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Roundabout

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, October 27, 2021 8:03 PM

Made me think of the abuse of X priority in stuff going to Los Alamos in the war years.

If I remember the story correctly (it was embellished over the years) critical material for weapon development was 'bumped' for toilet paper, because the sender of the critical material used the 'Cullinan Diamond' method of hiding the importance of the shipment by giving it lower letter priority, and 'all and sundry' stuff going to secret-project land was routinely eXpedited...

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Posted by rdamon on Wednesday, October 27, 2021 6:09 PM

Found it !! (7/5/2012)

jeffhergert

In my post about holiday operations, the railroad always says it will slow down operations except for certain lines of business.  The exceptions for things that still must move means just about everything except the lowest of the low manifest, locals and yard jobs.  Sometimes even they still work, too.

In my listing of the business lines, I threw in fence posts for a couple of reasons.  One to illustrate how the exceptions render a holiday slow down kind of moot, that we're only going to move "priority" things but everything is a prioritiy.  Also to reference an old joke about fence posts.

I've heard it told years ago on the Rock Island.  I've seen it in print in Trains about 25 or so years ago (IIRC the author, Ken Brovald in his story about an Omaha Road Brasspounder, I know Bruce knows what that is.) and an even older Railroad Magazine story by Peter Josserand, Night Chief Dispatcher on the Western Pacific.  I'm sure many old heads on many railroads will claim it happened on their railroads, too.  The story goes something like this.   

A train was overtonnage and had to reduce before leaving the yard.  Certain loads are more important than others, like perishable or livestock, high value merchandise etc.  Looking over the train list for what could be set out,  the yardmaster came across a load of fence posts.  Now in the scheme of things, it's hard to imagine fence posts being a hot item.  So the load of fence posts, along with other low priority freight was set out. 

A few days later, the yardmaster got a reprimand for setting out the most important car in the train.  It seems the superintendent had personally gauranteed delivery to the consignee on a certain date, and setting out the car it missed that date.  So after that, whenever a train had to reduce tonnage, the instructions were to set out anything except fence posts. 

Jeff

 

 

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Posted by Paul of Covington on Wednesday, October 27, 2021 4:10 PM

jeffhergert
like a car of fence posts*

   I have no idea, but I infer from your footnote that it's something that used to be important but has been made obsolete by later technology -- like communication?  Utility poles come to mind; in remote territory the railroads had to put in their own poles for telphone or telegraph wires, and they were lined up like fence posts along the track.  No?

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Posted by RTroy on Wednesday, October 27, 2021 12:50 AM

Interesting question I can't answer.  But I have to say that it sounds like mail coming to Long Island from some spot 10 miles away on Long Island - goes to New Jersey, then maybe upstate New York, then a few more places, and someday, maybe, makes it the wrong post office on Long Island, then maybe a few days later gets delivered!  :-)

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Tuesday, October 26, 2021 10:52 PM

Fence posts ?  Used cross ties ?

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Posted by SALfan1 on Tuesday, October 26, 2021 8:43 PM

jeffhergert

23 years today on a different railroad.  I've never heard of anyone, management or labor, having ever gotten "talked to" over misrouted cars.  By the time a train hits the first scanner, the misroute will have been assigned a new block destination, even though it's actual destination is still the same.  Unless it's hot, like a car of fence posts*, nobody is going to be to upset. 

Jeff

* We'll see if anyone catches the meaning.  I'm afraid too many that would catch on may have departed the forums. 

 

There's at least one of us still around.  Don't remember all the details, but remember the gist.

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Posted by pcpower on Tuesday, October 26, 2021 5:35 PM

My wife worked for a lumber broker in Portland Oregon a few years ago and one of her tasks was to route cars on roundabout routes so as to give the broker time to sell that carload. That way the car was traveling eastward getting closer to the eastern markets yet wasn't sold when shipped.

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Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, October 26, 2021 3:26 PM

Doktor No
If, while switching out a train OR building one we have bad cars and they don't get switched out you get a hearing letter in the mail. If it says 15 track it goes into 15 track. When you pull that track to build that train they better be in the right order! A miss built train will get caught at the first reader, signals go out to TM's and YM's get notified and the switch crew gets called on the carpet. At least that's the way CSX and we did it.

Cars get mis-sorted on railroads, containers get mis-handled at the docks, packages get mis-handled by UPS and FedEx, letters get mis-handled by USPS.

