|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Report into Australian rail disaster shows government decisions
undermined safety
By Barry Jobson
1 June 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email
The final section of a three-part report by a judicial inquiry
into the Glenbrook rail disaster in New South Wales was brought
down in April, nearly 16 months after the accident claimed the
lives of seven people and injured 51 others.
The disaster occurred on December 2, 1999, when a suburban
passenger train travelling towards Sydney ploughed into the rear
of the stationary interstate Indian Pacific. The passenger train
had been directed to pass through a malfunctioning signal showing
red just outside of the Glenbrook station on the Blue Mountains
line.
The judicial inquiry's interim report had already found that
the disaster was caused by the lack of a visual monitoring system
covering the track and inadequate communications systems to follow
movements.
These factors meant that rail personnel at Glenbrook and the
main signal box at Penrith were unaware that the Indian Pacific
had been stopped by another faulty red signal ahead of the suburban
train. The Indian Pacific driver was unable to communicate this
vital information to anyone.
The final report, which covered the Glenbrook tragedy and eight
other rail accidents, went further, however, touching on some
of the underlying economic and political causes. Its conclusions
are an indictment of the policies pursued by the NSW government
and by the State Rail Authority (SRA).
Summing up the investigation, the presiding judge Justice Peter
McInerney damned the NSW rail system which he said had a
culture of on-time running. [T]his objective,
he said, had become so entrenched in the attitudes of railway
operational personnel that they could no longer assess anomalous
situations.
Referring to the operational staff decision to direct the suburban
train through the failed red signal at Glenbrook, McInerney said:
They [operational staff] had developed an attitude that
could not be varied under any circumstancestrains have to
run on time despite the consequences.
McInerney's condemnation, serious as it is, deflects attention
from a more fundamental problem. On-time running presupposes
a timetable that matches the capacities of the rail system to
provide safe travel. For electoral purposes, the NSW Labor government
insisted that trains had to run on time, but under conditions
where it was running down rail infrastructure and maintenance
in order to cut costs.
Evidence given by a number of witnesses to the inquiry shows
that the culture referred to is imposed from the top.
Rail personnel are subjected to considerable pressure to take
shortcuts and ignore safety requirements to ensure train schedules
are met.
Train driver Charles Jarvis testified that drivers had been
forced to operate trains with non-functioning radios
and had pressure brought to bear on them to take out trains
with non-functioning brakes. Justice McInerney acknowledged
that Jarvis had named the persons involved in the incidents
and that in the absence of any challenge to his evidence
[by the rail authorities]... it must be regarded as having been
conceded.
The report also contains evidence that Network Operations Superintendents
or supervisors on the Blue Mountains line would only attend signal
boxes during morning and evening peak periods and were mainly
concerned with on-time running, not safety. According to the report,
superintendents [with the exception of one supervisor] did
not know how to operate a signal box so they could not have supervised
anything in any event.
Labor government criticised
The report criticised the 1996 decision by the state Labor
government to break up the State Rail Authority into four stand-alone
commercial entities. It declared that, no proper consideration
was given to safety management in New South Wales when the 1996
disaggregation occurred and that this led directly to deficiencies
in safety management.
The report stated: The process appears to have been driven
by an ideological commitment to the separation of train operations
from infrastructure ownership and to the economic benefits which
were perceived to be available from the creation of Rail Access
Corp with a duty to collect access fees on behalf of the government.
There is no question that economic benefits were
the main consideration driving the government's decision to dismember
the SRA. In 1995 the NSW government became a signatory to the
National Competition Policy Agreement, known as the Hilmer Report.
Drawn up by the Federal Labor government of the day, the Hilmer
Report called for all state government-owned enterprises to be
reorganised on an economically competitive basis.
The Hilmer recommendations were aimed at creating a favorable
climate to attract investment by offering reduced costs and other
concessions for overseas and domestic companies and preparing
state-owned enterprises, such as power and rail, for privatisation.
In 1996, in line with the requirements of the Hilmer report,
the NSW State government introduced the Transport Administration
Amendment Rail Corporatisation and Restructuring Act. Under
the changed structure, three new corporations were created. Rail
Access Corporation (RAC) became the owner of the rail
infrastructure, Rail Services Australia took over maintenance
and Freightcorp took over all freight services. The State Rail
Authority only retained responsibility for metropolitan train
services.
Each of the four services undertook significant cost cutting.
The cuts to maintenance by the Rail Access Corporation resulted
in the reduction of vital programs and contributed to several
derailments between July 1999 and April 2000, as well as the Glenbrook
disaster itself.
The Corporation's 1998 Annual Report stated that, since 1996-97,
it had achieved cumulative real maintenance cost reductions of
22 percent, producing accumulated savings of $296 million. This
included cutting overall rail maintenance to produce savings of
$112 million and slashing $50 million from track maintenance expenditure.
Since 1996, all the state-run fleet maintenance centres at
Chullora, which previously carried out extensive overhauls of
suburban and intrastate trains, have been closed down and the
work outsourced. Track Walka system where examiners would
walk along and check the entire length of the trackwas abolished.
Regular checks of the signalling systems by gangs of electricians
were abandoned.
Rail tracks have deteriorated substantially, directly affecting
the correct operation of signals. Track foundations are far from
adequate in many areas, so that during heavy rain train movement
pumps up sludge which fouls signalling equipment. This and other
deficiencies regularly cause signal light malfunctions.
A document circulated by the RAC just prior to the Glenbrook
crash revealed that speed restrictions had been imposed on 100
sections of track in metropolitan and regional areas. The document
said the restrictions were necessary because of suspected
faults or damage to the track and that dozens of sections
of track, ranging from 100 metres to more than one kilometre
were badly affected.
The McInerney report makes 95 recommendations, dealing with
infrastructure, training, monitoring systems, track and signal
inspections and independent safety auditing. The number of recommendations,
which cover all areas of rail operations, speaks volumes about
the serious lack of safety within the NSW rail network.
One of the major recommendations is the merging of Rail Access
Corporation and Rail Service Australia into a single statutory
authority to be known as the Rail Infrastructure Authority. But
this attempt to return to the old structure will not overcome
the basic problem. Safety has been compromised by the drive to
cut costs and pass on concessions to big business. This remains
the government's central concern.
See Also:
Evidence at Australian
rail disaster inquiry reveals chaotic safety system
[4 March 2000]
Australian signalling
engineer warns of further rail disasters
[13 January 2000]
At least seven dead
in second worst rail disaster in Australia's history
[3 December 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |