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TSB of Canada –Reflections on a Career in Rail Safety at the TSB

TSB of Canada –Reflections on a Career in Rail Safety at the TSB. Ian Naish Director, Rail Investigations (retd.) Transportation Safety Board of Canada IRSC, B å stad , Sweden 29 September 2009 Naish Transportation Consulting Inc. Topics to be presented. Background

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TSB of Canada –Reflections on a Career in Rail Safety at the TSB

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  1. TSB of Canada –Reflections on a Career in Rail Safety at the TSB Ian Naish Director, Rail Investigations (retd.) Transportation Safety Board of Canada IRSC, Båstad, Sweden 29 September 2009 Naish Transportation Consulting Inc

  2. Topics to be presented • Background • TSB Canada • SMS issues • Four accidents with SMS issues identified • Conclusions

  3. Canadian Railway Network & TSB Offices

  4. January 2009, British Columbia

  5. TSB Canada • Independent federal agency • Multi-modal • Chairperson and four Board Members • 21 rail investigators • Total Board employment: 235

  6. TSB Mandate Advance transportation safety by: • making findings • making recommendations • reporting publicly • Do not assign fault or liability • Shall not refrain from reporting fully • Board’s findings are not binding

  7. How work is carried out • 1,000 reported rail accidents per year • 40 deployments per year • 15 Board investigations per year in rail • ISIM Integrated Safety Investigation Methodology • Around 5 recommendations per year • 15-20 Safety Communications per year

  8. TSB Recommendations • Board recommendations if safety deficiency is systemic • Can make prior to final report released • Non-prescriptive and not binding • Normally made to Minister of Transport

  9. Accident Integrated Safety Investigation Methodology (ISIM) Model 1 Occ. Assessment 2 Data Collection Accident 3 Sequence of Events Occ. Events Integrated Investigation Process Unsafe Acts/ Conditions 4 Integrated Investigation Process Underlying Factors 5 Risk Assessment Process Assessed Risk 6 Defence (Barrier) Analysis Process Safety Deficiencies 7 Risk Control Options Analysis Process Risk Control Options 8 Safety Communication

  10. Key Components of an SMS • 1. A Safety management plan • 2. Training • 3. Regulatory monitoring (reactive and proactive) • 4. Documentation • 5. Quality assurance, and • 6. Emergency response preparedness.

  11. SMS • Some Safety Management Systems issues: • risk assessment and control processes • regulatory overview • organizational safety culture • under-reporting of accidents • 1996 – QNS&L One person freight train operation • 2003 – McBride bridge collapse: “Black Swan Event?” • 2006 – White Pass &Yukon Route runaway and derailment • 2007 – Prince George non-main track derailment • Accident under-reporting

  12. QNS&L Collision, 1996

  13. QNS&L Collision, 1996

  14. McBride Bridge Collapse, 2003

  15. McBride Bridge Collapse, 2003

  16. WP&YR Runaway and Derailment, 2006

  17. WP&YR Derailment, 2006

  18. Prince George Yard Derailment, 2007

  19. Prince George Derailment, 2007

  20. Prince George Derailment, 2007

  21. 250 200 X Y Others 150 Non Main Track Train Derailments 100 50 0 1 2 3 4 5 6-10 11+ Cars derailed Figure 2. NMTDs by Cars Derailed, May 1, 2007 - Dec 31, 2008 Reporting Issues

  22. Some Conclusions • SMS is not necessarily easy to implement or manage • SMS problems can occur during times of change • Industry has to be accountable for SMS to work • Regulators have to be accountable too • Safety culture is critical

  23. Something to think about... When anyone asks me how I can best describe my experience in nearly forty years at sea, I merely say, uneventful. Of course there have been winter gales, and storms and fog and the like, but in my experience, I have never been in an accident of any sort worth speaking about. I have never seen but one vessel in distress in all my years at sea...I never saw a wreck and never have been wrecked, nor was I ever in any predicament that threatened to end in disaster of any sort. E.J. Smith, 1907 On April 14, 1912, RMS Titanic sank with the loss of 1500 lives - one of which was its captain - E.J. Smith

  24. Thank you!Naish Transportation Consulting Inc.www.naishconsulting.ca

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