Sherbrooke Quebec - A former locomotive engineer for the Montreal Maine & Atlantic Railway (MMA) who regularly ran trains between Farnham and Lake Megantic said he was not allowed to refuse to operate a train, even when he knew it was over the maximum allowed weight.
Breathing quickly, his voice quivering, Francois Daigle testified Thursday at the trial of his former colleagues on charges related to the 2013 deadly Lake Megantic trail derailment and explosions.
His testimony is only being reported now because it was subject to a publication ban until Superior Court Justice Gaetan Dumas lifted that ban Monday morning.
Daigle's fellow locomotive engineer, Thomas Harding 56, as well as operations manager Jean Demaitre 53, and controller Richard Labrie 59, are each charged with 47 counts of criminal negligence causing death in connection with the 2013 Lake Megantic rail disaster.
Rules Dictated Maximum Weight
Daigle, one of three MMA engineers who operated trains along the Farnham-to-Megantic route, told the court it was common practice for the company's top management to play loose with established railway regulations.
Referring to a regulation manual and documents which listed the contents and weight of the 73 car train that derailed on 6 Jul 2013 Daigle confirmed the maximum weight allowed for an MMA train during the period from 1 Apr 2013 to 30 Nov 2013 was 6,300 tonnes, not counting locomotives.
The train involved in the tragedy weighed 9,100 tonnes.
Manager Dismissed Locomotive's Defects: Daigle
In his third day of testimony Monday Daigle told the court there were often problems with locomotives at MMA.
"Things weren't working great," he said.
"A lot of locomotives were reported several times, but nothing was ever done."
Earlier in his testimony, Daigle told Dumas and the 14 jurors he drove locomotive 5017, the same locomotive that was pulling the train that derailed two days later, from Vachon, near Lake Megantic, to Farnham on 4 Jul 2013.
Daigle said on that trip he noticed the locomotive kept losing speed and produced black smoke.
Daigle told the court he reported the problems to his supervisor, Jean Demaitre, and sent a fax to the repair shop in Maine at the end of his shift.
Daigle said he asked Demaitre to change the lead locomotive because of the repair issues.
"What was Demaitre's answer?" Crown prosecutor Marie-Eve Phaneuf asked.
"You're complaining again?" Daigle said Demaitre told him, continuing, "This is what we have, and at any rate, you are going to be receiving your pension after me."
Daigle said he understood that to mean no changes would be made.
MMA Disorganized Lacking Resources Daigle Says
Under cross-examination by Charles Shearson, one of Harding's lawyers, Daigle told the court he had worked at Canadian Pacific Railway before working for MMA.
Daigle said operating bulletins, which communicated information that wasn't in the regulations manuals, were not always organized at MMA.
"At Canadian Pacific, you had a book or log of bulletins you could look at them and sign them," he said.
"At MMA, they were more spread about all over the office," he added.
"I had talked about this in a health and safety meeting, that they should be grouped together."
Daigle told the court CP had more resources than MMA and more personnel to provide training.
"We did simulations when we got a new operational bulletin at CP," said Daigle, "which would help us understand the new rules."
Daigle told the court having various regulations from different authorities sometimes caused confusion for the train engineers and conductors.
He said sometimes they had different interpretations of the same rule.
"The solution was to talk it out with each other and try to explain each other's interpretations," he said.
"Otherwise, we would defer to the competent authority."
"I don't know if you'll agree, but regulations can become complicated?" asked Shearson.
"Yes," said Daigle, with a sigh.
Daigle is the twelfth witness in the trial, taking place at the Sherbrooke courthouse.
He returns the witness box for further cross-examination Tuesday.
Alison Brunette.