This combination of factors 
led to the report's conclusion that signal employees are a potentially 
viable candidate craft for certification.
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    \9\ See 2015 DOT Report to Congress on Certification of Railroad 
Crafts at 3.
    \10\ PTC systems vary widely in complexity and sophistication 
based on the level of automation and functionality they implement, 
the system architecture used, the wayside system upon which they are 
based (i.e., non-signaled, block signal, cab signal, etc.), and the 
degree of train control they are capable of assuming. Vital systems 
are reliable and built upon failsafe principles, while non-vital 
systems are reliable but not guaranteed to provide failsafe 
operation.
    \11\ See 2015 DOT Report to Congress on Certification of 
Railroad Crafts at 3. An overlay system relies upon and supplements 
an existing wayside signal system or redundant method of operation. 
A standalone system replaces the existing method of operation.
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5. RSAC Working Group

    In March 1996, FRA established the Railroad Safety Advisory 
Committee (RSAC), which provides a forum for collaborative rulemaking 
and program development. RSAC includes representatives from all of the 
agency's major stakeholder groups, including railroads, labor 
organizations, suppliers and manufacturers, and other interested 
parties. When appropriate, FRA assigns a task to RSAC, and after 
consideration and debate, RSAC may accept or reject the task. If 
accepted, RSAC establishes a working group that possesses the 
appropriate expertise and representation of interests to develop 
recommendations to FRA for action on the task.
    On April 21, 2017, a task statement regarding certification of 
signal employees was presented to the RSAC by email but no vote was 
taken. On April 24, 2019, the RSAC accepted a task (No. 19-03) 
entitled, ``Certification of Railroad Signal Employees.'' \12\ The 
purpose of the task was ``[t]o consider whether rail safety would be 
enhanced by developing guidance, voluntary standards, and/or draft 
regulatory language for the certification of railroad signal 
installation, repair, and maintenance workers.'' The task called for 
the RSAC Signal Employee Working Group (Working Group) to perform the 
following actions:
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    \12\ At the same meeting, the RSAC also accepted a task (No. 19-
02) titled ``Certification of Train Dispatchers.'' A separate RSAC 
Working Group was formed to address this task and FRA plans to issue 
a related proposed rule that would establish certification 
requirements for dispatchers.

--Review critical tasks performed by railroad signalmen for safe train 
operations, particularly with the introduction of Positive Train 
Control (PTC) technology;
--Review training duration, content, and methodology for new hires and 
continuing education.
--Review background checks designed to prevent railroad signalmen with 
active substance abuse disorders from ``job-hopping'' from one employer 
to another.

    The revised task statement also asked the Working Group to address 
the following issues, if appropriate:

--What requirements for training and experience are appropriate?
--What classifications of signalmen should be recognized, if any?
--To what extent do existing requirements and procedures for the 
certification of locomotive engineers and conductors provide a model 
for signalmen certification?
--What types of unsafe conduct should affect railroad signalmen's 
certification status?
--Do the existing locomotive engineer and conductor certifications 
provide an adequate model for handling appeals from decertification 
decisions of the railroads?

    The Working Group, which included representatives from the 
Association of American Railroads (AAR), American Public Transportation 
Association (APTA), American Short Line and Regional Railroad 
Association (ASLRRA), Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen (BRS), SMART 
Transportation, Commuter Rail Coalition, and National Railroad 
Construction & Maintenance Association, held its first and only meeting 
on September 5, 2019 in Washington, DC At this meeting, the Working 
Group reviewed the task statement from the RSAC, discussed some of the 
safety-critical tasks performed by signal employees, and debated 
whether certification of signal employees would be beneficial to 
railroad safety. At the end of the meeting, action items were assigned 
and the next meeting was tentatively scheduled for January 2020.
    However, on December 16, 2019, the presidents of the American Train 
Dispatchers Association, BRS, and the International Brotherhood of 
Electrical Workers (collectively the ``Unions'') sent a letter to the 
FRA Administrator requesting that the RSAC task be withdrawn from 
consideration. The letter stated the Unions were involved in numerous 
activities and were not able to give the task proper attention. AAR and 
ASLRRA advised the unions that they were not opposed to this request. 
In response to this letter, FRA withdrew the task from the RSAC and the 
Working Group became inactive.

6. Public Outreach

    In 2021, FRA revisited the issue of establishing certification 
requirements for signal employees. The agency assembled subject matter 
experts from FRA, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers 
(IBEW) and the Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen to exchange facts or 
information regarding the tasks performed by signal employees. Those 
parties met virtually several times between May 5, 2021 and June 30, 
2021.
    As part of FRA's outreach, a list of tasks performed by signal 
employees was developed. These tasks generally involved: vital 
equipment design validation, installation, calibration, testing, 
maintenance, and repair (interlockings, grade crossings, wayside signal 
systems, PTC, etc.). FRA reviewed each task to determine whether 
correctly performing the task was critical to railroad safety; what 
were the potential consequences if errors were made while performing 
the task; and whether there were any recent examples of issues or 
concerns with respect to the task. After performing this analysis, FRA 
concluded that the vast majority of tasks performed by signal employees 
(80-90% of the listed tasks) were critical to railroad safety with 
potentially catastrophic consequences, such as accidents, injuries, 
and/or deaths, if the tasks were not performed properly.
    During FRA's outreach, the benefits of certification based on the 
experience of stakeholders with engineer and conductor certification 
under 49 CFR parts 240 and 242 were also discussed. Some of the main 
benefits of

[[Page 35637]]

certification that were identified include:
--Creating a minimum standard for training to ensure that the training 
encompasses all skills and proficiencies necessary to properly perform 
all safety-related signal employee functions;
--Establishing a record of safety compliance that will follow a signal 
employee if they wish to become certified by another railroad and that 
can be used to review a signal employee's performance and potential 
training needs;
--Requiring certain safety checks, such as identifying active substance 
abuse disorders, that can minimize the risks posed by job hopping; and
--Establishing a system for individuals to dispute a railroad's 
decision to deny or revoke certification with the aim of creating a 
fair and consistent process for all parties.

    Based on these meetings, FRA concluded that requiring certification 
for signal employees would be an important tool to ensure signal 
employees performing safety-sensitive tasks are adequately trained and 
qualified and have a documented record of performance that is 
accessible to prospective employers.
    Following this initial outreach, FRA held a follow-up conversation 
with BRS and IBEW, on March 3, 2022, and individuals from the BRS and 
IBEW informed FRA of elements that they believe would be beneficial in 
a signal employee certification program. During this conversation, 
which was held in videoconference format, FRA asked the attendees to 
provide individualized feedback on how similar or different a signal 
employee certification rule should be to FRA's locomotive engineer and 
conductor certification rules found in 49 CFR parts 240 and 242.
    FRA heard that the agency needs to ensure that comprehensive 
training is provided to signal employees as the current training is 
inadequate. FRA also heard that railroads are not providing enough 
training on new equipment and new technology for signal employees. It 
was also noted that, in some cases, signal employees are being required 
to use new equipment and new technology without having received any 
prior training on the equipment or technology.
    On March 7, 2022, FRA had a conversation with the railroad 
industry, including Norfolk Southern Corporation (NS), ASLRRA, and AAR. 
During this conversation, which was conducted in a videoconference 
format, FRA also asked for individualized feedback on how FRA's 
locomotive engineer and conductor certification regulations in 49 CFR 
parts 240 and 242 could be improved upon with respect to signal 
employee certification. Specifically, FRA asked for feedback on any 
regulatory provisions in 49 CFR parts 240 and 242 that, in their 
experience, may have been difficult to implement, as well as whether 
FRA should explore any changes to these regulatory provisions.
    AAR expressed opposition to FRA's proposal to issue regulations 
requiring certification of signal employees arguing that there was not 
a safety benefit to certification. In addition, NS questioned the need 
for certification regulations in the absence of any identified gaps in 
coverage by existing railroad training programs.
    ASLRRA expressed concern that FRA's proposal to issue regulations 
requiring certification of dispatchers and signal employees would 
result in a big paperwork burden with little benefit. In addition, 
ASLRRA asserted that most shortline railroads do not have signal 
systems. With respect to grade crossings, ASLRRA asserted that most 
shortline railroads rely on contractors to maintain their grade 
crossing warning systems.
    After this conversation, FRA provided a short list of written 
questions to AAR and ASLRRA. While AAR did not provide additional 
feedback in response to FRA's list of questions, ASLRRA responded to 
FRA's list of written questions by email on April 13, 2022, a copy of 
which has been placed in the docket.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \13\ A record of public contact summarizing this meeting has 
been posted in the rulemaking docket at: <a href="https://www.regulations.gov/document/FRA-2022-0020-0003">https://www.regulations.gov/document/FRA-2022-0020-0003</a>.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    On March 8, 2022, FRA staff had a follow-up conversation with BRS 
and IBEW to receive information on the types of errors and grade 
crossing and signal violations that should result in a railroad 
revoking a signal employee's certification. During this conversation, 
which was conducted in a videoconference format, FRA heard that it 
might be appropriate to revoke a signal employee's certification in 
response to willful violations.

7. Contractors

    FRA considered whether railroad contractors (and subcontractors) 
should be authorized to certify their employees. FRA did not, however, 
include that option in this proposed rule. Instead, consistent with 
FRA's engineer and conductor certification regulations, this proposed 
rule requires railroads to develop and submit certification programs to 
FRA for approval and then implement their FRA-approved certification 
programs. FRA is proposing to adopt this approach because railroads are 
ultimately held responsible for the actions (or failure to act) of 
their employees, contractors, and subcontractors when engaged in 
railroad operations.
    FRA acknowledges that signal employee tasks are being subcontracted 
out by railroads to companies that specialize in this work. However, 
railroads are generally most knowledgeable about the signal systems 
that have been deployed on their territories. Therefore, railroads are 
best suited to develop certification programs that are needed to ensure 
all signal employees responsible for installing, troubleshooting, 
testing, repair, or maintenance of railroad signal systems, as defined 
in Sec.  246.7, have been properly trained and certified on: (a) all 
applicable Federal rail safety laws, regulations, and orders governing 
the installation, testing, repair, and maintenance of these systems; 
and (b) all railroad rules and procedures promulgated to implement 
those Federal rail safety laws, regulations, and orders. In addition, 
by keeping certification programs in-house, railroads can implement 
quality control measures to ensure that their FRA-approved 
certification programs are being implemented properly.
    Nonetheless, FRA is soliciting comment on the approach adopted in 
this proposed rule, which would require railroads to develop and 
implement FRA-approved signal employee certification programs. To ease 
any potential burden, especially on Class III railroads, the proposed 
rule would allow all railroads to choose between conducting the 
training or using a training program conducted by a third party, which 
would be adopted and ratified by the railroad. In addition, contractors 
that employ signal employees could help railroads comply with the 
requirements in this proposed rule by providing information about their 
signal employees' compliance with some of the proposed regulatory 
requirements. For example, contractors could provide information about 
their signal employees' compliance with the vision and hearing acuity 
requirements in the proposed rule. Under this proposed rule, however, 
railroads would ultimately be responsible for ensuring that certified 
signal employees are installing, testing, maintaining, and repairing 
their signal systems.

[[Page 35638]]

8. Interaction With Other FRA Regulations

    While developing this proposed rule, FRA has been mindful of other 
regulations that may touch upon topics covered in this proposed rule, 
including FRA's training, qualification, and oversight regulations in 
49 CFR part 243 (part 243); railroad safety risk reduction programs 
(SSP/RRP) in 49 CFR parts 270 and 271 (parts 270 and 271); and fatigue 
risk management programs (FRMP) in parts 270 and 271. However, FRA 
finds that this proposed rule would complement, rather than duplicate, 
those regulations.
    Signal employees are currently included in part 243's requirements 
for training, qualification, and oversight for safety-related railroad 
employees. However, part 243 does not require railroads to have formal 
processes in place for promptly removing signal employees from service 
if they violate one or more basic regulatory standards that could have 
a significant negative impact on the safety of rail operations. FRA's 
proposed signal employee certification requirements have been drafted 
to help address this void, as well as prevent signal employees who have 
been fired for committing one or more of the revocable events discussed 
in the proposed rule from ``job hopping'' and quickly resuming safety-
sensitive service at a different railroad that is unaware of the signal 
employee's prior violation(s) of FRA's rail safety regulations.
    As codified in parts 270 and 271, FRA requires Class I railroads, 
railroads with inadequate safety performance, and passenger rail 
operations to implement railroad safety risk reduction programs. A 
railroad safety risk reduction program is a comprehensive, system-
oriented approach to safety that determines an operation's level of 
risk by identifying and analyzing identified hazards and developing 
strategies to mitigate risks associated with those hazards. In this 
background, FRA is using the term ``railroad safety risk reduction 
programs'' to include both a ``system safety program'' (SSP) that is 
required for certain passenger rail operations \14\ and a ``risk 
reduction program'' (RRP) that is required for a limited number of 
other rail operations.\15\ Although a railroad safety risk reduction 
program might address a railroad's safety hazards and risks associated 
with its signal employees, the framework established by these programs 
neither directly addresses the risks associated with signal systems nor 
establishes an industry-wide approach.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \14\ 49 CFR 270.3 (requiring the application of the system 
safety program rule to certain passenger rail operations).
    \15\ 49 CFR 271.3 (requiring the application of the risk 
reduction program rule to certain rail operations).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    First, not every railroad is required to have a railroad safety 
risk reduction program. Indeed, FRA estimates that fewer than 100 
railroads (out of approximately 750 railroads under FRA's jurisdiction) 
will be required to develop a railroad safety risk reduction program 
over the next 10 years.
    Second, even if a railroad is required to have a railroad safety 
risk reduction program through which it identifies the risks associated 
with installing, testing, maintaining, and repairing signal systems, 
the railroad may decide not to implement mitigations to eliminate or 
reduce those specific risks. Parts 270 and 271 permit railroads to 
prioritize risks.\16\ Whether a railroad is required to have a program 
that mitigates risks associated with signal systems will depend on how 
the railroad prioritizes risks for mitigation and how effectively that 
mitigation would promote continuous safety improvement compared to 
mitigation of other identified hazards and risks. Thus, even if signal 
systems are identified as a risk, a railroad may not implement 
mitigations to eliminate or reduce that risk.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \16\ See e.g., 49 CFR 270.5 (definition of ``risk-based hazard 
management'') and 271.103(b)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Accordingly, this proposed rule may complement the SSP/RRP 
requirements but does not duplicate those requirements. Without this 
proposed rule, railroads may not be required to implement mitigations 
to address identified safety risks associated with signal systems 
across the entire industry.
    With respect to FRMPs,\17\ an FRMP is a comprehensive, system-
oriented approach to safety in which a railroad determines its fatigue 
risk by identifying and analyzing applicable hazards and developing 
plans to mitigate, if not eliminate, those risks. Like the SSP/RRP 
rules, the FRMP rule is part of FRA's continual efforts to improve rail 
safety and satisfies the statutory mandate of Section 103 of the 
RSIA.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \17\ On June 13, 2022, FRA published a final rule adding a FRMP 
to the railroad safety risk reduction program requirements in parts 
270 and 271. 85 FR 83484.
    \18\ Codified at 49 U.S.C. 20156.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Like the SSP/RRP requirements, there is no guarantee that any 
railroad covered by the regulation will use an FRMP to address signal 
issues. As with the SSP/RRP rules, a covered railroad must identify 
fatigue hazards, assess the risks associated with those fatigue 
hazards, and prioritize those risks for mitigation purposes. It is 
possible that other fatigue risks, not associated with signal systems, 
might rank higher, in which case the risk associated with signal 
systems might not be promptly mitigated. Further, because the FRMP 
requirements would apply only to those railroads required to comply 
with the SSP/RRP requirements, an FRMP would not be required of every 
railroad. Thus, like the SSP/RRP rules, this proposed rule is 
complementary to the FRMP final rule and is not duplicative.

