Vol. 149, No. 4 — February 25, 2015
Registration
SOR/2015-26 February 6, 2015
RAILWAY SAFETY ACT
Railway Safety Management System Regulations, 2015
P.C. 2015-91 February 5, 2015
His Excellency the Governor General in Council, on the recommendation of the Minister of Transport, pursuant to sections 37 (see footnote a), 47 and 47.1 (see footnote b) of the Railway Safety Act (see footnote c), makes the annexed Railway Safety Management System Regulations, 2015.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
(This table is not part of the Regulations.)
RAILWAY SAFETY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM REGULATIONS, 2015
INTERPRETATION
1. Definitions
OVERVIEW
2. Purpose
3. Organization — Parts
PART 1
RAILWAY COMPANIES
APPLICATION
4. Railway company
SAFETY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
Processes, Procedures, Plans and Methods
5. Processes
6. Index
7. Procedures, plans and methods
Process for Accountability — Accountable Executive
8. Designation of executive
Process with Respect to a Safety Policy
9. Safety policy
Process for Ensuring Compliance with Regulations, Rules and Other Instruments
10. List of instruments
11. Procedure
Process for Managing Railway Occurrences
12. Procedure
Process for Identifying Safety Concerns
13. Analyses
14. Procedure
Risk Assessment Process
15. Risk assessment
16. Consultation
17. Procedure, plan and method
Process for Implementing and Evaluating Remedial Action
18. Remedial action — implementation
19. Consultation
20. Procedures and plan
Process for Establishing Targets and Developing Initiatives
21. Targets and initiatives
22. Details of initiatives
23. Communication
Process for Reporting Contraventions and Safety Hazards
24. Internal reporting
Process for Managing Knowledge
25. List
26. Other persons
27. Plan and methods
Process with Respect to Scheduling
28. Principles of fatigue science
Process for Continual Improvement of the Safety Management System
Internal Monitoring
29. Monitoring
Internal Audit
30. Scope and frequency
31. Audit report
32. Action plan
RECORDS
33. Review, analysis and evaluation
34. Consultation, communication or collaboration
35. Specified documents
36. Duration
FILING AND NOTIFICATION
37. Filing with the Minister
38. Notification and filing
PART 2
LOCAL RAILWAY COMPANIES
DIVISION 1
MAIN TRACK OPERATIONS
Application
39. Local railway company — main track
Safety Management System
Processes, Procedures and Methods
40. Processes
41. Index
42. Procedures and methods
Process for Accountability — Accountable Executive
43. Designation of executive
Process with Respect to a Safety Policy
44. Safety policy
Process for Ensuring Compliance with Regulations, Rules and Other Instruments
45. List of instruments
46. Procedures
Process for Identifying Safety Concerns
47. Analyses
48. Procedure
Risk Assessment Process
49. Risk assessment
50. Communication
51. Procedure and method
Process for Implementing and Evaluating Remedial Action
52. Remedial action — implementation
53. Procedures
Process for Establishing Targets and Developing Initiatives
54. Targets and initiatives
55. Details of initiative
56. Communication
Process for Continual Improvement of the Safety Management System
Internal Monitoring
57. Monitoring
Internal Audit
58. Scope and frequency
59. Audit report
60. Action plan
Records
61. Review, analysis and evaluation
62. Communication
63. Specified documents
64. Duration
Filing and Notification
65. Filing with the Minister
66. Notification and filing
DIVISION 2
NON-MAIN TRACK OPERATIONS
Application
67. Local railway company — non-main track
Safety Management System
Processes, Procedures and Methods
68. Processes
69. Index
70. Procedures and methods
Process with Respect to a Safety Policy
71. Safety policy
Process for Ensuring Compliance with Regulations, Rules and Other Instruments
72. List of instruments
73. Procedures
Process for Identifying Safety Concerns
74. Analyses
75. Procedure
Risk Assessment Process
76. Risk assessment
77. Communication
78. Procedure and method
Process for Implementing and Evaluating Remedial Action
79. Remedial action — implementation
80. Procedures
Records
81. Review, analysis and evaluation
82. Communication
83. Risk assessment
84. Duration
Filing and Notification
85. Filing with the Minister
86. Notification and filing
PART 3
CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS, REPEAL AND COMING INTO FORCE
CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS TO THE RAILWAY OPERATING CERTIFICATE REGULATIONS
87-88.
REPEAL
89.
COMING INTO FORCE
90. April 1, 2015
RAILWAY SAFETY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM REGULATIONS, 2015
INTERPRETATION
Definitions
1. The following definitions apply in these Regulations.
“accountable executive”
« gestionnaire supérieur responsable »
“accountable executive” means the executive referred to in subsection 8(1) or 43(1), as the case may be.
“Act”
« Loi »
“Act” means the Railway Safety Act.
“dangerous goods”
« marchandises dangereuses »
“dangerous goods” has the meaning assigned in section 2 of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Act, 1992.
“main track”
« voie ferrée principale »
“main track” means a line of railway on which the movement of railway equipment is authorized by a railway company.
“non-main track”
« voie ferrée non principale »
“non-main track” means a line of railway other than a main track.
“railway occurrence”
« accident ferroviaire »
“railway occurrence” means a railway occurrence that is reportable under section 5 of the Transportation Safety Board Regulations.
OVERVIEW
Purpose
2. These Regulations establish the minimum requirements with respect to the safety management system that a company must develop and implement for the purpose of achieving the highest level of safety in its railway operations.
Organization — Parts
3. (1) These Regulations are divided into three Parts:
- (a) Part 1 sets out the requirements applicable to a railway company with respect to its safety management system and with respect to recordkeeping, notification and filing of information;
- (b) Part 2 sets out
- (i) in Division 1, the requirements applicable to a local railway company that operates railway equipment on main track with respect to its safety management system and with respect to record-keeping, notification and filing of information, and
- (ii) in Division 2, the requirements applicable to a local railway company that operates railway equipment exclusively on non-main track with respect to its safety management system and with respect to record-keeping, notification and filing of information; and
- (c) Part 3 makes consequential amendments to the Railway Operating Certificate Regulations, repeals the Railway Safety Management System Regulations and sets out the date on which these Regulations come into force.
Organization — processes
(2) The safety management system requirements set out in Parts 1 and 2 are organized into key processes that group together related requirements, including, in most instances, the requirement that a company develop and implement
- (a) procedures that establish a step-by-step sequence of activities for dealing with certain matters;
- (b) methods that are not necessarily a step-by-step sequence of activities, but that establish the manner in which certain evaluation, verification or supervisory activities are to be carried out; or
- (c) plans that establish the proposed time for carrying out certain activities with respect to the consultation and knowledge management requirements, and the proposed manner in which those activities are to be carried out.
PART 1
RAILWAY COMPANIES
APPLICATION
Railway company
4. (1) This Part applies to a railway company.
Delayed application
(2) In the case of a railway company that begins railway operations after the day on which these Regulations come into force, sections 21 to 23 do not apply until the day that is six months after the day on which the railway company begins railway operations.
SAFETY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
Processes, Procedures, Plans and Methods
Processes
5. A railway company must develop and implement a safety management system that includes
- (a) a process for accountability;
- (b) a process with respect to a safety policy;
- (c) a process for ensuring compliance with regulations, rules and other instruments;
- (d) a process for managing railway occurrences;
- (e) a process for identifying safety concerns;
- (f) a risk assessment process;
- (g) a process for implementing and evaluating remedial action;
- (h) a process for establishing targets and developing initiatives;
- (i) a process for reporting contraventions and safety hazards;
- (j) a process for managing knowledge;
- (k) a process with respect to scheduling; and
- (l) a process for continual improvement of the safety management system.
Index
6. (1) A railway company must keep an up-to-date index of all the processes referred to in section 5 that it has implemented.
Content of index
(2) The index must indicate the date of the last revision of the railway company’s safety policy and must indicate, for each process,
- (a) the management position occupied by a person designated under subsection 8(4), if applicable;
- (b) the procedures, plans and methods required by this Part that are associated with the process, and the date of their last revision; and
- (c) the position in the railway company that has responsibility for the development and implementation of the procedures, plans and methods.
Procedures, plans and methods
7. Every procedure, plan and method required by this Part must be in writing and must indicate the date of its last revision.
Process for Accountability — Accountable Executive
Designation of executive
8. (1) A railway company must designate an executive who is responsible for the operations and activities of the railway company to be accountable for the extent to which the requirements of the safety management system are met, including its effectiveness in achieving the highest level of safety in its railway operations.
Notice to Minister
(2) The railway company must provide the Minister with the name of the accountable executive as soon as possible after he or she has been designated.
Declaration to the Minister
(3) The railway company must ensure that, within 30 days after the day on which it designates an accountable executive, the accountable executive provides the Minister with a signed declaration accepting accountability for the extent to which the requirements of the safety management system have been met.
Designation of managers
(4) The railway company may, in its safety management system, permit the accountable executive to designate one or more persons to develop and implement one or more of the processes required by this Part. A designated person must occupy a management position within the railway company that includes responsibilities relevant to the process or processes and the authority to make decisions with respect to that process or those processes.
Annual update
(5) If the accountable executive designates a person under subsection (4), the accountable executive must ensure that the person reports to him or her, on an annual basis, with respect to
- (a) any problems following the procedures or implementing the plans and methods, and the manner in which those problems have been or are being resolved or, if applicable, the reasons why they have not been or are not being resolved; and
- (b) the effectiveness of the procedures, plans and methods in contributing to the improvement of the safety of the railway company’s operations.
Process with Respect to a Safety Policy
Safety policy
9. (1) A railway company must include, in its safety management system, a written safety policy that reflects the railway company’s commitment to promoting railway safety. The policy must be approved and signed by the accountable executive.
Annual review
(2) The railway company must ensure that its safety policy is reviewed annually.
Communication
(3) The railway company must communicate its safety policy, and any changes to the policy, to its employees.
Process for Ensuring Compliance with Regulations, Rules and Other Instruments
List of instruments
10. (1) A railway company must include, in its safety management system, a list of the following instruments relating to railway safety:
- (a) any regulations made under the Act that apply to the railway company and that are in force;
- (b) any engineering standards approved by the Minister under section 7 of the Act or established by the Minister under subsection 19(7) of the Act that apply to the railway company and that are in effect;
- (c) any rules approved or established by the Minister under section 19 of the Act that apply to the railway company and that are in force;
- (d) any exemptions granted under section 22 or 22.1 of the Act that apply to the railway company and that are in effect;
- (e) any notices sent to the railway company under section 31 of the Act that contain an order and that are in effect; and
- (f) any documents in effect by which the Minister has ordered the railway company to do or to not do something, including a ministerial order issued under section 32 of the Act and an emergency directive sent under section 33 of the Act.
Date and subject matter
(2) The list of instruments must include
- (a) in the case of an engineering standard or a rule, the date on which it was approved or established; and
- (b) in the case of an exemption, a notice, or a document referred to in paragraph (1)(f), the date and subject matter.
