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'Inadequate': Lack of crew, safety plan made Auckland train accident more likely

Author
Jamie Lyth,
Publish Date
Thu, 14 Dec 2023, 1:37pm
A switcher carriage came off the tracks last year near St John in Auckland. Photo / Darren Masters
A switcher carriage came off the tracks last year near St John in Auckland. Photo / Darren Masters

'Inadequate': Lack of crew, safety plan made Auckland train accident more likely

Author
Jamie Lyth,
Publish Date
Thu, 14 Dec 2023, 1:37pm

Calls for KiwiRail to improve its risk management, crewing and training to reduce the risks of human error have been revealed after a听train derailment in Auckland last year.

The听locomotive derailed听when it entered track crossover points too fast, overturned, and slid on its side for about 55 metres in Tamaki, Auckland on June 1, 2022.

All three crew members luckily escaped with only minor to moderate injuries, and two were taken to hospital for observation.

Now, a report says the inadequacy of KiwiRail鈥檚 risk management and crewing arrangements were vulnerable to human error and made the accident more likely.

The Transport Accident Investigation Commission has made four recommendations to听KiwiRail听and one to the New Zealand Transport Agency Waka Kotahi.

TAIC鈥檚 chief investigator of accidents Naveen Kozhuppakalam said the problems started when train control told the locomotive crew to travel on the 鈥渦p鈥 mainline in a 鈥渄own鈥 direction from Port of Auckland to Westfield.

鈥淎t that time, train control didn鈥檛 tell the crew about the plan to cross the locomotive over from the up mainline to the down mainline at Tamaki.

鈥淎nd the crew didn鈥檛 tell train control that their single cab locomotive would be travelling in long-hood leading configuration,鈥 said Kozhuppakalam.

KiwiRail COO Siva Sivapakkam said they have already implemented some of TAIC鈥檚 recommendations and are considering others.

鈥淲e have an ongoing commitment to safety, and to ensuring our staff go home at the end of each day. This was a serious incident and we have treated it as such.

鈥淪ince this incident, KiwiRail has ceased long-hood running on main lines, eliminating the risk, and as a result, no recommendation to KiwiRail was made in this area.鈥

A switcher carriage came off the tracks in June 2022 near St Johns in Auckland. Photo / Darren MastersA switcher carriage came off the tracks in June 2022 near St Johns in Auckland. Photo / Darren Masters

With long-hood leading, a locomotive appears to travel in reverse, with the crew cab at the rear.

This places the driver on the left of the cab, looking along the length of the engine cowling at the track ahead.

To remedy the driver鈥檚 obscured view, a 鈥渟econd person鈥 crew member sits on the cab鈥檚 right to tell the driver about signals on that side.

In this case, the spotter was a trainee, minded by a third crew member.

Accident investigators found that the minder鈥檚 seating position made it impossible to check that the trainee鈥檚 signal calls were correct.

鈥淲hen the trainee didn鈥檛 report speed limit signals, the driver didn鈥檛 slow the locomotive and it entered the points doing about 77km/h, about 50km/h faster than the limit.鈥

鈥淭he Commission identified gaps in two safety-critical areas 鈥 job training for the 鈥渟econd person鈥 role, and non-technical skills in general, which is knowing how to work together, talk to each other and understand what everyone is doing in safety-critical situations.

The report also found issues with KiwiRail鈥檚 risk management, handling of hazards, and mitigation of the risks of long-hood leading operations on the Auckland Metropolitan rail network.

鈥淲hile KiwiRail has largely ceased mainline long-hood leading operations nationwide, the Commission has recommended that Waka Kotahi ensure sufficient risk controls for long-hood leading by all rail participants, not just KiwiRail.鈥

鈥淎lso, safety on the Auckland Metro network relied largely on administrative risk controls, which are problematic because they rely on people always doing as they are told and always doing their jobs perfectly.

鈥淭hat might be okay in a simple work environment, but it鈥檚 not in a highly complex environment like the Auckland Metro network; that鈥檚 when you need engineering risk controls to make it easy for everyone to do things right.鈥

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