IV. Section-by-Section Analysis

Subpart A--General

    Subpart A of the proposed rule contains general provisions, 
including a formal statement of the proposed rule's purpose and scope. 
The subpart also provides that this proposed rule does not constrain 
the ability of a railroad to prescribe additional or more stringent 
requirements for its signal employees that are not inconsistent with 
this proposed rule.
Section 246.1 Purpose and Scope
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.1 and 242.1, 
indicates that the purpose of the proposed rule is to ensure that only 
those persons who meet minimum Federal safety standards serve as 
certified signal employees, to reduce the rate and number of accidents 
and incidents, and to improve railroad safety.
    Even though a person may have a job title other than signal 
employee, the requirements of this proposed rule would apply to that 
person if they meet the definition of ``signal employee'' without 
regard to the class or craft of the employee or the manner in which the 
employee is compensated, if at all. The definition of ``signal 
employee,'' and an explanation of who is covered by the definition, are 
discussed in more detail in the section-by-section analysis for Sec.  
246.7, below.
Section 246.3 Application and Responsibility for Compliance
    The extent of FRA's jurisdiction, and the agency's exercise of that 
jurisdiction, is well-established. See 49 CFR part 209, app. A. This 
proposed application and responsibility for compliance section is 
consistent with FRA's Statement of Agency Policy Concerning Enforcement 
of the Federal Railroad Safety Laws in appendix A to 49 CFR part 209 
(Policy Statement).
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.3 and 242.3, 
provides that the proposed rule would apply to all railroads with four 
exceptions.

[[Page 35639]]

Paragraph (a)(1) of this section notes that this proposed rule would 
not apply to railroads that do not have a signal system, as defined in 
Sec.  246.7. In paragraph (a)(2), FRA proposes to exempt operations 
that occur within the confines of industrial installations commonly 
referred to as ``plant railroads'' and typified by operations such as 
those in steel mills that do not go beyond the plant's boundaries and 
that do not involve the switching of rail cars for entities other than 
themselves. Further explanation of what is meant by the term ``plant 
railroad'' is provided in the section-by-section analysis for Sec.  
246.7.
    In paragraph (a)(3), FRA is also proposing to exclude ``tourist, 
scenic, historic, and excursion operations conducted only on track used 
exclusively for that purpose . . . and only on track inside an 
installation that is insular.'' In other words, FRA is proposing to 
exclude tourist, scenic, historic, or excursion operations conducted 
only on track where there is no freight, intercity passenger, or 
commuter passenger railroad operations on the track. In addition, FRA 
is proposing to consider insularity when determining whether the 
requirements of this proposed rule apply to a tourist, scenic, 
historic, or excursion operation. As explained in the Policy Statement, 
FRA considers a railroad to be ``insular'' if its operations are 
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. A railroad 
is not considered insular if one or more of the following exists on its 
line: (a) A public highway-rail grade crossing that is in use; (b) an 
at-grade rail crossing that is in use; (c) a bridge over a public road 
or waters used for commercial navigation; or (d) a common corridor with 
a railroad (i.e., its operations are within 30 feet of those of any 
railroad). In addition, when determining insularity for purposes of 
this proposed rule, FRA would consider whether a public pathway grade 
crossing is located on the railroad line. FRA is proposing to add this 
criterion to the determination of insularity for purposes of this 
proposed rule, in recognition of the potential safety risks associated 
with the use of public pathway grade crossings by members of the 
general public.
    FRA believes that applying the proposed regulatory requirements in 
this part to signal employees who work on non-insular passenger rail 
operations off the general system is warranted by the potential risk to 
passengers associated with accidents involving heavy motor vehicles. 
FRA acknowledges that a passenger railroad off the general system may 
be considered non-insular, yet have only private grade crossings on its 
line of railroad. Due to the non-insular status of the railroad, signal 
employees who install, maintain, test, or repair train-activated 
warning devices at those private grade crossings or who install, 
maintain, test, or repair signal systems on its line would be subject 
to this rule.
    The final proposed exclusion in Sec.  246.3(a)(4) covers rapid 
transit operations in an urban area that are not connected to the 
general railroad system of transportation. It should, however, be noted 
that FRA exercises jurisdiction over some rapid transit type 
operations, given their links to the general railroad system of 
transportation, such as rapid transit operations conducted on track 
used for freight, intercity passenger, or commuter passenger railroad 
operations, during a block of time during which a general system 
railroad is not operating (temporal separation). Thus, this proposed 
rule would apply to persons who perform work on signal systems for 
those rapid transit type operations.
    Paragraph (b) is intended to clarify that any person, as defined in 
Sec.  246.7 (including a railroad employee or employee of a railroad 
contractor) who performs a function required by this part will be held 
responsible for compliance.
Section 246.5 Effect and Construction
    This proposed section is derived from 49 CFR 240.5 and 242.5. 
Paragraph (a) addresses the relationship of this proposed rule to 
preexisting legal relationships. Paragraph (b) states that FRA does not 
intend to alter the authority of a railroad to initiate disciplinary 
sanctions against its employees by issuance of this proposed rule.
    Paragraph (c) of this section is intended to note that, as a 
general matter, FRA does not intend to create or prohibit the right to 
``flowback'' or take a position on whether ``flowback'' is desirable. 
The term ``flowback'' has been used in the industry to describe a 
situation where an employee leaves their current position to return to 
a previously held position or craft. The reasons for reverting back to 
the previous craft may derive from personal choice or a less voluntary 
nature (such as downsizing). Many collective bargaining agreements 
address the issue of flowback. However, paragraph (c) must be read in 
conjunction with Sec.  246.213, which would limit flowback in certain 
situations (i.e., when a certificate is revoked due to an alcohol or 
drug violation).
    Paragraph (d) of this proposed section addresses employee rights. 
The proposed rule would explicitly preserve any remedy already 
available to the person and would not create any new entitlements.
Section 246.7 Definitions
    This section defines a number of terms that have specific meaning 
in this proposed part. Some of these terms have definitions that are 
similar to, but may not exactly mirror, definitions used elsewhere in 
this chapter.
    Contractor, as defined in this proposed part, would include prime 
contractors, as well as subcontractors. This definition, which mirrors 
the definition of ``contractor'' in 49 CFR part 243, has been included 
in this section to help explain FRA's intent that the requirements of 
this part which apply to railroad contractors are also intended to 
apply to railroad subcontractors as well.
    Disable, as defined in this proposed part, would mean to render a 
device [or system] incapable of proper and effective action or to 
materially impair the functioning of that device. In the interest of 
consistency, this proposed definition is very similar to the definition 
of ``disable'' provided in Sec.  218.53 of FRA's railroad operating 
practices regulations. However, for purposes of this proposed part, the 
term ``disable'' would include situations in which a device or system 
is lawfully rendered incapable of proper and effective action.
    Consistent with parts 240 and 242, FRA proposes to define ``drug'' 
as any substance (other than alcohol) that has known mind- or function-
altering effects on an individual, specifically including any 
psychoactive substance and including, but not limited to, controlled 
substances. This term is intended to refer to substances that have a 
significant potential for abuse and/or dependence. Normal ingestion of 
caffeine in beverages and use of nicotine from tobacco products, even 
though involving some degree of habituation or dependence, are not 
intended to be included within the definition.
    In this proposed part, the terms ``ineligible'' and 
``ineligibility'' would be catch-all terms that not only encompass 
revocation and denial of certification, but also cover other situations 
in which a signal employee would be legally disqualified from serving 
as a signal employee. For example, a certified signal employee

[[Page 35640]]

may voluntarily refer him or herself for substance abuse counseling or 
treatment under 242.115(c). If the signal employee then refuses to 
complete a course of action recommended under the provisions of 49 CFR 
219.1003, that would not be an operating rule or procedure, or type of 
alcohol or drug violation that would require revocation (nor would it 
require denial of certification). Rather the signal employee would 
simply remain ``ineligible'' until a railroad determined that the 
person no longer had a substance abuse disorder, or the person re-
entered a substance abuse program and it had been determined under the 
provisions of 49 CFR 219.1003 that the person could safely return to 
duty under certain conditions.
    In this proposed part, mentor would be defined as a certified 
signal employee who has at least one year of experience as a certified 
signal employee. FRA is proposing to define the term, ``mentor,'' to 
help clarify that a mentor provides direct supervision and oversight 
over the work of one or more signal employees.
    In this proposed part, person would take on the same meaning as it 
does in FRA's other safety rules. The proposed definition is intended 
to clarify that this term does not apply merely to individual persons. 
Instead, the term would mean ``an entity of any type covered under 1 
U.S.C. 1'' and the proposed definition goes into detail regarding the 
types of people and entities that are covered.
    FRA proposes a definition of plant railroad to aid in the 
understanding of the application of this part pursuant to section 
246.3(a)(1). The definition coincides with FRA's longstanding 
explanation of how the agency will not exercise jurisdiction over a 
plant railroad that does not operate on the general system of 
transportation and does not move cars for other entities. See 49 CFR 
part 209, app. A.
    Although the RSIA required FRA to issue a report to Congress on 
whether the certification of certain crafts or classes of railroad 
carrier or railroad carrier contractor or subcontractor employees, 
including ``signal repair and maintenance employees,'' is necessary to 
reduce the number and rate of accidents and incidents or to improve 
railroad safety, the RSIA did not define the term, ``signal repair and 
maintenance employees.'' In the absence of such a definition in the 
RSIA, FRA proposes to use the streamlined term, ``signal employee.'' 
FRA also proposes to define this streamlined term, ``signal employee,'' 
as a person who is engaged in installing, troubleshooting, testing, 
repair, or maintenance of railroad signal systems, highway-rail and 
pathway grade crossing warning systems, unusual contingency detection 
devices, power-assisted switches, broken rail detection systems, and 
switch-point indicators, as well as other safety-related devices, 
appliances, and systems installed on the railroad in signaled or non-
signaled territory. This proposed definition is generally consistent 
with the definition of ``signal employee'' in the hours of service law 
but includes the terms ``troubleshooting'' and ``testing'' which are 
not found in the statutory definition.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \19\ 49 U.S.C. 21101(4). The hours of service law defines 
``signal employee'' as ``an individual who is engaged in installing, 
repairing, or maintaining signal systems.'' 49 U.S.C. 21101(4). 
While FRA believes ``troubleshooting'' and ``testing'' would fall 
under the terms ``installing, repairing, or maintaining'' in the 
hours of service law definition, FRA wanted to make explicit in this 
rule that ``troubleshooting'' and ``testing'' are included in the 
definition of ``signal employee.'' The addition of 
``troubleshooting'' and ``testing'' in the proposed definition in 
this rule is not intended to capture a broader group of employees 
than provided in the hours of service law.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Consistent with parts 240 and 242, the term ``substance abuse 
disorder'' is defined as a psychological or physical dependence on 
alcohol or a drug or another identifiable and treatable mental or 
physical disorder involving the abuse of alcohol or drugs as a primary 
manifestation.
    This proposed definition would include drug and alcohol users who 
engage in abuse patterns which result in ongoing safety risks and 
violations. A substance abuse disorder is ``active'' within the meaning 
of this proposed rule if the person (1) is currently using alcohol or 
other drugs, except under medical supervision consistent with the 
restrictions described in Sec.  219.103 of this chapter or (2) has 
failed to successfully complete primary treatment or successfully 
participate in aftercare as directed by a Substance Abuse Professional 
(SAP) or Drug and Alcohol Counselor (DAC).
Section 246.9 Waivers
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.9 and 242.9, 
provides the proposed requirements for a person seeking a waiver of any 
section of this proposed rule.
Section 246.11 Penalties and Consequences for Noncompliance
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.11 and 242.11, 
explains that FRA may impose civil penalties on any person, including a 
railroad or a contractor providing goods or services to a railroad, 
that violates any requirement of this proposed rule. Any person who 
violates a requirement of this proposed rule may be subject to civil 
penalties between the minimum and maximum amounts authorized by statute 
and adjusted for inflation per violation. Individuals may be subject to 
penalties for willful violations only. Where a pattern of repeated 
violations, or a grossly negligent violation creates an imminent hazard 
of death or injury, or causes death or injury, an aggravated maximum 
penalty may be assessed.\20\ Finally, a person may be subject to 
criminal penalties under 49 U.S.C. 21311 for knowingly and willfully 
falsifying reports required by these proposed regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \20\ Please visit FRA's website for the current aggravated 
maximum penalty amount at <a href="https://railroads.dot.gov/">https://railroads.dot.gov/</a>.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Consistent with FRA's final rule regarding the removal of civil 
penalty schedules from the CFR (84 FR 23730 (May 23, 2019)), FRA will 
not publish a civil penalty schedule for this rule in the CFR, but 
plans to publish a civil penalty schedule on its website. Penalty 
schedules are statements of agency policy, thus notice and comment are 
not required prior to their issuance, nor are they required to be 
published in the CFR. See 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(A). Nevertheless, 
commenters are invited to suggest the types of actions or omissions 
under each regulatory section that would subject a person to the 
assessment of a civil penalty. Commenters are also invited to recommend 
what penalty amounts may be appropriate, based upon the relative 
seriousness of each type of violation.

Subpart B--Program and Eligibility Requirements

Section 246.101 Certification Program Required
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.101 and 242.101, 
would require railroads to have written certification programs 
comprised of multiple elements, each of which comports with specific 
regulatory provisions in the proposed rule related to that element. In 
addition to these required elements, paragraph (b)(1) would require 
railroads who elect to classify their certified signal employees into 
multiple occupational categories (and, in some cases, subcategories) to 
explain and discuss each category or subcategory of certified signal 
employees.
    Paragraph (c) would require railroads to maintain version control 
for their certification programs. Therefore, railroads would be 
required to maintain an up-to-date, detailed list or index

[[Page 35641]]

