Good morning, Mr. Chair and members of the committee.
I'd like to thank you for this opportunity of allowing me to present before you. My name is Jim Vena—it's actually Vincenzo Vena—from Jasper, Alberta. I'm the executive vice-president and chief operating officer with CN Rail. I'm accompanied by Michael Farkouh, our vice-president of safety and sustainability.
We understand the committee is being asked to review the safe transportation of dangerous goods and the role of safety management systems. This morning I will be touching on these very points and explaining the regulations that oversee the rail transportation in our industry and additional measures our railroad has put in place and continues to work towards.
CN has an unwavering commitment to rail safety and is continually building multiple lines of defence through people, process, technology, and investment. The CN safety record for accidents continues to see improvements. Between 2003 and 2013, CN's main-track accidents declined by approximately 50%, even with the amount of business that has increased. Since 2009, we've seen a 30% increase in business alone; I won't even go back to 2003. We are committed to continuous improvement and continue to seek and implement additional lines of defence to make an already solid safety record even better.
A lot of discussion is being heard about the self-regulation of the rail industry. This point can be no further from the truth, as Michael has spoken about before. The rail industry is very much regulated in all facets of its operation. This can be seen through the extensive Canadian rail operating rules, whereby the rules are reviewed, vetted, and their compliance monitored by Transport Canada. The inspection process for both infrastructure and rolling stock is much the same. We have stringent standards for the inspection frequency and tolerances allowed for track, signals, freight cars, and locomotives, to mention but a few.
The committee must recognize that at CN we clearly understand that the regulations in place are a minimum and that we exceed regulations on many fronts. In fact, the regulation says we only have to do a rail flaw detection four times per year, and we're doing it up to 18 times a year in places.
Concerning SMS, allow me to address an area that this committee has reviewed: the safety management system, better known to us as our SMS plan. As already indicated, the SMS is a plan that we're all regulated to have in place. It's what guides CN on all of our elements of safety. SMS is an explicit set of processes designed to integrate safety into all decision-making, planning, and operational activities. CN has taken the requirements of SMS and translated them into a plan consisting of actionable steps exercised on a continual basis with our operation's workforce and management. The steps encompass the requirements and representative involvement in safety management and safety culture development, risk assessment, safety audit and evaluation, accident and incident reporting, investigation analysis, and corrective action. In other words, it's a broad range.
The CN SMS plan is also explained in our “Leadership in Safety” brochure. If anybody wants to see it, there's a new copy of on our website. This brochure is available to the general public, and all our employees get it sent to their homes. One element that would be of particular interest to this committee is our risk mitigation work performed through our corridor risk assessments, whereby we review the amount of dangerous goods, population density, topography, and the proximity to waterways and the environment, to see what we need to do and how we operate and what secondary measures we need in place.
Auditing and monitoring are other key elements of our SMS plan. We perform audits with our 106 health and safety committees made up of unionized and management employees. We do detailed integrated audits with management to ensure compliance of policies, instruction, and operating rules. We perform daily auditing on the tasks of our employees by virtue of our efficiency testing process. We performed over 400,000 of those tests in 2013. This amounts to well over 1,000 per day. I don't know why we did that; you guys are good with math, but we had to divide it anyway. This audit is over and above the monitoring and inspections that Transport Canada would perform on our railroad in Canada.
I need to talk about safety culture because this is very important to us and it’s an area we continue to strive to get better in. A successful ingredient in the world of safety is safety culture, and CN is building strong elements to foster this safety culture. Safety culture is about creating a true belief and desire for being safe. We interact with our system health and safety committee, of which I am a member, along with our employee representatives to discuss and develop means to build on this.
We have developed peer engagement groups and initiated safety summits and onboarding programs for new hires to our company. We are industry leaders in measuring safety culture, which is featured on Transport Canada's website.
We have worked closely with Saint Mary's University in developing the CN Centre for Occupational Health and Safety. In fact, we'll be holding a symposium on safety culture in October at the university, where we'll be expecting interested government agencies, the railroad industry, and university academics to help further the subject of safety culture. We are committed to creating the right safety environment for our employees and management.
I'd like to talk for a minute about dangerous goods, especially after Lac-Mégantic.
To give you a bit of my history, I've been railroading since 1975. I actually started by throwing ties out of boxcars. In 1977, while I was going to the University of Alberta, I was hired on as a brakeman, when we had four or five people on trains. After that I was a conductor, and after that I became a locomotive engineer before I finished off my degree.
I've seen railroading have a number of accidents. We always have to make sure we sit down and learn, because as much as we think we've done everything we can, there comes a point when, if you have an incident, you have to make sure you haven't missed anything in all the processes you have, and you move ahead.
Rail transportation safety is about identifying, analyzing, and mitigating risk throughout our network. Dangerous goods travel in rail transportation is a subject that has come under great public interest. On a factual basis, the transportation of dangerous goods in North America is very safe. We transport without incident 99.997% of dangerous goods safely from origin to their respective destination.
However, this statistic does not provide any level of comfort when an incident such as Lac-Mégantic occurs. This truly tragic event, which claimed the lives of 47 individuals, cannot be forgotten. It has allowed us to step back and evaluate our SMS plan and review opportunities to further enhance our robust plan. We believe several lines of defence may have gone wrong for such an accident to occur in this runaway train in Lac-Mégantic. However, we await the TSB's report and recommendations on their analysis and findings on this incident.