Update
(3) The railway company must keep the list of instruments up to date and must indicate the date of its last revision.
Procedure
11. A railway company must include, in its safety management system, a procedure for
- (a) reviewing and updating the list of instruments referred to in subsection 10(1); and
- (b) verifying compliance with
- (i) the requirements of the regulations, engineering standards, rules, and notices and documents containing an order, that are referred to in the list of instruments, and
- (ii) the terms of the exemptions referred to in the list of instruments.
Process for Managing Railway Occurrences
Procedure
12. (1) A railway company must include, in its safety management system, a procedure for
- (a) reporting a railway occurrence to the railway company’s management; and
- (b) reviewing a railway occurrence.
Communication
(2) The railway company must communicate to its employees the procedure for reporting railway occurrences.
Process for Identifying Safety Concerns
Analyses
13. A railway company must, on a continual basis, conduct analyses of its railway operations to identify safety concerns, including any trends, any emerging trends or any repetitive situations. The analyses must, at a minimum, be based on
- (a) any reports of railway occurrences;
- (b) any internal documentation relating to railway occurrences;
- (c) any reports of injuries;
- (d) the results of any inspections conducted by the railway company or by a railway safety inspector;
- (e) any reports of contraventions or safety hazards that are received by the railway company from its employees;
- (f) any complaints relating to safety that are received by the railway company;
- (g) any data from safety monitoring technologies;
- (h) the conclusions of the annual report referred to in subsection 29(3); and
- (i) the findings of any audit reports.
Procedure
14. A railway company must include, in its safety management system, a procedure for conducting the analyses referred to in section 13.
Risk Assessment Process
Risk assessment
15. (1) A railway company must conduct a risk assessment in the following circumstances:
- (a) when it identifies a safety concern in its railway operations as a result of the analyses conducted under section 13;
- (b) when it proposes to begin transporting dangerous goods, or to begin transporting dangerous goods different from those it already transports; or
- (c) when a proposed change to its railway operations, including a change set out below, may affect the safety of the public or personnel or the protection of property or the environment:
- (i) the introduction or elimination of a technology, or a change to a technology,
- (ii) the addition or elimination of a railway work, or a change to a railway work,
- (iii) an increase in the volume of dangerous goods it transports,
- (iv) a change to the route on which dangerous goods are transported, or
- (v) a change affecting personnel, including an increase or decrease in the number of employees or a change in their responsibilities or duties.
Components
(2) The risk assessment must
- (a) describe the circumstances that triggered the requirement to conduct the risk assessment;
- (b) identify and describe the risks associated with those circumstances;
- (c) identify the factors taken into account in the risk assessment, including the persons who may be affected and whether property or the environment is affected;
- (d) indicate, for each risk, the likelihood that the risk will occur and the severity of its consequences;
- (e) identify the risks that require remedial action; and
- (f) identify the remedial action for each of those risks.
Consultation
16. (1) When identifying the risks that require remedial action and the remedial action to be implemented, a railway company must consult with the bargaining agents representing the employees of the railway company who are affected by any of those risks or, if there is no bargaining agent, with
- (a) the employees of the railway company who are affected by any of those risks; or
- (b) a representative selected by the employees of the railway company.
Communication
(2) The railway company must communicate the risks identified as requiring remedial action, and the remedial action to be implemented, to the employees of the railway company who are affected by any of the circumstances referred to in subsection 15(1).
Procedure, plan and method
17. A railway company must include, in its safety management system,
- (a) a procedure for identifying the risks that require remedial action, taking into account, for each risk, the likelihood that the risk will occur and the severity of its consequences;
- (b) a plan for the consultation referred to in subsection 16(1); and
- (c) a method for evaluating the level of risk, taking into account the likelihood that a risk will occur and the severity of its consequences.
Process for Implementing and Evaluating Remedial Action
Remedial action — implementation
18. (1) A railway company must implement remedial action with respect to the risks that it has identified in its risk assessment as requiring remedial action.
Remedial action — evaluation
(2) The railway company must evaluate the effectiveness of the remedial action in reducing or eliminating the risks.
Consultation
19. When evaluating the effectiveness of remedial action with respect to a risk, a railway company must consult with the bargaining agents representing the employees of the railway company who are affected by the risk or, if there is no bargaining agent, with
- (a) the employees of the railway company who are affected by the risk; or
- (b) a representative selected by the employees of the railway company.
Procedures and plan
20. A railway company must include, in its safety management system,
- (a) a procedure for selecting the remedial action to be implemented;
- (b) a procedure for implementing the remedial action and evaluating its effectiveness; and
- (c) a plan for the consultation referred to in section 19.
Process for Establishing Targets and Developing Initiatives
Targets and initiatives
21. (1) A railway company must, for each calendar year,
- (a) establish targets designed to improve the safety of its railway operations; and
- (b) develop initiatives to achieve each target.
Basis for establishing targets
(2) The targets must be based on the analyses conducted under section 13 and must take into account the results of any previous analyses.
Details of initiatives
22. A railway company must include, in its safety management system, a written description of each initiative to be implemented in order to achieve each target and a written explanation of how the initiative will contribute to achieving that target.
Communication
23. A railway company must communicate to its employees the targets established and the initiatives to be implemented.
Process for Reporting Contraventions and Safety Hazards
Internal reporting
24. (1) A railway company must include, in its safety management system, a procedure for enabling its employees to report to the railway company, without fear of reprisal, a contravention of the Act or of any regulations, rules, certificates, orders or emergency directives made under the Act in relation to safety, or a safety hazard.
Policy
(2) The railway company must include, in its safety management system, a policy, in writing, for protecting its employees from reprisals for reporting a contravention or safety hazard.
Collaboration
(3) The railway company must develop the procedure and the policy in collaboration with the bargaining agents or, if there is no bargaining agent, with its employees or a representative selected by its employees.
Communication
(4) The railway company must communicate the procedure and the policy to its employees.
Process for Managing Knowledge
List
25. (1) A railway company must establish a list setting out
- (a) the duties that are essential to safe railway operations;
- (b) the positions in the railway company that have responsibility for the performance of each of those duties; and
- (c) the skills and qualifications required to perform each of those duties safely.
Employees — skills and qualifications
(2) The railway company must ensure that an employee who performs any of the duties referred to in paragraph (1)(a) has the skills and qualifications referred to in paragraph (1)(c).
Employees — knowledge
(3) The railway company must ensure that an employee who performs any of the duties referred to in paragraph (1)(a) has knowledge of
- (a) the requirements of the instruments referred to in subsection 10(1) that the employee needs to know to carry out his or her duties safely;
- (b) any federal legislation that may affect railway safety and that the employee needs to know to carry out his or her duties safely; and
- (c) any of the railway company’s procedures — including any procedure referred to in this Part — standards, instructions, bulletins or other internal documents that may affect railway safety and that the employee needs to know to carry out his or her duties safely.
Other persons
26. A railway company must ensure that any person, other than an employee, who is authorized by the railway company to access the railway and whose activities may affect the safety of railway operations has knowledge of
- (a) the requirements of the instruments referred to in subsection 10(1) that the person needs to know to carry out his or her activities safely;
- (b) any federal legislation that may affect railway safety and that the person needs to know to carry out his or her activities safely; and
- (c) any of the railway company’s procedures — including any procedure referred to in this Part — standards, instructions, bulletins or other internal documents that may affect railway safety and that the person needs to know to carry out his or her activities safely.
Plan and methods
27. A railway company must include, in its safety management system,
- (a) a plan for ensuring that an employee who performs any of the duties referred to in paragraph 25(1)(a) has the skills and qualifications referred to in paragraph 25(1)(c) and the knowledge referred to in subsection 25(3);
- (b) a method for verifying that an employee who performs any of the duties referred to in paragraph 25(1)(a) has the skills and qualifications referred to in paragraph 25(1)(c) and the knowledge referred to in subsection 25(3);
- (c) a method for supervising an employee who performs any of the duties referred to in paragraph 25(1)(a); and
- (d) a method for verifying that a person referred to in section 26 has the knowledge referred to in that section.
Process with Respect to Scheduling
Principles of fatigue science
28. (1) A railway company must apply the principles of fatigue science when scheduling the work of the employees referred to in subsection (2), including the principles
- (a) that human fatigue is governed by physiology;
- (b) that human alertness is affected by circadian rhythms;
- (c) that human performance degrades in relation to hours of wakefulness and accumulated sleep debt; and
- (d) that humans have baseline minimum physiological sleep needs.
Method
(2) The railway company must include, in its safety management system, a method for applying the principles of fatigue science when scheduling the work of an employee who is required to work according to a schedule that
- (a) is not communicated to the employee at least 72 hours in advance;
- (b) requires the employee to work beyond his or her normal work schedule; or
- (c) requires the employee to work between midnight and 6:00 a.m.
Communication
(3) The railway company must communicate, to any employees who are required by the railway company to work according to a schedule referred to in subsection (2), how the principles of fatigue science have been taken into account when requiring them to work according to that schedule.
Exception
(4) This section does not apply when scheduling the work of employees during an emergency related to the safety of railway operations.
Process for Continual Improvement of the Safety Management System
Internal Monitoring
Monitoring
29. (1) A railway company must, on a continual basis, monitor the implementation of its safety management system to verify
- (a) whether the bargaining agents, the employees or a representative selected by the employees are being involved in the processes as required by this Part;
- (b) whether the targets established by the railway company under section 21 are being achieved; and
- (c) whether the procedures required by this Part are being followed, and whether the policy referred to in subsection 24(2) and the methods and plans required by this Part are being implemented.
Deficiencies in implementation
(2) Monitoring must include, if applicable, inquiring into
- (a) the cause of any deficiencies in the implementation of the railway company’s safety management system and any actions being taken to remedy those deficiencies; and
- (b) the reasons why the targets are not being achieved.
Annual report
(3) The railway company must prepare an annual report setting out the conclusions of its monitoring activities.
Accountable executive
(4) The railway company must ensure that the conclusions of the annual report are brought to the attention of the accountable executive.
Internal Audit
Scope and frequency
30. (1) A railway company must conduct an audit of its safety management system every three years to evaluate
- (a) the extent to which the requirements related to each process have been implemented; and
- (b) the extent to which the policy referred to in subsection 24(2) and the procedures, plans and methods developed by the railway company are effective in improving the level of safety of its railway operations.
Audit plan
(2) The railway company must include, in its safety management system, an audit plan that
- (a) defines the scope of each audit;
- (b) indicates the evaluation criteria to be applied;
- (c) specifies the method to be used in conducting each evaluation; and
- (d) sets out the schedule for evaluating each process.
Audit report
31. (1) A railway company must prepare an audit report that includes the findings of the audit.
Accountable executive
(2) The accountable executive must sign the audit report to attest to his or her acceptance of the report.
Action plan
32. (1) A railway company must prepare an action plan setting out the action to be taken to address each finding in the audit report that it identifies as a deficiency in its safety management system.
Approval of action plan
(2) The accountable executive must sign the action plan to acknowledge that he or she approves it.