tracking every change made to their certification programs. FRA would 
encourage railroads to maintain a redlined version of their 
certification programs to reflect changes that have been made over the 
years in context.
Section 246.103 FRA Review of Certification Programs
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.103 and 242.103, 
describes the process for the submission and review of signal employee 
certification programs. Paragraph (a) of this section applies to 
railroads that have a signal system, as defined in Sec.  246.7, in 
operation prior to the effective date of the final rule and provides 
the deadlines for when these railroads would be required to submit 
their certification programs to FRA. (Paragraph (a) would not, however, 
apply to railroads that are exempted by Sec.  246.3(a)). The submission 
schedule in paragraph (a) would require Class I railroads and commuter 
service railroads to submit their programs earlier than Class II 
railroads, Class III railroads, and railroads not otherwise classified. 
The separate deadlines would help space out the initial influx of 
programs FRA will receive after the final rule goes into effect, to 
allow FRA to issue approval and disapproval decisions in a more timely 
manner. FRA also presumes that, in general, Class I railroads and 
commuter service railroads will have more resources to devote to 
creating these programs and will be better positioned to create and 
draft them more quickly.
    Paragraph (b) of this section would only apply to railroads that 
commence operations after the effective date of the final rule. Prior 
to installing, implementing, or operating any signal system as defined 
in Sec.  246.7, these railroads would be required to submit their 
signal employee certification program to FRA and obtain FRA approval.
    Paragraph (c) of this section provides that railroads would submit 
their programs and their requests for approval (which are described in 
greater detail in Sec.  246.106(a)) by uploading them to FRA's secure 
document submission site. This will allow for more efficient processing 
and will significantly reduce the risk of a program submission getting 
lost. FRA will need basic information from each railroad before setting 
up the user's account. In order to provide secure access, information 
regarding the points of contact will be required. It is anticipated 
that FRA will be able to approve or disapprove all or part of a program 
and generate automated notifications by email to a railroad's points of 
contact.
    FRA does not intend to develop a secure document submission site 
that would allow confidential materials to be identified and not shared 
with the general public. This is because FRA does not expect the 
information in a program to be confidential or proprietary, 
particularly since each railroad would be required to share the program 
submission, resubmission, or material modification with the president 
of each labor organization that represents the railroad's certified 
signal employees and the program will be available on FRA's website. 
See Sec.  246.103(d) and (j). Accordingly, FRA does not at this time 
believe it is necessary to develop a document submission system to 
address confidential materials.
    When a railroad submits its certification program to FRA, paragraph 
(d) of this section would require the railroad to also submit a copy of 
the program and the request for approval to the president of each labor 
organization that represents the railroad's signal employees and to all 
of the railroad's signal employees who would be subject to this part. 
The railroad's submission to FRA must include a statement affirming 
that it has provided a copy of the program and the request for approval 
to the president of each labor organization that represents its signal 
employees and to all of the railroad's signal employees who would be 
subject to this part. In addition, the railroad would be required to 
include a list of the names and email addresses of each labor 
organization president who received a copy of the program.
    Paragraph (e) of this section explains who would be allowed to 
comment on these programs. For signal employees who are members of a 
labor union, any comments must be submitted by a designated 
representative. Signal employees who are not members of a labor union 
would, however, be permitted to personally submit comments on their 
railroad's certification program. FRA anticipates that comments 
submitted through this process will assist the agency in determining 
whether a program conforms to the requirements set forth in this rule, 
and thus, FRA will not make a decision on a program until after the 45-
day comment period in paragraph (e)(1) has passed.
    Paragraph (f) of this section states FRA's aspirational goal to 
decide on whether to approve a program within 90 days of the date that 
the program is submitted. However, this would only be a goal and not a 
deadline for the agency. Paragraph (f)(3) explains that if FRA is 
unable to issue a decision on the program within 90 days, the program 
will not be considered approved on the 91st day. A certification 
program will not be approved until FRA issues a letter notifying the 
railroad that its program has been approved. While FRA will make every 
effort to issue approval and disapproval letters within 90 days, FRA 
recognizes that this will not always be possible. It may be especially 
difficult for FRA to meet this goal during the initial implementation 
of the final rule issued in this rulemaking when FRA expects to receive 
many certification programs within a relatively short period of time.
    Paragraph (g) of this section addresses the process for railroads 
who wish to materially modify their previously approved programs. If a 
railroad wishes to materially modify its certification program, it must 
submit two documents to FRA: (1) a description of how it intends to 
modify its current program (this constitutes the request for approval 
required under Sec.  246.106(a)); and (2) a copy of the modified 
program. Paragraph (g)(1) defines a ``material modification'' as a 
modification that ``would affect the program's conformance with this 
part.'' This definition is taken from 49 CFR 240.103(h)(1) and 
242.103(i)(1) and is intentionally broad to cover many different types 
of program modifications. FRA recognizes that there may be some desire 
among some interested parties to have a more specific definition of 
``material modification'' in the regulation. Thus, FRA welcomes any 
comments on suggested changes to the proposed definition of ``material 
modification.''
    Paragraph (g)(3) explains that the process for submission and 
review of material modifications mirrors the process for submission and 
review of initial certification programs. Railroads would be required 
to submit their material modifications to FRA in conformance with 
paragraph (c) of this section and would be required to send a copy of 
the material modification description and the modified program to all 
required parties referenced in paragraph (d) of this section. Certain 
interested parties would be allowed to comment on the modification in 
conformance with paragraph (e) of this section, and FRA would issue a 
letter either approving or disapproving the material modification in 
conformance with paragraph (f) of this section. If FRA approves the 
material modification, the railroad could begin implementing the 
modification and the modified program would replace the original 
program. If

[[Page 35642]]

FRA disapproves the material modification, the railroad would not be 
allowed to implement the modification and the original program must 
remain in effect. If a railroad's material modification submission 
contains multiple modifications, FRA reserves the right to approve some 
modifications while disapproving other modifications. In such an 
instance, the railroad could only begin implementing those 
modifications that FRA has approved.
    Paragraph (h) of this section describes the process to resubmit a 
program or material modification that was previously disapproved by 
FRA. Paragraph (h)(2) notes that the process for submission and review 
of resubmitted programs and material modifications mirrors the process 
for submission and review of initial certification programs. Railroads 
would resubmit their initial programs or material modifications to FRA 
in conformance with paragraph (c) of this section and would send a copy 
of the resubmitted program or material modification to all required 
parties referenced in paragraph (d) of this section. Certain interested 
parties would be allowed to comment on the resubmitted program or 
material modification in conformance with paragraph (e) of this section 
and FRA would issue a letter either approving or disapproving the 
resubmitted program or material modification in conformance with 
paragraph (f) of this section.
    Railroads would, however, remain responsible for maintaining their 
signal systems, as defined in Sec.  246.7, in compliance with Federal 
regulations even if rail operations cease or have not yet been 
initiated.
    Paragraph (h)(3) provides the deadlines, if any, for when a 
railroad must resubmit its certification program or material 
modification to FRA. For railroads that have installed or implemented a 
signal system, as defined in Sec.  246.7, prior to the effective date 
of the final rule (legacy railroads), if their initial certification 
program is disapproved by FRA, the railroad would be required to 
resubmit its program within 30 days of the date FRA notified the 
railroad that its program was deficient. If a legacy railroad fails to 
resubmit its program within 30 days and continues operations, FRA may 
use its enforcement discretion to determine whether enforcement action 
against the railroad is warranted.
    FRA believes a 30-day deadline is needed for legacy railroads 
because Sec.  246.105(a) allows legacy railroads to continue operations 
while they await FRA approval of their programs. Thus, without a 
deadline, legacy railroads could purposely delay coming into compliance 
with the final rule issued in this rulemaking by taking months or even 
years to resubmit their programs. In contrast, railroads that begin 
operations after the effective date of the final rule cannot begin 
operations until FRA approves their program. Likewise, no railroad 
(legacy or non-legacy) can implement a material modification to its 
program until FRA has approved the modification. In these scenarios, a 
deadline is unnecessary because the railroad has every incentive to 
resubmit its programs or material modifications in a timely manner. 
However, while there is no FRA-imposed deadline in these scenarios, FRA 
still recommends that railroads provide their resubmissions within 30 
days of being notified of deficiencies.
    Paragraph (i) of this section acknowledges that FRA reserves the 
right to revisit its prior approval of a certification program. In 
certain circumstances, including an audit of a certification program, 
FRA may discover that it made an error when it previously approved a 
program. This paragraph allows FRA to rescind a wrongful prior approval 
while also providing the railroads with certain rights. Paragraph 
(i)(3) notes that the process for submission and review of programs 
whose prior approval has been rescinded mirrors the process for 
submission and review of initial certification programs and 
resubmission of initially disapproved programs. Railroads would 
resubmit their programs to FRA in conformance with paragraph (c) of 
this section and they would send a copy of the resubmitted program to 
all required parties referenced in paragraph (d) of this section. 
Certain interested parties would be allowed to comment on the 
resubmitted program in conformance with paragraph (e) of this section, 
and FRA would issue a letter either approving or disapproving the 
resubmitted program in conformance with paragraph (f) of this section.
    Paragraphs (i)(6) and (i)(7) allow for a grace period where a 
rescinded program may remain in effect for a certain period of time. 
However, once FRA approves a resubmitted program, the resubmitted 
program must replace the rescinded program. In addition, a rescinded 
program can no longer remain in effect if FRA has twice disapproved the 
railroad's resubmitted program. This latter scenario is best explained 
through an example: On February 10th, FRA notifies ABC Railroad (ABC) 
that FRA is rescinding its prior approval of the railroad's signal 
employee certification program. On March 10th, ABC resubmits its 
program to FRA. On June 10th, FRA disapproves ABC's resubmitted 
program. On July 10th, ABC sends FRA its second resubmitted program. On 
October 10th, FRA issues a letter once again disapproving ABC's 
program. In this example, ABC's rescinded program could remain in 
effect between February 10th and October 10th. However, after October 
10th, the rescinded program could no longer be in effect. If ABC 
continued to operate its signal system after October 10th, when it did 
not have an FRA-approved certification program, FRA could find that the 
railroad failed to implement a program. In such cases, FRA would 
determine the appropriate enforcement approach to achieve compliance, 
including civil penalties and/or an emergency order. In exercising its 
enforcement discretion, FRA may consider such factors as the number and 
extent of the remaining deficiencies in the program and whether the 
railroad made good faith efforts to address the deficiencies in its 
resubmissions.
    Finally, paragraph (j) of this section notes that the following 
documents would be made available on FRA's website (<a href="http://railroads.dot.gov">railroads.dot.gov</a>): 
(1) certification programs and material modifications submitted by the 
railroads; (2) any comments to the submissions from the railroads; and 
(3) the letters from FRA approving or disapproving a program or a 
material modification. While parts 240 and 242 do not currently require 
the posting of these documents on FRA's website, the current practice 
with respect to locomotive engineer and conductor certification 
programs has been for FRA to post comments on a railroad's submission, 
as well as FRA approval and disapproval letters, on its website. 
Paragraph (j) of this section in this proposed rule is intended to make 
the proposed review and approval process for railroad signal employee 
certification programs as transparent as possible.
Section 246.105 Implementation Schedule for Certification Programs
    This section, derived from 49 CFR 240.201 and 242.105, contains the 
timetable for implementing this proposed rule. Paragraph (a) of this 
section acknowledges railroads that have installed or implemented a 
signal system, as defined in Sec.  246.7, prior to the effective date 
of the final rule may continue their rail operations while they await 
FRA's approval of their certification programs. However, if FRA 
disapproves a legacy railroad's certification program twice (the 
initial

[[Page 35643]]

submission and the first resubmission), the railroad will no longer be 
in compliance with the rule if it continues to operate its signal 
system without an FRA-approved program. In such a scenario, FRA could 
find that the railroad has failed to implement a program and would 
determine the appropriate enforcement approach to achieve compliance, 
including civil penalties and/or an emergency order. In exercising this 
enforcement discretion, FRA may consider such factors as the number and 
extent of the remaining deficiencies in the program and whether the 
railroad made good faith efforts to comply with the requirements of the 
rule through its submitted program. Paragraph (b) provides that any 
non-legacy railroad (a railroad that did not have any signal system, as 
defined in Sec.  246.7, installed or implemented prior to the effective 
date of the final rule) may not install or implement a signal system 
until FRA has approved its signal employee certification program.
    Paragraph (c) of this section would require railroads to designate 
as certified signal employees, in writing, all persons authorized by 
the railroad to perform the duties of each category or subcategory of 
certified signal employee identified by the railroad pursuant to Sec.  
246.107 as of the effective date of the final rule. Similarly, 
paragraph (d) of this section would require railroads to designate as 
certified signal employees, in writing, all such persons authorized by 
the railroad to perform the duties of certified signal employees 
pursuant to Sec.  246.107 between the effective date of the final rule 
and the date FRA approves the railroad's certification program. 
Railroads would also be required to issue a certificate to each person 
they designate. This designation system is modeled after the system 
used when parts 240 and 242 first went into effect. This system allows 
``legacy signal employees'' to obtain certificates so that when their 
railroad's program is approved, they will be considered ``previously 
certified signal employees'' when the time comes for them to be 
recertified through the railroad's signal employee certification 
program. Therefore, the recertifying railroad will not have to provide 
legacy certified signal employees with the kind of basic training that 
would be given to individuals with little to no signal experience. In 
other words, a person with 20 years of experience as a signal employee 
most likely does not need to take a ``Signal 101'' course that provides 
a basic overview of signal systems and related technology. Instead, 
this person would be better served by undergoing continuing education 
training as described in Sec. Sec.  246.107(b)(2) and 246.119(j).
    Paragraph (e) of this section states that after the final rule has 
been in effect for eight months, no person would be permitted to serve 
as a certified signal employee unless that person has been certified. 
Paragraph (f) of this section requires each railroad to make formal 
determinations concerning those individuals it has designated as 
certified signal employees within three years after FRA's approval of 
the railroad's certification program. Pursuant to this paragraph, a 
designated signal employee may serve as a certified signal employee for 
up to three years from the date of FRA's approval of the program. At 
the end of three years, however, the designated signal employee can no 
longer serve as a certified signal employee unless they successfully 
complete the tests and evaluations provided in subpart B of this rule 
(i.e., the full certification process).
    Thus, individuals who are designated as certified signal employees 
under paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section could be certified for 
more than three years before they have to complete the railroad's full 
certification process. For example, if a person is designated as a 
certified signal employee on September 1, 2024, and FRA approves the 
railroad's certification program on September 1, 2025, the signal 
employee would not have to go through the full certification process 
and get recertified until September 1, 2028 (four years from the date 
the individual was designated by the railroad as a certified signal 
employee). Railroads should note that they may not test and evaluate a 
designated signal employee or signal employee certification candidate 
under subpart B of this rule until they have a certification program 
approved by FRA pursuant to Sec.  246.103.
    In order to test and evaluate all of its designated signal 
employees by the end of the three-year period, a large railroad would 
likely have to begin that process well in advance of the end of the 
three-year period. For example, paragraph (f), which is derived from 
the designation provisions in parts 240 and 242, would permit a 
railroad to test and evaluate one-third of its designated signal 
employees within one year of the approval date of the railroad's 
certification program; another one-third within two years of the 
program's approval date; and the final one-third within three years of 
the program's approval date.
    To address the issue of designated signal employees who would be 
eligible to retire within three years of the date FRA approves their 
railroad's certification program, FRA is proposing paragraphs (f)(1) 
through (3) in this section since it would not be an efficient use of 
railroad resources to conduct the full certification process for a 
designated signal employee who is going to retire before the end of 
their designation period. Paragraph (f)(1) provides that a designated 
signal employee, who is eligible to receive a retirement pension in 
accordance with the terms of an applicable agreement or with the terms 
of the Railroad Retirement Act (45 U.S.C. 231) within three years from 
the date FRA approves the railroad's certification program, may request 
in writing that the railroad not perform the full certification 
progress on that designated signal employee until three years from the 
date FRA approves the railroad's program.
    Paragraph (f)(2) would allow the railroad to honor the designated 
signal employee's request. Thus, paragraphs (f)(1) and (2) allow 
designated signal employees to serve as signal employees for the full 
designation period and then retire before being subjected to the full 
certification process. While it is in the railroads' interest not to 
perform the full certification process for a person who is going to 
retire once the designation period expires, and thus, in their interest 
to grant as many requests as possible, it may not be feasible to 
accommodate every request that is made. If, for example, a significant 
number of designated signal employees properly request that the 
railroad wait to recertify them at the end of the designation period, 
but then do not retire by the end of the designation period, the 
railroad might not be able to recertify everyone in time and would risk 
violating this rule. In recognition of that risk and the need to give 
railroads some flexibility to comply with the rule, paragraph (f)(2) 
also provides that a railroad granting any request to delay performance 
of the full certification process must grant the request of all 
eligible persons ``to every extent possible.''
    In addition, paragraph (f)(3) provides that a designated signal 
employee who is also subject to recertification under part 240 or 242 
may not make a request under paragraph (f)(1) of this section. This 
provision recognizes that railroads would likely want to have 
concurrent certification processes for certifying a person who will be 
both a certified signal employee and a certified locomotive engineer or 
conductor. Thus, it would not be appropriate, in that instance, for a 
designated signal employee who is already subject to recertification 
under part 240 or 242 to

