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Does Class 1 management have a good relationship with the railroad unions?

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Posted by SFbrkmn on Saturday, May 4, 2019 3:42 PM
I don't mind deadheading as it pays the full miles and from the away terminal, if called for a DH and if possible, you can leave early before becoming FRA rested.
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Posted by SFbrkmn on Saturday, May 4, 2019 3:40 PM

RO claim is Running Off your assign miles per instructions to perform some type of work event. Even those claims now have go into the claim conference chain and can take months to get paid. On the pay half before last, 2 such claims were paid that took place in Nov. No one likes coming to work and having to constantly fight to get paid correctly

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Posted by Ulrich on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 4:55 PM

BaltACD

 

 

Ulrich
Deadheading after heldaway time has expired sounds to me (albeit I'm no expert) like a waste of time due to lack of planning. Surely they could forcast their upcoming crew needs so that an incoming crew could be sent back immediately (via taxi if that's better) instead of waiting in a hotel and THEN deadheading home. Maybe there's no better way to plan it.. I don't know. 

 

Was listening to a interview of a new General Manager in the NFL about the player draft when he was previously a media 'draft expert'.

to the effect - It is easy to comment about the pros and cons of a player, it is exponentially more difficult to make the decision and have to live with results of it.

 

 

Very true.. and probably more complex than what I'm seeing.  

 

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Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 4:52 PM

Ulrich
Deadheading after heldaway time has expired sounds to me (albeit I'm no expert) like a waste of time due to lack of planning. Surely they could forcast their upcoming crew needs so that an incoming crew could be sent back immediately (via taxi if that's better) instead of waiting in a hotel and THEN deadheading home. Maybe there's no better way to plan it.. I don't know. 

Was listening to a interview of a new General Manager in the NFL about the player draft when he was previously a media 'draft expert'.

to the effect - It is easy to comment about the pros and cons of a player, it is exponentially more difficult to make the decision and have to live with results of it.

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Posted by Ulrich on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 2:50 PM

Deadheading after heldaway time has expired sounds to me (albeit I'm no expert) like a waste of time due to lack of planning. Surely they could forcast their upcoming crew needs so that an incoming crew could be sent back immediately (via taxi if that's better) instead of waiting in a hotel and THEN deadheading home. Maybe there's no better way to plan it.. I don't know. 

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Posted by SD70Dude on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 2:33 PM

Deadheading on freights does still happen, out west things are so congested that they prefer to deadhead by taxi on most routes, no point in having the deadhead take 8, 10 or 12 hours.

VIA No. 5 and No. 6 are also still used to deadhead crews on the BC North line sometimes.

Most homeward deadheads only happen after the crew has already sat at the AFHT for close to their maximum heldaway time.  And deadheads to the AFHT usually happen 8 or 12 hours in advance of when that crew will probably be required there.

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Posted by zardoz on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 2:31 PM

jeffhergert
They either wait too long to deadhead crews out to the away terminal, resulting in trains waiting for crews to be rested.  Or they deadhead crews out of the away terminal resulting in the same.  In the latter case, they usually end up spending more money (van and driver, full trip rate for crews deadheading) than they would by letting a crew or two get an hour or two of held-away.   Once in a while they'll deadhead crews both ways at the same time.  Or deadhead one way and 6 or 8 hours later deadhead the other.

I find it amazing that, after having been retired 25 years, things around the properties have hardly changed.

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Posted by Ulrich on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 2:23 PM

Around here I routinely see crew in the second or third unit of a consist, often reclined and asleep as the train goes by. I'm guessing they're being returned to their base terminal.. That might be better and more cost effective for all.. instead of being held up in a motel they're back home in hours and ready to go out again. 

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Posted by jeffhergert on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 1:57 PM

zugmann

 

 
oltmannd
You can turn crews back mid-district. Operate half way up, swap crews, head back home. RR saves lodging, meal and taxi costs. Crews get home. PSR tends to concentrate traffic, so mid-district swapping becomes more viable.

 

 

We had a RRer here that was stuck in a hotel for a long time.  Typical situation, like 6 deep in a terminal that sends out like 3 trains a day.  The AFHT is about an hour and change away from the home terminal via highway as well. 

 

After a while, he calls up the chief and asks: "why are you keeping us here?  I could have brought a train here, deadheaded home, been rested, brought another train here, and been rested to take one back again!"

 

Chief plainly answered:  "if you go home, you'll mark off.  Being in the hotel you are avaliable for us".

I think he appreciated the honesty, if not the reasoning.

 

We have a couple terminals where the guys are notorious for marking off on the weekends.  So they use the AFHT crews as their extended extra list to cover their own loads.