RECORDS
Review, analysis and evaluation
33. (1) A railway company must keep a record of the factors taken into account in, and the results of,
- (a) the annual review of its safety policy;
- (b) each analysis conducted under section 13; and
- (c) each evaluation conducted under subsection 18(2).
Date
(2) The record referred to in subsection (1) must include the date on which the review, analysis or evaluation was undertaken.
Consultation, communication or collaboration
34. For each instance in which a railway company, in accordance with this Part, consults, communicates or collaborates with bargaining agents, employees or a representative selected by employees, the railway company must keep a record of the date and subject matter of the consultation, communication or collaboration and the manner in which it was carried out.
Specified documents
35. A railway company must keep the following records:
- (a) the documentation relating to each risk assessment conducted under section 15;
- (b) the written description and written explanation referred to in section 22;
- (c) the annual report referred to in subsection 29(3);
- (d) the audit plan referred to in subsection 30(2);
- (e) the signed audit report referred to in section 31; and
- (f) the approved action plan referred to in section 32.
Duration
36. A railway company must keep the records referred to in sections 33 to 35 for six years after the day on which they are created.
FILING AND NOTIFICATION
Filing with the Minister
37. A railway company must, at the request of the Minister, file with the Minister
- (a) an up-to-date copy of the index referred to in subsection 6(1);
- (b) the targets and initiatives referred to in subsection 21(1) for the current calendar year;
- (c) the written description and written explanation referred to in section 22;
- (d) the latest annual report referred to in subsection 29(3); and
- (e) the latest signed audit report referred to in section 31.
Notification and filing
38. A railway company that proposes to make a change referred to in paragraph 15(1)(b) or (c) must, before making the change, notify the Minister of the change and must, at the request of the Minister, file with the Minister the documentation relating to the risk assessment that it conducted with respect to the change.
PART 2
LOCAL RAILWAY COMPANIES
DIVISION 1
MAIN TRACK OPERATIONS
Application
Local railway company — main track
39. (1) This Division applies to a local railway company that operates railway equipment on main track.
Delayed application
(2) In the case of a local railway company that begins operating railway equipment on a railway after the day on which these Regulations come into force, sections 54 to 56 do not apply until the day that is six months after the day on which the local railway company begins operating railway equipment on a railway.
Safety Management System
Processes, Procedures and Methods
Processes
40. A local railway company must develop and implement a safety management system that includes
- (a) a process for accountability;
- (b) a process with respect to a safety policy;
- (c) a process for ensuring compliance with regulations, rules and other instruments;
- (d) a process for identifying safety concerns;
- (e) a risk assessment process;
- (f) a process for implementing and evaluating remedial action;
- (g) a process for establishing targets and developing initiatives; and
- (h) a process for continual improvement of the safety management system.
Index
41. (1) A local railway company must keep an up-to-date index of all the processes referred to in section 40 that it has implemented.
Content of index
(2) The index must indicate the date of the last revision of the local railway company’s safety policy and must indicate, for each process,
- (a) the management position occupied by a person designated under subsection 43(4), if applicable;
- (b) the procedures and methods required by this Division that are associated with the process, and the date of their last revision; and
- (c) the position in the local railway company that has responsibility for the development and implementation of the procedures and methods.
Procedures and methods
42. Every procedure and method required by this Division must be in writing and must indicate the date of its last revision.
Process for Accountability — Accountable Executive
Designation of executive
43. (1) A local railway company must designate an executive who is responsible for the operations and activities of the local railway company to be accountable for the extent to which the requirements of the safety management system are met, including its effectiveness in achieving the highest level of safety in its railway operations.
Notice to Minister
(2) The local railway company must provide the Minister with the name of the accountable executive as soon as possible after he or she has been designated.
Declaration to the Minister
(3) The local railway company must ensure that, within 30 days after the day on which it designates an accountable executive, the accountable executive provides the Minister with a signed declaration accepting accountability for the extent to which the requirements of the safety management system have been met.
Designation of managers
(4) The local railway company may, in its safety management system, permit the accountable executive to designate one or more persons to develop and implement one or more of the processes required by this Division. A designated person must occupy a management position within the local railway company that includes responsibilities relevant to the process or processes and the authority to make decisions with respect to that process or those processes.
Annual update
(5) If the accountable executive designates a person under subsection (4), the accountable executive must ensure that the person reports to him or her, on an annual basis, with respect to
- (a) any problems following the procedures or implementing the methods, and the manner in which those problems have been or are being resolved or, if applicable, the reasons why they have not been or are not being resolved; and
- (b) the effectiveness of the procedures and methods in contributing to the improvement of the safety of the local railway company’s operations.
Process with Respect to a Safety Policy
Safety policy
44. (1) A local railway company must include, in its safety management system, a written safety policy that reflects the local railway company’s commitment to promoting railway safety. The policy must be approved and signed by the accountable executive.
Annual review
(2) The local railway company must ensure that its safety policy is reviewed annually.
Communication
(3) The local railway company must communicate its safety policy, and any changes to the policy, to its employees.
Process for Ensuring Compliance with Regulations, Rules and Other Instruments
List of instruments
45. (1) A local railway company must include, in its safety management system, a list of the following instruments relating to railway safety:
- (a) any regulations made under the Act that apply to the local railway company and that are in force;
- (b) any rules approved or established by the Minister under section 19 of the Act that apply to the local railway company and that are in force;
- (c) any exemptions granted under section 22 or 22.1 of the Act that apply to the local railway company and that are in effect;
- (d) any notices sent to the local railway company under section 31 of the Act that contain an order and that are in effect; and
- (e) any documents in effect by which the Minister has ordered the local railway company to do or to not do something, including a ministerial order issued under section 32 of the Act and an emergency directive sent under section 33 of the Act.
Date and subject matter
(2) The list of instruments must include
- (a) in the case of a rule, the date on which it was approved or established; and
- (b) in the case of an exemption, a notice, or a document referred to in paragraph (1)(e), the date and subject matter.
Update
(3) The local railway company must keep the list of instruments up to date and must indicate the date of its last revision.
Procedures
46. A local railway company must include, in its safety management system, a procedure for
- (a) reviewing and updating the list of instruments referred to in subsection 45(1); and
- (b) verifying compliance with
- (i) the requirements of the regulations, rules, and notices and documents containing an order, that are referred to in the list of instruments, and
- (ii) the terms of the exemptions referred to in the list of instruments.
Process for Identifying Safety Concerns
Analyses
47. A local railway company must, on a continual basis, conduct analyses of its railway operations to identify safety concerns, including any trends, any emerging trends or any repetitive situations. The analyses must, at a minimum, be based on
- (a) any reports of accidents;
- (b) any internal documentation relating to accidents;
- (c) any reports of injuries;
- (d) the results of any inspections conducted by the local railway company or by a railway safety inspector;
- (e) any reports of contraventions or safety hazards that are received by the local railway company from its employees;
- (f) any complaints relating to safety that are received by the local railway company;
- (g) any data that is accessible to the local railway company from safety monitoring technologies;
- (h) the conclusions of the annual report referred to in subsection 57(3); and
- (i) the findings of any audit reports.
Procedure
48. A local railway company must include, in its safety management system, a procedure for conducting the analyses referred to in section 47.
Risk Assessment Process
Risk assessment
49. (1) A local railway company must conduct a risk assessment in the following circumstances:
- (a) when it identifies a safety concern in its railway operations as a result of the analyses conducted under section 47;
- (b) when it proposes to begin transporting dangerous goods, or to begin transporting dangerous goods different from those it already transports; or
- (c) when a proposed change to its railway operations, including a change set out below, may affect the safety of the public or personnel or the protection of property or the environment:
- (i) the introduction or elimination of a technology, or a change to a technology,
- (ii) an increase in the volume of dangerous goods it transports,
- (iii) a change to the route on which dangerous goods are transported, or
- (iv) a change affecting personnel, including an increase or decrease in the number of employees or a change in their responsibilities or duties.
Components
(2) The risk assessment must
- (a) describe the circumstances that triggered the requirement to conduct the risk assessment;
- (b) identify and describe the risks associated with those circumstances;
- (c) identify the factors taken into account in the risk assessment, including the persons who may be affected and whether property or the environment is affected;
- (d) indicate, for each risk, the likelihood that the risk will occur and the severity of its consequences;
- (e) identify the risks that require remedial action; and
- (f) identify the remedial action for each of those risks.
Communication
50. A local railway company must communicate the risks identified as requiring remedial action, and the remedial action to be implemented, to the employees of the local railway company who are affected by any of the circumstances referred to in subsection 49(1).
Procedure and method
51. A local railway company must include, in its safety management system,
- (a) a procedure for identifying the risks that require remedial action, taking into account, for each risk, the likelihood that the risk will occur and the severity of its consequences; and
- (b) a method for evaluating the level of risk, taking into account the likelihood that a risk will occur and the severity of its consequences.
Process for Implementing and Evaluating Remedial Action
Remedial action — implementation
52. (1) A local railway company must implement remedial action with respect to the risks that it has identified in its risk assessment as requiring remedial action.
Remedial action — evaluation
(2) The local railway company must evaluate the effectiveness of the remedial action in reducing or eliminating the risks.
Procedures
53. A local railway company must include, in its safety management system,
- (a) a procedure for selecting the remedial action to be implemented; and
- (b) a procedure for implementing the remedial action and evaluating its effectiveness.
Process for Establishing Targets and Developing Initiatives
Targets and initiatives
54. (1) A local railway company must, for each calendar year,
- (a) establish targets designed to improve the safety of its railway operations; and
- (b) develop initiatives to achieve each target.
Basis for establishing targets
(2) The targets must be based on the analyses conducted under section 47 and must take into account the results of any previous analyses.
Details of initiative
55. A local railway company must include, in its safety management system, a written description of each initiative to be implemented in order to achieve each target and a written explanation of how the initiative will contribute to achieving that target.
Communication
56. A local railway company must communicate to its employees the targets established and the initiatives to be implemented.
Process for Continual Improvement of the Safety Management System
Internal Monitoring
Monitoring
57. (1) A local railway company must, on a continual basis, monitor the implementation of its safety management system to verify
- (a) whether the targets established by the local railway company under section 54 are being achieved; and
- (b) whether the procedures required by this Division are being followed, and whether the methods required by this Division are being implemented.
Deficiencies in implementation
(2) Monitoring must include, if applicable, inquiring into
- (a) the cause of any deficiencies in the implementation of the local railway company’s safety management system and any actions being taken to remedy those deficiencies; and
- (b) the reasons why the targets are not being achieved.
Annual report
(3) The local railway company must prepare an annual report setting out the conclusions of its monitoring activities.
Accountable executive
(4) The local railway company must ensure that the conclusions of the annual report are brought to the attention of the accountable executive.
Internal Audit
Scope and frequency
58. (1) A local railway company must conduct an audit of its safety management system every three years to evaluate
- (a) the extent to which the requirements related to each process have been implemented; and
- (b) the extent to which the procedures and methods developed by the local railway company are effective in improving the level of safety of its railway operations.