[[Page 35644]]

make a request to delay the full signal employee certification process.
    Paragraph (g) of this section provides that after FRA approves a 
railroad's certification program, the railroad cannot certify or 
recertify a person as a signal employee unless that person has been 
tested and evaluated in accordance with the procedures provided in 
subpart B of this rule. In other words, after FRA approves a railroad's 
program, that railroad can no longer designate persons as certified 
signal employees under paragraph (c) or (d) of this section.
Section 246.106 Requirements for Certification Programs
    This proposed section, derived from Appendix B to part 240 and 
Appendix B to part 242, provides both the proposed organizational 
requirements and a narrative description of the submission required 
under Sec. Sec.  246.101 and 246.103. FRA is not proposing to require 
railroad submissions to be made on a specific form. Instead, FRA 
proposes to prescribe only minimal constraints on the organization and 
manner of presenting information.
    Paragraph (a) of this section addresses what must be included in a 
railroad's submission to FRA. Specifically, the railroad must include 
two documents in its submission: (1) a request for approval; and (2) 
the certification program. If a railroad is submitting its initial 
certification program, the request for approval can be a brief document 
that simply states the railroad is submitting its initial signal 
employee certification program to FRA for approval. However, if a 
railroad is making a material modification or modifications to a signal 
employee certification program that has previously been approved by 
FRA, the request for approval must describe how the railroad intends to 
modify its program. In addition, the railroad must provide a copy of 
the modified certification program that identifies all of the proposed 
changes from the last FRA-approved version of the program, as required 
by section 246.103(g).
    Paragraph (b) of this section would require that signal employee 
certification programs be divided into six sections, each dealing with 
a different subject matter, and that the railroad identify the 
appropriate person to be contacted in the event FRA needs to discuss 
some aspect of the railroad's program. Paragraph (b)(1) would require 
railroads to include basic contact information in Section One of their 
certification programs and to address whether the railroad elects to 
accept responsibility for training persons not previously certified as 
signal employees. However, for railroads that elect to classify their 
certified signal employees into more than one occupational category or 
subcategory by class, task, location, or other suitable terminology, 
paragraph (b)(1) would require the railroad to provide detailed 
information about each occupational category (and subcategory, if 
applicable) of certified signal service in Section One of its 
certification program.
    Paragraph (b)(2) would require railroads to address in Section Two 
of their certification programs how they will provide continuing 
education for certified signal employees. A matter of particular 
concern to FRA is how each railroad will ensure that certified signal 
employees receive sufficient training on new signal systems and related 
technology that are deployed on the railroad's territory. While a 
railroad would have the latitude to select the specific subject matters 
to be covered, the duration of continuing education sessions, the 
methods of presenting the information, and the frequency with which 
continuing education will be provided, the railroad must describe in 
this section how it will use that latitude to ensure that its certified 
signal employees receive up-to-date and comprehensive training on new 
signal systems and related technology so as to comply with the training 
standards set forth in Sec.  246.119(j).
    However, time and circumstances can diminish both abstract 
knowledge and the proper application of that knowledge to discrete 
events. Time and circumstances can also alter the value of previously 
obtained knowledge and the application of that knowledge. Therefore, 
certified signal employees also need to have their fundamental 
knowledge of applicable Federal laws and regulations, as well as 
railroad signal system safety rules and practices, refreshed 
periodically. Therefore, the railroad must also describe in Section Two 
how it will ensure that its certified signal employees remain 
knowledgeable concerning the safe discharge of their responsibilities, 
in accordance with the standard set forth in Sec.  246.119(j).
    Section Three of the certification program must address 
requirements for the testing and evaluation of previously certified 
signal employees. Paragraph (b)(3)(i) would require railroads to 
address how their certification programs will comply with the standards 
found in Sec.  246.121. Section 246.121 would require railroads, when 
seeking a demonstration of the signal employee's knowledge, to employ a 
written or electronic test containing objective questions that address 
the following subject matters: (i) compliance with all applicable 
Federal railroad safety laws, regulations, and orders governing signal 
systems and related technology; (ii) compliance with all applicable 
railroad safety and operating rules; and (iii) compliance with all 
applicable railroad standards, procedures, and instructions for the 
installation, operation, testing, maintenance, troubleshooting, and 
repair of the railroad's signal systems and related technology. In 
addition, the test must also include a practical demonstration 
component. Paragraph (b)(3)(ii) would also require railroads, in their 
certification programs, to explain their procedures for testing vision 
and hearing acuity and for ensuring that their medical examiners have 
sufficient knowledge to make determinations on whether candidates for 
signal employee certification or recertification can safely work as 
certified signal employees.
    Section Four of the certification program would address the 
requirements for training, testing, and evaluating persons not 
previously certified as signal employees. Railroads that elect, in 
Section One of the certification programs, to not take responsibility 
for training persons not previously certified as signal employees can 
skip this section. Paragraph (b)(4) would require railroads that elect 
to provide training to persons who have not been previously certified 
as signal employees to provide details in Section Four for how they 
will train, test, and evaluate these individuals to ensure they acquire 
and demonstrate sufficient knowledge and skills to safely perform the 
job of a certified signal employee. Paragraph (b)(4)(i) would also 
require railroads to discuss in Section Four its procedures for 
mentoring candidates for signal employee certification, in accordance 
with Sec.  246.124.
    Paragraph (b)(4)(ii) would require railroads to include the same 
level of detail in Section Four of their certification programs as that 
provided in Sections Two and Three of their programs. Therefore, 
railroads would be required to address both the training requirements 
found in Sec.  246.119 and the knowledge testing requirements in Sec.  
246.121.
    If a railroad intends to rely on another entity to provide training 
to persons not previously certified as signal employees, paragraph 
(b)(4)(iii) would require the railroad to explain in Section Four how 
the railroad will ensure that the training provided by another entity 
adheres to the railroad's certification program. Specifically, the 
railroad would be required to explain how persons not previously 
certified as signal employees will be given the required training on

[[Page 35645]]

the railroad's signal systems and related technology.
    Paragraph (b)(5) would require railroads to discuss in Section Five 
of their certification programs how the railroad will monitor the 
operational performance of its certified signal employees in accordance 
with Sec.  246.123. In particular, the railroad must discuss the 
processes and procedures it will use for ensuring that such monitoring 
and testing is performed. This includes a description of the scoring 
system the railroad will employ during monitoring observations and 
unannounced tests.
    Finally, paragraph (b)(6) would require railroads to address in 
Section Six of their certification programs how the railroad will 
perform routine administration of the program. This section must 
include summaries of how the program will comply with the various 
provisions listed in paragraph (b)(6) that contain procedural 
requirements for railroad certification programs.
Section 246.107 Signal Service Classifications
    This proposed section would permit, but not require, railroads to 
issue certificates for one or more occupational categories or 
subcategories of certified signal employee service. While some 
railroads with only one type of signal employee service might not have 
any interest in certifying multiple types of signal employee service, 
larger railroads that have already established multiple categories of 
signal employee service (such as signal maintainers, signal inspectors, 
locomotive signal/electrical technicians, etc.) on their territories 
may find it beneficial to issue certificates for multiple types of 
signal employee service. Therefore, by allowing railroads to classify 
their certified signal employees into multiple occupational categories 
or subcategories, FRA would give railroads the flexibility to shape the 
structure of their certification programs to highlight the specific 
tasks and responsibilities for each category and subcategory of 
certified signal employee working on their territories.
    A railroad that classifies its certified signal employees into 
separate categories, such as signal maintainers, signal inspectors, and 
locomotive signal/electrical technicians, would be permitted to issue 
specific certificates for each category of signal employee service. 
This proposed section would also allow railroads to certify signal 
employees for signal system work on specific railroad divisions or 
subdivisions, as opposed to issuing one universal signal employee 
certificate that would certify the signal employee to perform signal 
system work anywhere on the certifying railroad's territory. As further 
explained in the Section-by-Section Analysis of Sec.  246.106(b), 
railroads that choose to classify their certified signal employees into 
multiple occupational categories and subcategories would be required by 
Sec.  246.106(b)(1)(iv) to provide detailed information about each 
occupational category (and subcategory, if applicable) of its certified 
signal employees.
    Paragraph (b) of this section would require certified signal 
employees to immediately notify the railroad (or their employer, if 
they are not employed by a railroad) if they are called to work on a 
signal system or signal-related technology on which they have not been 
certified. When notified that a certified signal employee has been 
called to work on a signal system or signal-related technology on which 
the employee has not been certified, paragraph (c) would prohibit the 
railroad from requiring the certified signal employee to work on the 
signal system or signal-related technology unless the certified signal 
employee is allowed to work under the direct oversight and supervision 
of a mentor in accordance with Sec.  246.124.
Section 246.109 Determinations Required for Certification and 
Recertification
    This proposed section lists the determinations that would be 
required for evaluating a candidate's eligibility to be certified or 
recertified. The reference to Sec.  246.303 in paragraph (a)(2) of this 
section is to ensure railroads determine whether a candidate is 
eligible to hold a certification by reviewing any prior revocations 
addressed in subpart D of this rule.
    Despite the reference in paragraph (a)(1) of this section to 
provisions in Sec. Sec.  246.111 and 246.113 requiring a review of 
safety conduct information from the preceding five years, Sec.  
246.113(g)(1) would not permit a railroad to consider information 
concerning safety conduct that occurred prior to the effective date of 
the final rule issued in this rulemaking. Even though this provision 
would result in a railroad's evaluation of less than five years' worth 
of information for some signal employees early on in the rule's 
effective period, it is included in part 246 for the same reason 
similar provisions were included in parts 240 and 242--namely, that all 
signal employees should be permitted to start with a ``clean slate'' 
for certification purposes as a matter of basic fairness. See 56 FR 
28228, 28242 (June 19, 1991).
    Paragraph (b) of this section would provide flexibility to 
railroads and signal employees or signal employee candidates in 
obtaining the information required by Sec. Sec.  246.111 and 246.113. 
For example, in some states, railroads may be able to obtain motor 
vehicle operator data for signal employees and signal employee 
candidates through background checks.
Section 246.111 Prior Safety Conduct as Motor Vehicle Operator
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.111, 240.115, and 
242.111, would provide the requirements and procedures that a railroad 
would be required to follow when evaluating a certified signal employee 
or certification candidate's prior safety conduct as a motor vehicle 
operator. FRA believes that the prior safety conduct of a motor vehicle 
operator is one indicator of that person's drug and/or alcohol use and 
therefore an important piece of information for a railroad to consider.
    Pursuant to this section, each person seeking certification or 
recertification as a signal employee would be required to request in 
writing that the chief of each driver licensing agency that issued them 
a driver's license within the preceding five years provide a copy of 
the person's driving record to the railroad. Unlike part 240, this 
proposed rule would not require individuals to also request motor 
vehicle operator information from the National Driver Registry (NDR). 
Based on the NDR statute and regulation (see 49 U.S.C. chapter 303 and 
23 CFR part 1327), railroads are prohibited from running NDR checks or 
requesting NDR information from individuals seeking employment as 
certified signal employees.
    Paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section would require a railroad to 
certify or recertify a person for 60 days if the person: (1) requested 
the required information at least 60 days prior to the date of the 
decision to certify or recertify; and (2) otherwise meets the 
eligibility requirements provided in Sec.  246.109(a)(1) through (5). 
If a railroad certifies or recertifies a person for 60 days pursuant to 
paragraphs (b) and (c) but is unable to obtain and evaluate the 
required information during those 60 days, the person would be 
ineligible to perform as a certified signal employee until the 
information can be evaluated. However, if a person is simply unable to 
obtain the required information, that person or the certifying or 
recertifying railroad could petition for a waiver from FRA (see 49 CFR 
part 211). During the pendency of the waiver request, a railroad would 
be required to certify or recertify a person if the person

[[Page 35646]]

otherwise meets the eligibility requirements of Sec.  246.109(a)(1) 
through (5).
    Paragraph (k) of this section would require certified signal 
employees or persons seeking certification as signal employees to 
notify their employer (if employed by a railroad or contractor to a 
railroad), all prospective certifying railroads (if applicable), and 
all railroads with whom the person holds a signal employee certificate 
of motor vehicle incidents described in paragraph (m) of this section 
within 48 hours of the conviction or completed State action to cancel, 
revoke, suspend, or deny their motor vehicle driver's license for such 
incidents. Paragraph (k) would also prohibit railroads from having a 
more restrictive company rule requiring certified signal employees or 
persons seeking signal employee certification to report a conviction or 
completed State action to cancel, revoke, or deny a motor vehicle 
driver's license in less than 48 hours.
    The reasoning behind proposed paragraph (k) involves several 
intertwined objectives. As a matter of fairness, a railroad should not 
revoke, deny, or otherwise make a person ineligible for certification 
until that person has received due process from the State agency taking 
the action against the motor vehicle license. Further, by not requiring 
reporting until 48 hours after the completed State action, the proposed 
rule would have the practical effect of ensuring that a required 
referral to a drug and alcohol counselor (DAC) under paragraph (n) of 
this section would not occur prematurely. However, proposed paragraph 
(k) would not prevent an eligible person from choosing to voluntarily 
self-refer. Nor would it prevent the railroad from referring the person 
for an evaluation under an internal railroad policy if other 
information exists that identifies the person as possibly having a 
substance abuse disorder.
    Paragraph (n) of this section would provide that if a motor vehicle 
incident described in paragraph (m) is identified, the railroad would 
be required to provide the data to its DAC along with ``any information 
concerning the person's railroad service record.'' Furthermore, the 
person would have to be referred for evaluation to determine whether 
the person has an active substance abuse disorder. If the person has an 
active substance abuse disorder, the person would not be eligible for 
certification. However, even if it is determined that the person is not 
currently affected by an active substance abuse disorder, the railroad 
would be required, if recommended by a DAC, to condition certification 
upon participation in any needed aftercare and/or follow-up testing for 
alcohol or drugs or both. The intent of this proposed provision is to 
use motor vehicle records to identify signal employees or candidates 
for signal employee certification who may have active substance abuse 
disorders and make sure they are referred for evaluation and any 
necessary treatment before allowing them to perform safety sensitive 
service. Any testing performed as a result of a DAC's recommendation 
under paragraph (n) would be done under company authority, not Federal. 
However, the testing would be required to comply with the ``technical 
standards'' of part 219, subpart H, and part 40.
    Paragraph (n)(5) is intended to clarify that failure to cooperate 
in the DAC evaluation discussed in paragraphs (n)(2) of this section 
would result in the person being ineligible to perform as a certified 
signal employee until such time as the person cooperates in the 
evaluation.
Section 246.113 Prior Safety Conduct With Other Railroads
    This proposed section, which is derived from 49 CFR 240.113, 
240.205, and 242.113, would establish a process for certification 
candidates to request information about their prior safety conduct when 
employed or certified by another railroad. Except as otherwise provided 
by the retroactive time limit contained in paragraph (g) of this 
section, this section would require railroads to review records 
provided by railroads that previously employed or certified the 
certification candidate regarding the candidate's prior compliance with 
Sec. Sec.  246.115 and 246.303 within the previous five years, as well 
as the candidate's motor vehicle driving record within the previous 
three years.
    Paragraph (b) of this section contains an exception that if a 
certification candidate has not been employed or certified by any other 
railroad in the previous five years, they do not have to submit a 
request pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section. Such candidates, 
however, must notify the railroad where they are seeking certification 
of this fact. This exception should help minimize any burden arising 
from these proposed requirements.
    For certification candidates who do not qualify for the exception 
provided in paragraph (b), paragraph (c) would require the 
certification candidate to submit a written request to each railroad 
that employed or certified the candidate within the previous five 
years. As indicated earlier, the written request would direct the 
previous railroad employer or certifying railroad to provide 
information about the certification candidate's prior compliance with 
Sec. Sec.  246.115 and 246.303 within the previous five years, as well 
as the candidate's motor vehicle driving record within the previous 
three years from the date of the written request.
    In addition, railroads would be required by paragraph (e) to comply 
with written requests for records of prior safety conduct submitted by 
former employees or certified signal employees pursuant to this section 
within 30 days after receipt of such requests. Railroads that are 
unable to provide information about prior safety conduct within 30 days 
would be required by paragraph (f) to either: (1) provide a written 
explanation of why the railroad cannot provide the information within 
the requested time frame, along with an estimate of how much time will 
be needed to supply the requested information; or (2) provide an 
adequate explanation for why the railroad cannot provide the 
information requested.
    In the event a railroad seeking to certify or recertify a 
certification candidate receives a written statement from another 
railroad pursuant to paragraph (f) of this section, which explains that 
the railroad cannot provide the information requested, the railroad 
seeking to certify or recertify the certification candidate would be 
deemed to have complied with the eligibility determination required by 
paragraph (a) of this section, provided the railroad retains a copy of 
the other railroad's written statement in its records.
    Similarly, in the event a railroad seeking to certify or recertify 
a certification candidate does not receive a written response from 
other railroads, the railroad would be deemed to have complied with the 
eligibility determination required by paragraph (a) of this section 
provided the railroad retains a copy of its written request for this 
information in its records.
Section 246.115 Substance Abuse Disorders and Alcohol Drug Rules 
Compliance
    This proposed section, which is derived from 49 CFR 240.119, 
240.205, and 242.115, addresses: (1) active substance abuse disorders; 
and (2) specific alcohol/drug regulatory violations. As noted earlier, 
annual drug and alcohol testing data submitted to FRA revealed that 
signal employees had

