/ Transportation / FRA Awards $25 Million in Grants to Upgrade Safety at Railroad Crossings, Stations

FRA Awards $25 Million in Grants to Upgrade Safety at Railroad Crossings, Stations

Parul Dubey on September 13, 2016 - in Transportation

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. – The Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) today awarded $25 million in grants to increase safety at railroad crossings, train stations, and tracks across the country. A total of 23 projects in 14 states and the District of Columbia received funding. FRA received 40 eligible applications requesting $67.5 million, nearly three times the $25 million that Congress provided in the 2016 Consolidated Appropriations Act that funds DOT.

“It is vitally important that we invest in safety as rail continues to play an increasingly larger role in this country, transporting tons of freight and millions of passengers each day,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx. “These grants will help address some of the improvements that are crucial to ensuring safe, reliable and efficient railroad networks.”

The Railroad Safety Infrastructure Improvement Grants fund safety improvements to railroad infrastructure, including the acquisition, improvement, or rehabilitation of intermodal facilities; improvements to track, bridges, rail yards, and tunnels; upgrades to railroad crossings; and the separation of railroad crossings and roads.

“A safe railroad network requires continuous investment and upgrades,” said FRA Administrator Sarah E. Feinberg. “These grants will improve safety at hundreds of railroad crossings and make important safety upgrades at stations across the country. This is an investment that is desperately needed – and I urge state DOTs to join the FRA in investing more in improving safety at crossings.”

FRA requested $520 million for competitive local rail facility and safety project grants as part of President Obama’s Fiscal Year 2017 budget proposal.

 

FRA awarded Fiscal Year 2016 grants in the amounts below to the following entities to make improvements to:

Railroad Crossings

  • Indiana Rail Road Co. – Ind.
    • $129,537 to make improvements at 321 grade crossings in 10 Indiana and Illinois counties (Marion County, Ind.; Greene County, Ind.; Johnson County, Ind.; Monroe County, Ind.; Vigo County, Ind.; Daviess County, Ind.; Sullivan County, Ind.; Brown County, Ind.; Crawford County, Ill.; Jasper County, Ill.) by clearing trees, brush, and other vegetation from 201 railroad highway grade crossings and installing grade crossing warning signs that include stop signs at 120 private road crossings intersecting with the Indiana Railroad.

Indiana Map

 

 

  • Iberville Parish Government – La.
    • $385,000 to improve two Iberville Parish grade crossings by installing railway signals and gates, as well as reconstructing the roadway approaches and railway crossings to provide safe access to residential subdivisions, industrial sites, and farming operations. The two crossing are:

 

 

  • City of Buffalo – Minn.
    • $160,422 to upgrade a single grade crossing at 2nd Street South and Canadian Pacific Railroad in Buffalo, which includes installing updated advanced warning signs, a new raised median, a new warning signal, updated crossing arms, and pedestrian safety improvements.

 

 

 

  • New York State Department of Transportation – N.Y.
  • $1.90 million to fund installing upgrades to three grade crossings to mitigate hazardous conditions between highway and rail traffic. The Metro-North Railroad project includes upgrading the roadway, pavement markings, and signage at a heavily used grade crossing in North White Plains. The Long Island Railroad project will improve two public highway grade crossings in Deer Park and Oceanside, N.Y., with preemptive safety equipment and undertake roadway/traffic control improvements. The three crossing are:

 

 

New York

 

  • South Carolina Department of Commerce, Division of Public Railways – S.C.
    • $328,707 to upgrade seven grade crossings that serve several industries, including the South Carolina Port Authority in North Charleston. These upgrades include signals, gates, and improvements at seven tracks to provide a safer environment for motorists, pedestrians, and railroad employees. Currently, six of the tracks are at passive crossings, and the train crew flags the unprotected track at the seventh crossing when a train moves across Virginia Avenue in North Charleston, S.C.

SC Tracks

 

Rail Overpasses

  • City of Grandview – Mo.
    • $3.56 million to construct a dual-track overpass for the Kansas City Southern Railroad that will increase pedestrian and motor vehicle safety measures along the interstate running underneath it, as well as improve rail safety and efficiency. After the existing single-track railroad crossing is replaced with the new double-track crossing, the city will widen Blue Ridge Boulevard to four lanes and add sidewalks under the railroad to improve pedestrian and bicyclist safety.

 Rail Yards

  •  Finger Lakes Railway – N.Y.
    • $500,000 to widen the track centers of Solvay Auburn Yard tracks in the Town of Geddes, along with realigning the yard ladder track and repositioning the switches to improve safe walking conditions between the yard tracks. The removal of track 4 in the Solvay Auburn Yard will provide the space for widening the track centers and include a road through the entire yard, which will address current concerns that access for emergency vehicles is restricted by close clearances and a narrow road. Finger Lakes Railway also plans to add lighting along the north side of the yard for improved visibility.

Stations

  •  Amtrak – D.C.
    • $2.35 million to provide a new emergency egress stairway and fire suppression system in the North Hangar and Clayton Concourse, which serve trains moving north and south out of Washington Union Station.
  • Village of Cary – Ill.
    • $300,000 to provide channelization fencing with new signals and gates to improve crossing safety on the northwest end of the Cary Metra station platform.
  •  Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District – Ind.
    • $2.69 million to add two platform access points at the East Chicago Train Station in East Chicago, Indiana, to distribute passengers along the full length of the train to reduce congestion and improve egress operations. The project will also enhance safety and operational efficiencies, decrease passenger delays, and reduce the probability of derailments through track geometric improvements and reconstructing turnouts to increase train approach speeds from 10 m.p.h. to 40 m.p.h.
  •  Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) – Pa.
    • $1.61 million to construct a new pedestrian underpass and two new rail bridges at SEPTA’s Lawndale Station in Philadelphia, thereby enabling passengers to access the platform without crossing the tracks at grade. The project will also include other improvements, such as a new high-level platform, new signage and fencing, new catenary, and ADA-related improvements.
  •  Dallas Area Rapid Transit – Texas
    • $269,600 to provide safety improvements at 10 passenger rail stations, including safety gates to provide enhanced protection for the mobility impaired at ADA platform ramps; emergency kiosks to provide access to customer service and local law enforcement; and signage to provide concise and uniform safety messages at these stations across the Dallas project area.

Stations and Grade Crossings

  •  City of Shelby – Mont.
    • $953,954 to upgrade two pedestrian and motor vehicle crossings in Shelby by extending the existing Amtrak station platform and installing fencing, signage, two quadrant gates, and wayside horn advance warning systems to provide timely and reliable access to passenger rail service, schools, and businesses.

Tracks

  • San Luis Central Railroad – Ill.
    • $442,887 to upgrade 2.15 miles of a 13.2-mile system, resulting in a total of 7.5 miles of 90-pound rail to Class I standards, capable of operating 280,000-pound rail cars along San Luis Central Railroad’s main line between Vastine and Ansel stations in Rio Grande County, Colo.
  • Providence and Worcester Railroad Co. – Mass.
    • $2.37 million to rehabilitate 12 miles of century-old rail to improve track conditions substantially with new continuous welded rail and ties along Providence and Worcester Railroad Company’s Gardner Branch rail line in central Massachusetts.
  • Ohio Rail Development Commission – Ohio
    • $600,000 to upgrade 9.7 miles of track to Class II track from Hamden to Red Diamond, Ohio, on the Jackson line to provide a safe rail corridor for the transportation of hazardous materials.

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