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Chicago drowning in trains

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Chicago drowning in trains
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 11, 2005 4:07 PM
Last week’s Economist had an article on Chicago bogging down with 1,200 trains a day, a third of the nation’s rail traffic. It can take days to get freight across town. Unlike airlines, or any efficient logistics operation railroads have no intermediary to route shipments from one carrier to another. Railroads just fax news of arriving trains.

The Chicago Transportation Coordination Office (CTCO) wants to fix this and a planned Chicago Region Environmental and Transportation Efficiency (CREATE) program is waiting for federal funding (which they’ll never get from Bush).

I’d imagine anyone planning logistics at FedEx or WalMart would look at this and wonder why railroads have neglected hubs that connect carriers.

This looks like an obvious business opportunity for logistics entrepreneurs to save railroads and customers a huge amount of time and $ nationwide. Why aren’t railroads a lot more interested.

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 11, 2005 5:23 PM
If that's what the Economist said, then the article is a screed, a diatribe, and arrogant. Or it got its information from a source with an axe to grind or with an undisclosed financial interest in a certain outcome.

What makes you think railroads aren't interested? No insult intended, but if you approach railroads and railroaders with the presumption that they're antiquated, dimwitted, or complacent, I don't think you'll have a positive experience. There are substantive economic reasons that created the way things are done at present. I recognize that street legend says railroads are the way they are because of (check one) venality, stupidity, arrogance, greed, or all of the above, but street legend is self-serving and uninformed.

Would you like to know why railroad transportation is the way it is at Chicago and other gateway cities? If you do, I and others would be delighted to answer.

OS
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 11, 2005 6:28 PM
Sounds like it's time to build a new by pass around the windy city.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 11, 2005 6:35 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by O.S.


Would you like to know why railroad transportation is the way it is at Chicago and other gateway cities? If you do, I and others would be delighted to answer.

Yes I would like to know and I'm probably not the only one.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 11, 2005 8:35 PM
I vaguely remember an article in Trains about 30 years ago dealing with the interchange of cars between the then SF and the NYC. There was the Kankakee line which ran between Streator, IL. and South Bend, IN. which avoided going
into Chicago for interchange.

SF preferred Chicago since they would get more mileage on the shipment and therefore more money.

How short sighted. I believe Mr. Kneiling even agreed with SF.

Now, the Kankakee has portions torn up. How many trains that need to go Chicago today could possibly use this route which would be faster. I don't know. But it seems anything that can be diverted from Chicago would be an improvement.

Sadly, I feel the money won't come forward for what may be cheap solution and reduce at least of a little bit of Chicago's congestion.
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Posted by oltmannd on Friday, February 11, 2005 8:57 PM
There is a whole $2B plan to detangle Chicago. The RRs and the city put it together. It benefits all the roads, Metra, Amtrak and the highways.

But, when you just barely have enough capital to keep things status quo, big projects like this dont' happen. CN, NS and BNSF might be able to scrape up some capital but it would help if CSX and UP could get straightened out. Having just one road opt out makes the whole thing impossible.

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

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 11, 2005 9:14 PM
There's a number of issues here. I don't want to try to summarize the Chicago issue of Trains done two years ago, and if you're interested in Chicago, doing without that issue is like trying to build Boulder Dam without concrete. (Maybe if you had a 900-ton beaver with a 200-foot tail and a big pile of sticks ... )

One of the economic principles of railroading is "distance makes money, terminals cost money." A terminal cannot generate income, it is purely overhead. Thus a railroad spends the least possible money on terminals.

When the terminal also includes an interchange with another railroad, the costs and complexities grow by an order of magnitude. Now there are in effect two or more abutting terminals, each a gigantic money pit, that each have to coordinate the interests of two or more railroads, interests which will be congruent on through traffic and divergent on terminating and originating traffic. It's quite schizophrenic, and there's no way around it -- economics only apportions competing interests, it doesn't make them go away.

Because Chicago historically was more of a origin/destination for traffic than it was a waystation for traffic, there were very large economic disincentives for each railroad to spend money building efficient connections to the other railroads at Chicago. These connections weren't going to be used very much in relation to the use each railroad was going to get from its own main line leading to and from Chicago. So the historic pattern was to build enormous capacity right up to the city, and skimp when it got into the city, leaving somewhat of a moat between the railroads n the city itself. Whether one likes that or not, these companies would have been irrational to do otherwise. A company must spend most of its money on the things that generate most of the revenue.

