We came across this and several other articles arguing that the statistics show declining transportation (highway, train plane, boat, etc.) accidents, derailments and so on. We believe that the statistics cited by these individuals are false because they do not consider the impact of the economic slowdown on the number of transportation incidents (accidents, occurrences, and so on).
As the attached article admits, there has been an increase in the transportation incidents in the last year and this year. In fact, the incidents reached a bottom at the peak of the economic slowdown around 2009. They have been increasing since and will continue to increase with the increase in the volume of traffic through the transportation networks.
A smart government would have prepared itself for the bottlenecking to come by fixing the transportation systems during the economic recession. These are well-spend investments that provide millions of good jobs. Instead, they threw our money towards wars and the banking industry, and Wall Street and handouts to non-working people none of which have done much for this country's infrastructure and our prosperity. Working people are upset and they will get really mad as the economic growth in the States continues to accelerate, creating a much greater number of accidents, incidents, deaths, injuries and property damage. Stay tuned.
Here is this faulty article, probably written by ignorant people that wear "fly masks" and who have no holistic view of the past, present and future.
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Joseph Kane and Adie Tomer |
August 10, 2015 10:57am
Train derailments on the decline despite recent spate of accidents
America’s railroads have endured a number of high-profile accidents
over the past few months, resulting in widespread service disruptions
and economic costs across the country. From Montana to Tennessee to Pennsylvania, several freight and passenger trains have derailed, prompting action on safety from policymakers in Washington and beyond. Rapidly aging and increasingly overloaded with traffic—including large volumes of highly flammable energy products—many
rail corridors face a long list of infrastructure upgrades to reliably
and efficiently handle more passengers and goods over time.
Yet, despite the sudden spike in accidents, railroads are actually
becoming much safer overall, building off a number of public and private
efforts to boost infrastructure investment. This environment of overall
safety increases coupled with more disruptive accidents should inform
efforts to improve rail safety policy.
According to the latest Federal Railroad Administration data,
freight trains continue to see a drop in overall accidents,
particularly derailments. Last year, there were 1,202 freight
derailments nationally, nearly half the total of 2004 (2,350). This
decline, moreover, has come even as freight trains cover more miles,
which are up almost 17 percent since they bottomed out during the
recession in 2009. Still, the extent of damage from these derailments
can vary widely, depending on the accident location and type of goods
carried; this is especially true as the number of rail cars carrying hazardous materials, like Bakken oil, has risen over time.
Passenger trains have seen a similar fall in derailments. Amid booming Amtrak ridership—including
a 44 percent increase in passenger train miles since 1997—the number of
derailments has steadily declined, down to 58 last year from a recent
high of 113 in 2001. In addition, the severity of these and other
related passenger train accidents, such as highway-rail incidents, has
dipped over the past two decades. The rate of passenger injuries and
accidents exceeding $100,000 in damage, for instance, have both fallen
relative to the growing number of train miles covered.
In turn, derailments across many individual states continue to nudge downward, speaking to the tremendous regional variety in goods movement, passenger ridership, and rail performance. For example, while Texas ranks among the largest states
in total rail miles (10,469), carloads (3.1 million), and derailments
(184) annually, these types of accidents have fallen by 20 percent since
2012 alone, due in part to various signal and track improvements.
California, Ohio, and Louisiana, likewise, represent states with
extensive rail infrastructure that have seen their derailments fall by
nearly 10 percent or more over this same span.
Railroads have traditionally offered a safe way to carry passengers and goods compared to many other transportation modes, but ongoing infrastructure improvements will be crucial. Although private freight rail firms have already demonstrated
how capital improvements can result in fewer derailments, policymakers
at the national, state, and local level still have more work to do. This
is especially important in dense urban areas that handle the rise in
crude-by-rail shipments. Developing stronger plans, forming innovative partnerships, and implementing new technologies are among the range of strategies needed to drive further upgrades in years to come.