HR-2515-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Railroads, Pipelines, and Hazardous Materials.
Sponsored by Troy Nehls (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would direct the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) to create two new programs. First, a grant program would provide funding to freight railcar owners and operators to purchase and install onboard telematics systems (which track location and car health wirelessly) and gateway devices (which collect and share data between onboard systems). Grants would prioritize newly built tank cars and those carrying toxic or poison inhalation hazard (TIH/PIH) materials. Second, a pilot program would help railcar owners and manufacturers develop onboard sensor technologies — such as wheel and wheel bearing temperature monitors — to provide real-time visibility into railcar safety conditions while trains are in motion.
Who benefits
Communities located along freight rail corridors, particularly those near routes carrying hazardous materials, who would benefit from earlier detection of mechanical failures. Freight railcar owners and operators who receive grants to offset the cost of installing new technology. Sensor and telematics technology manufacturers who would gain a new federal market. Railroad workers whose safety could improve with earlier warning of mechanical problems. Emergency responders who would have better real-time data in the event of an incident. Shippers of hazardous materials who could reduce liability exposure from accidents.
Who is hurt
Railcar owners and operators not selected for grants who may face competitive pressure to adopt similar technology without federal assistance. Taxpayers who would fund the grant and pilot programs. Older or smaller railcar manufacturers whose existing products may be less compatible with new sensor requirements. Potentially, short-line and regional railroads with thinner margins that may face indirect pressure to adopt these technologies even without grant support.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the 2023 East Palestine, Ohio derailment — which involved tank cars carrying toxic vinyl chloride — demonstrated the catastrophic consequences of inadequate real-time monitoring of hazardous freight. They contend that onboard telematics and sensor technology already exists in other transportation sectors and that this bill would close a dangerous gap in rail safety oversight by prioritizing the highest-risk cars (TIH/PIH) first, reducing the likelihood of future disasters and the enormous public health and economic costs they impose.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill creates new federal spending programs without clear evidence that sensor mandates or subsidies are more cost-effective than existing inspection regimes or other safety interventions. They contend that by channeling grants to select owners and operators, the program may distort the market for safety technology, slow broader industry-wide adoption by creating dependency on federal funding, and fail to address underlying causes of derailments — such as train length, speed, and track maintenance — that sensors alone cannot prevent.