 

It's like approaching a holiday or even weekend and sometimes they start deadheading out of the home terminal for no real reason.  It's almost like they think by getting people out before they lay off they are ahead of the game.  Really, they aren't.  They just seem to short the home terminal.  (I've seen during times of really tight boards, they deadhead out the last two available engineers on the pool.  All that's left is vacancies due to lay offs or unrested turns, with no extra board.  Then they try to run trains.)  If they put too many in the hotel, some will undoubtly get held-away pay.  Or to avoid the held-away, they'll deadhead home.  Once you arrive at the home terminal, you're done.  It's not that they can't order you to take a train out, but it's another day's pay.  (One of them claims that may take a long time to get paid.)

For us the last couple of years, they've been watching the held-away.  At least some of the corridor managers seem to.  They either wait too long to deadhead crews out to the away terminal, resulting in trains waiting for crews to be rested.  Or they deadhead crews out of the away terminal resulting in the same.  In the latter case, they usually end up spending more money (van and driver, full trip rate for crews deadheading) than they would by letting a crew or two get an hour or two of held-away.   Once in a while they'll deadhead crews both ways at the same time.  Or deadhead one way and 6 or 8 hours later deadhead the other.

I suppose, like many things, it depends on who's budget things fall under.  Held-away comes out of this budget, deadheading and the required vans out of another.  Everyone does what's best for their budget, not necessarily what's good for the railroad in the big picture.

Jeff

 

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Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 1:07 PM

When I first started working CSX's Atlanta Division in the early 90's the Georgia Road crews working between Augusta and Atlanta with home terminal Augusta.

There were 2 Assigned crews working scheduled Intermodal trains with a 'schedule call period' of a 4 hour span.  There were 4 Freight Pool crews that worked through freights between Augusta and Atlanta in both directions.  All other work was performed by Extra Pool crews.  At that time that work included the nightly Georgia Building Authority dinner trains to Stone Mountain and return, Ballast Trains that would take empties to a quarry at Lithonia, GA and return loads to Atlanta and Plant Harrlee coal trains to Milledgeville, GA.

The Agreement for this territory only required that Extra Pool crews be returned to their Home Terminal after having been away for 14 days.  Which was a frequent happening.  Work a through run Augusta to Atlanta - get rest - work the dinner train to Stone Mountain and back to Atlanta - get rest - work a Harrlee coal train to Milledgeville - get rest - bring the Harrlee empties back to Atlanta - get rest - work a Ballast train to Lithonia and back to Atlanta - get rest - and so on and so forth unless the crew was lucky enough to catch a through train going back to Augusta.

I have no idea what the Union's local officials were thinking when this particular agreement was agreed to.  Obviously they were individuals that DID NOT want time at home.

After several years the agreement was changed to requiring the crew to go back to Augusta after the 4th trip.  Augusta to Atlanta was trip 1.  Either of the turn around jobs counted as 1 trip.  A trip to Harllee counted as 1 trip.  A trip back from Harllee counted as 1 trip.  Any combination of trips adding up to 4 and then the crew had to be deadheaded back to Home.   

There are as many forms of local crew agreements as there are people can come up with different ideas of the way to do things - and get all parties to agree on them.

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Posted by SD70Dude on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 12:00 PM

zugmann
oltmannd
You can turn crews back mid-district. Operate half way up, swap crews, head back home. RR saves lodging, meal and taxi costs. Crews get home. PSR tends to concentrate traffic, so mid-district swapping becomes more viable.

We had a RRer here that was stuck in a hotel for a long time.  Typical situation, like 6 deep in a terminal that sends out like 3 trains a day.  The AFHT is about an hour and change away from the home terminal via highway as well.

After a while, he calls up the chief and asks: "why are you keeping us here?  I could have brought a train here, deadheaded home, been rested, brought another train here, and been rested to take one back again!"

Chief plainly answered:  "if you go home, you'll mark off.  Being in the hotel you are avaliable for us".

I think he appreciated the honesty, if not the reasoning.

We have a couple terminals where the guys are notorious for marking off on the weekends.  So they use the AFHT crews as their extended extra list to cover their own loads.

Jasper, Alberta has been notorious on CN for that for many years.  Something to do with being a resort town full of bars...

Our contract has heldaway restrictions, if you don't take personal rest (MR doesn't affect this) they can only hold us at the AFHT for 14, 18 or 19 hours, depending on the subdivision.  Heldaway pay starts after 9 hours in that situation.  We can also only be called for one turn out of the AFHT, after that the next call has to take us home. 

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Posted by zugmann on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 11:48 AM

oltmannd
You can turn crews back mid-district. Operate half way up, swap crews, head back home. RR saves lodging, meal and taxi costs. Crews get home. PSR tends to concentrate traffic, so mid-district swapping becomes more viable.

