wjstix wrote:One thing I've heard from an old Soo employee is that it can be hard for US employees of Canadian Pacific to get ahead, CP prefers promoting Canadians and sending them to new positions in the US rather than promote former Soo Line or other US railroad people. Don't know if CN has similar policies with ex-IC or DMIR people.This came up a few years ago now, could be different today however.
One thing I've heard from an old Soo employee is that it can be hard for US employees of Canadian Pacific to get ahead, CP prefers promoting Canadians and sending them to new positions in the US rather than promote former Soo Line or other US railroad people. Don't know if CN has similar policies with ex-IC or DMIR people.
This came up a few years ago now, could be different today however.
The current CP VPO is an American woman from the Norfolk Southern.
Mudekk wrote: zugmann wrote: ... but man, it is like selling your soul to the devil. Couldn't the same be said for Train & Engine Service? It's not like the carrier(s) are treating the help any better.
zugmann wrote: ... but man, it is like selling your soul to the devil.
... but man, it is like selling your soul to the devil.
Couldn't the same be said for Train & Engine Service? It's not like the carrier(s) are treating the help any better.
1st level supervision gets the treatment of field hands on a Platation in the days before the Civil War.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
Low level managers are bounced around like a ping pong ball - staying anywhere for more than a year is rare. Unless you get stuck at some crappy lcoation, then the RR seems all to eager to let them there. With no HOS, you could work 18 hours at a terminal, go home, go to bed to be waken 5 minutes later because a car derailed and you have to be there.
As was said earlier, to get any higher up involves posterior kissing, and you tick off the wrong person - forget it, you are stuck in some crappy terminal the rest of your life. (I've seen it). Now the retirementis a little better - which is why some try to get in a manger's spot before retirement... but man, it is like selling your soul to the devil.
It's been fun. But it isn't much fun anymore. Signing off for now.
The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any
Ulrich wrote:That makes sense...but I guess for someone who takes the long view of his/her career and wants to progress making less now is okay if there are rewards further down the road. It's a bit of a crap shoot..what if you take that supervisor's job and then you don't move ahead? But then again if you're capable and hard working in five to ten years you're a VP of something and making in the mid six figures or more.
Anyone who has ever held a first-level supervisory position knows full well that they make less money than some of the people under them. Supervisors are management and are salaried (exempt from overtime pay) while labor receives time and one half for the extra hours.
I realize that; however, I'm sure the managment folks are paid reasonably well also...who would bother to get a good education and put up with the stresses of managment if the pay is terrrible?.. Anyway..."well" in the context I used in is a relative term...
Let me revise my previous statement to "HOPEFULLY" you're paid well.
Ulrich wrote:Good answer...glad to hear you guys are paid well.
He never said they were paid well; he said that rails do not want to take a pay cut in addition to the stresses of management.
Anyway, "well" is a relative term, unless one is refering to a location where liquids from the ground can be extracted.
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