Good morning, everyone.
Mr. Chair and members of the committee, thank you for having us this morning.
My name is Stephen Scott, and I work as the director general of rail safety and security at Transport Canada. Thank you for the opportunity to speak with you today about the regulatory regime for safe operation of railway grade crossings in Canada.
In total, there are about 23,000 grade crossings across the country. These comprise about 14,000 public grade crossings on roads that are maintained by a municipal road authority and are designed for public use. The remaining 9,000 are private grade crossings where the adjacent land is owned by private landowners—for example, businesses, farmers and residents—and the crossing is not intended for use by the general public.
In 2014, Transport Canada introduced the grade crossings regulations to improve safety at rail crossings by mandating the standards that govern their design, construction and maintenance. This includes engineering specifications for the crossing surface, the physical barriers, the warning systems and the signage.
Recognizing that a one-size-fits-all approach would not be pragmatic or in the interest of safety, the regulations establish a spectrum of safety measures tailored to the assessed level of risk of each individual crossing, with risk being dependent on several variables, such as volume of traffic, speed, sightlines and geography.
The regulations provided up to 10 years for railways and landowners to make infrastructure upgrades and bring rail crossings into compliance with the new safety standards. Over this period, Transport Canada has extensively engaged with stakeholders on the changes, including with farmer associations, and we are grateful for their continued involvement.
In order to ensure a reasonable regulatory burden and that resources are prioritized to the highest risk areas, the regulations were amended in 2021 to permanently exempt from upgrade requirements about 3,000 of the lowest-risk private grade crossings. The regulations came into full force on November 28, 2024. Information provided to Transport Canada from the railways indicates that over 99% of grade crossings are compliant with the new standards.
Under the regulations, private crossing owners have a shared responsibility for safety at their crossings and have flexible options to ensure compliance with safety standards. Apportionment of financial responsibility is governed by the Canada Transportation Act, which is administered by the Canadian Transportation Agency, an independent, quasi-judicial administrative tribunal with the mandate to regulate and adjudicate economic issues in the transportation sector.
Thank you. I'm happy to take any questions.