Audit plan
(2) The local railway company must include, in its safety management system, an audit plan that
- (a) defines the scope of each audit;
- (b) indicates the evaluation criteria to be applied;
- (c) specifies the method to be used in conducting each evaluation; and
- (d) sets out the schedule for evaluating each process.
Audit report
59. (1) A local railway company must prepare an audit report that includes the findings of the audit.
Accountable executive
(2) The accountable executive must sign the audit report to attest to his or her acceptance of the report.
Action plan
60. (1) A local railway company must prepare an action plan setting out the action to be taken to address each finding in the audit report that it identifies as a deficiency in its safety management system.
Approval of action plan
(2) The accountable executive must sign the action plan to acknowledge that he or she approves it.
Records
Review, analysis and evaluation
61. (1) A local railway company must keep a record of the factors taken into account in, and the results of,
- (a) the annual review of its safety policy;
- (b) each analysis conducted under section 47; and
- (c) each evaluation conducted under subsection 52(2).
Date
(2) The record referred to in subsection (1) must include the date on which the review, analysis or evaluation was undertaken.
Communication
62. For each instance in which a local railway company communicates with its employees in accordance with this Division, the local railway company must keep a record of the date and subject matter of the communication and the manner in which it was carried out.
Specified documents
63. A local railway company must keep the following records:
- (a) the documentation relating to each risk assessment conducted under section 49;
- (b) the written description and written explanation referred to in section 55;
- (c) the annual report referred to in subsection 57(3);
- (d) the audit plan referred to in subsection 58(2);
- (e) the signed audit report referred to in section 59; and
- (f) the approved action plan referred to in section 60.
Duration
64. A local railway company must keep the records referred to in sections 61 to 63 for six years after the day on which they are created.
Filing and Notification
Filing with the Minister
65. A local railway company must, at the request of the Minister, file with the Minister
- (a) an up-to-date copy of the index referred to in subsection 41(1);
- (b) the targets and initiatives referred to in subsection 54(1) for the current calendar year;
- (c) the written description and written explanation referred to in section 55;
- (d) the latest annual report referred to in subsection 57(3); and
- (e) the latest signed audit report referred to in section 59.
Notification and filing
66. A local railway company that proposes to make a change referred to in paragraph 49(1)(b) or (c) must, before making the change, notify the Minister of the change and must, at the request of the Minister, file with the Minister the documentation relating to the risk assessment that it conducted with respect to the change.
DIVISION 2
NON-MAIN TRACK OPERATIONS
Application
Local railway company — non-main track
67. This Division applies to a local railway company that operates railway equipment exclusively on non-main track.
Safety Management System
Processes, Procedures and Methods
Processes
68. A local railway company must develop and implement a safety management system that includes
- (a) a process with respect to a safety policy;
- (b) a process for ensuring compliance with regulations, rules and other instruments;
- (c) a process for identifying safety concerns;
- (d) a risk assessment process; and
- (e) a process for implementing and evaluating remedial action.
Index
69. (1) A local railway company must keep an up-to-date index of all the processes referred to in section 68 that it has implemented.
Content of index
(2) The index must indicate the date of the last revision of the local railway company’s safety policy and must indicate, for each process,
- (a) the procedures and methods required by this Division that are associated with the process, and the date of their last revision; and
- (b) the position in the local railway company that has responsibility for the development and implementation of the process, procedures and methods.
Procedures and methods
70. Every procedure and method required by this Division must be in writing and must indicate the date of its last revision.
Process with Respect to a Safety Policy
Safety policy
71. (1) A local railway company must include, in its safety management system, a written safety policy that reflects the local railway company’s commitment to promoting railway safety. The policy must be approved and signed by an executive who is responsible for the operations and activities of the local railway company.
Annual review
(2) The local railway company must ensure that its safety policy is reviewed annually.
Communication
(3) The local railway company must communicate its safety policy, and any changes to the policy, to its employees.
Process for Ensuring Compliance with Regulations, Rules and Other Instruments
List of instruments
72. (1) A local railway company must include, in its safety management system, a list of the following instruments relating to railway safety:
- (a) any regulations made under the Act that apply to the local railway company and that are in force;
- (b) any rules approved or established by the Minister under section 19 of the Act that apply to the local railway company and that are in force;
- (c) any exemptions granted under section 22 or 22.1 of the Act that apply to the local railway company and that are in effect;
- (d) any notices sent to the local railway company under section 31 of the Act that contain an order and that are in effect; and
- (e) any documents in effect by which the Minister has ordered the local railway company to do or to not do something, including a ministerial order issued under section 32 of the Act and an emergency directive sent under section 33 of the Act.
Date and subject matter
(2) The list of instruments must include
- (a) in the case of a rule, the date on which it was approved or established; and
- (b) in the case of an exemption, a notice, or a document referred to in paragraph (1)(e), the date and subject matter.
Update
(3) The local railway company must keep the list of instruments up to date and must indicate the date of its last revision.
Procedures
73. A local railway company must include, in its safety management system, a procedure for
- (a) reviewing and updating the list of instruments referred to in subsection 72(1); and
- (b) verifying compliance with
- (i) the requirements of the regulations, rules, and notices and documents containing an order, that are referred to in the list of instruments, and
- (ii) the terms of the exemptions referred to in the list of instruments.
Process for Identifying Safety Concerns
Analyses
74. A local railway company must, on a continual basis, conduct analyses of its railway operations to identify safety concerns, including any trends, any emerging trends or any repetitive situations. The analyses must, at a minimum, be based on
- (a) any reports of accidents;
- (b) any internal documentation relating to accidents;
- (c) any reports of injuries;
- (d) the results of any inspections conducted by the local railway company or by a railway safety inspector;
- (e) any reports of contraventions or safety hazards that are received by the local railway company from its employees;
- (f) any complaints relating to safety that are received by the local railway company;
- (g) any data that is accessible to the local railway company from safety monitoring technologies; and
- (h) the findings of any audit reports.
Procedure
75. A local railway company must include, in its safety management system, a procedure for conducting the analyses referred to in section 74.
Risk Assessment Process
Risk assessment
76. (1) A local railway company must conduct a risk assessment in the following circumstances:
- (a) when it identifies a safety concern in its railway operations as a result of the analyses conducted under section 74;
- (b) when it proposes to begin transporting dangerous goods, or to begin transporting dangerous goods different from those it already transports; or
- (c) when a proposed change to its railway operations, including a change set out below, may affect the safety of the public or personnel or the protection of property or the environment:
- (i) the introduction or elimination of a technology, or a change to a technology,
- (ii) an increase in the volume of dangerous goods it transports,
- (iii) a change to the route on which dangerous goods are transported, or
- (iv) a change affecting personnel, including an increase or decrease in the number of employees or a change in their responsibilities or duties.
Components
(2) The risk assessment must
- (a) describe the circumstances that triggered the requirement to conduct the risk assessment;
- (b) identify and describe the risks associated with those circumstances;
- (c) identify the factors taken into account in the risk assessment, including the persons who may be affected and whether property or the environment is affected;
- (d) indicate, for each risk, the likelihood that the risk will occur and the severity of its consequences;
- (e) identify the risks that require remedial action; and
- (f) identify the remedial action for each of those risks.
Communication
77. A local railway company must communicate the risks identified as requiring remedial action, and the remedial action to be implemented, to the employees of the local railway company who are affected by any of the circumstances referred to in subsection 76(1).
Procedure and method
78. A local railway company must include, in its safety management system,
- (a) a procedure for identifying the risks that require remedial action, taking into account, for each risk, the likelihood that the risk will occur and the severity of its consequences; and
- (b) a method for evaluating the level of risk, taking into account the likelihood that a risk will occur and the severity of its consequences.
Process for Implementing and Evaluating Remedial Action
Remedial action — implementation
79. (1) A local railway company must implement remedial action with respect to the risks that it has identified in its risk assessment as requiring remedial action.
Remedial action — evaluation
(2) The local railway company must evaluate the effectiveness of the remedial action in reducing or eliminating the risks.
Procedures
80. A local railway company must include, in its safety management system,
- (a) a procedure for selecting the remedial action to be implemented; and
- (b) a procedure for implementing the remedial action and evaluating its effectiveness.
Records
Review, analysis and evaluation
81. (1) A local railway company must keep a record of the factors taken into account in, and the results of,
- (a) the annual review of its safety policy;
- (b) each analysis conducted under section 74; and
- (c) each evaluation conducted under subsection 79(2).
Date
(2) The record referred to in subsection (1) must include the date on which the review, analysis or evaluation was undertaken.
Communication
82. For each instance in which a local railway company communicates with its employees in accordance with this Division, the local railway company must keep a record of the date and subject matter of the communication and the manner in which it was carried out.
Risk assessment
83. A local railway company must keep the documentation relating to each risk assessment conducted under section 76.
Duration
84. A local railway company must keep the records referred to in sections 81 to 83 for three years after the day on which they are created.
Filing and Notification
Filing with the Minister
85. A local railway company must, at the request of the Minister, file with the Minister an up-to-date copy of the index referred to in subsection 69(1).
Notification and filing
86. A local railway company that proposes to make a change referred to in paragraph 76(1)(b) or (c) must, before making the change, notify the Minister of the change and must, at the request of the Minister, file with the Minister the documentation relating to the risk assessment that it conducted with respect to the change.
PART 3
CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS, REPEAL AND COMING INTO FORCE
CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS TO THE RAILWAY OPERATING CERTIFICATE REGULATIONS
87. Subparagraph 4(e)(ii) of the Railway Operating Certificate Regulations (see footnote 1) is replaced by the following:
- (ii) has or will have a safety management system that meets the requirements of the Railway Safety Management System Regulations, 2015.
88. Paragraph 7(1)(e) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:
- (e) an attestation by the applicant’s chief executive officer or most senior officer that the application is complete and accurate and that the applicant
- (i) has the human and financial resources to operate railway equipment on a railway at the highest level of safety, and
- (ii) has or will have a safety management system that meets the requirements of the Railway Safety Management System Regulations, 2015.
REPEAL
89. The Railway Safety Management System Regulations (see footnote 2) are repealed.
COMING INTO FORCE
April 1, 2015
90. These Regulations come into force on April 1, 2015.
REGULATORY IMPACT ANALYSIS STATEMENT
(This statement is not part of the Regulations.)
Executive summary
Issues: The Railway Safety Management System Regulations (the 2001 SMS Regulations), made under the Railway Safety Act (the Act), came into force in 2001 as a complement to Transport Canada’s rail safety legislative framework. The 2001 SMS Regulations require railway companies to implement and maintain a safety management system for integrating safety into their day-to-day operations. In 2008, the reports of the Railway Safety Act Review and of the Standing Committee on Transport, Infrastructure and Communities (SCOTIC) study on rail safety made several recommendations with regard to improving the implementation of safety management systems in the rail industry. Those recommendations resulted in amendments to the Act, which came into force on May 1, 2013. These amendments, as well as the Rail Safety Program’s more than 10 years’ worth of lessons learned from regulatory oversight of safety management systems, resulted in the need to revise and modernize the 2001 SMS Regulations. Specifically, three key areas required attention: additional detail and clarity to facilitate more effective implementation and enforceability; expansion of the scope of application to local railway companies that operate on federal track; and the inclusion of new provisions stemming from amendments to the Act that clarify the authority of the Governor in Council to establish regulations for an accountable executive, continuous monitoring and regular assessment of safety, non-punitive internal reporting by employees, as well as increased involvement of employees and their unions to enhance rail safety management systems.