 

We had a RRer here that was stuck in a hotel for a long time.  Typical situation, like 6 deep in a terminal that sends out like 3 trains a day.  The AFHT is about an hour and change away from the home terminal via highway as well. 

 

After a while, he calls up the chief and asks: "why are you keeping us here?  I could have brought a train here, deadheaded home, been rested, brought another train here, and been rested to take one back again!"

 

Chief plainly answered:  "if you go home, you'll mark off.  Being in the hotel you are avaliable for us".

I think he appreciated the honesty, if not the reasoning.

 

We have a couple terminals where the guys are notorious for marking off on the weekends.  So they use the AFHT crews as their extended extra list to cover their own loads.

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

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Posted by jeffhergert on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 11:31 AM

oltmannd

There are a lot of win-win things the railroads could do - and some might become more attractive with PSR.  

You can "card" jobs.  A crew owns a job.  Same start time (plus or minus) every day.  PSR tries to make operations occur reliably 7 days a week and eliminates few day a week unit trains, folding traffic into the merchadise trains.  So, this is a fit.

You can turn crews back mid-district.  Operate half way up, swap crews, head back home.  RR saves lodging, meal and taxi costs.  Crews get home.  PSR tends to concentrate traffic, so mid-district swapping becomes more viable.

One problem is the HOS law says six days on, two off.  Or 7 days on, three off.  How do you work that requirement into 7 day operations?  Particularly, how would you card it?  One crew 4 days a week, the other 3?  Or just chain two crews, 6 days on, 6 days off?

 

 

I've not really seen where PSR has anything to do with running trains on a schedule.  It's about moving cars, getting them out of yards.  If anything, it ruins schedules once a train leaves it's originating terminal because of work events and the unpredictablility of how long those events take.  Even before PSR, all our manifests had a regular call time window out of their originating terminals.  

Working half way and turning only works where you already have double ended pools.  Most of ours have a home terminal and an away from home terminal.  While a few live at the away end, not enough to effectively meet and turn.

Jeff  

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Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 11:27 AM

oltmannd
There are a lot of win-win things the railroads could do - and some might become more attractive with PSR.  

You can "card" jobs.  A crew owns a job.  Same start time (plus or minus) every day.  PSR tries to make operations occur reliably 7 days a week and eliminates few day a week unit trains, folding traffic into the merchadise trains.  So, this is a fit.

You can turn crews back mid-district.  Operate half way up, swap crews, head back home.  RR saves lodging, meal and taxi costs.  Crews get home.  PSR tends to concentrate traffic, so mid-district swapping becomes more viable.

One problem is the HOS law says six days on, two off.  Or 7 days on, three off.  How do you work that requirement into 7 day operations?  Particularly, how would you card it?  One crew 4 days a week, the other 3?  Or just chain two crews, 6 days on, 6 days off?

The reality is that the carriers have tried every 'solution' you have stated - some work, some don't.

Even PSR is customer dependent on when traffic is made available for movement and when bulk commodity customers get involved in the traffic mix all bets are off.  Remember, one of tha hallmarks of PSR is doing away with yards, primarily hump yards but also some flat switch yards.

Going back in time on single track routes, most crew change locations (at least on CSX) had a small yard that was able to 'stage' a train or two for whatever operational needs may be...in the 'plant rationalization' mania of the late 80's and early 90's those yards were eliminated; at most crew change locations the only thing left was a passing siding.  Then the 'reduce the head count' wave began where crews were 'cut to the bone' in number.  Next thing you know you can't get a crew to run a through train through the location, if you park the train on the crew change passing siding - now you can't operate another train to the crew change location unless you KNOW there is a crew available for it - if not it gets parked at the siding before the crew change location - and so on and such forth!  Next thing you know - without crews - you have 100 or more miles of railroad locked down - when you do come up with crews they are going to have to run a long distance before they can meet another 'active' train.

The latest change in the HOS regulations were occasioned, in part, by the operating crafts going to the 'authorities' complaining about the rest provisions that were in the prior version of the HOS regulation.

Be careful what you ask for - you may get it; and what you get will be different in details that you didn't ask for.

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Posted by Euclid on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 10:22 AM

Fatigue would be an easy problem to solve if it were only caused by insufficient sleep during time off.  But that is old school thinking.  The new medical paradigm is that fatigue cause is not limited to insufficient sleep.  It is also caused by various sleep disorders, and any amount of nightshift work.  A person can be aflicted without knowing it or feeling tired.  Only testing can diagnose it.   

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Posted by oltmannd on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 10:02 AM

There are a lot of win-win things the railroads could do - and some might become more attractive with PSR.  

