Standard Safety Training Rules Get a Routine Refresh for Rail Workers
Published Date: 5/15/2026
Rule
Summary
Starting July 14, 2026, railroad companies must follow clearer and updated rules for training and checking safety-related workers. This means better training, tougher qualifications, and stronger oversight to keep everyone safer on the rails. The new rule affects all safety-related railroad employees and aims to improve safety without causing big costs or delays.
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Analyzed Economic Effects
9 provisions identified: 8 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
Small-Entity Refresher Relief Savings
FRA estimates the final rule will provide cost savings of $1.1 million based on a one-year relief period for small entities' annual refresher training requirements. The estimate is tied to that one-year relief period to reduce administrative refresher training burdens for small railroads and contractors.
Employees Can "Test Out" of Refresher
The rule allows employees to test out of refresher training if they previously received formal training; the test must be designed to show the employee has the critical knowledge and skills and cannot rely on existing operational efficiency testing. This change adds a test-out option where appropriate.
Train Only For Authorized Tasks
Employers may limit a safety-related employee's training to only the Federal requirements relevant to the safety-related tasks the employer authorizes the employee to perform, plus any required knowledge-based training. This clarifies employers need not train employees on unrelated Federal requirements.
Refresher Training Deadline Delayed
FRA is delaying the refresher training implementation deadline for small entities by one year to December 31, 2026 (see Sec. 243.201(e)(2)). Small railroads and contractors covered as small entities will have an extra year before refresher training implementation.
Electronic Program-Only Submissions
FRA requires program submissions through its part 243 web portal and eliminates the written submission option for employers with fewer than 400,000 total employee work hours annually. Submitters must register for access to the portal.
Parent Companies Can File Programs
Parent or holding companies may submit a training program on behalf of subsidiaries if the filing describes which companies are covered and how; subsidiaries may opt out of the parent's submission in whole or in part. FRA adopted this submission approach to allow legally related companies to share programs.
Supervised OJT Before Full Qualification
An employee who is not yet fully qualified may perform tasks during on-the-job training (OJT) under direct, onsite observation of a qualified person and consistent with specified conditions, before completing all formal training. FRA clarified this to avoid implying OJT is optional.
Use Non-Employee Instructors Allowed
The rule revises the 'designated instructor' definition to specify an instructor need not be an employee; employers must ensure employee or non-employee instructors have the necessary knowledge, skills, and abilities to coach and mentor learners.
Old Designations Remain Valid
FRA removed outdated implementation dates from the regulation but expressly clarified that employees designated as qualified by September 1, 2020, or January 1, 2022, remain appropriately designated and the removal does not change those designations.
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