Let's talk about a few of them. One that we know about is securement. CN has worked closely with all the stakeholders in addressing concerns in the securement of railway equipment. Transport Canada issued an emergency directive on the means, and CN had already many of the suggested changes in place. The element of securing the locomotives and the application of handbrakes was an example of some of the elements that CN had previously put in place. We felt they were strong, and added a few of the changes that were given to us and we worked with Transport Canada to put in place.
I want to talk for a minute about OT-55. Let me explain it. CN did not stop at this one element with this operation. We began reviewing other areas that we felt would strengthen our lines of defence. One such area was adoption in Canada of a speed restriction for hazardous goods, having more than 20 carloads of such cars, or one toxic or poisonous inhalation car on the train on high-volume corridors of dangerous goods to a maximum speed of 50 miles an hour. This industry-adopted approach in the United States was brought up to our Canadian rail operation. As an example, a train carrying 20 or more dangerous goods between Toronto and Montreal can now not exceed 50 miles an hour. The adoption of the OT-55 policy has been in place on our network since August 13, 2013.
Earlier this year, the U.S. Secretary of Transportation had a call to action by all the class I railroads to assist in further strengthening the lines of defence for rail transportation. As an industry, we came together and developed several commitments that we would undertake for the movement of crude oil.
The items consisted of, to name a few, speed restriction of 40 miles per hour in a high-threat urban area for trains carrying 20 or more crude oil cars having as a minimum one older-style DOT-111 car. If a train has one DOT-111 car, it's restricted to 40 miles an hour.
There's also the review of routes for crude oil. If you have options, we look at the risk assessment and how we would operate if you have options of where you operate.
As well, wayside detection allows for the inspection of moving trains at an interval of no more than 40 miles. Even though in most of our routes we had the frequency of less than 40 miles, we made sure there weren't any areas where we were not compliant.
Although there are others, I've taken the time to mention these commitments by CN, and we'll be bringing these items to our Canadian network. Everything we agreed to in the U.S., the speed restriction, the 40-mile spacing, we're going to implement on the Canadian side of the operation.
I also want to take a minute to talk about emergency response in communities.
CN has undertaken a number of initiatives to strengthen emergency response and to engage communities. In line with dangerous goods volumes along rail routes, resources and processes to enhance response have been strengthened. We have initiated mutual aid protocols with other railways to leverage greater response. CP and CN might be competitors, but we work together to ask, “Where do you have equipment? What do you have in place?” In case anything ever happens, we can respond.
We are engaging customers and other stakeholders, such as the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, to work together as a group. We are leveraging the TRANSCAER program to train external responders to augment readiness.
CN also believes that the rail industry can enhance safety by working closely with communities through the structured community engagement program that we launched last October. CN is engaging municipalities by approaching municipal officials and their emergency responders to ensure that they have contact information for appropriate CN officials, as well as targeted information. We have reached out to 1,098 communities in Canada and initiated 100 outreach meetings with our dangerous goods offices.
In these meetings we discuss CN's comprehensive safety plan, solid safety performance, and the nature of volume and economic importance of dangerous goods we transport through the communities, and we review emergency response planning. We also arrange to conduct training centres for emergency responders when required.
On technology and risk mitigation, a key area that CN has continued to leverage is its technology. Following the Lac-Mégantic accident, we have also taken a step back and reviewed our existing comprehensive network of technology. This network consists of inspection technology as we monitor the health of a moving train for wheel conditioning, bearing temperatures, and dragging equipment. The network is among the densest networks in North America.
We also reviewed our infrastructure inspection technologies which consisted of ultrasonic rail flaw detection. This looks at the actual rail to see if any discontinuances exist in the rail. We use track geometry technologies whereby we measure the gauge of the rail, cross-level alignment, and profile.
In November 2013 we announced a further $10 million capital investment that complemented our already robust investment of $2 billion in 2013. Of the $2 billion capital investment in 2013, we invested $1.2 billion in rail and signal infrastructure on our own right-of-way.
The additional technology investment consists of additional wayside equipment, inspection systems, a new track geometry test guard, an optical track inspection system, brittle bar detectors to minimize the adversity, and control signalling on certain key sidings. These additional investments will continue to layer our lines of defence and mitigate our risks.
Quickly, I'll talk about DOT-111. I think you've heard from both, and we've been very up front that we think it is time to change out the DOT-111 cars. In fact, instead of repeating it, for time, we use about 40 that we own. We don't have a lot of tank cars but we have 40 of them that we do own ourselves. We use them in the movement of diesel, which is not the same classification and packing group as the other commodities. But we think it is important enough to show some leadership on this and by the end of this year, we will have removed the 40 and replaced them with 40 new ones of the latest vintage.
In conclusion, CN believes that safety is a journey and not a destination. Our safety record continues on the right trend with decreases in accidents; however, we recognize that much work lies ahead of us. A robust regulatory framework is in place and our SMS plan is key to ensuring that we continue to operate in the safest manner possible.
Through people, process, technology, and investment we will continue to further our risk mitigation on this continuum of our safety journey.
With that, Mr. Chair and members, thank you very much.