[[Page 35647]]

a random violation rate (drug and alcohol positives and refusals) and a 
pre-employment violation rate that was considerably higher than their 
train and engine service counterparts.
    Therefore, this section and Sec.  246.111 address certain 
situations in which inquiry must be made into the possibility that the 
individual has an active substance abuse disorder if the individual is 
to obtain or retain a certificate. The fact that specific instances are 
cited in this section would not preclude the general duty of the 
railroad to take reasonable and proportional action in other 
appropriate cases. Declining job performance, extreme mood swings, 
irregular attendance and other indicators may, to the extent not 
immediately explicable, indicate the need for an evaluation under 
internal policies of the railroad.
    The purpose of identifying conditions is not to require (and does 
not require) a railroad to order an evaluation any time a listed 
condition is exhibited. Rather, FRA is simply providing guidance here 
as to conditions that may, given the context, call for an evaluation 
under internal policies of the railroad. Moreover, FRA remains vigilant 
of harassment and intimidation and will take appropriate action if such 
conduct is discovered.
    Paragraph (a) of this section would require railroads to determine 
that a person initially certifying, or a signal employee recertifying, 
meets the eligibility requirements of this section. In addition, each 
railroad would be required by Sec.  246.203 to retain the documents 
used to make that determination.
    Paragraph (c) of this section would prohibit a person with an 
active substance abuse disorder from being certified as a signal 
employee. This means appropriate action must be taken with respect to a 
certificate (whether denial or suspension) whenever the existence of an 
active substance abuse disorder comes to the official attention of the 
railroad, with the exception discussed below. Paragraph (c) would also 
provide a mechanism for an employee to voluntarily self-refer for 
substance abuse counseling or treatment.
    Paragraph (d) would address conduct constituting a violation of 
Sec.  219.101 or Sec.  219.102 of the alcohol/drug regulations. Section 
219.101(a)(1) prohibits regulated employees from using or possessing 
alcohol or any controlled substance when the employee is on duty and 
subject to performing regulated service for a railroad. Section 
219.101(a)(2) prohibits regulated employees from reporting for 
regulated service, or going on or remaining on duty in regulated 
service, while under the influence of (or impaired by) alcohol or while 
having a breath or blood alcohol concentration of 0.04 or more. A 
regulated employee is also prohibited from using alcohol either within 
four hours of reporting for regulated service or after receiving notice 
to report for regulated service, whichever is less. This is conduct 
that specifically and directly threatens safety in a way that is wholly 
unacceptable, regardless of its genesis and regardless of whether it 
has occurred previously. In its more extreme forms, such conduct is 
punishable as a felony under the criminal laws of the United States (18 
U.S.C. 341 et seq.) and a number of states.
    Section 219.102 prohibits use of a controlled substance by a 
regulated employee, at any time, whether on or off duty, except for 
approved medical use. Abuse of marijuana, cocaine, amphetamines, and 
other controlled substances poses unacceptable risks to safety.
    Under the alcohol/drug regulations, whenever a violation of Sec.  
219.101 or Sec.  219.102 is established, based on authorized or 
mandated chemical testing, the employee must be removed from service 
and may not return until after an SAP evaluation, any needed treatment 
and/or education, and a negative return-to-duty test, and is subject to 
follow-up testing (as required by Sec.  219.104). These requirements 
constitute an absolute minimum standard for action when a signal 
employee is determined to have violated one of these prohibitions. 
Considering the need both for general and specific deterrence with 
respect to future unsafe conduct, additional action should be premised 
on the severity of the violation and whether the same individual has 
had prior violations.
    This proposed rule would require railroads to consider conduct that 
occurred within the period of five consecutive years prior to the 
review. This is the same period provided in this proposed rule as the 
maximum period of ineligibility for certification following repeated 
alcohol/drug violations and is the same period used in parts 240 and 
242. Use of a 5-year cycle reflects railroad industry experience 
indicating that conduct committed as much as 5 years before may tend to 
predict future alcohol or drug abuse behavior. For example, in 
analyzing data submitted to FRA between 2017 and 2021, FRA found that 
railroad employees returning to duty from previous drug or alcohol 
violations were approximately five times more likely to test positive 
than other railroad employees. Of course, railroads would retain the 
flexibility to consider prior conduct (including conduct more than 5 
years prior) in determining whom they will hire as signal employees.
    Conduct violative of the FRA proscriptions against alcohol and 
drugs need not occur while the person is serving in the capacity of a 
signal employee in order to be considered. For instance, an employee 
who violated Sec.  219.101 while working as a conductor and then sought 
signal employee certification six months later (under the provision 
described below) would not be eligible for certification. The same is 
true under part 240--an employee who violates Sec.  219.101 while 
working as a brakeman and then seeks locomotive engineer certification 
six months later would not be eligible for certification at that time. 
The responsibility of the railroad would therefore not be limited to 
periodic recertification. This proposed rule would require a review of 
certification status for any conduct in violation of Sec.  219.101 or 
Sec.  219.102.
    The proposed rule would require a determination of ineligibility 
for a period of 9 months for an initial violation of Sec.  219.101. 
This would parallel the 9-month ineligibility period in Sec. Sec.  
240.119(c)(4)(iii) and 242.115(e)(4)(iii).
    Specifying a period of ineligibility serves the interest of 
deterrence while giving further encouragement to deal with the problem 
before it is detected by management. In order to preserve and encourage 
referrals, the nine-month period could only be waived in the case of a 
qualifying referral (see Sec.  219.1001). FRA believes that this 
distinction in treatment, which is also found in part 242, is warranted 
as a strong inducement to participation because referral programs help 
identify troubled employees before those employees get into accidents 
and incidents.
    In the case of a second violation of Sec.  219.101, the signal 
employee would be ineligible for a period of five years. Given railroad 
employment practices and commitment to alcohol/drug compliance, it is 
likely that any individual so situated may also be permanently 
dismissed from employment. However, it would be important that the 
employing railroad follow through and revoke the certificate under this 
proposed rule, so the signal employee could not go to work for another 
railroad (or railroad contractor) within the five-year period using the 
unexpired certificate issued by the first railroad as the basis for 
certification. These proposed sanctions

[[Page 35648]]

mirror the sanctions in Sec. Sec.  240.119 and 242.115.
    Under this proposed rule, one violation of Sec.  219.102 within the 
5-year window would require only temporary suspension and the minimum 
response described in Sec.  246.115(e) (referral for evaluation, 
treatment as necessary, negative return-to-duty test, and appropriate 
follow-up). This parallels the approach taken in parts 240 and 242 and 
reflects FRA's intent to not undercut the therapeutic approach to drug 
abuse employed by many railroads. This approach permits first-time 
positive drug tests to be handled in a non-punitive manner that 
concentrates on remediation of any underlying substance abuse problem 
and avoids the adversarial process associated with investigations, 
grievances, and arbitrations under the Railway Labor Act and collective 
bargaining agreements. A second violation of Sec.  219.102 would 
subject the employee to a mandatory two-year period of ineligibility. A 
third violation within five years would lead to a five-year period of 
ineligibility.
    This proposed rule also addresses violations of Sec. Sec.  219.101 
and 219.102 in combination. A person violating Sec.  219.101 after a 
prior Sec.  219.102 violation would be ineligible for three years; and 
the same would be true for the reverse sequence. This mirrors the 
ineligibility period for locomotive engineers and conductors who have 
one Sec.  219.101 violation and one Sec.  219.102 violation. See 49 CFR 
240.119(e)(4)(ii) and 242.115(e)(4)(ii).
    Refusals to participate in chemical tests would be treated as if 
the test were positive. A refusal to provide a breath or body fluid 
sample for testing under the requirements of 49 CFR part 219 when 
instructed to do so by a railroad representative would be treated, for 
purposes of ineligibility under this section, in the same manner as a 
violation of: (1) Sec.  219.101, in the case of a refusal to provide a 
breath sample for alcohol testing, or a blood specimen for mandatory 
post-accident toxicological testing; or (2) Sec.  219.102, in the case 
of a refusal to provide a body fluid specimen for drug testing.
    Interested parties should, however, note that 49 CFR part 40, 
subpart I, discusses medical conditions under which an individual's 
failure to provide a sufficient sample would not be deemed a refusal. 
In addition, subpart G of FRA's alcohol and drug regulations excuses 
employees from compliance with the requirement to participate in random 
drug and alcohol testing if the employee can substantiate a medical 
emergency involving the employee or an immediate family member. See 49 
CFR 219.617.
    If an employee covered by 49 CFR part 219 refuses to provide a 
breath or body fluid specimen or specimens when required to by a 
railroad pursuant to a mandatory provision of 49 CFR part 219, then the 
railroad (apart from any action it takes under part 246) would be 
required to remove that employee from regulated service and disqualify 
the employee from working in regulated service for nine months. See 49 
CFR 219.104 and 219.107; see also, 49 CFR part 219, subpart H, and 49 
CFR 40.191 and 40.261. The employee would also be prohibited by Sec.  
246.213(c) from working as a certified signal employee for any other 
railroad during this 9-month period.
    Paragraph (e) prescribes the conditions under which employees may 
be certified or recertified after a determination that the 
certification should be denied, suspended, or revoked, due to a 
violation of Sec.  219.101 or Sec.  219.102 of FRA's alcohol/drug 
regulations. These conditions are derived from the conditions in 
Sec. Sec.  240.119(d) and 242.115(f) and closely parallel the return-
to-duty provisions of the alcohol/drug rule. The proposed regulation 
would not require compensation of the employee for the time spent in 
this testing, which is a condition precedent to retention of the 
certificate; but the issue of compensation would ultimately be resolved 
by reference to the collective bargaining agreement or other terms and 
conditions of employment under the Railway Labor Act. Moreover, the 
railroad that intends to withdraw its conditional certification would 
be required to afford the signal employee the hearing procedures 
provided by Sec.  246.307 if the signal employee does not waive their 
right to the hearing.
    Paragraph (f) would ensure that a signal employee, like any other 
covered employee, can self-refer for treatment under the alcohol/drug 
rule (49 CFR 219.1003) before being detected in violation of alcohol/
drug prohibitions and would be entitled to confidential handling of 
that referral and subsequent treatment. This means that a railroad 
would not normally receive notice from the DAC of any substance abuse 
disorder identified as a result of a voluntary self-referral under 49 
CFR 219.1003. However, paragraph (f) would also require that the 
railroad policy provide that confidentiality is waived if the signal 
employee at any time refuses to cooperate in a recommended course of 
counseling or treatment, to the extent that the railroad must receive 
notice that the employee has an active substance abuse disorder so that 
appropriate certificate action can be taken. The effect of this 
proposed provision is that the certification status of a signal 
employee who seeks help and cooperates in treatment would not be 
affected, unless the signal employee fails to follow through.
Section 246.117 Vision Acuity
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.121, 240.207, and 
242.117, contains the requirements for vision acuity testing that a 
railroad would have to incorporate in its signal employee certification 
program. This section differs from its analogous sections in 49 CFR 
parts 240 and 242 in that 40 CFR parts 240 and 242 address the 
requirements of vision and hearing acuity in the same section. However, 
FRA determined that for this proposed rule, it could more clearly 
present these requirements if they are in two separate sections: one 
section for vision acuity (Sec.  246.117) and one section for hearing 
acuity (Sec.  246.118).
    Paragraph (c) of this section contains the general vision standards 
that a person would be required to satisfy in order to be certified as 
a signal employee unless they are determined to have sufficient vision 
acuity under paragraph (d) of this section. The standards in paragraph 
(c) mirror the vision acuity standards for locomotive engineers and 
conductors in 49 CFR parts 240 and 242. FRA is proposing that certified 
signal employees should have to satisfy certain vision standards, with 
the ability to distinguish between colors being particularly important. 
However, FRA requests comments on whether vision acuity standards for 
certified signal employees are necessary, and if so, whether they 
should be as strict as the standards for locomotive engineers and 
conductors.
    Although some individuals may not be able to meet the threshold 
acuity levels in paragraph (c) of this section, they may be able to 
compensate in other ways that will permit them to function at an 
appropriately safe level despite their physical limitations. Paragraph 
(d) of this section permits a railroad to have procedures whereby 
doctors can evaluate such individuals and make discrete determinations 
about each person's ability to compensate for their physical 
limitations. If the railroad's medical examiner concludes that an 
individual has compensated for their limitations and could safely serve 
as a certified signal employee, the railroad could certify that person 
under this proposed regulation if the railroad obtains the medical 
examiner's professional medical opinion to that

[[Page 35649]]

effect. If necessary, medical examiners could condition their opinion 
on certain circumstances or restrictions, such as the use of corrective 
lens.
    Paragraph (e) of this section describes what documents the railroad 
would be required to keep on file with respect to vision acuity 
testing. Railroads would be required to retain these records for 
individuals who the railroad certifies as signal employees, as well as 
those individuals for whom the railroad denies certification. Paragraph 
(g) of this section addresses the issue of vision deterioration. Once 
certified signal employees become aware that their vision has 
deteriorated, they must notify the railroad before performing any 
subsequent service as a certified signal employee. FRA presumes that 
certified signal employees would most likely become aware of 
deterioration in their vision either through their own personal 
observation or through examination by a medical professional. Should 
this occur, before a certified signal employee can return to service, 
they must be reexamined. If upon reexamination, the railroad's medical 
examiner concludes that the certified signal employee still satisfies 
the vision acuity standards in this part, the certified signal employee 
would be allowed to return to service. However, if the medical examiner 
concludes that the certified signal employee no longer satisfies these 
requirements, the railroad must deny the person's certification in 
accordance with Sec.  246.301, regardless of how much time remains 
before the signal employee's current certificate expires. Certified 
signal employees should note that willful noncompliance with the 
notification requirement in this paragraph could result in enforcement 
action.
Section 246.118 Hearing Acuity
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.121, 240.207, and 
242.117, contains the requirements for hearing acuity testing that a 
railroad would be required to incorporate in its signal employee 
program.
    Paragraph (c) of this section contains the general hearing 
standards that a person must satisfy in order to be certified as a 
signal employee unless they are determined to have sufficient hearing 
acuity under paragraph (d) of this section. The standards in paragraph 
(c) mirror the hearing acuity standards for locomotive engineers and 
conductors in 49 CFR parts 240 and 242. FRA is considering whether 
hearing acuity standards are necessary for certified signal employees 
and if so, whether they need to be as stringent as the standards for 
engineers and conductors. FRA proposes that certified signal employees 
should have to satisfy certain hearing standards and it seems logical 
for these standards to be consistent with the hearing standards for 
engineers and conductors. However, FRA requests comments on whether 
hearing acuity standards for certified signal employees are necessary, 
and if so, whether they should be as strict as the standards for 
locomotive engineers and conductors.
    Although some individuals may not be able to meet the threshold 
acuity levels in paragraph (c) of this section, they may be able to 
compensate in other ways that will permit them to function at an 
appropriately safe level despite their physical limitations. Paragraph 
(d) of this section would permit a railroad to have procedures whereby 
doctors can evaluate such individuals and make discrete determinations 
about each person's ability to compensate for their physical 
limitations. If the railroad's medical examiner concludes that an 
individual has compensated for their limitations and could safely serve 
as a certified signal employee, the railroad could certify that person 
under this regulation once the railroad possesses the medical 
examiner's professional medical opinion to that effect. If necessary, 
medical examiners could condition their opinion on certain 
circumstances or restrictions, such as the use of a hearing aid.
    Paragraph (e) of this section describes what documents the railroad 
would be required to keep on file with respect to hearing acuity 
testing. Railroads would be required to retain these records for both 
individuals who the railroad certifies as signal employees and those 
individuals for whom the railroad denies certification. Paragraph (g) 
of this section addresses the issue of hearing deterioration. Once 
certified signal employees become aware that their hearing has 
deteriorated, they would be required to notify the railroad before 
performing any subsequent service as a certified signal employee. FRA 
presumes certified signal employees would most likely become aware of 
deterioration in their hearing either through their own personal 
observation or through examination by a medical professional. Before a 
certified signal employee could return to service, they would have to 
be reexamined. If upon reexamination, the railroad's medical examiner 
concludes that the certified signal employee still satisfies the 
hearing acuity standards in this part, the certified signal employee 
could return to service. However, if the medical examiner concludes 
that the certified signal employee no longer satisfies these 
requirements, the railroad would be required to deny the person's 
certification in accordance with Sec.  246.301, regardless of how much 
time remains before the signal employee's current certificate expires. 
Certified signal employees should note that willful noncompliance with 
the notification requirement in this paragraph could result in 
enforcement action.
Section 246.119 Training Requirements
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.123, 240.213, and 
242.119, would require railroads to provide initial and periodic 
training to signal employees. Such training is necessary to ensure 
certified signal employees have the knowledge, skills, and abilities 
necessary to safely perform all of the safety-related duties mandated 
by Federal law, regulations, and orders.
    Paragraph (b) of this section would require railroads to address in 
their certification programs whether the railroad will accept 
responsibility for training persons who have not been previously 
certified as signal employees and thus obtain authority to provide 
initial signal employee certification or whether the railroad will only 
recertify signal employees who were previously certified by other 
railroads. If a railroad accepts responsibility for training persons 
who have not been previously certified as signal employees, paragraph 
(c) of this section would require the railroad to state in its 
certification program whether it will conduct the training or whether 
the railroad will employ a training program that has been adopted and 
ratified by the railroad, but will be conducted by another entity on 
its behalf.
    Under this section, railroads would have latitude to design and 
develop the training and delivery methods they will employ; but 
paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this section contain proposed 
requirements for railroads that elect to train persons who have not 
been previously certified as signal employees. Pursuant to paragraph 
(d), a railroad that makes this election would be required to determine 
how training will be structured, developed, and delivered, including an 
appropriate combination of classroom, simulator, computer-based, 
correspondence, practical demonstration, on-the-job training, or other 
formal training. Paragraph (d)(3) would also require railroads to 
review and modify their training programs whenever new safety-related 
railroad laws, regulations, orders, and procedures are issued, as well 
as whenever new signal systems,

