ProRail, the Dutch national rail infrastructure operator, began using anti-trespass panels in 2014. It found a 30-90 percent reduction in trespass incidents depending on the implementation and the issues in the locations where they were used. Suicides seemed less affected overall, as they may have used more accessible grade crossings instead. , at the
Viane-Moerbeke station in Belgium In neighboring
Belgium,
Infrabel, ProRail's counterpart, also started a pilot program with the panels in 2014. It focused on a location known to have a high incidence of trespassing near three schools and a grade crossing. The panels were used in conjunction with fencing, CCTV, and warning signs. In the three months after installation, trespass decreased 78 percent from the same period prior to installation. After a year, trespass incidents had dropped even further, to 2 percent of the pre-installation level. Infrabel added anti-trespass panels to another 70 grade crossings around the country.
Sweden The
Swedish Transport Administration began a comprehensive study in late 2016, as trepassing fatalities increased yearly. It installed panels at six locations on the country's rail network where there had been trespassing issues due to either nearby
yards, a station close to a grade crossing, or, in one case, a short tunnel frequently used as a shortcut by residents. In all cases but one the sites were also monitored by CCTV to track trespass incidents, as were four other similar sites not equipped with ATPs. Comparisons of trespassing at the test sites before and after the panels were installed showed that at all but one site it declined significantly compared to the period prior to installation and the reference sites, where in most cases they increased during the period after installation. At the one site where trespassings increased, that increase was small, only 4 percent, and less than the increase reported at the nearby reference sites. At one site, the
commuter rail station at
Älvsjö in suburban
Stockholm, where eight trespasser deaths had been recorded between 2006 and 2015, no trespasses by members of the public were reported during the study period. At two sites, the presence of the panels had led to attempts to negate their presence, in one case by placing a wooden plank over them and in the other by cutting a hole in a nearby fence to allow pedestrians to bypass the panels. Applying a
cost-benefit analysis, the study concluded that implementing anti-trespass panels in the Swedish rail network would be profitable if delays are reduced by 12 minutes per site of implementation and year.
United States In the mid-2010s the
U.S. Department of Transportation's
John A. Volpe National Transportation Systems Center undertook a study at the FRA's request to see how effective anti-trespass panels were at deterring trespassers. It worked with the
Arkansas and Missouri Railroad (A&M), a
short line operating in those states, to identify areas where trespassing had been a problem for a test of the panels. The railroad and the agency settled on the south side of a grade crossing at West Dickson Street in
Fayetteville, Arkansas. Video cameras in operation around the clock were installed at the crossing and the footage reviewed to count the amount of trespassers before and after the panels were installed; signs warning against trespassing were also installed. Along with the panels, gates were added to the crossing to supplement the flashing lights when trains were in the vicinity; the researchers did not believe this had any effect on trespass incidents since video footage did not show anyone on the tracks or right-of-way when trains came through. The West Dickson Street crossing is in an area of Fayetteville adjacent to the main
University of Arkansas campus that is the city's primary entertainment district, with many shops, restaurants and bars. One of the latter has a patio abutting the tracks at the crossing, leading some patrons to use the right-of-way to climb over the patio's guardrails and enter the bar. It is also adjacent to the Frisco Trail, a
rail-with-trail route that uses the right-of-way of the former parallel track. The regular foot traffic from campus is augmented on those fall weekends when the
university's football team plays home games, bringing additional alumni and fans to Fayetteville, weekends that were included in the study period. Train traffic along the line, by contrast, is more limited, with approximately four freights coming through a day at speeds of . After the 10-week study periods in fall of 2014 and 2015, both of which included the same number of home football game weekends, the FRA found that, overall, there was a 38 percent overall decrease in trespassers following the installation of the panels. The agency also found shifts in the pattern of trespassing, primarily in the time of day when it occurred. Trespassing went down during three periods of the day: the morning hours between 6 and 10 a.m. (when the least amount of trespassing occurred to begin with), the midday hours between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., and the evening between 6 and 10 p.m. It increased post-installation in the afternoon between 2 and 6 p.m. and around midnight, between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. The researchers theorized that the increase during those periods might be best accounted for by bar patrons cutting across the tracks to get to the bar's patio. Likewise, while an increase in trespass on Fridays and Saturdays was observed following the panels' installation, it was accompanied by a drop in Sunday trespassing. The section of track and right-of-way was broken down into three zones from which trespassers could enter and exit the section. Approaches from the south of the crossing, where trespassers might already have been on the property for some distance, and exits at the crossing, dropped along with entrances and exits via the crossing. Trespasses from the crossing and the bar patio went up. A slight shift in the gender of trespassers was noted, but the ratio remained around three-quarters male. ==See also==