Home » Railroads file suits to block two-person crew law

Railroads file suits to block two-person crew law

By Trains Staff | April 11, 2024

| Last updated on August 6, 2025


UP, BNSF, Indiana Rail Road, Florida East Coast file separate suits in federal appellate courts

BNSF crew change
A BNSF intermodal train changes crews on the Chillicothe Subdivision in Chicago. BNSF is among the railroads filing suit over the FRA’s regulation requiring two-person crews. David Lassen

Four railroads have filed lawsuits in federal court to block the Federal Railroad Administration’s requirement for two-person crews for most freight trains, the Associated Press reports.

Union Pacific, BNSF Railway, the Indiana Rail Road, and Florida East Coast Railway filed individual suits this week in different appellate courts, all saying the rule is arbitrary, capricious, and an illegal abuse of discretion.

The FRA announced the rule earlier this month, saying it enhanced safety, particularly in light of longer trains operated by Class I railroads [see “FRA issues rule …,” Trains News Wire, April 2, 2024]. The Association of American Railroads immediately blasted the rule as “unfounded and unnecessary” and said there is no data supporting the safety claims. The AAR likely has a role in the  lawsuits; when contacted by the Associated Press, BNSF deferred comment to the industry group.

UP said in a statement quoted by the AP that the rule “hinders our ability to compete in a world where technology is changing the transportation industry and prevents us from preparing our workforce for jobs of the future.”

The lawsuit is not unexpected; the industry has a history of challenging crew-size laws enacted by states. The AAR sued over an Ohio crew size law last year, for example; it and the Indiana Rail Road sued over an Illinois law in 2019.

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