Title 49 › Subtitle SUBTITLE V— - RAIL PROGRAMS › Part PART A— - SAFETY › Chapter CHAPTER 211— - HOURS OF SERVICE › § 21109
The Secretary can make rules to improve safety and reduce worker tiredness. The rules can cut the maximum work hours, raise the minimum rest time, limit time spent waiting for or riding deadhead transportation, set special rules for signal employees who return from remote worksites or trouble calls, and change other operating or scheduling practices that affect fatigue. Within 3 years after the Rail Safety Improvement Act of 2008, the Secretary must make rules for commuter and intercity passenger train employees that may differ from the rest of the law. The Secretary must consider scientific and medical research, scheduling and operating practices, new safety technology, differences in freight and passenger work, and any fatigue management plans. The Secretary should first ask the Railroad Safety Advisory Committee to draft rules. If the Committee accepts, it gets a reasonable time, but must reach consensus within 18 months for passenger-rail rules or the Secretary will act. Within 2 years after that Act, the Secretary must run at least 2 pilot projects (one testing 10-hour shift notice and one testing defined on-call shifts followed by non-call shifts). The Secretary may temporarily waive rules to do a pilot project. One defined term: duty call — a phone call telling an employee their assigned shift time.
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Reference
Citation
49 U.S.C. § 21109
Title 49 — Transportation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73