Quiet Zone
Included in the rule are ways in which communities can make safety improvements to silence the horns through the establishment of a quiet zone. The Federal Railroad Administration's Web site includes additional guidance on creating a quiet zone.
When the rule established the requirement for routine sounding of the locomotive horn, a procedure was also established whereby localities that could meet certain safety requirements might designate as a “quiet zone” a segment of a rail line with one or more consecutive public highway-rail grade crossings. Upon satisfying the regulation’s technical requirements, locomotive horns would not be routinely sounded within this quiet zone.
Only a public authority may establish quiet zones. “Public authority” means the public entity (such as a city or county) responsible for traffic control or law enforcement at the public highway-rail grade crossings under consideration.
Localities that want to establish a quiet zone are first required to mitigate the increased risk caused by the absence of a horn. In a quiet zone, train horns may still be used in emergency situations or to comply with other Federal regulations or railroad operating rules. Additionally, a “no horn” restriction that may have existed prior to the establishment of the rule may have been duly qualified to be a “pre-rule quiet zone.”
Learn how to create a quiet zone here. The Office of Rail Transportation has compiled a list of the appropriate railroad contacts for quiet zone issues in Iowa.