You can "card" jobs.  A crew owns a job.  Same start time (plus or minus) every day.  PSR tries to make operations occur reliably 7 days a week and eliminates few day a week unit trains, folding traffic into the merchadise trains.  So, this is a fit.

You can turn crews back mid-district.  Operate half way up, swap crews, head back home.  RR saves lodging, meal and taxi costs.  Crews get home.  PSR tends to concentrate traffic, so mid-district swapping becomes more viable.

One problem is the HOS law says six days on, two off.  Or 7 days on, three off.  How do you work that requirement into 7 day operations?  Particularly, how would you card it?  One crew 4 days a week, the other 3?  Or just chain two crews, 6 days on, 6 days off?

 

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Posted by oltmannd on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 9:44 AM

RailRoader608

 

 
SD70Dude
Fatigue is a major problem in the rail industry due to employees working on call, and has been for many years.
 

 

 
Well that's a bit frightening. Is fatigue a problem the industry is looking to address? Or is it so ingrained in the culture everyone accepts it as 'that's how we do things'?
 

It's a problem the industry would love to solve without having to spend more than two nickels and 15 minutes of thought. 

So, yes and no.  Mostly no.  The attitude is often "for what you're being paid, you shouldn't have fatigue issues."

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Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, April 30, 2019 7:09 AM

jeffhergert
Actually, most places have or had a contractual 90 minute call (the old CNW contracts read 1 hour) for those who lived within one and one half miles of the reporting location, it being understood that callers would not be required to go outside of those limits.  Of course, it's been years since individual terminals had callers and most places adopted the use of telephones for calling way back in the early 20th centure.  Although, when my home terminal still had callers, they were known to get in the company car and go out looking for crews.

Many metro locations have had 2 and even 3 hour calls for many years, due to traffic considerations.  My home terminal just started 2 hour calls, up from 90 minute calls, a few months back.  Mostly because so many live way, way out of the 1 and 1/2 mile limit.  I now live 5 minutes away.  At our away from home terminals we still get a 90 minute call.    

I don't mind working on call.  What I don't like are the line ups.  Some of the fatigue issues are because the line ups are so bad.  I've fallen back or moved up 8 or 12 hours as estimated train times change.   Line ups are usually listed by the closest trains at the top, those farther out down and so on.  Some of the trains are what I call "ghost trains".  They may have power assigned but no cars or cars but no power or nothing assigned at all.  They'll eventually run but who knows when.  Some times a train passes a CAD reporting location and the computer jumps it way ahead of where it should be, or may drop one way down which is close to being called.  Then they may decide to tie down a train for staging or whatever.  Sometimes because there may be different crew boards, a train may be on one board's line up but called off a different board.

Example.  When I was firing (learning to be an engineer)on the north pool out of Des Moines one Friday night about 1030pm, the turn I was assigned to was 4 times out.  There was only one train listed, expected about 6am the next morning.  I told my wife I was going to bed.  Thirty minutes later the phone was ringing, the railroad calling me to work on a dead head.  What had happened in those 30 minutes?  The first out engineer was called for a train that was on a Boone line up but regularly called out of Des Moines.  The second out engineer was called off his turn to work a yard vacancy, the extra board being exhausted.  The third and fourth out engineers (I being assigned to the fourth out guy) were both called for deadheads to the away from home terminal that weren't on the line up. 

Jeff

Before I retired CSX implemented a Crew Balancing Tool - not for the crews but for Chief Dispatchers to minimize 'crew management costs'.  Those costs include the payment of 'held away' at the away from home terminal (including lodging expenses) as well as deadheading costs (which in addition to payments to the crew also include the costs of the means of transportation).

The staff that programmed the 'tool' thought it was wonderful.  Those of us who were 'required' to use it viewed it as 10 sledge hammer being used for an operation that required a Phillips head screwdriver.  I formulated 20 or more changes to the logic being used by the application to suggest 'decisions' that were in error and was considered a 'trouble maker'.  

The real problem for crews, as I see it, is where they have gotten their required rest (either at home or away) and don't get called until their 'personal day' has them ready to go back to bed.  If crews are called consistantly 'on their rest' or shortly after they can go on and on and on; however, if a crew becomes 'rested; at 0800 and doesn't get called until 2300 the crew is now in a 'danger zone'.  They are well rested in respect to the HOS law and they are on their last legs on the human rest cycle.

Deadheads are a Wild Card in crews being able to 'understand the board' as the board at home is not looking at what the board is at the away from home terminal.  From the Chief Dispatcher perspective, you are trying to see into the next day when you Deadhead to the away terminal (2 hour call, 2 to 6 hour transport to the away terminal, 12 hours rest at the away terminal) as the minimum time required to have an additional crew able to be called at the away terminal is 16 hours and in many cases several hours more.  If you don't plan for the 'ghost train'; when it does run there may only be a 'ghost crew' able to operate it.