Description: Due to the volume of amendments and the significant restructuring that would have been required to amend the 2001 SMS Regulations, the Railway Safety Management System Regulations, 2015 (the 2015 SMS Regulations) instead repeal and replace the 2001 SMS Regulations. Significant changes reflected in the 2015 SMS Regulations include the
- Application of the Regulations to include local railway companies operating on federally regulated track;
- Addition of new requirements pursuant to clarified authorities in the Act;
- Inclusion of more detail on regulatory objectives in order to enhance compliance and enforceability of the Regulations;
- Addition of clear rules of conduct, clarifying expectations for industry;
- Addition of new definitions; and
- Addition of consequential amendments to the Railway Operating Certificate Regulations.
Cost-benefit statement: The overall cost of the 2015 SMS Regulations is estimated to have a present value of $19.33 million over a 10-year period, which corresponds to an annualized value of $2.75 million. In the long term, the 2015 SMS Regulations are expected to increase railway safety by enhancing requirements that compel companies to take responsibility for managing the safety of their operations, including improving their abilities to identify hazards, as well as assess and mitigate risks. These benefits are qualitative in nature and are difficult to monetize given that both the risk and impact (baseline and proposal) are uncertain. It is expected that a safety management system would help reduce the number of accidents, fatalities and injuries, as well as property damage. Therefore, even if the benefits cannot be monetized, it is expected that the 2015 SMS Regulations will result in a net benefit to Canadians.
“One-for-One” Rule and small business lens: Transport Canada has considered the potential impacts of all provisions of the 2015 SMS Regulations on administrative burden, and has determined that the “One-for-One” Rule would apply with the annualized cost to be offset estimated at $255 (total annualized average administrative costs) among 35 local railway companies.
The 2015 SMS Regulations were designed to align compliance costs with underlying risks, so that costs disproportionate to risk were not imposed on the six companies that would be considered small businesses. The flexible approach taken will result in an annual average cost per small business of $25,806 rather than $49,692 under the initial option.
Domestic and international coordination and cooperation: Transport Canada has consulted with provincial counterparts as the 2015 SMS Regulations have an expanded scope of application to include local railway companies. Local railway companies are provincial railways and commuter trains that, when operating on federal track, fall under the requirements of the Act. The addition of local railway companies to federal rail safety jurisdiction occurred when the amendments to the Act came into force on May 1, 2013. In addition, many provinces have harmonized their rail safety legislative framework with that of the federal government. As a result, the provinces were consulted to ensure they were aware of proposed changes to the federal approach to safety management systems.
Background
The Railway Safety Management System Regulations (the 2001 SMS Regulations), created under the Railway Safety Act (the Act), came into force on March 31, 2001, with the objective of establishing, within the rail industry, a more comprehensive way of managing safety. The 2001 SMS Regulations were designed to supplement the existing legislative framework, and require railway companies to take responsibility for managing the safety of their operations, identifying hazards, assessing and mitigating risks, while building a safety consciousness into their day-to-day operations. Basic components of a safety management system include a safety policy, safety targets, a risk assessment process, and internal audit and evaluation procedures. The introduction of the SMS Regulations in 2001 resulted in all federal railway companies implementing and maintaining a safety management system, based on regulatory requirements.
In 2008, the reports of the Railway Safety Act Review and of the Standing Committee on Transport, Infrastructure and Communities (SCOTIC) review on rail safety made a series of recommendations to further enhance the safety of the rail transportation system in Canada. While the reports expressed support and commendation for safety management systems, several recommendations focused on how to improve their implementation and effectiveness.
The bulk of the recommendations made in the 2008 reports resulted in amendments to the Act that came into force on May 1, 2013. The amendments clarified the Governor in Council’s regulatory authority to make regulations requiring the establishment by companies of a safety management system that includes the following:
- Identification of an executive responsible for the company’s operations and accountable for the extent to which the requirements of the company’s safety management system are met;
- Implementation of remedial actions as a result of a risk assessment required to maintain the highest level of safety;
- Continuous monitoring and regular assessment of the level of safety achieved;
- Implementation of non-punitive internal reporting by the railway company’s employees of contraventions of the Act or of any regulations, rules, certificates, orders or emergency directives under the Act relating to safety, or of other safety concerns;
- Involvement of employees and their bargaining agents in the ongoing operation of the railway company’s safety management system; and
- Establishment of the criteria to which the safety management system must conform as well as the components, including the principle of fatigue science applicable to scheduling, that must be included in a safety management system.
Among other changes, the amendments to the Act also expanded the scope of the application to include local railway companies.
In August 2014, the Transportation Safety Board released their final response to the investigation of the railway accident in Lac-Mégantic. The report contained two new recommendations, one of which was that “Transport Canada must take a more hands-on role when it comes to railways’ safety management systems — making sure not just that they exist, but that they are working and that they are effective.”
Issues
Legislative amendments, including the addition of local railway companies to the federal regime, as well as more than 10 years’ worth of lessons learned from providing regulatory oversight of safety management systems, have resulted in the need to revise and modernize the 2001 SMS Regulations.
Specifically, three key areas require attention: additional detail and increased clarity to allow for more effective implementation and enforceability; expansion of the scope of application to local railway companies that operate on federal track; and inclusion of requirements stemming from amendments to the Act that clarified the Governor in Council’s regulatory authority in order to enhance rail safety management systems.
Objectives
The changes reflected in the Railway Safety Management System Regulations, 2015 (the 2015 SMS Regulations) operate to
- Expand the scope of application of safety management system requirements to ensure all companies under federal jurisdiction have such a system;
- Expand the regulatory regime related to safety management systems by including new provisions under the clarified authorities of the Act; and
- Clarify the overall objectives of the safety management system regulations, and the regulatory provisions in relation to safety management systems, in order to facilitate more effective compliance and enforcement.
By addressing these matters, the 2015 SMS Regulations are expected to improve the quality of safety management systems, in general, by improving the implementation by the rail industry and enhancing Transport Canada’s oversight, consequently, leading to the improved safety of Canada’s rail transportation system.
Description
The 2015 SMS Regulations repeal the 2001 SMS Regulations and replace them, including the following changes:
- Addition of new requirements pursuant to clarified authorities in the Act;
- Expansion of the scope of application to include local railway companies operating on federally regulated track;
- Inclusion of more detailed regulatory requirements to help clarify regulatory objectives and enhance compliance and enforceability;
- New and clarified definitions; and
- Consequential amendments to subparagraph 4(e)(ii) and paragraph 7(1)(e) of the Railway Operating Certificate Regulations.
Application of amendments to the Act
In response to the amendments to the Act, the 2015 SMS Regulations include new requirements for a company’s safety management system, such as the following:
- The appointment of an accountable executive who is responsible for the operations and activities of the railway company or of the local railway company operating on federal main track and accountable for the extent to which the requirements of the safety management system are met.
- The inclusion, by railway companies, of a procedure that would enable employees to report safety contraventions and safety hazards to the railway company without the fear of reprisal, and the establishment of a policy for protecting its employees from reprisals for reporting safety contraventions and safety hazards.
- The inclusion, by railway companies, of a process for scheduling employees required to work according to certain schedules, applying the principles of fatigue science.
Key elements of the 2015 SMS Regulations
The full suite of safety management systems components in the 2015 SMS Regulations are as follows:
- The designation of an accountable executive responsible for the extent to which the requirements of the safety management system have been met;
- A process with respect to a safety policy reflecting a commitment to safety;
- A process for ensuring compliance with regulations, rules and other instruments;
- A process for managing railway occurrences which includes procedures for the reporting of occurrences by employees to management;
- A process for identifying safety concerns from the analyses of collected data for the purpose of risk assessments;
- A risk assessment process which includes an evaluation of the level of risk for each risk identified;
- A process for the implementation and evaluation of remedial actions for the purpose of mitigating risks;
- A process for establishing annual targets and developing initiatives to achieve the targets;
- A process for employees to report contraventions and safety hazards without the fear of reprisal;
- A process for managing knowledge to ensure that employees as well as any other persons carrying out activities that may affect the safety of railway operations have the knowledge they need to perform their duties and activities safely;
- A process for scheduling employees required to work according to certain schedules, applying the principles of fatigue science; and
- A process for continual improvement of the safety management system.
In addition, the 2015 SMS Regulations set out certain record-keeping requirements as well as require, at the Minister’s request, the filing of specific information with the Minister for the purpose of assessing the effectiveness and improvement of the company’s safety management system. Furthermore, where certain operational changes are proposed, the 2015 SMS Regulations require the Minister be notified in advance of the change being made and, at the request of the Minister, the related risk assessment must be filed with the Minister.
Scope of application
The 2001 SMS Regulations applied only to federally regulated railway companies. As the amendments to the Act include the addition of local railway companies to the federal regime, the 2015 SMS Regulations also apply to those companies.
The scope of application of the 2015 SMS Regulations is divided into three categories:
- Federal railway companies, to which the 2015 SMS Regulations apply, will have to comply with the requirements under Part 1 of the 2015 SMS Regulations, which includes all the components listed above.
- Local railway companies that operate on federal main track will have to comply with the requirements under Part 2, Division 1, of the 2015 SMS Regulations, which includes many of the components listed above except for a process for managing railway occurrences which, because of a link to federal occurrence reporting requirements, only applies to federal railway companies; and those processes that relate to labour relations (a process for reporting contraventions and safety hazards, a process for managing knowledge and a process with respect to scheduling) which are the exclusive jurisdiction of the province.
- Local railway companies that operate solely on federal non-main tracks will have to comply with the requirements under Part 2, Division 2, of the 2015 SMS Regulations, which focus on the following provisions:
- a process with respect to a safety policy;
- a process for ensuring compliance with regulations, rules and other instruments;
- a process for identifying safety concerns;
- a risk assessment process;
- a process for implementing and evaluating remedial action; and
- record-keeping, notification to the Minister of certain operational changes and filing with the Minister upon request of certain information.
More detailed objectives to enhance safety management systems
The 2015 SMS Regulations build on the framework established in the 2001 SMS Regulations by regulating specific matters for companies to address in their safety management systems and setting regulatory requirements for companies to act in a manner that demonstrates implementation of the safety management system that they develop.