Today, Chicago still is a huge consumer/originator of traffic. In terms of intermodal lifts each year, it is the number one city in the world, bigger than Hong Kong, Shanghai, Rotterdam, or Los Angeles. So a lot of the traffic going to Chicago is never going to come out the other side. That traffic creates zero incentive for bypasses or connections through the city. Moreover, that very huge weight of terminating traffic pulls a lot of the through traffic into Chicago with it. That's because traffic comes in trainloads, if it's to be moved at a profit, and trains that are short-tonnaged increase costs more than they increase revenues.

Suppose, for instance, Fresno, California, acting as a collecting point for a broad territory in the Central Valley, generates for BNSF enough carload traffic every day to fill a train for Chicago and eastern points, but about 50% of that traffic will stop somewhere in Chicago or its environs. Each Chicago car could conceivably end up on any one of the Class Is, belt lines, or short lines serving Chicago, or about a dozen different railroads -- and many of those railroads have several lines into Chicago. How do you handle this traffic? Your three simplest choices are:

1. Originate one train a day at Fresno, run it into Chicago, break it down there, then deal with getting the eastern carrier cars through Chicago to them. This is essentially the cheapest in terms of labor, but creates some serious delays in Chicago for the through cars. The terminating cars will do pretty well, though (back to favoring yourself first).
2. Originate one train a day at Fresno, run it to Galesburg, hump it, and when there are enough Chicago cars for yourself, run it, enough eastern carrier cars for a full train to NS, run that to NS connection, and ditto for CSX. But NS and CSX have more than one place they go out of Chicago, so Galesburg is going to have to classify the train into blocks for CSX or NS (each block requires its own bowl track). Conceivably this train could bypass Chicago, if and only if there happens to be some junction where CSX or NS can split the blocks apart without backtracking. Then CSX and NS are presented with the problem of sitting on that block until they get full tonnage, or combining it with other blocks from other railroads, or its own Chicago customers, to build a full train for each of its major destinations. That's beginning to sound like a yard, and if that yard is not in Chicago, it's either going to be sending cars backward to a junction in Chicago to get on the right line, or it will only be handling some of the blocks. So CSX or NS are going to have to classify this BNSF traffic at some point in Chicago, or just east of there. Conceivably, Galesburg could build, say, full trains for CSX-Selkirk, CSX-Queensgate, CSX-Evansville, etc.. Now, instead of Galesburg having one track in the bowl for CSX it empties out every few hours, or five tracks for CSX it empties out every 24 hours, it has just given over five or more tracks to CSX that won't empty out for several days. And instead of the cars dwelling in the yard for maybe 24 hours until there's a full trains' worth for CSX, the cars can easily dwell for 72, 96 hours, or more until enough accumulate for a train. (And customers like slow transit times how much?) You could run short-tonnage trains, but your crew costs go through the roof on both your road and on the connection, too, unless you're planning to simply substitute the interchange track for the bowl track, and after three or four days when a train's worth accumulates, CSX comes over and pulls it. If you hold the cars in Galesburg until a full train for a destination accumulates, you also start really increasing your equipment costs, too, because the cars aren't moving -- you just increased the number of cars you need to haul the same amount of freight. Empties will still be needed back in Fresno in the same number every morning.
3. Originate two trains daily at Fresno, one Chicago, and one east, and either double the crew costs to advance the cars at the same schedule -- chewing up twice the mainline capacity on which you can't run something else, or hold the cars in Fresno for 48 hours, average, instead of 24, which sucks up yard space in Fresno, runs up equipment costs, delays freight, etc.

What I'm trying to illustrate with this conundrum -- which is multiplied 10,000-fold by all the permutations of all the different main lines leading to Chicago -- is that there are no easy solutions. Any choice made has huge consequences. If Chicago consumed or generated no traffic, it would be less of a problem, it would look a lot like North Platte, Nebraska, except instead of having in effect five main lines entering from the west and three from the east, it would have 20 or so main lines converging. Dwell times would be pretty bad no matter what you did. However, because Chicago generates and consumes traffic, there's no way to get around running a lot of the trains into the city. And because each of the 20 or so main lines are sending traffic to each of the other 19 main lines, the logical place for a single yard -- to avoid backtracking -- is as close to the core of the city as you can get. If you don't put the yard there, then you start needing two, three, four yards, each one of them its own money pit, and the traffic flows instead of being ganged into one for maximum main line efficiency start getting fractured into several flows, requiring a lot more main track, crews, locomotives, etc.