The CSX 'standard' call time allowance is 2 hours, home or away.  Certain pools are designated 'Interdivisional' and get a 3 hour call time allowance at the Home Terminal. (Example: the Richmond-Philadelphia ID pool was created from, and available to crews headquarted at Richmond and Baltimore - the 3 hour allowance gives men domiciled at Baltimore the opportunity to report for duty 'on time' with the nominal 2 hour highway trip from Baltimore).  All away crews get a 2 hour call.

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Posted by charlie hebdo on Monday, April 29, 2019 9:25 PM

oltmannd

 

 
jeffhergert
Run-around claims, where you're first out on the board and they use someone behind you, good for 4 hrs pay, used to be paid right away.  Not anymore for us.  Lately they have to be processed through the appeals process.

 

Really interesting stuff!  

What's really wierd about this claim denial stuff is that 15 years ago, or so, UP's own company, PST, which is the system most RRs use, was in the process of automating the claims system based on the rules in the agreement for paying claims.  The idea was to take a lot of the workload from the folks reviewing the claims. 

Of course, part of the justification was mgt's basic mistrust of the train crews - always assuming they were trying to get away with something.  So, stupid, in my opinion.

Way back at the begining of the Conrail split, I chatted a good bit with and engineer on the Chicago line.  He was really dispirited how poorly NS mgt was treating the train crews.  Conrail at least tried to outfit the locomotive cabs decently and make the work environment the best they could (key word: "tried") .  They also tried to give the crews the best possible view of where they stood and what the train line up looked like.  NS's data was a mess and mgt was not sympathetic and the train crews were dispirited. 

The mistrust is deeply rooted.  There has to be a culture change to fix the problem.  With everyone neck deep in PSR, I doubt it'll get any better any time soon.

 

Railroads have long had a reputation for unenlightened and ineffective managememt, about as bad as any industry in the US. Most have them, particularly (though hardly limited to) southern roads like the NS, have an old boy attitude of treating their workers with a total lack of deceny, i.e. with utter contempt. And the worse things get on the bottom line, the worse it gets for the workers. Changing a backward culture like that is nearly impossible.

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Posted by jeffhergert on Monday, April 29, 2019 8:53 PM

RailRoader608

This is somewhat unrelated, but I'm reading about these phone calls giving two hours notice to be on site and ready to work. Is that typical in the rail industry? That sounds so much more difficult than having regularly scheduled shifts. Do people like that "wait for a call" scheduling or would they prefer a set schedule if possible?

 

Actually, most places have or had a contractual 90 minute call (the old CNW contracts read 1 hour) for those who lived within one and one half miles of the reporting location, it being understood that callers would not be required to go outside of those limits.  Of course, it's been years since individual terminals had callers and most places adopted the use of telephones for calling way back in the early 20th centure.  Although, when my home terminal still had callers, they were known to get in the company car and go out looking for crews.

Many metro locations have had 2 and even 3 hour calls for many years, due to traffic considerations.  My home terminal just started 2 hour calls, up from 90 minute calls, a few months back.  Mostly because so many live way, way out of the 1 and 1/2 mile limit.  I now live 5 minutes away.  At our away from home terminals we still get a 90 minute call.    

I don't mind working on call.  What I don't like are the line ups.  Some of the fatigue issues are because the line ups are so bad.  I've fallen back or moved up 8 or 12 hours as estimated train times change.   Line ups are usually listed by the closest trains at the top, those farther out down and so on.  Some of the trains are what I call "ghost trains".  They may have power assigned but no cars or cars but no power or nothing assigned at all.  They'll eventually run but who knows when.  Some times a train passes a CAD reporting location and the computer jumps it way ahead of where it should be, or may drop one way down which is close to being called.  Then they may decide to tie down a train for staging or whatever.  Sometimes because there may be different crew boards, a train may be on one board's line up but called off a different board.

Example.  When I was firing (learning to be an engineer)on the north pool out of Des Moines one Friday night about 1030pm, the turn I was assigned to was 4 times out.  There was only one train listed, expected about 6am the next morning.  I told my wife I was going to bed.  Thirty minutes later the phone was ringing, the railroad calling me to work on a dead head.  What had happened in those 30 minutes?  The first out engineer was called for a train that was on a Boone line up but regularly called out of Des Moines.  The second out engineer was called off his turn to work a yard vacancy, the extra board being exhausted.  The third and fourth out engineers (I being assigned to the fourth out guy) were both called for deadheads to the away from home terminal that weren't on the line up. 

