Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of HB3137
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Full Text of HB3137  95th General Assembly

HB3137 95TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY


 


 
95TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2007 and 2008
HB3137

 

Introduced 2/26/2007, by Rep. Tom Cross

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
625 ILCS 5/18c-7402   from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 18c-7402

    Amends the Illinois Vehicle Code. Makes a technical change in a Section concerning railroad safety.


LRB095 06786 DRH 26902 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB3137 LRB095 06786 DRH 26902 b

1     AN ACT concerning transportation.
 
2     Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3 represented in the General Assembly:
 
4     Section 5. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by changing
5 Section 18c-7402 as follows:
 
6     (625 ILCS 5/18c-7402)  (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 18c-7402)
7     Sec. 18c-7402. Safety Requirements for Railroad
8 Operations.
9     (1) Obstruction of Crossings.
10         (a) Obstruction of Emergency Vehicles. Every railroad
11     shall be operated in such a manner as to minimize
12     obstruction of emergency vehicles at crossings. Where such
13     obstruction occurs and and the train crew is aware of the
14     obstruction, the train crew shall immediately take any
15     action, consistent with safe operating procedure,
16     necessary to remove the obstruction. In the Chicago and St.
17     Louis switching districts, every railroad dispatcher or
18     other person responsible for the movement of railroad
19     equipment in a specific area who receives notification that
20     railroad equipment is obstructing the movement of an
21     emergency vehicle at any crossing within such area shall
22     immediately notify the train crew through use of existing
23     communication facilities. Upon notification, the train

 

 

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1     crew shall take immediate action in accordance with this
2     paragraph.
3         (b) Obstruction of Highway at Grade Crossing
4     Prohibited. It is unlawful for a rail carrier to permit any
5     train, railroad car or engine to obstruct public travel at
6     a railroad-highway grade crossing for a period in excess of
7     10 minutes, except where such train or railroad car is
8     continuously moving or cannot be moved by reason of
9     circumstances over which the rail carrier has no reasonable
10     control.
11     In a county with a population of greater than 1,000,000, as
12 determined by the most recent federal census, during the hours
13 of 7:00 a.m. through 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. through 6:00 p.m.
14 it is unlawful for a rail carrier to permit any single train or
15 railroad car to obstruct public travel at a railroad-highway
16 grade crossing in excess of a total of 10 minutes during a 30
17 minute period, except where the train or railroad car cannot be
18 moved by reason or circumstances over which the rail carrier
19 has no reasonable control. Under no circumstances will a moving
20 train be stopped for the purposes of issuing a citation related
21 to this Section.
22     However, no employee acting under the rules or orders of
23 the rail carrier or its supervisory personnel may be prosecuted
24 for a violation of this subsection (b).
25         (c) Punishment for Obstruction of Grade Crossing. Any
26     rail carrier violating paragraph (b) of this subsection

 

 

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1     shall be guilty of a petty offense and fined not less than
2     $200 nor more than $500 if the duration of the obstruction
3     is in excess of 10 minutes but no longer than 15 minutes.
4     If the duration of the obstruction exceeds 15 minutes the
5     violation shall be a business offense and the following
6     fines shall be imposed: if the duration of the obstruction
7     is in excess of 15 minutes but no longer than 20 minutes,
8     the fine shall be $500; if the duration of the obstruction
9     is in excess of 20 minutes but no longer than 25 minutes,
10     the fine shall be $700; if the duration of the obstruction
11     is in excess of 25 minutes, but no longer than 30 minutes,
12     the fine shall be $900; if the duration of the obstruction
13     is in excess of 30 minutes but no longer than 35 minutes,
14     the fine shall be $1,000; if the duration of the
15     obstruction is in excess of 35 minutes, the fine shall be
16     $1,000 plus an additional $500 for each 5 minutes of
17     obstruction in excess of 25 minutes of obstruction.
18     (2) Other Operational Requirements.
19         (a) Bell and Whistle-Crossings. Every rail carrier
20     shall cause a bell, and a whistle or horn to be placed and
21     kept on each locomotive, and shall cause the same to be
22     rung or sounded by the engineer or fireman, at the distance
23     of a least 1,320 feet, from the place where the railroad
24     crosses or intersects any public highway, and shall be kept
25     ringing or sounding until the highway is reached; provided
26     that at crossings where the Commission shall by order

