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BNSF railroad stresses safety but held back by longstanding industry issues, report finds

The Federal Railroad Administration was more favorable toward Fort Worth-based BNSF than it was Norfolk Southern, but still leveled criticism.

Fort Worth-based freight railroad BNSF is generally striving to improve safety on a consistent basis, but that message doesn’t always reach front-line workers who often don’t feel comfortable reporting safety concerns for fear of being disciplined, according to an assessment released Wednesday by regulators.

The Federal Railroad Administration’s review of BNSF’s safety culture also found the company continues to be held back by some of the same issues that have been common across the industry for years.

The new report is the second one the agency has completed to address railroad safety concerns after the disastrous February 2023 Norfolk Southern derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, as it works to review all the major railroads.

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The BNSF review is more positive than last summer’s Norfolk Southern report, which said executives at that railroad too often were satisfied with only doing the minimum for safety.

The agency found company leaders consistently stressed safety as a core value, but at the lower levels of the railroad, some managers still prioritize keeping the trains moving ahead of safety.

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“Changes in messaging create doubt among front-line craft employees as to the true goals, priorities and commitments of the railroad,” the agency said in the report.

Regulators also reiterated their recommendation for BNSF and all the major freight railroads to sign on to the confidential federal safety reporting hotline for workers to report concerns without fear of being punished.

BNSF earned praise for launching a pilot program with that hotline for its dispatchers earlier this year, but the railroad administration said the resource needs to be available to all rail workers. The industry has a long history of retaliating against workers who report too many safety concerns, because those issues slow down trains while repairs are made.

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All the major railroads promised to join that federal reporting system after East Palestine, but so far only BNSF and Norfolk Southern have announced limited pilot programs.

“Effective reporting systems improve safety by reducing risks and allow for changes and repairs to be made so safety incidents do not recur,” according to the report.

BNSF didn’t immediately comment on the report after its public release early Wednesday.

BNSF is one of the nation’s largest railroads, with tracks crossing the western U.S. It is owned by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway conglomerate of Omaha, Neb.

Josh Funk for The Associated Press

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