Jeff

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Posted by oltmannd on Monday, April 29, 2019 7:35 PM

jeffhergert
Run-around claims, where you're first out on the board and they use someone behind you, good for 4 hrs pay, used to be paid right away.  Not anymore for us.  Lately they have to be processed through the appeals process.

Really interesting stuff!  

What's really wierd about this claim denial stuff is that 15 years ago, or so, UP's own company, PST, which is the system most RRs use, was in the process of automating the claims system based on the rules in the agreement for paying claims.  The idea was to take a lot of the workload from the folks reviewing the claims. 

Of course, part of the justification was mgt's basic mistrust of the train crews - always assuming they were trying to get away with something.  So, stupid, in my opinion.

Way back at the begining of the Conrail split, I chatted a good bit with and engineer on the Chicago line.  He was really dispirited how poorly NS mgt was treating the train crews.  Conrail at least tried to outfit the locomotive cabs decently and make the work environment the best they could (key word: "tried") .  They also tried to give the crews the best possible view of where they stood and what the train line up looked like.  NS's data was a mess and mgt was not sympathetic and the train crews were dispirited. 

The mistrust is deeply rooted.  There has to be a culture change to fix the problem.  With everyone neck deep in PSR, I doubt it'll get any better any time soon.

-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/

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Posted by Ulrich on Monday, April 29, 2019 6:59 PM

SD70Dude

 

 
Ulrich

Sounds terrible.. and all the more reason to have actively participating competent ownership. How is it that Ackman was able to swoop in like he did anyway? It happened because under  the previous management regime CP was a sitting duck, with the worst numbers of any class 1. There would have been no Ackman had investors/owners at the time taken a more active role in the business.. perhaps by insisting on better results from the previous management team. Same story at CSX a decade earlier with the Children's Investment Fund.. how is that they were able to sweep in and set the tune? The answer, again, other investors by and large passively allowed that to happen. This happens because there's not enough capable ownership on hand that cares about what happens day to day.. The answer is more accountability to ownership.. not less. BNSF is probably a good example where ownership (in the form of BH) is on hand and on site.. instead of a bunch of investors who don't know or care about what they own, they've got a few capable people who own the bulk of it. The other roads need something similar.. at least one owner who has a ton of skin in the game.. and a ton to lose if things go sideways. 

 

 

I agree that shareholders have a right to demand results, and that a corporation benefits from having large shareholders who want it to do well in the long-term.  And of course that management apathy leaves a company vulnerable to hostile takeovers and management change.  Apathy is good for no one, not the customers, not the employees, and certainly not the apathetic managers.

But I do not think that Ackman/Hilal/TCI Fund are examples of good shareholders.  All three of them wanted results NOW, as one would expect from hedge funds.  Ackman and Hilal were perfectly willing to overlook all the downsides of Hunter Harrison when they hired him, and the employees & customers of CP & CSX suffered, and continue to suffer for it.

I've often wondered if Bill Gates would have become the majority shareholder of CN, were it not for our federal government's restriction on how much one shareholder can own.

 

 

And I agree that Ackman, Hilal and company could have done a better job in bringing about much needed change. Certainly the intimidation tactics you've described are counterproductive to say the least.

At least it appears that CN and CP are through the worst of it now... both companies have good leadership, and they're both investing heavily in infrastructure improvements. Hopefully you railroaders have seen some of that over the last year as well... some cause for optimism.  

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Posted by SD70Dude on Monday, April 29, 2019 5:20 PM

Overmod
RailRoader608
Well that's a bit frightening. Is fatigue a problem the industry is looking to address? Or is it so ingrained in the culture everyone accepts it as 'that's how we do things'?

There has never been any real question that "fatigue" is a vicious and severe problem in railroading, and that steps toward its eradication would be both sensible and valuable.

The problem lies in the fundamental nature of "railroading" as, for want of a more exact technical term, a 'capitalist' enterprise.  As a train is made up, a crew is needed for it ASAP; as the train works its way over the road, crews are needed for relief where and when necessary; as the train arrives at yarding points, crews are needed to receive and work with it.  All this within, say, a two-hour window.

Now, remember the definition of 'engaged to be waiting'.  A railroad loses substantial amounts of money if it has to pay employees to sit around waiting for trains, or worse, have them go home after waiting the Federally-mandated number of hours and have a train 'show up' a short time later.  So the railroads instituted the idea of 'calling' when a train comes, at any "legal" time day or night, without much regard to egghead niceties like 'circadian rhythms', and then in a misguided attempt at discipline (reminiscent of the theories behind bans on personal electronics) bans things like napping at sidings without much regard to egghead niceties like the SAC practice of power naps.  Government of course jumps in with do-gooder legislation that doesn't address the fundamental issue much, if at all.  And railroaders as a breed, much like workers enduring an idiotic rolling-shift scheduling system in a factory, have to suck it up and learn to take it.  (This for some reason always reminds me gently of the 'market failure' of the Bishop coupling knife...)