Under the 2001 SMS Regulations, only the components are listed, with details and expectations of the components outlined in guidance material. The 2015 SMS Regulations list the components required in a safety management system, and the procedures, plans and methods to be developed and implemented. The 2015 SMS Regulations contain much of the detail previously found in the guidance material to better establish the intent of the requirements in order to improve compliance and contribute to more effective enforcement by Transport Canada. For example, while the 2001 SMS Regulations simply require a process for evaluating and classifying risks by means of a risk assessment and, separately, a process for risk control strategies, the 2015 SMS Regulations add clarity by setting out the elements of the risk assessment, such as listing the circumstances in which a company must conduct a risk assessment; requiring a description of the circumstances that triggered the risk assessment; requiring a description of the risks associated with the circumstances and the factors included in the assessment, requiring considerations of who may be affected and whether property or the environment is affected; requiring an indication of the likelihood of occurrence and the severity of the consequences of any risk; and an identification of required remedial action, as well as requiring that the remedial action be implemented and assessed for effectiveness. This example of risk assessment and remedial action elements demonstrates how the addition of detail and clarity will facilitate effective compliance and set the minimum expectations against which Transport Canada can conduct oversight and enforcement.
Amendments to definitions
The 2015 SMS Regulations remove outdated or inapplicable definitions and add new ones to increase clarity and respond to amendments to the Act. Definitions that have been added are
- accountable executive;
- Act;
- dangerous goods;
- main track;
- non-main track; and
- railway occurrence.
Consequential amendments to the Railway Operating Certificate Regulations
The 2015 SMS Regulations also contain two consequential amendments to the Railway Operating Certificate Regulations. The first amends paragraph 7(1)(e). Since the 2015 SMS Regulations expand the scope of application to local railway companies, the chief executive officer or most senior officer of a local railway company will also be required to attest that the company has, or will have, an SMS in the application for a railway operating certificate. A further consequential amendment to subparagraph 4(e)(ii) updates the regulatory language to reflect the title of the 2015 SMS Regulations.
Regulatory and non-regulatory options considered
The regulatory approach aims to continue and improve upon the approach first introduced in 2001. Given the lessons learned and the changes to the Act since the introduction of the 2001 SMS Regulations, a regulatory approach is needed to address legislative amendments and provide greater clarity to regulated entities to facilitate more effective and efficient compliance.
The approach will also facilitate enforcement by avoiding undue reliance on unenforceable guidance material in applying and interpreting requirements. Therefore, a voluntary approach was not considered. Regulated requirements for companies to identify their risks and document, coordinate, and oversee the safety of operations, including risk mitigation efforts, were considered the most appropriate and effective approach. Voluntary safety assessments, internal audits and remedial actions could not have been considered as options, as there would be no assurance that safety systems and processes would be optimally managed to mitigate risks and improve safety.
Benefits and costs
Costs
The 2015 SMS Regulations apply to approximately 28 federal railway companies and to 35 local railway companies. A distinction is made between local railway companies that operate on federal main track (18 companies) and local railway companies that operate on federal non-main track (17 companies). The regulatory provisions applicable to local railway companies that operate on federal main track include the minimum requirements of a safety management system but not those requirements that affect labour relations, as these are under the jurisdiction of the province, or those that link to federal occurrence reporting requirements. The focus of the 2015 SMS Regulations for local railway companies that do not operate on federal main track is on five core safety management system components.
The existing level of compliance with the 2015 SMS Regulations has been estimated in consultation with the stakeholders and varies according to the requirements for federal railway companies, local railway companies operating on federal main track and local railway companies operating on federal non-main track. Costs are associated with new roles and responsibilities for company employees and the possible creation of new positions. Assuming an average wage rate of $35.70 (this includes 25% overhead), the present value of the cost to federal railway companies is estimated to be $9.93 million over a 10-year period, which corresponds to an annualized value of $1.41 million. The present value of the cost to local railway companies that operate on federal main track is estimated to be $6.28 million with an annualized value of $894,291, and the present value of the cost to local railway companies that operate on federal non-main track is estimated to be $3.08 million with an annualized value of $438,555. Therefore, the present value of the total cost to industry is estimated to be $19.29 million over a 10-year period, which corresponds to an annualized value of $2.75 million.
Table of estimated costs by provision
Total incremental costs | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Proposed Regulatory Provision | Federal (PV) | Local Main Track (PV) | Local Non-Main Track (PV) | Total (PV) |
Attestation of accountable executive | $8,482 | $5,453 | N/A | $13,935 |
Process with respect to a safety policy | $0 | $28,186 | $26,620 | $54,805 |
Process for ensuring compliance with regulations, rules and other instruments | $443,101 | $331,677 | $313,250 | $1,088,027 |
Process for managing railway occurrences | $584,564 | N/A | N/A | $584,564 |
Process for identifying safety concerns | $1,235,713 | $1,850,841 | $1,748,016 | $4,834,570 |
Risk assessment process | $2,124,282 | $825,093 | $779,255 | $3,728,629 |
Process for the implementation and evaluation of remedial actions | $102,703 | $65,380 | $61,747 | $229,830 |
Annual safety targets and associated initiatives | $0 | $141,951 | N/A | $141,951 |
Process for reporting contraventions and safety hazards | $85,133 | N/A | N/A | $85,133 |
Process for managing knowledge | $1,337,315 | N/A | N/A | $1,337,315 |
Process with respect to scheduling | $260,707 | N/A | N/A | $260,707 |
Process for continual improvement (internal audits) | $2,574,781 | $2,453,181 | N/A | $5,027,963 |
Process for continual improvement (internal monitoring) | $924,095 | $419,123 | N/A | $1,343,218 |
Recording instances of consultation, communication or collaboration with employees (see reference *) | $249,266 | $160,242 | $151,340 | $560,848 |
Total costs to industry | $9,930,140 | $6,281,126 | $3,080,228 | $19,291,494 |
Reference * The cost estimate reflects the compliance burden of documenting instances of consultation, communication or collaboration with employees to demonstrate compliance; it is not an estimated cost of keeping records.
There will be a cost to Transport Canada to update the existing Rail Safety Integrated Gateway (RSIG) system, which is the Rail Safety Program’s national database used to inform risk-based business planning, with the requirements of the 2015 SMS Regulations. This would require the costs for two to three consultants over a two-week period. The present value of the cost to Government is estimated to be $42,000 over a 10-year period, which is equivalent to an annualized value of $6,000.
The overall cost of the 2015 SMS Regulations is estimated to have a present value of $19.33 million over a 10-year period, which corresponds to an annualized value of $2.75 million.
Benefits
The main benefits of the 2015 SMS Regulations will be to provide greater safety to the Canadian rail transportation system by establishing the minimum requirements with respect to the safety management system that a company must develop and implement for the purpose of achieving the highest level of safety and by expanding the scope of its application to local railway companies. The 2015 SMS Regulations also provide more details regarding the various safety management system components that companies must implement and facilitate enforcement.
Safety management is based on the premise that there will always be safety hazards and human errors. A safety management system establishes processes to improve information and communication about these risks and take action to minimize them. It therefore facilitates more informed decision making. Furthermore, risk assessments can allow an organization to evaluate and plan for the mitigation of risk of accidents and could enable better resource allocation, which would result in increased efficiencies and reduced costs. Safety management systems also strengthen corporate safety culture and demonstrate corporate due diligence, thus improving an organization’s overall level of safety in the long term.
The 2015 SMS Regulations are expected to increase railway safety in the long term by requiring railway companies to take additional responsibility for managing the safety of their operations, including refining their ability to identify hazards, assess and mitigate risks, and build a safety consciousness into their day-to-day operations, which should lead to a reduced number of accidents. Additionally, the benefits include fewer resources being spent by anticipating issues and solving problems earlier to avoid costly derailments and accidents.
These benefits are qualitative in nature and are difficult to monetize given that both the risk and impact (baseline and proposal) are subjective and uncertain. However, not only have qualitative benefits been identified, but statistics reflect a correlation between the introduction of the safety management system approach in 2001 and improved safety statistics. Statistical analysis using linear regression indicates a downward trend in accident rates (statistically significant at the p < .05 level) over the past 10 years. (see footnote 3) Moreover, since 2007, train accidents have decreased by 23% and passenger train accidents have decreased by 19%. This decrease can be linked to increased levels of consultation and communication between the three largest railway companies and Transport Canada, enhanced focus on safety management systems, and a variety of new safety initiatives related to operations and infrastructure. It is therefore expected that updates to safety management systems would help further reduce the number of accidents, fatalities and injuries, and property damage. As a result, even if the benefits cannot be monetized, those benefits could be significant.
The 2007 Railway Safety Act Review Panel Final Report asserts that “[a] strong SMS can lead to economic benefits because safety and economic performance are linked . . . [with] direct and indirect cost savings when accidents are prevented . . .” The Final Report also listed a number of benefits including the following:
- improved decision making;
- improved safety performance;
- customized mitigation strategies;
- possibly exceeding safety standards set by regulation;
- improved public and customer confidence;
- increased competitive advantage;
- demonstrated due diligence;
- enhanced relationships and collaboration; and
- improved economic performance. (see footnote 4)
Overall, it is expected that the 2015 SMS Regulations would have a positive impact on Canadians.
Cost-benefit statement
Cost-benefit statement | Base Year (2015) | 2019 | Final Year (2024) | Total (PV) | Annualized Cost | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A. Quantified impacts ($) | ||||||
Costs | Federal railway companies | $2,351,568 | $1,268,965 | $1,271,964 | $9,930,140 | $1,413,829 |
Class 1 federal railways | $273,828 | $314,214 | $314,535 | $2,169,769 | $308,926 | |
Other smaller federal railways | $2,077,740 | $954,752 | $957,429 | $7,760,370 | $1,104,902 | |
Local railway companies on federal main track | $1,201,983 | $846,465 | $848,393 | $6,281,126 | $894,291 | |
Local railway companies on federal non-main track | $700,970 | $398,278 | $398,278 | $3,080,228 | $438,555 | |
Industry total | $4,254,521 | $2,513,708 | $2,518,635 | $19,291,494 | $2,746,675 | |
Government | $45,000 | $0 | $0 | $42,056 | $5,988 | |
Total | $4,299,521 | $2,513,708 | $2,518,635 | $19,333,550 | $2,752,663 | |
B. Qualitative benefits | ||||||
|
The approach taken for the 2015 SMS Regulations focuses on efficiency, capacity, and proportionality with requirements for either processes or outcomes rather than prescriptive requirements for “how” the objectives of safety management systems should be achieved. This would promote accountability and timely remedial actions in the management of safety, without Transport Canada prescribing one-size-fits-all requirements. An exclusively prescriptive regulatory approach would only ensure compliance with regulations rather than providing for proactive risk assessments and remedial action. Therefore, industry-developed and -monitored safety management systems are intended to more efficiently and effectively supplement the existing regulatory framework by formally requiring companies to be proactive and responsible for safety.
In an effort to minimize the burden on stakeholders, while continuing improvement of safety management system implementation to further increase safety, local railway companies that operate solely on federal non-main track would be required to have fewer requirements, including a safety policy and a process for each of the following: ensuring compliance, identifying safety concerns, assessing risks, and implementing and evaluating remedial actions.
