B64 Network Rail Shared Learning NRL25-04 Fatal Road Traffic Collision

Issued to: All Network Rail line managers, safety professionals and accredited contractors
Ref: NRL25-04
Date of issue: 08/08/2025
Location: M40 Northbound (Junctions 12–13)

Incident Summary

At approximately 0245 on Wednesday 8 May 2024, two Vital Human Resources Limited (VHRL) employees were involved in a fatal RTC on the M40 Northbound. Returning home post-shift from Hemel
Hempstead, their vehicle collided with the rear of a Heavy Goods Vehicle (HGV). The driver sustained non life-threatening injuries. Tragically, the passenger later died. Both had chosen to forgo their pre-booked
hotel accommodation to return home for personal reasons. This incident underscores the critical risks posed by fatigue, policy non-adherence, and gaps in monitoring and assurance.

During the investigation, the parallel police investigation meant the driver could not be interviewed, and the hire vehicle lacked telematics to support post-incident reconstruction. However, the revised Fatigue
Risk Index (FRI) score of 39.7% indicated a high risk of microsleep. Given the early-morning timing following a night shift and being over 60 minutes into a 90-minute journey, it is reasonable to conclude
that the driver’s alertness was likely impaired due to fatigue, even if the exact cause - such as microsleep or loss of concentration - cannot be definitively confirmed.

 

Behavioural and systematic insights

• Personal responsibilities (childcare, appointments) motivated a decision to return home rather than
rest.
• Night driving following a shift increased fatigue risk, equivalent in impairment to alcohol.
• Vehicle lacked data-capturing systems, limiting post-incident reconstruction and assurance.
• Sentinel swipe protocol was bypassed, impairing fatigue and attendance data quality.
• Policy assumed rest would be taken if provided - no check was in place to verify.

Key lessons

• Fatigue must be treated as a live risk, even below FRI trigger points.
• Behavioural choices under pressure (e.g. returning home) can override planned controls.
• Short-term hire vehicles must meet baseline monitoring requirements.
• Sentinel compliance must be actively monitored, not assumed.
• Booking rest does not guarantee rest - assurance processes must verify usage.

Recommendations and Local Actions

Network Rail
• Confirm Sentinel swipe-in requirement in Scheme Rules v5 and brief accordingly.
• Explore feasibility of validating hotel room usage as part of fatigue assurance
VHRL
• Review process for inputting shift data into PeopleSoft to ensure FRI accuracy.
• Install geofencing and telematics in all fleet and hire vehicles.
• Deliver refresher driver training on fatigue, post-shift travel risk, and lifesaving rules.
• Brief all drivers on consequences of non-compliance with rest policy and Sentinel protocol.

Key Takeaway

This fatal incident was not the result of one failure, but a series of unverified assumptions. Behaviour,
fatigue, monitoring gaps, and policy execution all intersected. Preventing recurrence requires not only
policies but living, verifiable compliance and behavioural alignment under pressure.

B64 Network Rail Shared Learning NRL25-04 Fatal Road Traffic Collision

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