 

 

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1     direct, only after a hearing has been held to determine the
2     public is reasonably and sufficiently protected, the rail
3     carrier may be excused from giving warning provided by this
4     paragraph.
5         (a-5) The requirements of paragraph (a) of this
6     subsection (2) regarding ringing a bell and sounding a
7     whistle or horn do not apply at a railroad crossing that
8     has a permanently installed automated audible warning
9     device authorized by the Commission under Section
10     18c-7402.1 that sounds automatically when an approaching
11     train is at least 1,320 feet from the crossing and that
12     keeps sounding until the lead locomotive has crossed the
13     highway. The engineer or fireman may ring the bell or sound
14     the whistle or horn at a railroad crossing that has a
15     permanently installed audible warning device.
16         (b) Speed Limits. Each rail carrier shall operate its
17     trains in compliance with speed limits set by the
18     Commission. The Commission may set train speed limits only
19     where such limits are necessitated by extraordinary
20     circumstances effecting the public safety, and shall
21     maintain such train speed limits in effect only for such
22     time as the extraordinary circumstances prevail.
23         The Commission and the Department of Transportation
24     shall conduct a study of the relation between train speeds
25     and railroad-highway grade crossing safety. The Commission
26     shall report the findings of the study to the General

 

 

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1     Assembly no later than January 5, 1997.
2         (c) Special Speed Limit; Pilot Project. The Commission
3     and the Board of the Commuter Rail Division of the Regional
4     Transportation Authority shall conduct a pilot project in
5     the Village of Fox River Grove, the site of the fatal
6     school bus accident at a railroad crossing on October 25,
7     1995, in order to improve railroad crossing safety. For
8     this project, the Commission is directed to set the maximum
9     train speed limit for Regional Transportation Authority
10     trains at 50 miles per hour at intersections on that
11     portion of the intrastate rail line located in the Village
12     of Fox River Grove. If the Regional Transportation
13     Authority deliberately fails to comply with this maximum
14     speed limit, then any entity, governmental or otherwise,
15     that provides capital or operational funds to the Regional
16     Transportation Authority shall appropriately reduce or
17     eliminate that funding. The Commission shall report to the
18     Governor and the General Assembly on the results of this
19     pilot project in January 1999, January 2000, and January
20     2001. The Commission shall also submit a final report on
21     the pilot project to the Governor and the General Assembly
22     in January 2001. The provisions of this subsection (c),
23     other than this sentence, are inoperative after February 1,
24     2001.
25     (3) Report and Investigation of Rail Accidents.
26         (a) Reports. Every rail carrier shall report to the

 

 

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1     Commission, by the speediest means possible, whether
2     telephone, telegraph, or otherwise, every accident
3     involving its equipment, track, or other property which
4     resulted in loss of life to any person. In addition, such
5     carriers shall file a written report with the Commission.
6     Reports submitted under this paragraph shall be strictly
7     confidential, shall be specifically prohibited from
8     disclosure, and shall not be admissible in any
9     administrative or judicial proceeding relating to the
10     accidents reported.
11         (b) Investigations. The Commission may investigate all
12     railroad accidents reported to it or of which it acquires
13     knowledge independent of reports made by rail carriers, and
14     shall have the power, consistent with standards and
15     procedures established under the Federal Railroad Safety
16     Act, as amended, to enter such temporary orders as will
17     minimize the risk of future accidents pending notice,
18     hearing, and final action by the Commission.
19 (Source: P.A. 91-675, eff. 6-1-00; 92-284, eff. 8-9-01.)