News & Reviews News Wire Digest: UP CEO says vaccine process has been challenging

Digest: UP CEO says vaccine process has been challenging

By David Lassen | March 17, 2021

News Wire Digest second section for March 17: GO Transit adopts Japanese ‘point and call’ system; cars removed from CP derailment in Minnsota

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Union Pacific’s Fritz says railroad’s process of getting vaccine for workers has been complex

Union Pacific CEO Lance Fritz [Trains: David Lassen]
Union Pacific CEO Lance Fritz says railroad employees have begun receiving COVID-19 vaccinations, but that the process is a challenging one. “We serve 23 western states, and in every state the process to get a vaccine into an arm is different,” Fritz told Omaha TV station KETV. “We’re working with county health officials in every single one of our communities to make sure that UP employees, railroad employees, are prioritized appropriately. … Next time around, I do think a more coordinated approach to vaccine distribution and getting the vaccine into the arms of U.S. citizens would benefit all of us.” The railroad is offering incentives to employees who choose to get the vaccine.

GO Transit adopts Japanese safety system

Crew members on Toronto GO Transit commuter trains have begun using the longstanding Japanese practice of “Shisa Kanko,” or point and call, to improve safety. The website Daily Hive reports the approach requires workers to use loud calls and dramatic hand gestures during stops, such as pointing in both directions and calling “clear right, clear left” to make sure no passengers remain before closing car doors. The practice is meant to keep employees from falling into a routine by stimulating their senses. “The gesture may seem a little silly, or a tad dramatic, but it’s effective,” a representative of parent agency Metrolinx told the website. “Japan’s public transit system, a transportation network that moved 12 billion passengers annually prior to the pandemic, is considered one of the world’s safest transit systems.”

Cars removed, cleanup continues at site of CP derailment in Minnesota

Freight cars have been removed from the site of the March 7 Canadian Pacific derailment in Plymouth, Minn., and Pineview Lane, which had been closed to allow the movement of heavy machinery, has been reopened. The City of Plymouth reports cleanup will continue as CP crews remove lumber and rock, restore pavement, and remediate wetland areas. Most work will occur during daylight hours but some route maintenance may be required at night. Twenty-two cars derailed in the accident [see “Derailment blocks Canadian Pacific main line …,” Trains News Wire, March 8, 2021]; at one point, the city had warned residents that cleanup could continue into the summer.

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