Release #12-08—April 25, 2012
The 2012 Dr. Gary Burch Memorial Safety Award was presented by the Burch family to three Amtrak employees for
their groundbreaking work on the monitoring of track conditions, reducing the
risk of accidents and derailments. The award, which honors individuals
who have significantly enhanced rail passenger safety, is sponsored by the family
of Dr. Burch, who died in a 1991 passenger train derailment in
“Messrs. Trosino, Chrismer and Perkins have demonstrated an
extraordinary level of safety commitment to railroad passengers on the NEC and
The award was presented at NARP’s Capitol Hill reception under
the auspices of Robert VanderClute, Senior Vice President for Safety &
Operations at the Association of American Railroads
and part of the selection committee. The
committee was so impressed by the presentation of the three
engineers’ work, they requested that
U.S. Department of Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood was also in attendance, and congratulated the three Amtrak employees for their dedication to the safety of passengers.
“To [Mr. Trosino, Mr. Chrismer, and Mr. Perkins]: thank you for making sure that passenger rail continues to be very, very important for our country,” said LaHood, who has consistently identified “safety” as the U.S. DOT’s primary goal during his tenure as Secretary.
The Burch family established the $1,000 award in 1994 and has sponsored it ever since. A list of previous winners can be found on NARP’s website.