“One-for-One” Rule
Transport Canada has considered the potential impacts of all provisions of the 2015 SMS Regulations on administrative burden, and has determined that the “One-for-One” Rule would apply with the annualized cost to be offset estimated at $255 (total annualized average administrative costs) among 35 local railway companies (18 on federal track and 17 on federal non-main track). When consulted, federal railway companies agreed that despite updates, there would be no incremental effort needed to comply with the requirement to submit information annually to the Minister. This determination was based on the following assumptions: an applicable wage rate of $23.84/hour (2012 dollars), and a time estimate of 0.3 hours per regulated company annually (once a year, ongoing) to submit the required safety management system information to Transport Canada.
Small business lens
The 2015 SMS Regulations were designed to align compliance costs with underlying risks, so that costs disproportionate to risk would not be imposed on small businesses. For the application of these 2015 SMS Regulations to local railway companies, a distinction between main track and non-main track was used to represent the area of highest risk to address. Non-main track includes sidings and rail yards, and main track represents tracks that run across the country through cities and towns. For the 2015 SMS Regulations, a distinction has been made between local railway companies that operate on federal main track and local railway companies that operate solely on federal non-main track. Regulatory provisions applicable to local railway companies that operate on federal main track include all the same obligations as those that apply to railway companies with the exception of those that affect labour relations, as they are under the jurisdiction of the province. The 2015 SMS Regulations encompass 18 local railway companies that operate on federal main track. Requirements for local railway companies that do not operate on main track focus on the minimum safety management system provisions.
The total scope of application includes at least six small businesses as defined by the Treasury Board Secretariat guidance (having fewer than 100 employees and between $30,000 and $5 million in annual gross revenues). Due to the nature of safety management systems, the 2015 SMS Regulations are designed to be proportional to the size and risk of the operations.
With the expanded scope in the Act, Transport Canada could have taken a broader approach to the scope of application for local railway companies. However, this would have imposed a burden disproportionate to the risk associated with local non-main track railway company operations. During consultations, both industry and Transport Canada’s Rail Safety inspectors and officials recommended and/or supported this approach. Industry pointed out that requiring local railway companies who operate on non-main track to comply with the full suite of regulatory requirements would be overly burdensome and costly for what would usually be a smaller or limited railway operation. Rail Safety inspectors and officials acknowledged that the risk represented by such companies on non-main track did not warrant the development and implementation of a full safety management system, but that certain core aspects be applied as a means of instilling a safety culture in those companies.
Initial Option | Flexible Option | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Short description | Small businesses (6 out of 17 local railways that do not operate on main track) face the same requirements as federal railways and local railways that operate on main track. | Small businesses (6 out of 17 local railways that do not operate on main track) do not face the same requirements as federal railways and local railways that operate on main track. | ||
Maximum number of small businesses impacted | 6 | 6 | ||
Annualized Average ($ 2012) |
Present Value ($ 2012) |
Annualized Average ($ 2012) |
Present Value ($ 2012) |
|
Compliance costs | $298,097 | $2,093,709 | $154,784 | $1,087,139 |
Administrative costs | $54 | $377 | $54 | $377 |
Total costs | $298,151 | $2,094,086 | $154,838 | $1,087,516 |
Average cost per small business | $49,692 | $349,014 | $25,806 | $181,253 |
As a result of the focus on only key core safety management system components for local railway companies on non-main track, the approach taken will result in an annual average cost per small business of $25,806 rather than $49,692. The Small Business Lens Checklist is also found at the end of this document.
Consultation
The Railway Safety Act Review Panel and SCOTIC, during their study of rail safety in 2007–2008, consulted a wide range of stakeholders across Canada, including railway companies, railway employees, unions, municipalities, and provincial governments, as well as a host of others. As a result, stakeholders have been aware for a number of years of the initiative, and corresponding details, to revise and modernize the 2001 SMS Regulations.
In developing the 2015 SMS Regulations, Transport Canada’s Rail Safety Program followed an established and formalized stakeholder consultation process. Consultative activities have included the following:
- Dissemination of consultation documents by email to industry stakeholders and to employees of Transport Canada’s Rail Safety Program;
- A face-to-face meeting with the Advisory Council on Railway Safety (ACRS) Working Group on Regulatory Development (with representatives from Canadian National Railway, Canadian Pacific Railway, VIA Rail, the Province of British Columbia, Railway Association of Canada, GO Transit and Agence métropolitaine de transport);
- A face-to-face meeting with unions (including UNIFOR, Teamsters, United Steelworkers Local 2004);
- A teleconference with the Federal-Provincial Working Group; and
- Two additional teleconferences with the Regulatory Development Working Group comprising representatives from railway companies, local railway companies, provinces and unions to explain the proposed 2015 SMS Regulations.
The comments submitted by industry in these initial consultations were considered and addressed during policy development and regulatory drafting processes. No outstanding issues remain. Examples of the issues raised include the following:
- Preventing overlap with the Canada Labour Code with regard to requirements for employee involvement in safety management systems development and implementation;
- How railway companies are to inform employees regarding corrective actions resulting from the non-punitive reporting process; and
- Ensuring that when companies create employee schedules, principles of fatigue science are taken into account as part of their overall safety management system.
Transport Canada also worked closely with industry to develop the cost assumptions for the cost-benefit analysis. Specifically, Transport Canada consulted the Regulatory Development Working Group of the ACRS in its cost assumptions, both secretarially and through conference calls. The comments received from industry were considered and addressed and played a large role in Transport Canada’s development of the cost-benefit analysis.
Consultation following publication in the Canada Gazette, Part I
This regulatory package was published in the Canada Gazette, Part I, on July 5, 2014, followed by a 90-day comment period. Transport Canada also notified stakeholders of the prepublication. Written submissions were received from four stakeholders representing a union, the industry association, and provinces, respectively. One stakeholder submission supported the Regulations outright.
Three of the comments expressed concern regarding the scope of applicability; however, the decision to expand the scope to include local railway companies on main and non-main track was made to carry out the changes made to the Act, and Transport Canada has chosen a risk-based tiered approach to applicability. As a result, core components such as risk assessment apply to local railway companies operating on non-main track for any distance. Although companies may be travelling short distances, the nature of operations could vary among those companies from carrying grain, to carrying passengers or dangerous goods. Therefore, short distances do not necessarily equate to negligible impacts. In addition, with the new scope of application, Transport Canada may take enforcement action directly with the local railway company, rather than relying on federal railway companies to encourage local railway companies to conform to federal obligations while operating on federal tracks. Therefore, Transport Canada has decided that developing a safety management system to increase safety culture and continuous improvement is important for all companies. The safety management system developed will be scalable to the size and nature of operations and Transport Canada is developing tools, templates and guidance to help ease the burden of implementation.
The majority of the comments were seeking clarity or suggesting changes to improve the understanding and ease the implementation of the Regulations. There were over 15 suggestions for these types of modifications. Each of the comments was considered and modifications were made to improve the clarity of the language or the ease of implementation without compromising the intent of the Regulations. For example, the wording in the proposed Regulations required the railway companies to review and date the safety policy annually, when the actual intent of the Regulations was for the railway companies to review the policy annually and document the date of the review; therefore, an adjustment to the Regulations was made.
Two of the components of the Regulations required more noteworthy changes: the process for establishing schedules and the process for continual improvement. Through both internal reviews and stakeholders’ comments, it became apparent that those components would require more considerable wording adjustments to clarify the regulatory intent. In addition, concerns were raised that it would be unreasonable to expect an internal audit of the entire safety management system to be conducted annually. As a result, the revised requirements for a process for continual improvement include clarified annual monitoring requirements that will ensure railway companies conduct annual oversight and improvements to the implementation and effectiveness of their safety management system, while a three-year cycle is being introduced for the internal audits to give railway companies and local railway companies adequate time to conduct a meaningful and quality review through the internal audit process. When consulted, industry expressed general acceptance with the changes proposed to the process for continual improvement.
Transport Canada consulted industry regarding the changes that could impact the cost-benefit analysis and adjusted the estimates as appropriate. The most noteworthy changes to the costing were for the process for managing railway occurrences and the process for continual improvement. For the process for managing railway occurrences, the costing was reduced to reflect the fact that railway companies are no longer required to separately verify whether employees are reporting occurrences and, when reporting, are doing so in accordance with the required procedure. This is already captured by the internal monitoring and auditing requirements and should not be costed as an additional activity requiring specific dedicated resources. For the process for continual improvement requirement, the costing estimate was reduced due to updated annual monitoring requirements and changing the audit requirement to a three-year cycle. As a result, the total cost estimate had been reduced from $26.8 million to $19.33 million over a 10-year period. This reflects a reduction in estimated total cost for all federal railways from $13.8 million to $9.93 million, and for all local railway companies on main track a reduction in total estimated costs from $9.90 million to $6.28 million over a 10-year period.
Consultation on the consequential amendment to the Railway Operating Certificate Regulations
Stakeholders were informed of the intent of the consequential amendment (i.e. to extend the safety management system attestation in the application for a railway operating certificate to local railway companies) in the Regulatory Impact Analysis Statement published with the proposed Railway Operating Certificate Regulations in Part I of the Canada Gazette on March 15, 2014. No comments were received regarding this proposed change.
Regulatory cooperation
The recent amendments to the Act change its application to now include local railway companies operating on federal track. Before the changes to the Act, those local railway companies operating on federally regulated track were only indirectly subject to federal rules and standards through contract agreements with their host railway companies; however, the requirement for a safety management system did not apply to them. Different provinces took different approaches with respect to the adoption of the federal 2001 SMS Regulations. The 2015 SMS Regulations support the change in scope of the Act by applying the regulatory provisions to these local railway companies. This will also increase national consistency, and reduce complexity in implementation and oversight among regions. However, the provinces that had adopted the federal regime for provincially regulated railways may wish to adjust the provincial regulatory regime to further harmonize with the 2015 SMS Regulations. Transport Canada will work with those provinces to ensure a common understanding the Regulations and oversight approach.
During regulatory development, Transport Canada has been consulting with the provinces through the Federal-Provincial Working Group and through the Regulatory Development Working Group. Transport Canada will continue to work with the provinces to facilitate implementation of the 2015 SMS Regulations.
Rationale
The 2015 SMS Regulations replace the 2001 SMS Regulations to respond to the analysis and recommendations of the Railway Safety Act Review in 2008 and the SCOTIC review of 2008. The 2015 SMS Regulations further address oversight issues in order to
- Improve the implementation and oversight of regulated safety management systems with clearer, more detailed requirements that enhance enforcement by clarifying what can be enforced; and
- Enable consistent and predictable implementation and compliance by providing sufficient detail to ensure regulatory objectives are understood and met.
The 2015 SMS Regulations will also improve the overall consistency and quality of companies’ safety management systems by providing
- Certainty as to the regulatory requirement related to each safety management system component;
- Clarified expectations, adding clear rules of conduct;
- Added provisions requiring demonstration of implementation; and
- A structure to the requirements that is more logically organized, facilitating compliance.
