Senate confirms top rail safety official
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[February 14, 2018]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate
unanimously confirmed late on Tuesday a former Conrail president as the
top U.S. rail safety official as a series of deadly railroad accidents
have raised concerns.
The nomination of Ronald Batory, who was unanimously approved by the
Senate Commerce Committee in August to head the Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA), had been stalled for months by Senate Democratic
Leader Charles Schumer over a dispute over funding for a New York City
area infrastructure project.
Senator John Thune, a Republican who chairs the Commerce Committee, had
pressed Democrats to approve Batory. "His confirmation is a win for
railroad safety and I expect him to have an impact,” said Thune.
A spokesman for Schumer said Trump's budget and infrastructure proposals
released Monday showed that the administration is not interested in
advancing a $24 billion project to build a tunnel under the Hudson River
critical to northeast U.S. transportation.
"Rather than wait around for the administration to come to their senses,
Schumer and his colleagues will continue to work together to advance
this project in Congress," the spokesman said.
The former top Trump administration rail safety official resigned
Saturday after questions were raised about whether he was conducting
outside work, the U.S. Transportation Department said. Batory has been
serving as a consultant to FRA.
There have been a number of high-profile rail crashes in recent months,
most recently the Feb. 4 crash of an Amtrak passenger train with a
freight train that killed two people and injured more than 100 in South
Carolina.
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A deadly Amtrak crash in December near Seattle killed three after an
engineer misread a signal and was speeding, investigators have said.
On Jan. 31, an Amtrak train carrying lawmakers slammed into a
garbage truck on Wednesday in Virginia, killing one person.
The Senate also Tuesday confirmed two other Transportation
Department nominees - Raymond Martinez to head the Federal Motor
Carrier Safety Administration and Adam Sullivan to be assistant
secretary of governmental affairs.
In December, U.S. Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao urged the
nation’s railroads and transit agencies to take all possible
measures to meet deadlines to install a safety system called
positive train control to prevent crashes.
A U.S. House of Representatives committee plans to hold a hearing
Thursday on the status of efforts to install the technology,
including Amtrak’s chief executive, the National Transportation
Safety Board and FRA.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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