Shipping happens and nobody is perfect.

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Posted by jeffhergert on Tuesday, October 26, 2021 2:52 PM

23 years today on a different railroad.  I've never heard of anyone, management or labor, having ever gotten "talked to" over misrouted cars.  By the time a train hits the first scanner, the misroute will have been assigned a new block destination, even though it's actual destination is still the same.  Unless it's hot, like a car of fence posts*, nobody is going to be to upset. 

It's not that uncommon to also have a stray or two that weren't supposed to be in the train.  That get's picked up and the info passed on to the crew to update their train lists.  Have too many of those types, and then someone will get notified.

I can't say it's happening more with PSR, but with the cuts and changes it's even less likely that they are going to have a switch crew dig out a car that's in track 15 that should've gone to track 14.  Unless it's hot and being watched, it's going to take the scenic route.

Heck, there's probably some in higher managment who would be happy if a misrouted car led to a customer leaving the railroad.

Jeff

* We'll see if anyone catches the meaning.  I'm afraid too many that would catch on may have departed the forums. 

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Posted by rdamon on Tuesday, October 26, 2021 2:21 PM

I think with PSR that is called DDT - 'Dynamic Dwell Time'

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Posted by Doktor No on Tuesday, October 26, 2021 2:07 PM

If, while switching out a train OR building one we have bad cars and they don't get switched out you get a hearing letter in the mail. If it says 15 track it goes into 15 track. When you pull that track to build that train they better be in the right order! A miss built train will get caught at the first reader, signals go out to TM's and YM's get notified and the switch crew gets called on the carpet. At least that's the way CSX and we did it.

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Posted by Gramp on Wednesday, October 20, 2021 5:49 PM

Those cars used to be called "rollers", didn't they?

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Posted by BaltACD on Wednesday, October 20, 2021 10:16 AM

Convicted One
 
CatFoodFlambe
would delierately choose a slow route with lots of interchange activity.    The broker would eventually find a buyer for that particular carload 

If my memory correctly serves, there was an article in Trains magazine several years back, explaining that Roscoe, Snyder, & Pacific was an especially popular bridge for such routings.

At one time Circuitous routing, Reconsignment and Diversion were the hallmarks of distribution of agricultural products from the Pacific Northwest.  Product was shipped from PNW without a buyer, consigned to the shipper on the East Coast.  As the products moved across the country the shippers 'marketing department' would be working on finding buyers at the highest possible price.  Once a buyer was secured, the 'marketing department' would contact the appropriate railroad and issue reconsignment and diversion orders to move the car(s) on a direct routing to the ultimate buyer.

With the carrier combinations that have happened since the enactment of Staggers there are no longer all the 'intermediate carriers' to effect circuitous routing, at least not to the extent that existed pre-Staggers.

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Posted by Convicted One on Wednesday, October 20, 2021 9:47 AM

CatFoodFlambe
would delierately choose a slow route with lots of interchange activity.    The broker would eventually find a buyer for that particular carload

If my memory correctly serves, there was an article in Trains magazine several years back, explaining that Roscoe, Snyder, & Pacific was an especially popular bridge for such routings.

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Posted by jeffhergert on Wednesday, October 20, 2021 1:12 AM

CatFoodFlambe

Years ago it was a common practice for lumber brokers to ship commodity lumber (standard items such as 4x8  1/2" plywood,  finished 2x4, etc.) to a nominal destinations without having sold the cargo.    Often, the would delierately choose a slow route with lots of interchange activity.    The broker would eventually find a buyer for that particular carload, then issue a diversion order to have the car pulled off the initial route and sent to the actual buyer.   I suspect that practice died out with onset of the Staggers Act and would not be the reason this particlar load was batted back & forth?

I unloaded freight cars at a small grocery warehouse in southern Ohio in the late 1970's while I was in high school - i remember getting just such a BN boxcar of canned apple juice that originated in Washington State.   The waybill showed the car was orginally consigned to Philadelphia  via the following route:
BN to Beiber, CA

WP to Salt Lake City

DRGW to Denver

MP to Kansas City

UP to St. Louis

N&W to Toledo

Conrail to Philly

It was pulled off that route at Toledo, given to the DT&I there, taken to the town where the grocery wholesaler was located, and then handed to the B&O to move the final 500 yards to the unloading dock.   It took over five weeks.  Confused   


 

 

UP didn't go to St Louis in the 1970s.  They didn't gain St. Louis until they got the MP in 1982.

