Greely British Columbia - Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) and two others were charged in connection with an incident where a train was allegedly
ordered to be parked without the brakes properly applied near Revelstoke.
The company, along with former Mountain Division superintendent Mark Jackson, and Tim McLelland, were charged with two counts of contravening an emergency
directive made by the federal Minister of Transport.
They are scheduled to appear in Revelstoke court on Wednesay, 1 Feb 2017.
The charges are in connection with an incident that took place on the night of 15 Feb 2015 when CP engineers and conductors were about to go on
strike.
A search warrant from May 2015 alleges the accused violated the Railway Safety Act by ordering that 57 railway cars, some of which were carrying dangerous
goods, be left unattended without the hand brakes properly applied on the tracks near Greeley, 10 kilometres east and uphill from Revelstoke.
The warrant alleges the conductor of the train told rail traffic control they didn't have time to apply the brakes, but that Jackson responded with an order to
leave the train without the brakes applied.
The train was later moved without incident.
The conductor of the train notified the union of the issue, who in turn informed Transport Canada (TC) of the incident.
TC investigators first searched CP headquarters in Calgary in May 2015 to obtain recordings from the night in question.
They conducted a second search in December 2015 to obtain employee time sheets to find out who was working in the rail traffic control centre that
night.
They also conducted an investigation in Revelstoke.
The CBC broke the story of the first search in June 2015.
Charges were laid late in 2016.
CP said it could not comment on the incident because the matter was before the court.
TC provided the following statement:
"Railway companies are responsible for the safety of their rail line infrastructure, railway equipment, and operations. This includes ongoing inspection,
testing, and maintenance programs in accordance with regulatory requirements, as well as any particular operating and environmental conditions. TC does not
hesitate to take appropriate enforcement action, should an issue of non-compliance be identified. The department has a variety of enforcement tools for
non-compliance with rules, regulations, and Emergency Directives made under the Railway Safety Act (RSA) ranging from administrative monetary penalties (fines)
to prosecution."
The incident raised the spectre of a repeat of the Lake Megantic incident, when a train left unattended rolled out of control into the heart of a small Quebec
town and exploded, killing 47 people on 6 Jul 2013.
Following the incident, TC issued an emergency directive that required all rail companies to ensure that handbrakes were properly applied on any trains left
unattended for more than one hour.
According to his Linked In profile, Jackson was the superintendent of the Revelstoke based Mountain Division from September 2013 to March 2015, when he was
transferred to the Kootenay Division, which is based in Cranbrook.
He is no longer with CP.
Alex Cooper.