[[Page 35650]]

technologies, software, or equipment are introduced into the workplace.
    Paragraph (f) of this section provides the requirements a person 
not previously certified as a signal employee would have to satisfy in 
order to become a certified signal employee. Paragraph (f)(2) states 
the person must demonstrate on-the-job proficiency by successfully 
completing the tasks, and using the signal systems and technology 
necessary, to be a certified signal employee on the railroad. A 
certification candidate may perform these tasks under the direct onsite 
supervision of a certified signal employee who has at least one year of 
experience as a signal employee. FRA requests comments, including any 
supporting data, on whether this ``one year of experience'' requirement 
for certified signal employees supervising certification candidates is 
sufficient. The final proposed requirement, found in paragraph (f)(3), 
is that the previously uncertified person must demonstrate their 
knowledge of the railroad's signal systems, technologies, software, and 
equipment deployed on the railroad's territory. If the railroad uses a 
written test to fulfill this requirement, paragraph (f)(3) would 
require the railroad to provide the person(s) being tested with an 
opportunity to consult with a qualified instructor to explain a test 
question. This requirement is equivalent to 49 CFR 242.119(f) and is 
included so that certification candidates being tested can obtain 
clarification of test questions from someone who possesses knowledge of 
the signal systems, technologies, software and equipment deployed in 
the relevant territory.
    Paragraph (g) of this section would require railroads to retain 
written documentation of the listed determinations. Paragraph (g)(1) 
would only apply to people who have not been previously certified as 
signal employees, whereas paragraph (g)(2) would apply to all persons 
seeking signal employee certification.
    Paragraph (h) would require all railroads, regardless of their 
election in paragraph (b) of this section, to provide comprehensive 
training on the installation, operation, testing, maintenance, and 
repair of the signal systems and related technology deployed on their 
territory. (This training must include training on both signal software 
and signal equipment.) In order to implement this requirement, 
paragraph (h) requires railroads to address in their certification 
program how such training will be provided and how the railroad will 
ensure that each certified signal employee receives this comprehensive 
training before the employee is required to install, operate, test, 
maintain, or repair any signal system or related technology deployed on 
the railroad's territory.
    Paragraph (h)(3) would also require railroads to discuss in their 
programs the maximum amount of time that a certified signal employee 
can be absent from performing various types of safety-sensitive work on 
signal systems before refresher training will be required. This 
provision is intended to require railroads to address situations in 
which a certified signal employee may have been working on signal 
system installations for an extended period and was not involved in the 
intricacies of maintenance and repair of those systems during that 
time. This time period cannot exceed twelve months. However, railroads 
would be allowed to choose a shorter time period if they desire.
    Paragraph (j) of this section would require each railroad to 
provide for the continuing education of their certified signal 
employees to ensure each certified signal employee maintains the 
necessary knowledge and skills concerning compliance with all 
applicable Federal laws, regulations, and orders; compliance with all 
applicable railroad signal system safety and operating rules; and 
compliance with all applicable standards, procedures, and instructions 
for the installation, operation, testing, maintenance, troubleshooting, 
and repair of new and existing signal systems and new and existing 
signal-related technology deployed on its territory. Given the formal 
annual review and analysis of railroad certification programs that each 
Class I railroad, commuter railroad, and Class II railroad would be 
required by Sec.  246.215 to conduct, FRA anticipates that these 
railroads will address issues identified during the annual review and 
analysis of their certification programs in their continuing education 
programs. Thus, FRA expects the annual review and analysis required by 
Sec.  246.215 will help improve the overall quality of the railroads' 
training programs.
    Paragraph (k) is intended to ensure that each certified signal 
employee receives comprehensive training on the installation, 
operation, testing, maintenance, and repair of new signal systems 
(including software and equipment) and new signal-related technology 
deployed on the railroad's territory before the employee is required to 
install, operate, test, maintain, or repair any such system or signal-
related technology.
Section 246.121 Knowledge Testing
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.125, 240.209, and 
242.121, would require railroads to provide for the initial and 
periodic testing of certified signal employees. Paragraph (b) of this 
section outlines the general requirements for such testing. This 
testing will have to effectively examine and measure a signal 
employee's knowledge of: (a) all applicable Federal railroad safety 
laws, regulations, and orders governing signal systems and related 
technology, (b) all applicable railroad safety and operating rules, and 
(c) all applicable railroad standards, procedures, and instructions for 
the installation, operation, testing, maintenance, troubleshooting, and 
repair of the railroad's signal systems and related technology.
    Under this section, railroads would have discretion to design the 
tests that will be employed; for most railroads that would entail some 
modification of their existing ``book of rules'' examination to include 
new subject areas. This section does not specify the minimum number of 
questions to be asked or the passing score to be obtained. However, it 
would require that the test be conducted without open reference books 
unless use of such materials is part of a test objective. Also, this 
section would require that knowledge testing include a practical 
demonstration component, with other test components in written or 
electronic form. Since the testing procedures and requirements selected 
by the railroad would be submitted to FRA for approval, FRA expects the 
railroad would describe how it will exercise its discretion to ensure 
certified signal employees on its territory demonstrate their knowledge 
concerning the safe discharge of their responsibilities. FRA would also 
monitor the exercise of discretion being afforded to railroads by this 
section.
    Paragraph (c) of this section mirrors 49 CFR 242.121(e) and would 
require the railroad to provide the person(s) being testing with an 
opportunity to consult with a qualified instructor to explain one or 
more test questions.
    Paragraph (d) of this section states that if a person fails a test, 
the railroad cannot allow that person to serve as a certified signal 
employee until they achieve a passing score on reexamination. The 
railroad would decide how much time, if any, mut pass after a test 
failure before a certification candidate can be reexamined. 
Furthermore, the railroad would decide what additional training, if 
any, a candidate would receive after a test

[[Page 35651]]

failure. The railroad would also decide whether there should be a limit 
on the number of times a candidate could retake a test, and if so, the 
number of test retakes the railroad will allow.
Section 246.123 Monitoring Operational Performance
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.129 and 242.123, 
contains proposed requirements for conducting unannounced compliance 
tests. Paragraph (a) of this section would require each railroad to 
describe in its certification program how it will monitor the conduct 
of its certified signal employees by performing unannounced compliance 
tests on the railroad's signal standards, test procedures, and Federal 
regulations concerning signal systems, as well as monitoring the 
performance of signal-related tasks. Paragraph (a)(3) would require 
railroads to indicate the types of actions they will take if they 
identify deficiencies in a certified signal employee's performance 
during an unannounced compliance test. FRA believes it is up to each 
railroad to decide the appropriate action to take in light of various 
factors, including collective bargaining agreements. Further, FRA 
believes that the vast majority of railroads have adequate policies to 
deal with deficiencies in a signal employee's performance and have 
handled them appropriately for many years.
    To avoid restricting the options available to the railroads and 
employee representatives to develop processes for handling test 
failures, FRA designed this regulation to be as flexible as possible. 
There are a variety of actions and approaches that a railroad could 
take, such as developing and providing formal remedial training for 
certified signal employees who fail tests or have deficiencies in their 
performance. Railroads could also implement formal procedures whereby 
certified signal employees are given the opportunity to explain, in 
writing, the factors that they believe caused their test failure or 
performance deficiency. These explanations could help railroads 
identify areas of training on which to focus or perhaps discover that 
the reason for the failure/deficiency was due to something other than a 
lack of skills. FRA believes there are numerous other approaches that 
could be considered and evaluated by railroads and their certified 
signal employees. FRA does not want to stifle a railroad's ability to 
adopt an approach that is best for its organization.
    Paragraph (a)(4) would require railroads to describe how they will 
monitor the performance of signal-related tasks by their certified 
signal employees. For example, railroad monitoring could include 
unaccompanied, post-installation inspections of signal cut-overs 
(conducted within three days of the installation) to verify that the 
certified signal employee properly installed and tested the signal 
system in accordance with the railroad's signal standards. Paragraph 
(b) of this section provides proposed requirements for these 
unannounced compliance tests, including signal system tests that must 
be performed and who would be allowed to conduct the tests. Paragraph 
(b)(3) specifies that each railroad would be required to give each of 
its certified signal employees at least one unannounced compliance test 
each calendar year, except as provided in paragraph (d) of this 
section. FRA recognizes that before these unannounced compliance tests 
can be performed in conformance with this section, a railroad's 
certification program must first be approved by FRA. Thus, at the 
latest, FRA expects railroads to perform these unannounced compliance 
tests on all of their certified signal employees during the calendar 
year immediately following the year their certification program is 
first approved by FRA. For example, if FRA approves one railroad's 
program in January 2025 and another railroad's program in December 
2025, both of these railroads would be required to perform unannounced 
compliance tests on all of their certified signal employees starting in 
2026. While FRA would encourage these railroads to commence the 
unannounced tests after their programs are approved in 2025, FRA 
recognizes it may not be practical to perform unannounced tests on all 
of their certified signal employees by the end of 2025, especially for 
the railroad whose program was not approved until December 2025.
    Paragraph (c) of this section reflects FRA's recognition that some 
certified signal employees may not be performing tasks that require 
certification. Therefore, a railroad would not be required to provide 
those certified signal employees with an annual, unannounced compliance 
test. For example, a certified signal employee may be on furlough, in 
military service, off with an extended illness, or working in another 
craft. In situations like these where a certified signal employee is 
not performing tasks that require certification, the railroad would not 
have to give an unannounced compliance test. However, when the 
certified signal employee resumes work on signal systems that requires 
certification, they would have to be given an unannounced compliance 
test within 30 days. Moreover, the railroad would be required to retain 
a written record documenting the dates on which the certified signal 
employee stopped performing tasks requiring certification, the date the 
certified signal employee resumed performing signal system work 
requiring certification, and the date the certified signal employee 
received their unannounced compliance test following their resumption 
of signal system work requiring certification.
Section 246.124 Mentoring
    This proposed section would require railroads to include, in their 
certification programs, procedures for mentoring signal employees who 
have not been certified by the railroad (such as newly-hired signal 
employees who were certified by their previous employers). By allowing 
for the mentoring of these signal employees, railroads can allow 
uncertified signal employees to perform signal work under the direct 
oversight and supervision of a mentor until these signal employees are 
certified by the railroad.
    After a railroad's certification program has been approved by FRA, 
paragraph (b) of this section would require that the railroad assign 
either a signal employee that it has certified pursuant to this part or 
a signal employee who is working under the direct observation and 
supervision of a mentor to perform work on a signal system or signal-
related technology that requires certification. Therefore, if the 
railroad assigns a signal employee that it has not certified to perform 
work on a signal system or signal-related technology that requires 
certification, paragraph (b) would require the railroad to assign a 
mentor who can directly oversee and supervise the work performed by the 
signal employee.
    Paragraph (c) of this section would only apply to railroads who 
elect to classify their certified signal employees into more than one 
occupational category or subcategory, in accordance with Sec.  246.107. 
These railroads would be required by paragraph (c) to address in their 
certification programs how mentoring will be provided for certified 
signal employees who move into a different occupational category or 
subcategory of certified signal service.
    Paragraph (e) of this section reflects FRA's intent that mentors 
must be held accountable for the work performed by the signal employees 
who are working under their direct oversight and supervision. 
Therefore, paragraph (e)

[[Page 35652]]

would require railroads to address in their certification programs how 
they will hold mentors accountable for the work performed by signal 
employees who are working under their direct oversight and supervision.
Section 246.125 Certification Determinations Made by Other Railroads
    This section of the proposed rule, derived from 49 CFR 240.225 and 
242.125, contains requirements that would apply when a certified or 
previously certified signal employee is about to begin work for a 
different railroad. This section would allow a railroad to rely on 
determinations made by another railroad concerning a person's 
certification.
    As noted previously in the discussion above related to Sec.  
246.124, railroads would be required to provide mentoring for signal 
employees with some signal system work experience who have not been 
certified by the railroad. However, this section would also require 
railroads to address in their certification programs how they will 
administer training for previously uncertified signal employees with 
extensive signal experience or previously certified signal employees 
who have had their certification expire. In both scenarios, FRA would 
allow the railroad to reduce the on-the-job training that might 
otherwise be required if these signal employees were treated as having 
no signal system work experience. However, if a railroad's 
certification program fails to specify how the railroad will train a 
previously certified signal employee hired from another railroad, all 
signal employees hired by that railroad would be required to take the 
hiring railroad's entire training program (regardless of the signal 
employee's prior certification status).