Furthermore, the 2015 SMS Regulations also apply the clarified regulatory authorities in the Act that regulate requirements for the identification of an accountable executive and for a process for non-punitive reporting for employees.
While Transport Canada continues to conduct inspections, the intention of safety management systems is not to replace the existing regulatory and oversight framework, but rather to increase safety by having companies put formal systems in place to identify and address safety concerns before Transport Canada conducts inspections, and before major safety issues arise. In addition, companies implementing safety management systems should not only be looking to comply with the Act and its related instruments, but should also be working to build a safety culture throughout their organization to achieve the highest level of safety.
As an early adopter of the safety management systems approach, Transport Canada, with the help of the third-party reports, has learned lessons about how to improve safety through further progressing safety management system implementation. The 2015 SMS Regulations address those opportunities for improvement by expanding the scope of application to local railway companies operating on federally regulated track, as well as by strengthening and clarifying the regulatory provisions, and by adding new provisions to improve employee involvement in, and awareness of, safety management systems. The 2015 SMS Regulations are intended to increase railway safety by providing more details related to the requirements for implementation of safety management systems by companies and by facilitating Transport Canada oversight and enforcement.
The consequential amendments to the Railway Operating Certificate Regulations align the attestation requirements for a local railway company in paragraph 7(1)(e) with those for a railway company in subsection 4(1) and update references to the 2001 SMS Regulations to the 2015 SMS Regulations. Due to a delay between the coming into force of the Railway Operating Certificate Regulations and the application of the 2015 SMS Regulations to local railway companies, the safety management system provision of the attestation was formerly limited to railway companies to avoid unintended timing problems related to the coming-into-force dates of the two regulatory proposals.
Implementation, enforcement and service standards
The 2015 SMS Regulations will come into force for all companies on April 1, 2015, and will be accompanied by an implementation plan that will, for an initial period, focus on compliance promotion and awareness. When the 2015 SMS Regulations come into force, in accordance with the Rail Safety Oversight Policy, Transport Canada will take a graduated and proportionate enforcement approach used to educate, deter, and, when necessary, penalize those who contravene the Act or its associated instruments. Potential risks to consider would include the company’s behaviour and willingness to comply. This also ties in with the objectives of the Act, particularly the encouragement of collaboration of all parties towards the continual improvement of railway safety, while recognizing that companies are responsible for managing the safety risks associated with their operations.
The 2015 SMS Regulations provide more detail and clarity than the 2001 SMS Regulations. As Transport Canada continues to enhance its approach to oversight of safety management systems, it will continue to develop and refine its methodology for identifying safety risks, performance indicators and safety performance information needed from companies so that oversight activities can be targeted to areas of greatest risk. Transport Canada is working to update and enhance inspector/auditor training and tools to ensure oversight is undertaken by properly trained staff with nationally consistent oversight tools.
Transport Canada is also developing non-regulatory elements such as guidance material, templates, tools and best practices to support the 2015 SMS Regulations. Transport Canada is committed to consulting industry while developing materials, including guidance material to facilitate implementation and compliance.
Performance measurement and evaluation
In keeping with the life-cycle approach to regulating under the Cabinet Directive on Regulatory Management, the effectiveness of the 2015 SMS Regulations will be measured through the oversight activities of the Rail Safety Program. Rail Safety Program officials will monitor whether the 2015 SMS Regulations continue to meet policy objectives via results stemming from inspections and audits. The oversight activities consist of a combination of inspections to verify compliance and audits to verify the effectiveness of a company’s safety management system. Once the 2015 SMS Regulations are in force, Transport Canada will continue to conduct a minimum baseline audit every five years for both railway companies and local railway companies. This audit cycle would be complemented by an emergent audit program where audits are conducted at any time during a year. Analyses would be based on the results of inspections and audits to both continually inform the oversight activities of the Rail Safety Program to achieve regulatory compliance, as expressed in Transport Canada’s Report on Plans and Priorities, and to identify whether the intended results of the 2015 SMS Regulations are being achieved. For example, industry trends in non-compliance or safety management system deficiencies will be analyzed to determine if increased oversight would be necessary, or if the regulatory requirement should be amended to clarify objectives or whether the requirement no longer enhanced safety and would warrant repeal.
Contact
Any questions related to the 2015 SMS Regulations should be directed to
Susan Archer
Director
Regulatory Affairs
Rail Safety
Transport Canada
427 Laurier Avenue West
Ottawa, Ontario
K1R 7Y2
Telephone: 613-990-8690
Email: susan.archer@tc.gc.ca
Small Business Lens Checklist
1. Name of the sponsoring regulatory organization:
2. Title of the regulatory proposal:
3. Is the checklist submitted with a RIAS for the Canada Gazette, Part I or Part II?
Canada Gazette, Part I Canada Gazette, Part II
A. Small business regulatory design
I | Communication and transparency | Yes | No | N/A |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Are the proposed Regulations or requirements easily understandable in everyday language? | |||
The Regulations are written in commonly used safety management system terminology and plain English when possible. | ||||
2. | Is there a clear connection between the requirements and the purpose (or intent) of the proposed Regulations? | |||
Yes, there is a clear connection with the purpose of further enhancing the safety of the rail transportation system in Canada and the requirements, particularly the requirement for risk assessments and remedial actions. | ||||
3. | Will there be an implementation plan that includes communications and compliance promotion activities, that informs small business of a regulatory change and guides them on how to comply with it (e.g. information sessions, sample assessments, toolkits, Web sites)? | |||
Yes, Transport Canada will develop tools to assist railway companies with implementation. | ||||
4. | If new forms, reports or processes are introduced, are they consistent in appearance and format with other relevant government forms, reports or processes? | |||
If new forms, reports or processes are introduced, they will be consistent with other relevant government forms, reports or processes where possible. | ||||
II | Simplification and streamlining | Yes | No | N/A |
1. | Will streamlined processes be put in place (e.g. through BizPaL, Canada Border Services Agency single window) to collect information from small businesses where possible? | |||
Transport Canada will provide tools and templates to help small businesses comply with the regulatory requirements, including reporting. | ||||
2. | Have opportunities to align with other obligations imposed on business by federal, provincial, municipal or international or multinational regulatory bodies been assessed? | |||
These Regulations help to promote national consistency by including local railway companies under federal regulations. Many of the provinces have adopted the existing SMS regulations within their own legislation or through an agreement with the federal government. The Regulations, in these cases, would apply automatically to the provincial shortlines operating on provincially regulated lines. | ||||
3. | Has the impact of the proposed Regulations on international or interprovincial trade been assessed? | |||
Increased railway safety would benefit international and interprovincial trade. | ||||
4. | If the data or information, other than personal information, required to comply with the proposed Regulations is already collected by another department or jurisdiction, will this information be obtained from that department or jurisdiction instead of requesting the same information from small businesses or other stakeholders? (The collection, retention, use, disclosure and disposal of personal information are all subject to the requirements of the Privacy Act. Any questions with respect to compliance with the Privacy Act should be referred to the department’s or agency’s ATIP office or legal services unit.) | |||
The information that would be requested pertains only to the requirements proposed in these Regulations. | ||||
5. | Will forms be pre-populated with information or data already available to the department to reduce the time and cost necessary to complete them? (Example: When a business completes an online application for a licence, upon entering an identifier or a name, the system pre-populates the application with the applicant’s personal particulars such as contact information, date, etc. when that information is already available to the department.) | |||
The information being requested would be produced as a result of compliance with the regulatory provisions. | ||||
6. | Will electronic reporting and data collection be used, including electronic validation and confirmation of receipt of reports where appropriate? | |||
Information and documentation may be electronic. The format is not specified by the Regulations. | ||||
7. | Will reporting, if required by the proposed Regulations, be aligned with generally used business processes or international standards if possible? | |||
The format is not specified in the regulatory provisions. | ||||
8. | If additional forms are required, can they be streamlined with existing forms that must be completed for other government information requirements? | |||
The information being requested would be produced as a result of compliance with the regulatory provisions. | ||||
III | Implementation, compliance and service standards | Yes | No | N/A |
1. | Has consideration been given to small businesses in remote areas, with special consideration to those that do not have access to high-speed (broadband) Internet? | |||
The format for reporting is not specified in the Regulations. | ||||
2. | If regulatory authorizations (e.g. licences, permits or certifications) are introduced, will service standards addressing timeliness of decision making be developed that are inclusive of complaints about poor service? | |||
There is a service standard in the Railway Safety Act. The right to appeal the Minister’s decision is also laid out in the Act. | ||||
3. | Is there a clearly identified contact point or help desk for small businesses and other stakeholders? | |||
Small businesses may contact their Transport Canada regional office for assistance. |
B. Regulatory flexibility analysis and reverse onus
IV | Regulatory flexibility analysis | Yes | No | N/A |
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1. | Does the RIAS identify at least one flexible option that has lower compliance or administrative costs for small businesses in the small business lens section? Examples of flexible options to minimize costs are as follows:
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Due to the nature of safety management systems, the Regulations would be proportional to the size and risk of the operations. With the expanded scope in the Railway Safety Act, Transport Canada could have taken a broader approach to the scope of applicability for local railway companies, however, this would impose a burden disproportionate to the risk associated with local non-main track railway company operations. | ||||
2. | Does the RIAS include, as part of the Regulatory Flexibility Analysis Statement, quantified and monetized compliance and administrative costs for small businesses associated with the initial option assessed, as well as the flexible, lower-cost option?
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3. | Does the RIAS include, as part of the Regulatory Flexibility Analysis Statement, a consideration of the risks associated with the flexible option? (Minimizing administrative or compliance costs for small business cannot be at the expense of greater health, security or safety or create environmental risks for Canadians.) | |||
Due to the nature of safety management systems, the Regulations would be proportional to the size and risk of the operations. Rail Safety inspectors and officials acknowledged that the risk represented by such companies on non-main track did not warrant the development and implementation of a full SMS, but that certain core aspects should be applied as a means of further instilling a safety culture in those companies. | ||||
4. | Does the RIAS include a summary of feedback provided by small business during consultations? | |||
The feedback is not specifically attributed to small businesses, however, industry was represented by the industry association and all feedback was considered through the policy development and regulatory drafting stages. | ||||
V | Reverse onus | Yes | No | N/A |
1. | If the recommended option is not the lower-cost option for small business in terms of administrative or compliance costs, is a reasonable justification provided in the RIAS? |
- Footnote a
S.C. 2012, c. 7, s. 30 - Footnote b
S.C. 2012, c. 7, s. 37 - Footnote c
R.S., c. 32 (4th Supp.) - Footnote 1
SOR/2014-258 - Footnote 2
SOR/2001-37 - Footnote 3
Transportation Safety Board of Canada — Statistical Summary, Railway Occurrences 2013: www.tsb.gc.ca/eng/stats/rail/2013/ssro-2013.asp. - Footnote 4
Stronger Ties, Review of the Railway Safety Act, November 2007, p. 65.