It is difficult to conceive just how much of a wrench would be thrown into any contemporary railroad's operation, PSR or not, were 'sensible' measures of fatigue eradication to be tried.  Instead it is much easier to treat things like 'sleep apnea' as diseases subject to insurance coverage, rather than fatigue sequelae as they almost certainly usually are, and make the poor enginemen crank up CPAP machines during their inadequate sleepy time.

Do not expect humans to like this, unless they be stockholders with relatively flinten hearts; do not expect any management that expects to stay in for more than a couple of months to make meaningful changes that actually improve anything.  I have been working on semi-autonomous solutions that can and would, in fact, help "the root causes", but they involve both technological and cultural changes that are probably best 'imposed via a Government funded mandate'.  As would any meaningful change likely have to be.

Bravo!

That's the best summary of our sad reality that I have ever seen.

Unfortunately this is the only "autonomous solution" that I have heard of so far, and it does nothing to address the root causes of fatigue:

https://www.progressrail.com/en/innovation/fatigue.html

Nice to see that the corporate "monitoring centre" will be alerted.  I wonder how many demerits each microsleep or distraction will warrant?

Greetings from Alberta

-an Articulate Malcontent

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Posted by SD70Dude on Monday, April 29, 2019 4:53 PM

Ulrich

Sounds terrible.. and all the more reason to have actively participating competent ownership. How is it that Ackman was able to swoop in like he did anyway? It happened because under  the previous management regime CP was a sitting duck, with the worst numbers of any class 1. There would have been no Ackman had investors/owners at the time taken a more active role in the business.. perhaps by insisting on better results from the previous management team. Same story at CSX a decade earlier with the Children's Investment Fund.. how is that they were able to sweep in and set the tune? The answer, again, other investors by and large passively allowed that to happen. This happens because there's not enough capable ownership on hand that cares about what happens day to day.. The answer is more accountability to ownership.. not less. BNSF is probably a good example where ownership (in the form of BH) is on hand and on site.. instead of a bunch of investors who don't know or care about what they own, they've got a few capable people who own the bulk of it. The other roads need something similar.. at least one owner who has a ton of skin in the game.. and a ton to lose if things go sideways. 

I agree that shareholders have a right to demand results, and that a corporation benefits from having large shareholders who want it to do well in the long-term.  And of course that management apathy leaves a company vulnerable to hostile takeovers and management change.  Apathy is good for no one, not the customers, not the employees, and certainly not the apathetic managers.

But I do not think that Ackman/Hilal/TCI Fund are examples of good shareholders.  All three of them wanted results NOW, as one would expect from hedge funds.  Ackman and Hilal were perfectly willing to overlook all the downsides of Hunter Harrison when they hired him, and the employees & customers of CP & CSX suffered, and continue to suffer for it.

I've often wondered if Bill Gates would have become the majority shareholder of CN, were it not for our federal government's restriction on how much one shareholder can own.

Greetings from Alberta

-an Articulate Malcontent

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Posted by SD70Dude on Monday, April 29, 2019 4:37 PM

charlie hebdo
SD70Dude
Intimidation is when you cancel the napping pilot program, and send the trainmasters out to sneak onto locomotives in the middle of nowhere.

What was that?

I've forgotten some specifics, but basically the pilot project attempted to reduce fatigue by allowing crews of stopped trains to nap if tired.  The crews of extended-run (double-sub) trains were even empowered to request that the RTC put their train into a siding for 20 or 30 minutes, for the specific purpose of taking a power nap. 

CN ended up deciding that this was not a worthwhile project, and so it ended.

The only lasting legacy of the pilot program is the fully reclining seats that new locomotives of that time were ordered with, some of them have not yet been replaced.

Greetings from Alberta

-an Articulate Malcontent

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Posted by Ulrich on Monday, April 29, 2019 4:15 PM

Sounds terrible.. and all the more reason to have actively participating competent ownership. How is it that Ackman was able to swoop in like he did anyway? It happened because under  the previous management regime CP was a sitting duck, with the worst numbers of any class 1. There would have been no Ackman had investors/owners at the time taken a more active role in the business.. perhaps by insisting on better results from the previous management team. Same story at CSX a decade earlier with the Children's Investment Fund.. how is that they were able to sweep in and set the tune? The answer, again, other investors by and large passively allowed that to happen. This happens because there's not enough capable ownership on hand that cares about what happens day to day.. The answer is more accountability to ownership.. not less. BNSF is probably a good example where ownership (in the form of BH) is on hand and on site.. instead of a bunch of investors who don't know or care about what they own, they've got a few capable people who own the bulk of it. The other roads need something similar.. at least one owner who has a ton of skin in the game.. and a ton to lose if things go sideways. 