Subpart C--Administration of the Certification Program

Section 246.201 Time Limitations for Certification
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.217 and 242.201, 
contains various time constraints that preclude railroads from relying 
on stale information when evaluating a candidate for certification or 
recertification. For example, when making a determination of 
eligibility based on prior safety conduct on a different railroad 
pursuant to Sec.  246.113, paragraph (a)(1) would prohibit a railroad 
from relying on information provided more than one year before the 
railroad's certification decision. However, paragraph (b) goes on to 
explain that the time constraints listed in paragraph (a) would not 
apply to railroads who are making certification or recertification 
decisions based on the eligibility determination that have already been 
made by another railroad in accordance with Sec.  246.125.
    Paragraph (c) would prohibit a railroad from certifying a person as 
a signal employee for more than three years except for those 
individuals who are designated as certified signal employees under 
Sec.  246.105(c) or (d). When a railroad designates a person as a 
certified signal employee under Sec.  246.105(c) or (d), that 
certification can last for three years after the date that FRA 
initially approves the railroad's certification program. This could, 
however, lead to situations where a certificate could be valid for more 
than three years. For example, if a railroad designates a person as a 
certified signal employee in January 2025, but FRA does not approve the 
railroad's certification program until January 2026, the signal 
employee's certification could last until January 2029 (four years in 
total). However, any subsequent recertifications for that signal 
employee could only last for three years. In other words, if the signal 
employee in the previous example got recertified in January 2029, that 
certificate would expire no later than January 2032.
    Paragraph (d) would require railroads to issue certificates that 
comply with Sec.  246.207 to their certified signal employees within 30 
days from the date of the railroad's decision to certify or recertify 
that person.
Section 246.203 Retaining Information Supporting Determinations
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.215 and 242.203, 
contains recordkeeping requirements for railroads that employ certified 
signal employees. Paragraph (b) lists the documents that railroads 
would be required to retain for each of their certified signal 
employees and certification candidates, while paragraph (e) would 
require railroads to retain these records for six (6) years from the 
date of the certification, recertification, denial, or revocation 
decision. Paragraph (e) would also require railroads to make these 
records available to FRA representatives, upon request, in a timely 
manner.
    Paragraph (f) would prohibit railroads and individuals from 
falsifying records that railroads are required to retain pursuant to 
this section. Paragraph (g) contains minimum standards for electronic 
recordkeeping with which railroads would be required to comply to 
maintain electronic versions of the required records. These minimum 
standards for electronic recordkeeping are virtually identical to the 
electronic recordkeeping standards contained in 49 CFR 242.203.
Section 246.205 List of Certified Signal Employees and Recordkeeping
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.221 and 242.205, 
would require a railroad to maintain a list of its certified signal 
employees. Paragraph (b) of this section would also require railroads 
to update their lists of certified signal employees at least annually 
and to make its list of certified signal employees available, upon 
request, to FRA representatives in a timely manner.
    Paragraph (c) contains minimum standards for electronic 
recordkeeping with which railroads would be required to comply, in 
order to maintain an electronic version of the list of certified signal 
employees required by this section. These minimum standards are similar 
to the electronic recordkeeping standards contained in 49 CFR 242.205.
    Paragraph (d) would prohibit railroads and individuals from 
falsifying the list of certified signal employees that railroads are 
required to maintain pursuant to this section.
Section 246.207 Certificate Requirements
    This proposed section contains proposed requirements for the 
certificate that each certified signal employee would be required to 
carry. The requirements in paragraphs (a)-(e) of this section, which 
pertain to the proposed minimum content for certificates and 
authorization of the person who would be designated to sign the 
certificates, are derived from 49 CFR 240.223 and 242.207.
    Paragraph (a) of this section specifies that railroads have the 
option of issuing certificates electronically or in paper form. 
Paragraph (a)(1) would require that the signal employee certificate 
identify the railroad issuing the certificate. Therefore, a certified 
signal employee who works for more than one railroad would be required 
to have a separate certificate for each railroad with whom the signal 
employee is certified. For railroads who choose to classify their 
certified signal employees into occupational categories or 
subcategories, pursuant to Sec.  246.107, paragraph (a)(2) would 
require the railroad to indicate the specific signal employee 
category(ies) or subcategory(ies) for which the person has been 
certified.
    Paragraph (a)(7) would require the certificate to be signed by an 
individual who has been designated by the railroad

[[Page 35653]]

as an authorized signatory of signal employee certificates, as 
described in paragraph (c) of this section. Electronic signatures are 
permitted under this proposed rule. In addition, paragraph (e) of this 
section would prohibit railroads and individuals from falsifying 
certificates.
    Paragraphs (f) and (i) are derived from 49 CFR 240.305 and 242.209. 
These paragraphs would require signal employees to have their 
certificates in their possession while on duty, display their 
certificates when requested by an FRA representative, State inspectors 
\21\ authorized under 49 CFR part 212, or certain railroad officers, 
and to notify a railroad if they are called to serve as a signal 
employee in a service that would cause the employee to exceed their 
certificate limits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \21\ Although State inspectors authorized under 49 CFR part 212 
could be considered FRA representatives, they are mentioned 
separately in this section to ensure there is no dispute regarding 
their authority.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Paragraph (g), derived from 49 CFR 240.301 and 242.211(a), would 
require a railroad to promptly replace a certified signal employee's 
certificate at no cost to the employee, if the certificate is lost, 
stolen, mutilated, or becomes unreadable. However, unlike Sec.  
242.211(b), this section does not contain detailed requirements for 
temporary replacement certificates. Temporary replacement certificates 
generally contain most of the information provided on official 
certificates. Therefore, it does not appear to be especially burdensome 
for railroads to issue temporary certificates to replace certificates 
that have been lost, stolen, mutilated, or become unreadable. 
Nonetheless, by refraining from proposing a formal process for the 
issuance of temporary replacement certificates, FRA would allow 
railroads to decide how and when to issue temporary replacement 
certificates to signal employees. FRA is soliciting comment on this 
proposed approach.
Section 246.213 Multiple Certifications \22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \22\ To the extent possible, FRA has attempted to match the 
section numbers in this proposed rule to analogous sections in the 
conductor certification rule (49 CFR part 242). Since 49 CFR 242.213 
addresses multiple certification issues, FRA is proposing to use 
section number 246.213 for the multiple certification section in 
this proposed rule instead of the next sequential section number, 
which would be 246.209.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.308 and 242.213, 
establishes how railroads would handle certified signal employees who 
are also certified in another railroad craft. FRA recognizes that while 
it is fairly common for an individual to work as both an engineer and a 
conductor, it is less common for a signal employee to also work in 
another craft that requires certification. However, because situations 
may arise where a certified signal employee is also certified to work 
in another craft, such as a locomotive engineer or conductor, FRA would 
like to address how railroads would be required to handle such 
situations.
    Paragraph (a) of this section would allow a certified signal 
employee to become certified in one or more of the other railroad 
crafts that require certification such as locomotive engineer or 
conductor. If a person is certified in multiple crafts by the same 
railroad, paragraph (b) would require the railroad to coordinate the 
expiration dates of those certificates, to the extent possible. While 
railroads are not required to have all of a person's certificates 
expire at the same time, it would be beneficial from the standpoint of 
administrating the certification programs if railroads followed this 
practice. Thus, FRA encourages railroads to coordinate these expiration 
dates when possible.
    Paragraph (c) of this section would pertain to signal employees who 
hold signal employee certificates issued by multiple railroads or who 
are seeking to become certified signal employees for multiple 
railroads. Paragraph (c)(1) would require the signal employee to 
immediately notify their employer(s) and all railroads with whom the 
signal employee holds a signal employee certificate, if a railroad 
denies, suspends, or revokes the signal employee's certification or 
recertification. Certified signal employees should note that willful 
noncompliance with the notification requirements in this paragraph will 
likely result in enforcement action including, but not limited to, 
disqualification from safety-sensitive service.
    Paragraph (c)(2) would prohibit an individual from working as a 
certified signal employee for any railroad while their signal employee 
certification is suspended or revoked by a railroad, except as provided 
for in Sec.  246.124(d). For example, if an individual is a certified 
signal employee with Railroad ABC and Railroad DEF, and ABC suspends 
and/or revokes the individual's certificate, that individual would not 
be able to work as a certified signal employee for DEF, or any other 
railroad, during the period of suspension and/or revocation. (Section 
246.124(d) would, however, allow the individual to perform work on 
signal systems, if allowed by a railroad's certification program, under 
the direct oversight and supervision of a mentor.)
    Paragraph (c)(3) states that if a person has their signal employee 
certification suspended or revoked by one railroad and that person 
attempts to become a certified signal employee with another railroad 
during the certificate suspension or revocation period, they must 
notify the railroad from whom they are seeking certification that their 
signal employee certificate has been suspended or revoked. Therefore, 
if a person is seeking signal employee certification with Railroad XYX 
when their signal employee certificate is suspended or revoked by 
Railroad ABC, they must notify XYZ of their current suspended or 
revoked certification status.
    Paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this section address how the 
revocation of a person's signal employee certification would affect 
that person's ability to work in another railroad craft requiring 
certification and vice versa. If a person's signal employee 
certification is revoked because of a drug or alcohol violation, as 
described in Sec.  246.303(e)(11), then that person would be ineligible 
to work in any craft requiring certification, such as a locomotive 
engineer or conductor, for any railroad during the period of 
revocation. Such person would also be prohibited from obtaining 
certification in any of those crafts from any railroad while their 
signal employee certification is revoked. Likewise, if a person's non-
signal employee certification, such as locomotive engineer or 
conductor, is revoked because of an alcohol or drug violation, as 
described in Sec.  219.101 of this chapter, that person will be 
ineligible to work as a certified signal employee or obtain a signal 
employee certificate from any railroad during the revocation period. In 
contrast, if a signal employee's certification is revoked for a 
violation that does not involve alcohol or drugs, as described in 
Sec. Sec.  246.303(e)(1) through (10), that person would still be able 
to work in any other railroad craft requiring certification, such as a 
locomotive engineer or conductor, during the period of revocation, as 
long as the person is certified in that craft. Likewise, a person could 
still work as a certified signal employee if their certificate for 
another railroad craft, such as locomotive engineer or conductor, was 
revoked due to a violation that did not involve drugs or alcohol.
    FRA's reasoning for this line of delineation between revocable 
events that involve alcohol and drugs and those that do not is rooted 
in railroad safety. If someone shows up to work as

[[Page 35654]]

a certified signal employee under the influence of alcohol or drugs, it 
stands to reason that they could likely show up to work for another 
craft, such as a locomotive engineer or conductor, under the influence 
as well. Thus, it makes sense for an individual's alcohol or drug 
violations as a certified signal employee to impact their eligibility 
to work in another craft that requires certification and vice versa. 
With respect to revocable events that do not involve alcohol or drugs, 
FRA finds that the tasks performed by a certified signal employee are 
so inherently different from the tasks performed in another certified 
craft, such as an operating crew member, that it does not automatically 
follow that a person's revocable event as a certified signal employee 
indicates they are more likely to also have a revocable event while 
performing in another craft. Thus, FRA is taking the position that the 
revocation of a signal employee certificate which does not involve 
alcohol or drugs should not affect that person's eligibility to work in 
another railroad craft requiring certification, and vice versa. 
However, FRA solicits comments on this issue.
    Paragraphs (f) and (g) would prohibit a railroad from denying or 
revoking a signal employee's certification just because their attempt 
at certification or recertification in another railroad craft, such as 
locomotive engineer or conductor, was denied and vice versa. Paragraph 
(h) would allow a railroad to issue a single certificate to an 
individual who is certified in multiple railroad crafts that require 
certification. If a railroad exercises this option, it must ensure that 
the single certificate contains all of the components required for that 
craft. Alternatively, railroads are also welcome to issue multiple 
certificates to an individual who is certified in multiple crafts (one 
certificate for each craft). Thus, if a person is certified as both a 
signal employee and conductor, the railroad could issue the person a 
single certificate for both crafts or it could issue one signal 
employee certificate and one conductor certificate.
    Finally, paragraph (i) of this section denotes that if a person is 
certified in multiple crafts and they are involved in a revocable 
event, that event can only lead to the revocation of a certificate for 
a single railroad craft. The railroad would be required to determine 
which certificate should be revoked based on the work the individual 
was performing at the time of the event. In such instances, while the 
railroad may only revoke a certificate for a single craft, that 
revocation could affect a person's eligibility to perform other crafts. 
For example, if a person who is certified as a signal employee and a 
conductor violates Sec.  246.303(e)(11) while on duty as a signal 
employee, the railroad should only revoke the person's signal employee 
certification. The person's conductor certification could not be 
revoked for the incident that occurred while the individual was on duty 
as a signal employee. However, as discussed in paragraph (d)(1) of this 
section, this person would not be able to work as a conductor while 
their signal employee certificate was revoked for this offense.
Section 246.215 Railroad Oversight Responsibilities
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.309 and 242.215, 
would require each Class I railroad (including the National Railroad 
Passenger Corporation), each railroad providing commuter service, and 
each Class II railroad to conduct an annual review and analysis of its 
program for responding to detected instances of poor safety conduct by 
certified signal employees. FRA has formulated the information 
collection requirements of this proposed section to ensure that 
railroads collect data on signal employee safety behavior and feed that 
information into their operational monitoring efforts, thereby 
enhancing safety.
    This section would require each Class I railroad (including the 
National Railroad Passenger Corporation), railroad providing commuter 
service, and Class II railroad to have an internal auditing plan to 
keep track of events involving poor safety conduct by certified signal 
employees. For each such event, the railroad would be required to 
indicate how it responded to that event. The railroad would then be 
required to evaluate this information, together with data showing the 
results of annual testing and causation of FRA reportable train 
accident/incidents, to determine whether additional or different 
actions, if any, are needed to improve the safety performance of its 
certified signal employees. FRA would not, however, require railroads 
to furnish this data or their analysis of the data to FRA. Instead, FRA 
would require that railroads be prepared to submit such information 
when requested.
    As set forth in paragraph (i), an instance of poor safety conduct 
involving a person who is a certified signal employee and is certified 
in another railroad craft (such as a locomotive engineer or conductor) 
need only be reported once under the appropriate section of this 
chapter (e.g., under Sec.  240.309, Sec.  242.215, or under this 
section). The determination as to where to report the instance of poor 
safety conduct should be based on the work the person was performing at 
the time the conduct occurred. This determination is similar to the 
determination made under part 225, in which railroads determine whether 
an accident was caused by poor performance of what is traditionally 
considered a conductor's job function (e.g., switch handling, derail 
handling, etc.) or whether it was caused by poor performance of what is 
traditionally considered a locomotive engineer's job function (e.g., 
operation of the locomotive, braking, etc.)

Subpart D--Denial and Revocation of Certification

    This subpart parallels part 240 and part 242's approach to adverse 
decisions concerning certification (i.e., decisions to deny 
certification or recertification and revoke certification). With 
respect to denials, the approach of this proposed rule is predicated 
principally on the theory that decisions to deny certification or 
recertification will come at the conclusion of a prescribed evaluation 
process which would be conducted in accordance with the provisions set 
forth in this subpart. Thus, this proposed rule contains specific 
procedures designed to ensure that a person in jeopardy of being denied 
certification or recertification would be given a reasonable 
opportunity to examine and respond to negative information that may 
serve as the basis for being denied certification or recertification.
    When considering revocation, this proposed rule contemplates that 
decisions to revoke certification would only occur for the reasons 
specified in this subpart. Since revocation decisions by their very 
nature involve a clear potential for factual disagreement, this subpart 
is structured to ensure that such decisions would only be made after a 
certified signal employee has been afforded an opportunity for an 
investigatory hearing at which the presiding officer would determine 
whether there is sufficient evidence to establish that the signal 
employee's conduct warranted revocation of their certification.
    This subpart also provides for certificate suspension in certain 
circumstances. Certificate suspension would be employed in instances 
where there is reason to think the certificate should be revoked or 
made conditional but time is needed to resolve the situation. 
Certificate suspension would be applicable in instances where a person 
is awaiting an investigatory

