A grant is awarded to K-State for a rural railroad safety center

17 Jun 2019


BY DEWEY TERRILL 

The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Railroad Administration has awarded more than $326 million in grant funds for a variety of state and local railroad infrastructure projects.

The grants will fund 45 projects in 29 states, including just over $2.5 million for a Rural Railroad Safety Center at Kansas State University.

Heading up the project will be Eric Fitzsimmons, assistant professor of civil engineering in the Carl R. Ice College of Engineering. His collaborators are civil engineering faculty members Robert Peterman, professor; and Christopher Jones and StacyKulesza, associate professors.

“Our state’s economy depends on safe, reliable rail transportation to connect farmers and businesses to the nation and deliver goods to market,” said U.S. Senator Jerry Moran. “This grant to establish the Rural Railroad Safety Center at K-State will help solidify Kansas as a leader in rail transportation and share the expertise of officials at K-State with the rest of the country and industry. I was pleased to support efforts to help secure the funding from the Department of Transportation, and look forward to working alongside the university to build and grow this innovative program.

Partner institutions include the University of Nebraska, Lincoln; University of Florida; Pennsylvania State University, Altoona; and California State University, Chico.

The Rural Railroad Safety Center will have four strategic goals:

  • Conduct and promote railroad safety research selected by industry partners and the Federal Railroad Administration.
  • Develop a comprehensive unified railroad education curriculum to be delivered at all  partnering  universities.
  • Facilitate novel rail-focused outreach activities, including a bimonthly railroad seminar and undergraduate summer research experiences.
  • Disseminate research results and technology transfer to be used by the railroad industry via various outlets.

I certainly want to thank the entire Kansas Congressional delegation for their support and assistance in securing this grant,” Fitzsimmons said.

“By the end of the three year grant period it is our goal to ahve evolved into a vibrant center for industry-relevant railroad research,” he said. “Additional educational and outreach programs will be in place to train and develop a diverse workforce for the railroad industry and our research outcomes will help ensure the future of the rail industry is as safe and efficient as possible.”