"No soup for you!" - Yev Kassem (from Seinfeld)
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP57313 A friend of mine worked for C&NW many years ago. He liked the pay, but hated the hours; sometimes worked 7 days a week, but not the same hours each day. After he was able to get back on his feet financially he left. Was not able to plan any kind of life outside of work.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP57313The local paper (I live 20 miles south of L.A.) advertised jobs for UP several months back. It was for working on freight cars being switched "any hour, any day, any weather". I don't recall if it mentioned the pay.
QUOTE: Originally posted by ericsp QUOTE: Originally posted by MP57313 The local paper (I live 20 miles south of L.A.) advertised jobs for UP several months back. It was for working on freight cars being switched "any hour, any day, any weather". I don't recall if it mentioned the pay. The advertisement in Fresno says the same thing. However, I have been talking to local crews (as well as mainline crews) and the Senior MTO here. Local and yard crews do have a set schedule. I drive by UP's Fresno Yard every day on my way to work and have noticed the the locals usually leave about the same time every day. Of course other than the fact a crew cannot work for more than 12 hours, I guess it is up in the air when the local crew will return to the yard. Here locals work 6 days per week and up to 12 hours. The senior MTO said that the yard crews usually work 5 days per week with an 8 hour shift. Not bad.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP57313 The local paper (I live 20 miles south of L.A.) advertised jobs for UP several months back. It was for working on freight cars being switched "any hour, any day, any weather". I don't recall if it mentioned the pay.
QUOTE: Originally posted by ericsp I have been considering going to work for UP. I was talking to a conductor regarding this. He said that there was a railfan in his class who aced the classroom portion. However, onece he started work he (the railfan) decided he hated the job and quit. Does anyone have any idea how often this happen? If you have heard of a such thing, what were the reasons given as to why he hated the job?
QUOTE: Originally posted by LimitedclearDON'T YOU BELIEVE IT!!!If you hire out you won't have the luxury of picking your job. There is a reason the old guys on the local and yard jobs are retiring. It is called seniority. How do you think they got those jobs instead of being out on the road?? Seniority allows them to hold jobs with regular hours. Many old heads prefer locals as they get to keep regular work hours and sleep at home more often. You will be at the very bottom of the roster when you hire out. After your training you will be lucky to hold the extra board which means you will be called by a crew caller and assigned to any train or other T&E work anywhere in your seniority district. The caller may call you at any time of day or night 24/7 365 days a year. After some time passes and you move up the roster you may be able to hold some better jobs such as road pools or even an occasional local or yard job, but that may not happen for years. Don't plan on getting a nice RR job close to home.LC
QUOTE: Originally posted by ericsp QUOTE: Originally posted by Limitedclear QUOTE: Originally posted by ericsp The advertisement in Fresno says the same thing. However, I have been talking to local crews (as well as mainline crews) and the Senior MTO here. Local and yard crews do have a set schedule. I drive by UP's Fresno Yard every day on my way to work and have noticed the the locals usually leave about the same time every day. Of course other than the fact a crew cannot work for more than 12 hours, I guess it is up in the air when the local crew will return to the yard. Here locals work 6 days per week and up to 12 hours. The senior MTO said that the yard crews usually work 5 days per week with an 8 hour shift. Not bad. DON'T YOU BELIEVE IT!!! If you hire out you won't have the luxury of picking your job. There is a reason the old guys on the local and yard jobs are retiring. It is called seniority. How do you think they got those jobs instead of being out on the road?? Seniority allows them to hold jobs with regular hours. Many old heads prefer locals as they get to keep regular work hours and sleep at home more often. You will be at the very bottom of the roster when you hire out. After your training you will be lucky to hold the extra board which means you will be called by a crew caller and assigned to any train or other T&E work anywhere in your seniority district. The caller may call you at any time of day or night 24/7 365 days a year. After some time passes and you move up the roster you may be able to hold some better jobs such as road pools or even an occasional local or yard job, but that may not happen for years. Don't plan on getting a nice RR job close to home. LC I have noticed that some of the guys operating the yard switchers and locals look like they are probably in there 20s while others are look older (I did talk to one who said he is retiring in 4 years). What do you think?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Limitedclear QUOTE: Originally posted by ericsp The advertisement in Fresno says the same thing. However, I have been talking to local crews (as well as mainline crews) and the Senior MTO here. Local and yard crews do have a set schedule. I drive by UP's Fresno Yard every day on my way to work and have noticed the the locals usually leave about the same time every day. Of course other than the fact a crew cannot work for more than 12 hours, I guess it is up in the air when the local crew will return to the yard. Here locals work 6 days per week and up to 12 hours. The senior MTO said that the yard crews usually work 5 days per week with an 8 hour shift. Not bad. DON'T YOU BELIEVE IT!!! If you hire out you won't have the luxury of picking your job. There is a reason the old guys on the local and yard jobs are retiring. It is called seniority. How do you think they got those jobs instead of being out on the road?? Seniority allows them to hold jobs with regular hours. Many old heads prefer locals as they get to keep regular work hours and sleep at home more often. You will be at the very bottom of the roster when you hire out. After your training you will be lucky to hold the extra board which means you will be called by a crew caller and assigned to any train or other T&E work anywhere in your seniority district. The caller may call you at any time of day or night 24/7 365 days a year. After some time passes and you move up the roster you may be able to hold some better jobs such as road pools or even an occasional local or yard job, but that may not happen for years. Don't plan on getting a nice RR job close to home. LC
QUOTE: Originally posted by ericsp The advertisement in Fresno says the same thing. However, I have been talking to local crews (as well as mainline crews) and the Senior MTO here. Local and yard crews do have a set schedule. I drive by UP's Fresno Yard every day on my way to work and have noticed the the locals usually leave about the same time every day. Of course other than the fact a crew cannot work for more than 12 hours, I guess it is up in the air when the local crew will return to the yard. Here locals work 6 days per week and up to 12 hours. The senior MTO said that the yard crews usually work 5 days per week with an 8 hour shift. Not bad.
QUOTE: Originally posted by OldArmy94 I have a friend who was a railfan turned railroader. Unfortunately, he was seriously injured on the job and is now permanently disabled. He DID receive an extremely large compensation package but that will never replace a lost limb. I don't know if he'd do it all over again..I doubt it, truthfully. Just BE CAREFUL!! It's very dangerous work. I have known of too many people that ended up getting hurt to pursue it as a career option so I'll just stay a railfan.
QUOTE: Originally posted by csxengineer98 my address is ..........and no comments from the peanut gallery but my email address..lol SEXTRAVAGANZA1@.......
QUOTE: Originally posted by ericsp I once had an UP engineer ranting to me about how filthy the cabs were in the locomotives. He was saying that they do not empty the toilets nearly as often as they should and they would overflow. He said this is common, at least out of Roseville, CA. Has anyone heard anything like that?
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