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Failings revealed in BAM Nuttall rail works plans

27 Sep 19 BAM Nuttall has been told by the Rail Accident Investigation Branch that it needs to improve its safe system of work planning process.

Another near miss...
Another near miss...

The warning follows the official investigation into a near-miss on the railways last December.

At 23:24 hrs on 2nd December 2018, a track worker narrowly avoided being struck by a train between Horley and Gatwick Airport stations. The track worker, a controller of site safety (COSS), was undertaking work related to the electrical isolation of conductor rails and moved out of the path of the train just before it reached him.

The Rail Accident Investigation Branch (RAIB) investigation determined that Network Rail鈥檚 isolation planning process meant that BAM Nuttall planners lacked the information needed for them to establish the exact location where track work was to be carried out. The planners lacked the skills and experience to understand this and so provided a system of work which provided no protection from train movements at the actual location of the task.

The COSS recognised that the planned system of work lacked adequate protection from train movements, but went ahead anyway without implementing an alternative safe system of work.

A second track worker involved in the isolation task did not challenge the COSS about the unsafe method of working.

The underlying factor was that Network Rail isolation processes did not provide planners outside Network Rail with sufficient information to always be able to plan safe systems of work, RAIB found.

The RAIB has recommended that Network Rail should improve its isolation planning processes so that safe system of work planners receive the information they need to plan all associated work safely. The RAIB has also recommended that BAM Nuttall should improve its safe system of work planning process to ensure that its planners do not plan work without sufficient information to identify appropriate protection measures.

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Forward facing CCTV showing the driver's view of a trackworker moving clear of the line as the train approaches at 51 mph

Simon French, chief inspector of rail accidents, said: 鈥淥nce again the RAIB has to report on an alarming near-miss between a train and a track worker. We have seen far too many of these incidents in recent years, and the recent tragic accidents at Stoats Nest Junction, just a few miles from Gatwick, and at Margam, which is still under investigation, are a stark reminder of how terrible the consequences of mixing trains and people can be.

鈥淲hen engineering work takes place on and around lines electrified on the conductor rail system, it is important that the conductor rails are isolated and earthed, to protect everyone from electrical hazards. Straps between the conductor rail and the running rail are the usual means of achieving this, although it鈥檚 good to see that remote isolation devices are now being introduced at some locations. Placing and removing these straps is an important task, which can expose people to great risk if it is not planned and carried out to a high standard. In this case the plan called for some straps to be fitted on tracks outside the area protected by the possession arrangements, even though there was an alternative site available, where the straps could have been placed within the possession. The information about the alternative site was not available to the planners who needed it, and they did not identify the need for additional protection from trains when the straps were to be applied. We are recommending that Network Rail improves its processes so that all planners get the right information at the right time.

鈥淭he staff who were given the defective plans did not challenge them. Having managed to place the straps without incident, they went out to remove them the next day, knowing that the straps were attached to lines outside the possession, but believing that no trains would pass by while they were doing their work. It was considered OK to take a risk to get the job done, and no-one felt able to challenge this.

鈥淲e have previously recommended, in two recent reports, that Network Rail should improve the leadership skills of team leaders and supervisors. Work is being done to address this, but railway industry staff at all levels must understand the importance of good leadership: getting people to do the right thing, at the right time, all the time.鈥

A spokesperson for BAM Nuttall said: 鈥淏AM Nuttall fully supported RAIB and Network Rail鈥檚 investigation of causes leading to a near miss on 2 December 2018. RAIB鈥檚 report includes learnings and recommendations that have been agreed and already actioned. For example, Network Rail now provide our delivery teams with access to information used for developing accurate and safe systems of work. These changes have, and will continue to result in improved safety for both our own teams and the wider industry.鈥

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