Chicago, Evergreen Park Want CSX Fined For Blocking Railroad Crossings

(STMW) -- Relief may be on the way for Southwest Side residents forced to endure interminable and potentially dangerous waits at railroad crossings, some of them located near hospitals, the Chicago Sun-Times is reporting.

Chicago is joining forces with the Village of Evergreen Park in an effort to force CSX Transportation to live up to the commitments it made to the Surface Transportation Board after acquiring the rights to operate on the Elsdon Line in 2013.

To minimize delays at grade crossings, CSX was required to break trains into two parts whenever a blockage was expected to exceed 10 minutes. But, Chicago and Evergreen Park maintain the railroad's own quarterly reports show CSX has cut only one train in three years.

Despite rules tailor-made to prevent lengthy delays, CSX trains frequently block at-grade crossing for long periods of time, inconveniencing Southwest Side and southwest suburban commuters during rush hours.

Blockages frequently occur along 95th Street in Evergreen Park, potentially endangering residents because those lengthy delays impede access to Little Company of Mary Hospital and Advocate Christ Medical Center, one of the only trauma centers serving Chicago's South Side, the city claims.

In a petition jointly filed with the Surface Transportation Board, Chicago and Evergreen Park are seeking fines and other sanctions, continued monitoring and additional auditing with the potential to hold the railroad's feet to the fire.

"Ever since CSX secured the right to operate on this track, residents have told us that trains along the Elsdon Line routinely cause lengthy delays that not only inconvenience residents, but threaten public safety by blocking access to area hospitals," Mayor Rahm Emanuel was quoted as saying in a press release.

The mayor said his goal is to "hold the railroad accountable for [its] repeated violations in order to bring relief to the local community."

Ald. Matt O'Shea (19th) could not be reached for comment.

The press release quoted him as saying he has spent three years trying to "work cooperatively" with CSX to address the "many public safety and quality of life issues" caused by the railroad's operations along the Elsdon Line.

"Unfortunately, we have very little to show for that effort and now are forced to take more serious action," O'Shea was quoted as saying.

CSX spokesman Rob Doolittle countered that the company has "worked diligently to limit the impact" on neighborhoods like Beverly and Evergreen Park since beginning operations on the Elsdon line in 2013 and would continue to do so.

"CSX also has invested in significant improvements along the Elsdon line, including replacing approximately 42,000 railroad ties; installing new signal technology; rebuilding Elsdon line road crossings with new premium surfaces at 127th Street, 119th Street, 115th Street, 111th Street, 103rd Street, 99th Street, 95th Street, 94th and Kedzie, 91st Street, and 87th Street; and installing camera monitoring technology to allow us to view track operating conditions and make changes in real time," he wrote in an emailed statement.

Doolittle argued that CSX has been "collaborative and transparent" with community leaders by providing periodic progress reports on its efforts to minimize delays. Those efforts will continue.

But, he also said, "The CSX Elsdon line remains important to the entire Chicago region to balance the safe delivery of commerce."

State Senator Bill Cunningham, whose district includes Evergreen Park and Chicago's Mount Greenwood neighborhood, accused CSX of ignoring the promises it made to operate a "safe and efficient" rail line through those communities.

"The legal action taken … demonstrates that Chicago and Evergreen Park will do everything possible to hold CSX accountable for their neglect," Cunningham was quoted as saying.

If past precedent is any indication, fines against CSX could be substantial.

A 2007 case culminated in the Surface Transportation Board slapping the Canadian National Railroad with a $250,000 fine for violating obligations governing the railroad's Chicago area operations. Those legally-binding commitments were "similar" to the promises made by CSX, City Hall contends.

(Source: Sun-Times Media Wire © Chicago Sun-Times 2016. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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