UP/BNSF - are they self-insured?
She who has no signature! cinscocom-tmw
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They will also have a big deductible, in the millions of dollars, before the insurance compoany will need to get involved.
Both Ed and cx500 have it right
When there is damage first there is the deductable, then there is the insurance payout, and then everybody starts sueing everybody for what will likely be out of pocket settlements.
Back in the day of loose car railroading, damage to goods in transit was so routine that in every large centre there would be an auction house whose primary business would be to sell off damaged goods for the proverbial "scratch and dent" sales. In Calgary, for instance, the primary auction house was conveniently located across 9th Ave. SE from the CPR freight sheds to simplify getting the stuff off of railway property. The money from these sales was set aside for use in paying the deductables from claims involving wrecks, etc. From what I understand, the money raised by the auctions did go a significant way toward keeping up with deductable payments.
Bruce
So shovel the coal, let this rattler roll.
"A Train is a Place Going Somewhere" CP Rail Public Timetable
"O. S. Irricana"
. . . __ . ______
Today's Harbor Freight Tools company started out as a railroad salvage seller.
cacole Today's Harbor Freight Tools company started out as a railroad salvage seller.
I suspect the tools they sold then were of higher quality than what they get from China today!
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
You can find the details in their annual reports - well, at least for UP; I doubt that BNSF issues them anymore since being bought by Berkshire Hathaway about 5 years ago. Try NS or CSX instead.
- Paul North.
Growing up where I did, everybody knew about Railway Salvage in Hammond, conveniently located next to the IHB just east of Hohman Ave. You could find almost anything you could think of (and a few other things, too) inside their walls.
Paul_D_North_Jr You can find the details in their annual reports - well, at least for UP; I doubt that BNSF issues them anymore since being bought by Berkshire Hathaway about 5 years ago. Try NS or CSX instead. - Paul North.
Hi Ed,
I've heard in the past that in a derailment involving autos they would be scrapped for liability reasons. Do you know where they draw the line? Say a 100 autorack train derails a couple cars, What can be delivered and what goes to the scrapper? I was told the whole train worth would be wasted, but that seems a little extreame.
Only the contents of the cars that derailed get scrapped, those that stay on the rails are still good to go.
I am sure a lot of it depends on the insurance adjusters determinations also, the car may derail, remain up right with no damage to the autos, and the adjustor may not write them off...in this case, all the autoracks were laying on their sides, so....
Thanks ed, that makes more sense then the story I heard (scrap em' all).
That brings up another question. between the securing straps/blocks and the cars suspension, in the event of a autorack 'layover' ,how often does the auto body make contact with the autorack structure?
edblysard Only the contents of the cars that derailed get scrapped, those that stay on the rails are still good to go. I am sure a lot of it depends on the insurance adjusters determinations also, the car may derail, remain up right with no damage to the autos, and the adjustor may not write them off...in this case, all the autoracks were laying on their sides, so....
We had a derailment 10 or so years ago. Involved some auto racks with Cadillac Escalades. One car only had one truck on the ground, the other autoracks involved weren't as lucky. All involved, including the one with only one truck derailed, had their loads scrapped. (Conviently at the scrap yard on the other side of the tracks as it turned out.)
Jeff
Given that the core of Berkshire Hathaway is a group of insurance businesses I guess the case could be made for BNSF to be aself insured company.
"I Often Dream of Trains"-From the Album of the Same Name by Robyn Hitchcock
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