There are very few traffic flows anywhere in the U.S. that go through Chicago (or could go around it) that are large enough to generate a through train every day, not without tolerating some enormous dwell times in yards. Only the unit coal trains that continue on to Detroit or Ohio or Northern Indiana are truly through trains, along with a very few intermodal and carload trains -- and most of those through carload trains are really Galesburg-Elkhart trains, or the equivalent, which means those cars have lots of dwell they're already carrying. It must be acknowledged that there are several hundred important origin-destination points and several thousand minor origin-destination points in the U.S. and Canada that send significant traffic to and through Chicago every day. Together, their business add up to 1,200 or so freight trains. While that sounds like a lot, individually by origin-destination pair, they each break down to flows of 5, 10, 20 cars a day. That many cars is not enough to build a train that can be operated at a profit.

Railroads make money by assembling many shipments into one collection called a train. Each of those individual shipments is yoked to every other individual shipment. If you want to run cars one at a time, and avoid all this problem with yards, connections, bypasses, terminals, interchanges, dwell time, etc., the transportation world already has a solution for you: it's called a truck. You'll gain time and certainty, and pay more in rate. If you want a low rate, you subordinate the independence of your single car to the interdependence of a train, and pay more in time, uncertainty, and unreliability. Unless you as a shipper can generate your traffic in unit-train quantities, you cannot expect the independence of movement of a truck at the low cost of a train.

OS
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Posted by BaltACD on Friday, February 11, 2005 10:45 PM
OS - well presented

I might add that the Class I carriers have and and continue to implement system wide blocking schemes that utilize Gateways other than Chicago to all extents practical. However, as opposed to airlines, routing a shipment from New Englad to the Pacific Northwest via DFW, the railroads need to keep the operating milages as short as reasonably practical. Gateways other than Chicago also have their own set of capacity constraints.

Wall Streeet and it's mind set that the railroads are an archaic and dying form of transportation have directly caused the capacity constraints by pricing capital dearly. Railroads and not like the Dot.Com industry that can turn paper profits from minimal investment; railroads require real investment into real objects (Engines, Cars, Tracks, Signals, and employees to operate and maintain it all)....such investment in the Wall Stree World doesn't return itself 5 times over in the first year and is thus percieved tobe a poor investment and rated accordingly.

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, February 11, 2005 11:33 PM
Thanks OS for a clear explanation of the physical constraints of routing through Chicago but the thing about the article that’s bothered me for a week was this sentence. Unlike the airlines, railroads don't have an oversight agency to co-ordinate their traffic: each of them uses its own dispatchers, who sometimes send faxes to their counterparts to let them know trains are coming. That’s an IT problem not a physical problem. Before a container ship arrives in port a plan is drawn up to unload, transfer, and reload the ship in the shortest possible time. It looks like no one is responsible for this when trains arrive in Chicago. If that’s the case, inter-railroad information technology would expedite cargo through Chicago, to some extent, without building bypasses or running short-tonnage trains.
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, February 12, 2005 12:24 AM
Ever wonder how a B747 can fall out of the sky if only one part breaks? It's because all the other parts can't carry on without it. Railroads are no different. One thing breaks, and the whole system starts to grind to a halt. The railroad version of flight is the fixed guideway: you can't steer around it and continue on as if nothing happened, and you can't do without it. Plus, the locomotives, cars, and crew are all already being figured for future trains, so you're affecting future trains, not just the ones you have on hand. Railroads run 24 hours a day -- they have no makeup time every night like an airline or your average workplace, where the timer can be reset to zero for the next morning and you start over and have chronological forgiveness for everything that went out of kilter the day before.

And when something goes wrong on a railroad, it isn't right there next to you in the office where you can reach out and grab it. Or out on the factory floor under lights, temperature control, and clean conditions. It's 423 miles away from you, 20 minutes on foot from the nearest 4WD road, in the middle of the night, in the mud, in a pouring rainstorm, in a windstorm, the power has failed, the microwave carrier for the radio has failed, and your nearest maintainer has 92 minutes left on his hours of service, it's a Saturday morning, the roadmaster is on vacation, the signal maintainer is laid up with a broken ankle, and you've got 18 trains holding while you're wondering what the hell to do next as one of them reports 24 inches of water over the rail and another reports a bank failure along a cresting river. Standing still starts to seem like a bad idea, but do you dare move one of them ... right into a washout?

Oh -- I'm not dreaming this up. It describes one night a few weeks ago. It wasn't all that unusual a night on anyone's railroad.

Ever throw a rock into a small, still puddle, and see the ripples reflect and refract for the next minute? Write a mathematical formula that predicts the magnitude, frequency, and position of each wave crest one minute into the future, accounting for all the variations in the shoreline and water depth of that pond. Essentially it describes how one car can affect one railroad on one day. Now drop 100,000 pieces of gravel into a good sized pond all at once, and write a mathematical formula that predicts the surface of the pond 1 second, 5 seconds, 10 seconds, and one minute later. That describes the typical day on a Class I railroad. We know in broad terms what's going to happen -- a bunch of ripples. In specific terms, no one has a clue where each wave crest will be, when.