--------

In my example, UP isn't the only party to the routing.  BNSF also has a say where the interchange point is going to be.  I almost wonder if they want the longer route to get a better division on the rate.  

Jeff

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Posted by CatFoodFlambe on Tuesday, October 19, 2021 11:43 PM

Years ago it was a common practice for lumber brokers to ship commodity lumber (standard items such as 4x8  1/2" plywood,  finished 2x4, etc.) to a nominal destinations without having sold the cargo.    Often, the would delierately choose a slow route with lots of interchange activity.    The broker would eventually find a buyer for that particular carload, then issue a diversion order to have the car pulled off the initial route and sent to the actual buyer.   I suspect that practice died out with onset of the Staggers Act and would not be the reason this particlar load was batted back & forth?

I unloaded freight cars at a small grocery warehouse in southern Ohio in the late 1970's while I was in high school - i remember getting just such a BN boxcar of canned apple juice that originated in Washington State.   The waybill showed the car was orginally consigned to Philadelphia  via the following route:
BN to Beiber, CA

WP to Salt Lake City

DRGW to Denver

MP to Kansas City

UP to St. Louis

N&W to Toledo

Conrail to Philly

It was pulled off that route at Toledo, given to the DT&I there, taken to the town where the grocery wholesaler was located, and then handed to the B&O to move the final 500 yards to the unloading dock.   It took over five weeks.  Confused   


 

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Posted by Shadow the Cats owner on Tuesday, October 19, 2021 4:27 PM

Well Jeff just like UP and how they are now routinely routing the resins my boss gets.  It goes from Houston to Dallas then over to St Louis then backtrack to Little Rock then finally up to North Platte then down to Kansas City where it finally gets interchanged to the BNSF for delivery to my boss at his SIT yard.  These are flyers either the last 8 shipments all have gone this way.  What should take 3 days maximum is taking between 1 to 2 weeks.  

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Posted by charlie hebdo on Sunday, October 17, 2021 5:39 PM

jeffhergert
Could there me a rational reason for a routing like that?  Sure, but I'm hard pressed to see it.  I know since Stagger's a lot of former interchange points were closed, many physically removed.  But still, that extra 1000 miles seems out of place when they always are looking for

Just goes to show not everything post-Staggers deregulation is so  sensible or efficient.

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Posted by zugmann on Sunday, October 17, 2021 4:16 PM

jeffhergert
There are some managers who feel that the climb to the top requires writing people up for as much as possible.  It's actually gotten better for us in that regard.  The culture has changed a bit for the better, maybe because many of the old school managers have retired.  Maybe because there aren't as many managers left after the PSR purges. 

The old school managers I had just ripped you a new one, but an hour later, everything was fine.  The newer ones are the ones that instantly want to take everything to official discipline levels. 

As far as number of managers?  We must have missed that day in PSR school - it seems like we have more than ever. 

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 Murphy Siding on Sunday, October 17, 2021 3:20 PM

Convicted One

Well, I guess for the ones who get fired, there is some consolation in knowing that there is always a job in construction waiting for them? Whistling

 

Well, the world needs ditch diggers too! Mischief

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Posted by BaltACD on Sunday, October 17, 2021 7:37 AM

jeffhergert
 
Convicted One

Well, I guess for the ones who get fired, there is some consolation in knowing that there is always a job in construction waiting for them? Whistling 

Getting fired on the railroad isn't always the same as getting fired elsewhere.  Usually getting fired is more like being suspended without pay for a period of time.  That time period varies with the offense and if there is a Federally required specific time period.

Getting fired too often could lead to a permanent dismissal but again, depending on the offenses, doesn't happen that often.

There are some managers who feel that the climb to the top requires writing people up for as much as possible.  It's actually gotten better for us in that regard.  The culture has changed a bit for the better, maybe because many of the old school managers have retired.  Maybe because there aren't as many managers left after the PSR purges. 

Jeff

Many if not most railroad labor agreements have some sort of clause that limits maximum discipline suspensions to to 30 days or so.  The carriers in certain instances view the 30 days as a insuficient level of discipline for the particular transgression - thus employees get terminated.