[[Page 35655]]

hearing to determine whether that person violated certain provisions of 
FRA's alcohol and drug control rules, or committed a violation of 
certain signal standards, procedures, or practices, and situations in 
which the person is being evaluated or treated for an active substance 
abuse disorder.
Section 246.301 Process for Denying Certification
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.219 and 242.401, 
establishes minimum procedures that must be offered to a certification 
candidate before a railroad denies the candidate certification or 
recertification. Paragraph (a) of this section gives a certification 
candidate a reasonable opportunity to explain or rebut adverse 
information, including written documents or records, that the railroad 
intends to use as the basis for its decision to deny certification or 
recertification.
    Paragraph (b) of this section requires that a written explanation 
of an adverse decision be `served' on a certification candidate within 
10 days of the railroad's decision. Paragraph (b) also requires that 
the basis for a railroad's denial decision address any explanation or 
rebuttal information that the certification candidate may have provided 
pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section.
    Paragraph (c) of this section prohibits a railroad from denying 
certification based on a failure to comply with a railroad test 
procedure, signal standard, or practice which constitutes a violation 
under Sec.  246.303(e)(1) through (10) if sufficient evidence exists to 
establish that an intervening cause prevented or materially impaired 
the signal employee's ability to comply with that railroad test 
procedure, signal standard, or practice. This paragraph is derived from 
the intervening cause exception for revocation in Sec.  246.307(h).
Section 246.303 Criteria for Revoking Certification
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.117, 240.305, and 
242.403, provides the circumstances under which a signal employee may 
have their certification revoked. In addition, paragraph (a) of this 
section makes it unlawful to fail to comply with any of the railroad 
test procedures, signal standards and practices described in paragraph 
(e) of this section. Paragraph (a) is needed so that FRA can initiate 
enforcement action. For example, FRA might want to initiate enforcement 
action in the event that a railroad fails to initiate revocation action 
or a person who is not a certified signal employee violates a railroad 
test procedure, signal standard or practice described in paragraph (e) 
of this section. (Railroads should, however, note that they may not 
revoke a signal employee's certificate, including a designated signal 
employee's certificate, until they have obtained FRA approval of their 
certification programs pursuant to Sec.  246.103.)
    Paragraph (b) of this section provides that a certified signal 
employee who fails to comply with a railroad test procedure, signal 
standard or practice described in paragraph (e) will have their signal 
employee certification revoked. Paragraph (c) provides that a certified 
signal employee who is monitoring, mentoring, or instructing another 
signal employee could have their certification revoked if the certified 
signal employee fails to take appropriate action to prevent a violation 
of a railroad test procedure, signal standard or practice described in 
paragraph (e) of this section. As explained in paragraph (c), 
``appropriate action'' does not mean that a supervisor, certified 
signal employee, mentor, or instructor must prevent a violation from 
occurring at all costs, but rather the duty may be met by warning the 
signal employee, as appropriate, of a potential or foreseeable 
violation.
    Paragraph (d) provides that a certified signal employee who is 
called by a railroad to perform a duty other than that of a signal 
employee would not have their signal employee certification revoked 
based on actions taken or not taken while performing that duty. In 
general, this paragraph would apply regardless of whether the 
individual was called to perform a certified craft, such as locomotive 
engineer or conductor, or a non-certified craft. However, this 
exemption would not, however, apply to violations described in 
paragraph (e)(11) of this section. Therefore, certified signal 
employees working in other capacities that do not require 
certification, who violate certain alcohol and drug rules would have 
their signal employee certification revoked for the appropriate period 
of time pursuant to Sec.  246.115. However, if the certified signal 
employee was working in another certified craft, such as a locomotive 
engineer or conductor, at the time of the alcohol or drug violation, 
their certificate for the craft that they were performing at the time 
of the violation would be revoked as opposed to their signal employee 
certificate.
    If a certified signal employee who is also certified in another 
craft, such as locomotive engineer or conductor, violates Sec.  219.101 
while performing a craft that does not require certification, the 
railroad must select one, and only one, certificate to revoke. For 
example, if a person who is a certified signal employee and conductor 
violates Sec.  219.101 while working as a brakeman, the railroad must 
decide to revoke either their signal employee or conductor certificate, 
but it cannot revoke both certificates. Regardless of which certificate 
the railroad chooses to revoke, however, the person will be unable to 
work as a signal employee or conductor during the period of revocation. 
See Sec.  246.213(d).
    Paragraph (e) provides the eleven types of rule infractions that 
could result in certification revocation. The infractions listed in 
paragraphs (e)(1) through (11) are derived in part from the revocable 
events provided in 49 CFR 242.117(e) but have been modified to account 
for the duties and responsibilities of a certified signal employee.
    Paragraph (e)(1) refers to action(s) taken by a certified signal 
employee that interfere with the normal functioning of a highway-rail 
grade crossing warning system or signal system, if alternative means of 
protecting motorists and other crossing users have not already been 
provided. (For this purpose, railroads shall only consider violations 
of paragraph (e)(1) that result in an activation failure or false 
proceed signal.)
    Paragraph (e)(2) refers to action(s) taken by a certified signal 
employee that fail to comply with a railroad rule or procedure when 
removing one or more of the following devices and systems from service: 
(a) highway-rail or pathway grade crossing warning devices and systems; 
(b) wayside signal devices and systems; or (c) other devices or systems 
subject to this part. Similarly, paragraph (e)(3) refers to action(s) 
taken by a certified signal employee that fail to comply with a 
railroad rule or procedure when placing these devices and systems in 
service or restoring them back to service.
    Paragraph (e)(4) refers to violations involving a certified signal 
employee's failure to conduct certain inspections and tests on highway-
rail and pathway grade crossing warning devices and systems that are 
required by railroad rule, signal standard, or railroad procedures. 
These required inspections and tests would include post-installation 
and post-repair testing and inspections that are required by FRA's 
grade crossing and signal regulations in parts 234 and 236, as well as 
inspections and tests that are required after modification or 
disarrangement of grade crossing warning devices and other types of 
signal systems.

[[Page 35656]]

    Paragraph (e)(5) refers to a certified signal employee's failure to 
restore power to a train detection or highway-rail or pathway grade 
crossing warning device or system after manual interruption of the 
power source. (For violations of this nature, railroads would, however, 
be directed to consider only those violations that result in activation 
failure.)
    Paragraph (e)(6) refers to a certified signal employee's failure to 
comply with railroad validation or cutover procedures.
    Paragraph (e)(7) refers to a certified signal employee's failure to 
comply with FRA's Roadway Worker Protection regulations in 49 CFR part 
214. However, for purposes of this part, paragraph (e)(7) would require 
railroads to consider only those violations that directly involve a 
certified signal employee who failed to ascertain whether on-track 
safety was being provided before fouling the railroad track.
    Paragraphs (e)(8) through (e)(10) refer to a certified signal 
employee's failure to comply with FRA's Railroad Operating Practices 
regulations related to work performed on, under, or between rolling 
equipment. Paragraph (e)(11) refers to a certified signal employee's 
failure to comply with the alcohol and drug use prohibitions in Sec.  
219.101 of FRA's alcohol and drug regulations.
    Paragraph (f) proposes a three-year period for considering 
certified signal employee conduct that failed to comply with a Federal 
regulation or railroad test procedure, signal standard or practice 
described in paragraphs (e)(1) through (10) of this section. However, 
when alcohol and drug violations are at issue, the time period for 
evaluating prior operating rule misconduct would be dictated by Sec.  
246.115, which would establish a period of 60 consecutive months prior 
to the date of review for such evaluations.
    Paragraph (g) provides that if a single incident contravenes more 
than one Federal regulatory provision or railroad test procedure, 
signal standard, or practice listed in paragraph (e) of this section, 
the incident would be treated as a single violation. FRA considers a 
single incident to be a unique identifiable occurrence caused by a 
certified signal employee's violation of one or more railroad operating 
rules or practices listed in paragraph (e). However, a certified signal 
employee could be involved in more than one incident during a single 
tour of duty, if the incidents are separated by time, distance, or 
circumstance.
    Paragraph (h) provides that a certified signal employee may have 
their certification revoked for violation of a railroad test procedure, 
signal standard, or practice listed in paragraph (e) that occurs during 
a properly conducted monitoring test. However, as reflected in 
paragraph (i), violations of railroad test procedures, signal 
standards, or practices that occur during monitoring tests that are not 
conducted in compliance with this part, the railroad's testing 
procedures, or the railroad's program under Sec.  217.9 will not be 
considered for revocation purposes.
Section 246.305 Periods of Ineligibility
    This section of the proposed rule, derived from 49 CFR 240.117 and 
242.405, describes how a railroad would determine the period of 
ineligibility (e.g., for revocation or denial of certification) for a 
certified signal employee or candidate for signal employee 
certification. Paragraph (a) of this section provides the starting date 
for a period of ineligibility. For persons who are not certified as 
signal employees, a period of ineligibility would begin on the date of 
the railroad's written determination that an incident involving a 
potential violation of one or more regulatory requirements in Sec.  
246.303(e)(1) through (10) has occurred. For example, if the railroad 
made a written determination on March 10th that an incident involving a 
potential violation of one or more regulatory requirements in Sec.  
246.303(e)(1) through (10) occurred on March 1st, the period of 
ineligibility would begin on March 10th for persons who are not 
certified signal employees. However, for certified signal employees and 
candidates for signal employee recertification, a period of 
ineligibility would begin on the date the railroad notifies the 
candidate for signal employee recertification that recertification has 
been denied or the date the railroad notifies the certified signal 
employee that their certification has been suspended.
    Even though some certified signal employees will be subsequently 
notified that their certification will be revoked as a result of the 
incident, the period of ineligibility will begin on the date the 
railroad notifies the certified signal employee that their 
certification has been suspended. This is because once a person's 
certificate is suspended, they are ineligible to work as a certified 
signal employee pending a determination as to whether their 
certification should be revoked.
    With respect to revocation, paragraph (b) of this section provides 
that once a railroad determines that a certified signal employee has 
failed to comply with its test procedures, signal standards, or 
practices listed in Sec.  246.303(e), two consequences would occur. 
First, the railroad would be required to revoke the signal employee's 
certification for a period of time provided in this section. Second, 
that revocation would initiate a period during which the signal 
employee would be subject to an increasingly more severe period of 
revocation if additional revocable events occur within the next 24 to 
36 months.
    The standard periods of revocation proposed in this section track 
the revocation periods provided in parts 240 and 242. One revocable 
event would result in revocation for 30 days. Two revocable events 
within 24 months of each other would result in revocation for six (6) 
months. Three revocable events within 36 months of each other would 
result in revocation of one (1) year. Four revocable events within 36 
months of each other would result in revocation for three (3) years.
    While paragraph (c) of this section contains a provision that 
parallels Sec.  242.405(b) and provides that all periods of revocation 
may consist of training, paragraph (d) contains a provision that 
parallels Sec. Sec.  240.117(h) and 242.405(c). Paragraph (d) provides 
that a person whose signal employee certification is denied or revoked 
would be eligible for grant or reinstatement of the certificate prior 
to the expiration of the initial period of revocation if they can 
satisfy all of the criteria listed in the paragraph.
Section 246.307 Process for Revoking Certification
    This proposed section, derived from 49 CFR 240.307 and 242.407, 
provides the procedures a railroad would be required to follow if it 
acquires reliable information regarding a certified signal employee's 
violation of a railroad test procedure, signal standard, or practice 
described in Sec.  246.303(e) or 246.115(d). Paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section would require a railroad to suspend a signal employee's 
certification immediately, upon receipt of reliable information 
regarding a violation of a railroad test procedure, signal standard, or 
practice described in Sec.  246.303(e). Prior to, or upon suspending, 
the signal employee's certificate, paragraph (b)(3) would require the 
railroad to provide either verbal or written notice of the reason for 
the suspension, the pending revocation, and an opportunity for a 
hearing. If the initial notice was verbal, then the notice would have 
to be promptly confirmed in writing. The amount of time the railroad 
would have to confirm the verbal notice in writing would depend on 
whether or not a collective bargaining agreement is

[[Page 35657]]

in effect and applicable. In the absence of such an agreement, a 
railroad would have four days to provide written notice. If a notice of 
suspension is amended after a hearing is convened or does not contain 
citations to all railroad test procedure, signal standards, and 
practices that may apply to the potentially revocable event, the 
Certification Review Board (CRB or Board), if asked to review the 
revocation decision, might subsequently find that this constitutes 
procedural error pursuant to Sec.  246.405.
    Paragraph (b)(5) of this section would require the railroad, no 
later than the start of the hearing, to provide the signal employee 
with a copy of the written information and a list of witnesses that the 
railroad will present at the hearing. If requested, a recess to the 
start of the hearing would be granted if the written information and 
list of witnesses is not provided until just prior to the start of the 
hearing. If the information that led to the suspension of the signal 
employee's certificate pursuant to paragraph (b)(1) of this section is 
provided through statements of an employee of the convening railroad, 
the railroad would be required to make that employee available for 
examination during the hearing. Examination may be telephonic or 
virtual when it is impractical to provide the witness at the hearing. 
These provisions in paragraph (b)(5) of this section are intended to 
ensure that signal employees are provided with information and/or 
witnesses necessary to defend themselves at their hearings. Even if a 
railroad conducts a hearing pursuant to the procedures in an applicable 
collective bargaining agreement, the railroad would still have to 
comply with the provisions of paragraph (b)(5). It is not, however, 
FRA's intent to require railroads to call every witness included on the 
railroad's list of witnesses to testify at the hearing. If, for 
example, a railroad believes that it has provided sufficient evidence 
during a hearing to prove its case and that calling a witness on its 
list to testify would be unduly repetitive, the railroad would not be 
obligated to call that witness to testify. Of course, the opposing 
party could request that the witness be produced to testify, but the 
hearing officer would have the authority pursuant to paragraph (d)(4) 
of this section to determine whether the witness's testimony would be 
unduly repetitive or have such minimal relevance that its admission 
would impair the prompt, orderly, and fair resolution of the 
proceeding.
    Paragraph (d)(2) of this section provides the presiding officer 
with the powers necessary to regulate the conduct of the hearing. Thus, 
a presiding officer would be permitted to deny excessive hearing 
request delays by the signal employee. Moreover, a presiding officer 
could find implied consent to postpone a hearing when a signal 
employee's witnesses are not available within 10 days of the date the 
certificate is suspended. However, the CRB may grant a petition on 
review if the CRB finds that the hearing schedule caused the petitioner 
substantial harm.
    Paragraph (e) of this section contains requirements regarding the 
written decision in a railroad hearing. FRA believes these requirements 
would ensure that railroads issue clear and detailed decisions. In 
turn, clear and detailed decisions would allow a signal employee to 
understand exactly why their certification was revoked and would allow 
the CRB to have a more detailed understanding of the case if asked to 
review the revocation decision pursuant to subpart E of this proposed 
rule.
    Paragraph (f) credits the period of certificate suspension prior to 
the commencement of a hearing required under this section towards 
satisfying any applicable revocation period imposed in accordance with 
the provisions of Sec.  246.305. For example, if a signal employee's 
certificate is suspended on July 1st and on July 11th, the railroad 
issues a decision to revoke the signal employee's certificate for 30 
days, the time between July 1st and July 11th would count towards the 
30-day revocation period. Thus, the signal employee's certificate would 
only be revoked for an additional 20 days after the railroad issued its 
revocation decision.
    Paragraph (g) would require a railroad to revoke a signal 
employee's certification if it discovers that another railroad has 
revoked that individual's signal employee certification. The revocation 
period would coincide with the period of revocation imposed by the 
railroad that initially revoked the signal employee's certification. 
For example, if a signal employee is certified by Railroad ABC and 
Railroad XYZ, and ABC revokes the signal employee's certification from 
November 1st through November 30th, XYZ must revoke the signal 
employee's certification through November 30th once it learns of ABC's 
revocation. The revocation hearing requirement in this rule would be 
satisfied if any railroad holds a revocation hearing for the signal 
employee that arises from the same set of facts.
    Paragraphs (h) and (i) provide two specific defenses for railroad 
supervisors and hearing officers to consider when deciding whether to 
suspend or revoke a person's certificate due to an alleged revocable 
event. Pursuant to these provisions, either defense would have to be 
proven by sufficient evidence. Paragraph (h) would prohibit railroads 
from revoking a signal employee's certificate when there is sufficient 
evidence of an intervening cause that prevented or materially impaired 
the signal employee's ability to comply. For example, a railroad should 
consider assertions that a qualified instructor failed to take 
appropriate action to prevent an uncertified signal employee or signal 
employee trainee from using defective equipment. However, FRA does not 
intend to imply that all equipment failures and errors caused by others 
will serve to absolve signal employees from certification revocation 
under this proposed rule. The factual issues presented by each incident 
would need to be analyzed on a case-by-case basis.
    Paragraph (i) would allow railroads to exercise discretion when 
determining whether to revoke a signal employee's certification ``if 
sufficient evidence exists to establish that the violation of the 
railroad test procedure, signal standard, or practice described in 
Sec.  246.303(e) was of a minimal nature and had no direct or potential 
effect on rail safety.'' However, FRA acknowledges that the 
determination as to whether an incident meets this criterion could be 
subject to different interpretations. For this reason, paragraph (j) 
would require railroads to retain information about the evidence relied 
upon when exercising this discretion. Unless a railroad fails to retain 
information as required in paragraph (j) or acts in bad faith, FRA does 
not anticipate taking enforcement action against the railroad even if 
FRA believes the railroad could have revoked the sign

[…truncated; see source link]
Indexed from Federal Register on May 31, 2023.

This is legal information, not legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change frequently. Always verify current law with official sources and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice on your specific situation.