Mathematically speaking, railroads are nonlinear dynamic systems that give rise to chaotic and unpredictable results that oscillate within broad boundaries. Every single variable has influence on every other variable because of the nature of the fixed guideway. Consider these unpredictabilities that are all in play for one train on one mile of average track at any given instant:

1. Discontinuity of track -- broken rail, washout, track buckle, wide gauge, etc.
2. Foreign object on track -- boulder, large animal, motor vehicle, trespasser
3. Failure of locomotives -- each a system of many thousand dependent parts
4. Failure of any one of 100+ cars -- each a system of a few hundred dependent parts
5. Failure of signal system -- itself reliant on long-distance communication systems
6. Failure of line power -- no signal power results
7. Failure of human crew -- they fall asleep, don't show up, miss a signal, etc.
8. Failure of dispatcher -- he focuses on something else, gets behind, etc.
9. Failure of fuel -- it happens!

And so forth: over 100,000 interdependent parts all present in a single train and a single mile of track of which the failure of any one has the substantial if not absolute potential to stop that train, and thus affect every other train to a distance of hundreds of miles away. If the train is stopped, for say, just one hour, the crew, for instance, now ties up one hour later, which means your ability to use them again 12 hours later has been altered. It affects every train it connects with. It affects every train it meets with. It may result in some of the cars missing connections, dwelling in a yard 24 hours, occupying a track the YM would usually use for something else, spilling into effects on how that yard works, delaying five more trains a few minutes each, etc.

This page describes some of the efforts to describe non-linear dynamic systems with math: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logistic_map Don't ask me to explain it; this level of math is about as far as I can grasp in a very general sense.

If it was as simple as an IT problem or a central dispatching office, the railroads would have done it already. What would be the point of staffing a facility to consider information that can't be predicted? Some insufferable twit from the Economist shows up, sees a fax machine instead of some fancy workstations, and tut-tuts at the ignorance of these poor backward railroaders. Perhaps his self-importance blinded him to the possibility that railroads do it this way because anything more elaborate is a waste of money that would create more problems than it solved. But, having already filled his head with all the knowledge he'll ever need, he simply compares railroads against airlines, like railroads are some sort of brutish stone-age tribe and airlines the "civilized world." I think I'd like to ask him, "If airlines are so clever and sophisticated, how is it that their net profit since Wilbur Wright fluttered into the air is $0.00?

OS
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Posted by dehusman on Saturday, February 12, 2005 1:22 AM
Garyaiki said:
"Before a container ship arrives in port a plan is drawn up to unload, transfer, and reload the ship in the shortest possible time. It looks like no one is responsible for this when trains arrive in Chicago. "
Every railroad has a plan for every train. When it gets to a yard there is a classification system in place. Every destination is served by a different train. If a train arrives with a car for the ABC RR, then the car will leave on train 102. If a train arrives with a ca for the ABC RR, then the car will depart on train 102 tomorrow too. There is a plan in place.
Part of the problem is sheer volume. The other is that with a container ship the cans drive off by themselves. Railroad cars don't do that.
The container ship analogy breaks down because its not the same operation. A steamship docking is INTERmodal, the railway interchange in Chicago is INTRAmodal. That makes a big difference in the dynamics.

Dave H.

Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, February 12, 2005 1:34 AM
Short and sweet, Mr. Husman.

OS
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Posted by ericsp on Saturday, February 12, 2005 1:39 AM
If one has to drown, drowning in trains is not a bad way to go.

"No soup for you!" - Yev Kassem (from Seinfeld)

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Posted by greyhounds on Saturday, February 12, 2005 12:10 PM
They've been trying to fix rail congestion in Chicago ever since the railroads got to Chicago. If you want to see trains standing still, this is the place. I ride in every workday on Metra. Lots of waiting freights.

A real hang up is Tower A-2 at Western Avenue. That's where the old Milwaukee Road commuter lines, plus the new North Central service, cross the old C&NW west commuter line.

East of the tower the tracks are seven wide, 3 for the MILW and 4 for the CNW.
Topping the whole thing off is that the storage/maintenance facility for the old CNW trains is west of the interlocking. So even trains that run other ex-CNW routes have to go through the interlocking before and after their inbound/outbound runs. There are a lot of stopped trains waiting at the junction as I ride through.