Terminations create additional work for the Local Chairmen of the unions as the have to undertake the work of getting the employee reinstated.  The 'reinstatement process' has multiple step both within the carrier and with external labor boards.  Sometimes the employee is reinstated by the carrier after 6 months or so; sometimes the carrier will continue to fight reinstatement through various labor boards.  Many, but not all, employees that have been terminated are ultimately reinstated - in some cases with some level of back pay.  In most all cases the reinstated employees have their seniority continued without impairment.

Some are terminated with finality and never get reinstated.

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Posted by jeffhergert on Sunday, October 17, 2021 4:29 AM

Convicted One

Well, I guess for the ones who get fired, there is some consolation in knowing that there is always a job in construction waiting for them? Whistling

 

Getting fired on the railroad isn't always the same as getting fired elsewhere.  Usually getting fired is more like being suspended without pay for a period of time.  That time period varies with the offense and if there is a Federally required specific time period.

Getting fired too often could lead to a permanent dismissal but again, depending on the offenses, doesn't happen that often.

There are some managers who feel that the climb to the top requires writing people up for as much as possible.  It's actually gotten better for us in that regard.  The culture has changed a bit for the better, maybe because many of the old school managers have retired.  Maybe because there aren't as many managers left after the PSR purges. 

Jeff

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Posted by Convicted One on Saturday, October 16, 2021 9:48 AM

Well, I guess for the ones who get fired, there is some consolation in knowing that there is always a job in construction waiting for them? Whistling

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Posted by BaltACD on Saturday, October 16, 2021 9:45 AM

Convicted One
 
BaltACD
Different carriers had differnt cultures. 

Some of the stories we've heard here, such as the guy getting fired  just for taking his engine around a wye that he wasn't "qualified" for, even though he was instructed to do so by a superior...doesn't really paint a picture of tolerance. 

As I said - Different carriers, different cultures.  On some carriers that was a firing offense, other carriers might discipline the Supervisor that instructed the crew to do it.  Other carriers might take no notice of the transgression at all.

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Posted by Convicted One on Saturday, October 16, 2021 9:39 AM

BaltACD
Different carriers had differnt cultures.

Some of the stories we've heard here, such as the guy getting fired  just for taking his engine around a wye that he wasn't "qualified" for, even though he was instructed to do so by a superior...doesn't really paint a picture of tolerance. 

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Posted by BaltACD on Saturday, October 16, 2021 7:04 AM

Convicted One
 
Murphy Siding
Meh, I work in th construction industry. Every day sh...tuff happens, and you just deal with it. It's an industry that's not kind to perfectionists 

Some organizations are funny in that regard.  An outfit I put in almost 30 years with were sticklers for getting to the very root of even the smallest ordeal. I think they had some idea that by sifting through the ashes they might prevent XXXX  from ever happening again.

I had enough organizational goodwill that I didn't have to worry about my job security, so on a number of ocassions I would just take the blame to get the inquisition over with.

But, we were not a company looking for reasons to fire people. I get the impressionn  from discussions here that the railroads often are that way.

Different carriers had differnt cultures.  When I was working with CSX the 'story' making the rounds was that no one was 'true' NS employee until they had been fired at least once.  YMMV.

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Posted by Convicted One on Saturday, October 16, 2021 1:03 AM

I think our owner had the view that small problems have simple solutions. But that the more opaque a problem might be, the more obsessed he was in finding the elusive root.  Those of us with serious time used to chuckle among ourselves how intense the fires sometimes burned.

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Posted by Convicted One on Saturday, October 16, 2021 12:58 AM

Murphy Siding
Meh, I work in th construction industry. Every day sh...tuff happens, and you just deal with it. It's an industry that's not kind to perfectionists

Some organizations are funny in that regard.  An outfit I put in almost 30 years with were sticklers for getting to the very root of even the smallest ordeal. I think they had some idea that by sifting through the ashes they might prevent XXXX  from ever happening again.

I had enough organizational goodwill that I didn't have to worry about my job security, so on a number of occasions I would just take the blame to get the inquisition over with.

But, we were not a company looking for reasons to fire people. I get the impression  from discussions here that the railroads often are that way.

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Friday, October 15, 2021 10:28 PM

Convicted One

 

 
jeffhergert
Murphy's car seems to be one of accidental mishandling

 

 

Is that the kind of mistake that would get called out? (eg a heated "how could you let this happen") Or is it inevitable to the point where it's just written off as a bad experience that everyone hopes it doesn't repeat itself?

 

Meh, I work in th construction industry. Every day sh...tuff happens, and you just deal with it. It's an industry that's not kind to perfectionists.

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