Railroad Safety and Accountability Act
Railroad Safety and Accountability Act
Plain Language Summary
# Railroad Safety and Accountability Act Summary **What It Would Do:** The Railroad Safety and Accountability Act (HR 7338) is a proposed federal law designed to improve safety standards and oversight in the railroad industry. While the bill's specific provisions aren't detailed in the available information, legislation with this title typically aims to strengthen federal regulations governing how railroads operate, maintain their equipment, and respond to safety concerns. The bill would likely affect railroad companies' operational requirements and possibly impose new reporting or inspection procedures. **Who It Affects:** This bill would directly impact railroad companies and their operations across the United States. It could also affect railroad workers, passengers, and communities near rail lines by establishing or strengthening safety requirements.
Shippers who use railroads for freight transport might experience changes to procedures or costs. **Current Status:** The bill was introduced in the 119th Congress by Rep. Emilia Strong Sykes (D-OH) but remains in committee, meaning it has not yet advanced to a full vote by the House. Detailed provisions of the bill are not currently available in this summary. For specific information about what reforms the bill proposes, you would need to review the full bill text on Congress.gov.
Latest Action
Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR H1987)