Recently purchased an ICG freight schedule book from 1977 and at that time ICG was running their St. Louis - Chicago "mini piggyback" service (as it was referred to in the schedule. There were 3 trains in each direction daily (except weekends) between the two cities.
Southbound trains:Lv Chicago 8pm 11pm 12noon
Ar EStL 4am 7am 8pm
Northbound trains;
Lv EStL 6pm 1am 9am
Arr Chicago 2am 9am 5pm
With discussions today of railroads needing to increase volumes and market share, in light of the diminishing coal and CBR revenues, no doubt the rails are exploring all options, including point to point short haul intermodal.
How did this operation come into existance? How long did it operate? Who/what were the target markets? What were the challenges?
Greyhound...I am specifically looking to you for answers on this as you were in the room where this occurred. Obviously this service was eliminated. Was it due to high costs or low volumes (probably both)? Was this regulated (were rates published in tariff form or contractually agreed to?)
ICG obviously had a route between the two cities which was underutilized and attempted to maximize revenue. Similar service was provided by Milwaukee Road between Chicago and Twin Cities. Were there any discussions between the two railroads for providing thru service?Ed
ED (MP173):
You are so right, Greyhounds, would be a real source for this information. As a side note; I worked for a medium-sized trucking company during the same period of time late 1970's, early 1980's. At this point our company joined the piggy-back movement, at about the time ICG had built, and populated a large 'lift' adjacent to the Johnson Yard at Memphis. Primarily, it was a flat lot with the 'lifts' being accomplished by a fleet of large fork lift-type eauipment.
Our sales and marketing guys were really interested in the Chicago area destination, and the NOLA market as a secondary destination. Of course, our trailers were not specifically outfitted with factory- installed lifting points, it was thought that the Lufkin trailers were inherently stout enough, and the lifting points under the frame rails were reinforced with 6 quarter rough-sawn oak planks. The system worked well, for a while. Then problems cropped up with positioning of loads within the trailers, which resulted in trailers being broken into pieces, when lifted, and of course freight claims.
The real clincher was on the Chicago end, when the local drayage fees, killed the deal. The Sales & Marketing 'brain trust' called it a learning experience, then slunk away from the whole deal. Some of us thought it was going to get a new chance, when at the behest of a major client, we shipped almost 75 trailers on BNSF TOFC to California; to populate a new operation out there, and to also move the customer's products out to the West Coast.
MP173 Recently purchased an ICG freight schedule book from 1977 and at that time ICG was running their St. Louis - Chicago "mini piggyback" service (as it was referred to in the schedule. There were 3 trains in each direction daily (except weekends) between the two cities. Southbound trains:Lv Chicago 8pm 11pm 12noon Ar EStL 4am 7am 8pm Northbound trains; Lv EStL 6pm 1am 9am Arr Chicago 2am 9am 5pm With discussions today of railroads needing to increase volumes and market share, in light of the diminishing coal and CBR revenues, no doubt the rails are exploring all options, including point to point short haul intermodal. How did this operation come into existance? How long did it operate? Who/what were the target markets? What were the challenges? Greyhound...I am specifically looking to you for answers on this as you were in the room where this occurred. Obviously this service was eliminated. Was it due to high costs or low volumes (probably both)? Was this regulated (were rates published in tariff form or contractually agreed to?) ICG obviously had a route between the two cities which was underutilized and attempted to maximize revenue. Similar service was provided by Milwaukee Road between Chicago and Twin Cities. Were there any discussions between the two railroads for providing thru service?Ed
samfp1943The system worked well, for a while. Then problems cropped up with positioning of loads within the trailers, which resulted in trailers being broken into pieces, when lifted, and of course freight claims. The real clincher was on the Chicago end, when the local drayage fees, killed the deal. The Sales & Marketing 'brain trust' called it a learning experience, then slunk away from the whole deal.
They should have called me. I would have arranged for a supply of rail spec trailers and cut a price deal to compensate for the dray cost.
Thanks for jumping in guys. I knew Greyhound would add a great perspective to this. The Alton line was really under utilized and this would have been a great opportunity. I only saw a couple of scheduled freights (other than the Slingshots) plus the Amtraks.
Do you know for sure that UP will change that Chicago - Houston to the Alton, or is it a possibility due to the Logistics Park on the line? It would make sense to move it as operations change and more and more business is located near the Logistics Park.
Each year CSX runs the Christmas train from Columbus to Chicago on a tight overnight operation, primarily with UPS loads. This train begins around Thanksgiving and runs thru to Christmas. So, yes a short haul intermodal can work, but the cards must be played correctly.
NS is currently running a 26W daily from Chicago to Pittsburgh. It is heavy with UPS and has international containers. Today's train had 44 trailer/containers of which 32 were UPS marked. It would be interesting to see how that adds to the bottom line. Train 24W followed shortly for Baltimore with only 33 containers, 10 of which were UPS.
Ed
MP173Do you know for sure that UP will change that Chicago - Houston to the Alton
No, I've just read that after the State of Corruption Illinois gets through wasting spending a couple billion dollars that we do not have on the UP line the UP plans to make the most of it.
There is NO provision in the agreement with the UP to maintain the proposed slightly improved Amtrak times.
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