BILL NUMBER: SB 1491 ENROLLED
BILL TEXT
PASSED THE ASSEMBLY AUGUST 18, 2000
PASSED THE SENATE MAY 30, 2000
AMENDED IN SENATE MAY 24, 2000
AMENDED IN SENATE MAY 2, 2000
AMENDED IN SENATE APRIL 24, 2000
INTRODUCED BY Senator Leslie
(Coauthor: Senator Johnston)
(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bock, Cox, House, Longville,
Pescetti, and Zettel)
FEBRUARY 11, 2000
An act to amend Sections 1202, 7604, and 7678 of the Public
Utilities Code, relating to transportation, and declaring the urgency
thereof, to take effect immediately.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
SB 1491, Leslie. Railroad crossings: automated warning devices.
Existing law requires that an audible warning device be sounded
from a locomotive engine at least 1320 feet before the intersection
of the railroad and a street, road, or highway with certain
exceptions. Existing law imposes a civil fine on a railroad
corporation that violates this provision and makes it a misdemeanor
for a person in charge of a locomotive engine to fail to sound the
warning. Existing law also provides the Public Utilities Commission
with exclusive power to regulate the location, maintenance, and
operation of railroad and street railroad crossings.
This bill would eliminate the requirement that the warning device
on the locomotive engine be sounded when approaching a railroad
crossing that has a permanent audible warning device that
automatically sounds as the locomotive engine approaches the railroad
crossing. This bill would also authorize the commission to
authorize on an application by application basis and supervise the
operation of pilot projects to evaluate proposed crossing warning
devices or new technology. The bill would make related declarations
and findings.
This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as
an urgency statute.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1. Section 1202 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to
read:
1202. The commission has the exclusive power:
(a) To determine and prescribe the manner, including the
particular point of crossing, and the terms of installation,
operation, maintenance, use, and protection of each crossing of one
railroad by another railroad or street railroad, and of a street
railroad by a railroad, and of each crossing of a public or publicly
used road or highway by a railroad or street railroad, and of a
street by a railroad or of a railroad by a street.
(b) To alter, relocate, or abolish by physical closing any
crossing set forth in subdivision (a).
(c) To require, where in its judgment it would be practicable, a
separation of grades at any crossing established and to prescribe the
terms upon which the separation shall be made and the proportions in
which the expense of the construction, alteration, relocation, or
abolition of crossings or the separation of grades shall be divided
between the railroad or street railroad corporations affected or
between these corporations and the state, county, city, or other
political subdivision affected.
(d) (1) To authorize on an application-by-application basis and
supervise the operation of pilot projects to evaluate proposed
crossing warning devices or new technology at designated crossings,
with the consent of the local jurisdiction, the affected railroad,
and other interested parties, including, but not limited to,
represented railroad employees.
(2) (A) The Legislature finds and declares that for the
communities of the state that are traversed by railroads, there is a
growing need to mitigate train horn noise without compromising the
safety of the public. Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature
that the commission may authorize pilot projects, after an
application is filed and approved by the commission in at least the
communities of Roseville and Lathrop to test the utility and safety
of stationary, automated audible warning devices as an alternative to
trains having to sound their horns as they approach highway-rail
crossings.
(B) In light of the pending proposed ruling by the Federal
Railroad Administration on the use of locomotive horns at all
highway-rail crossings across the nation, it would be in the best
interest of the state for the commission to expedite the pilot
projects in order to contribute data to the federal rulemaking
process regarding the possible inclusion of stationary, automated
warning devices as a safety measure option to the proposed federal
rule.
SEC. 2. Section 7604 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to
read:
7604. (a) A bell, of at least 20 pounds weight or of equivalent
sound-producing capability, shall be placed on each locomotive
engine, and shall be rung at a distance of at least 1,320 feet from
the place where the railroad crosses any street, road, or highway,
and be kept ringing until it has crossed the street, road, or
highway; or a steam whistle, air siren, or an air whistle shall be
attached, and be sounded at the like distance, and be kept sounding
at intervals until it has crossed the street, road, or highway,
except as follows:
(1) In a city, the ringing of the bell or the sounding of the
steam whistle, air siren, or air whistle shall be at the discretion
of the operator of the locomotive engine.
(2) When a locomotive engine is engaged in a switching operation
or comes to a stop at any point within a distance of 1,320 feet from
the place at which the railroad crosses any street, road, or highway,
it shall not be necessary that the bell be rung or the whistle, air
siren, or air whistle be sounded, until the time and from the place
that the locomotive begins an uninterrupted movement to and across
the place at which the railroad crosses the street, road, or highway.
(3) (A) The ringing of the bell or the sounding of the steam
whistle, air siren, or air whistle is not required when approaching a
railroad crossing that has a permanently installed audible warning
device authorized by the commission that sounds automatically when an
approaching train is at least 1,320 feet from the place where the
railroad crosses any street, road, or highway, and that keeps
sounding until the lead locomotive has crossed the street, road, or
highway.
(B) The operator of the locomotive may ring the bell or sound the
steam whistle, air siren, or air whistle at crossings equipped as set
forth in subparagraph (A).
(b) Any railroad corporation violating this section shall be
subject to a penalty of one hundred dollars ($100) for every
violation. The penalty may be recovered in an action prosecuted by
the district attorney of the proper county, for the use of the state.
The corporation is also liable for all damages sustained by any
person, and caused by its locomotives, train, or cars, when the
provisions of this section are not complied with.
SEC. 3. Section 7678 of the Public Utilities Code is amended to
read:
7678. Except as provided in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive, of
subdivision (a) of Section 7604, every person in charge of a
locomotive engine who, before crossing any traveled public way, omits
to cause a bell to ring or steam whistle, air siren, or air whistle
to sound at the distance of at least 1,320 feet from the crossing,
and until the lead locomotive has passed through the crossing, is
guilty of a misdemeanor.
SEC. 4. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate
preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the
meaning of Article IV of the Constitution and shall go into immediate
effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:
In order for the test of the pilot program for stationary,
automated audible warning devices at highway-rail crossings and the
feasibility of that system to be assessed as soon as possible, it is
necessary that this act take effect immediately.