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Posted by charlie hebdo on Monday, April 29, 2019 4:14 PM

SD70Dude
Intimidation is when you cancel the napping pilot program, and send the trainmasters out to sneak onto locomotives in the middle of nowhere.

What was that?

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Posted by SAMUEL C WALKER on Monday, April 29, 2019 4:04 PM

The gas line was marked with a five foot vertical 2.5 inch pipe that its its top had an open pipe welded at at an angle of 30 degrees of a length of about 12 inches. Such markers are typically decades old with faded paint and havinng suface rust. There was / is no written markings on such markers. Modern markers are typiccaly vertical polymer pipes with corporate colors and written information. The marker described also serves as an exhaust for the gas line that is within a larger tube. As the operator most likely was trained for modern markings encountered out on an ROW, he ws not prepared for the marking that essentially was / is a piece  of functioning industrial archaeology.

 

 

 

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Posted by SD70Dude on Monday, April 29, 2019 3:17 PM

Ulrich
SD70Dude
Ulrich

Looks as if that's true across the board... i.e. "train trash" at UP certainly doesn't suggest that things are any better there... can't blame Ackman for that one or even activist investors in general. 

This type of behavior and overall poor employment relations is far less prevalent where the owner of the business is on the premises. This is because the owner has a vested interest in seeing management and labor working well and in harmony. Where companies are publicly traded the "owners" are not on the premises and often don't care much about what happens  day to day.. a situation that is compounded by the fact that railroads are large and complex..where people are sometimes hired and promoted without the proper vetting.. That's how so called managers who refer to their people as train trash get in. 

It's a systemic problem.. the net affect is that the "ownership" is very passive.. and getting more passive by the day as more investors go the index fund route. Would be much better if the owners/shareholders have more to lose.. an activist investor who is willing to put a significant amount of his own money on the line is closer to having the "owner" of the business on the premises.. as it is the collective ownership doesn't care.. do whatever you want.. a perfect recipe to ensure that decisions go unchecked.

If Ackman cared about employee relations he would not have hired a management team with a history of union-busting and intimidation tactics.  Or at minimum, he could have instructed said management to tread more lightly, and show some basic respect. 

Ackman and his protege (Hilal) hired that same guy twice, and did nothing to temper his attitude.  Actions (or inactions) speak louder than words.

Unions at both carriers alive and well and doing just fine. Ackman and team aggressive? For sure.. Intimidating?.. probably. One needs to be that way in business.. doesn't matter if you're running a railroad or a dry cleaner. If you're a pussycat today you will be roadkill tomorrow. But that doesn't preclude being fair and respectful.

The union-busting tactics take the form of disproportionately following around and harassing local union reps while they are at work, and deliberately causing a massive number of grievances (cut time claims, excessive discipline) with the intent of clogging up the grievance resolution and arbitration system so grievances are no longer resolved in a timely manner, so that the union would be forced to expend more and more resources fighting these battles and members would lose faith in the union's ability to resolve their grievances.  All while EHH attempted to force in his ideal contract (hourly rate of pay, almost no personal rest, conductor-only everything, etc).

Those tactics only partly worked.  Yes, the unions still exist but the arbitration system has been clogged up for years, and in many cases grievances drag on for years longer than they should (you can imagine how this has gone over out on the property).  Union dues ended up increasing because of all the related costs as well.  There were two major strikes at CN over EHH trying to impose his contract, and he ended up losing those particular battles.

Now for some examples of intimidation, and the attitude that created these filters down from the top, and the employees get to bear the brunt of it.

Intimidation is when you yell, scream and swear at your employees instead of talking to them respectfully.

Intimidation is when you follow crews around, hide in the weeds, and hand out demerits or suspensions for every possible rule violation, no matter how small.

Intimidation is when you cancel the napping pilot program, and send the trainmasters out to sneak onto locomotives in the middle of nowhere.

Intimidation is when you refuse to allow employees to book "unfit" and instead force them to come to work tired, under threat of harsh discipline.

Intimidation is when you force employees to work with equipment that is unsafe or not properly equipped, like using a yard engine with worn-out brakes or taking a locomotive without DB into mountain-grade territory, and then discipline and harass them after accidents happen. 

I could go on all day, but I'll let these guys take over for a bit:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KmPm6Fpd0ic

What a way to run a railroad.

Greetings from Alberta

-an Articulate Malcontent

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