Right at tower A-2 there is an industry that actually still uses boxcars. It must be fun/expensive/interesting to get those cars in and out.

The comment about "Good luck getting money to fix this from the Bush Administration" is ignorance. For the Federal Government to fund this they would have to take the money from other economic development in the private sector. That is, they'd have to tax it away from some other purpose.

The problem is, they have absolutely no, none, nada, zero way of knowing what they are taking it away from. And they can't begin to measure the cost/benifits of doing such a thing. That's why the gubernmint should stay The Hell! out of allocating economic resources.

Absent gubernmint intrustion, investment capital is basically allocated on an auction basis. That lets each applicant for capital decide how much the allocation is worth to him/her. It isn't perfect, nothing is, but it sure beats a bunch of politicians deciding which projects get funded.

If an improvement in Chicago, or anywhere else, is worthwhile it will be privately financed. Otherwise, it just is less costly to let the trains sit.
"By many measures, the U.S. freight rail system is the safest, most efficient and cost effective in the world." - Federal Railroad Administration, October, 2009. I'm just your average, everyday, uncivilized howling "anti-government" critic of mass government expenditures for "High Speed Rail" in the US. And I'm gosh darn proud of that.
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Posted by eolafan on Saturday, February 12, 2005 12:34 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by BNSF railfan.

Sounds like it's time to build a new by pass around the windy city.


You may find it interesting that the EJ&E is very much busier in the past two years than ever before, serving like the bypass you speak about. I heard a rumor last weekend about them looking at possibly double tracking "The J" in the future to accomodate more bypass traffic, but it was just a rumor. The UP and CN are using the J right now in addition to the J's own trains. I live about a mile from their main and hear lots of trains at night blowing for the Rt. 34 crossing. Also, when I cross Rt. 34 I see their approach lit signals glowing much more often than ever before.

PS: Chicago drowing in trains may be not so good for the railroads but very good for us railfans.
Eolafan (a.k.a. Jim)
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, February 12, 2005 2:45 PM
Good explanations for why there’s a problem. I’ll throw in another quote from the article. Air-freight tonnage in Chicago is projected to double in the next 25 years; the number of lorries coming through the area is expected to rise by 80%; rail volume should almost double in two decades. And there will be a compounding effect from the fast growth of inter-modal transport (switching freight from one “mode” to another, such as train to truck or aircraft) which tends to send even more traffic to hubs like Chicago
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, February 12, 2005 3:05 PM
Gary: That is essentially true. I think their inclusion of "aircraft" in the sentence shows they don't know the difference between freight value and freight tonnage. A huge percentage of freight value moves by air, but the effects of that freight on the highway and rail infrastructure is almost nil.

Greyhounds: I'm suprised to see you advance this argument. Your other posts show great awareness of complexity. You would propose that all the intermodal traffic reaching Chicago should simply be rubbered from one side to another, each truck paying a fuel tax that is penny or so on the dollar of its actual use of roadway resources, and that the air pollution and subsequent impact on everyone else's health care, building maintenance costs, etc., should be foisted onto the people paying for the health care and building maintenance?

Is there ANY government expenditure you think justified? National defense -- shouldn't that be paid for in user fees, too? I realize that your insistence on belittling those who disagree with you by calling it "gubermint" means you're probably not open to different opinions, but I'll give you the benefit of any doubt.

I agree, in the long run, the free market will work just fine. Traffic and pollution will drive people out of Chicago, real estate prices will collapse, and the railroads will find it easy to build connections across the deserted land once occupied by a thriving metropolis. The loss of wealth will be enormous, the loss of productivity will be enormous, but measured against the threat to a sacred ideology, a trillion dollars here or there seems a cheap price indeed. My friend, I don't like the abuse of the free market by people using the government to extract money from my wallet to put in their wallet any more than you do -- and I spend a lot of time in my job analyzing the negative (and sometimes positive) effects of subsidy, regulation, and taxation, but in my view, the whole point of life isn't to erect a shrine to the free market, it's to be happy, healthy, free of sin, and free of fear -- you know, the preface to the U.S. Constitution. The free market isn't the end we seek, it's a means to our end.

OS
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, February 12, 2005 3:31 PM
Wondering about the growth projections. Are people going to continue to load up their lives with so much physical stuff? Will the transportation component trend downward as technological change continues? Projection TV's become thin membranes?
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, February 12, 2005 3:46 PM
Tom: Incisive question. Many people thought that the gross ton-mile growth we're experiencing wouldn't happen, because heavy capital goods and durable consumer goods would achieve market saturation, then become more durable, nearly eliminating new installations and reducing replacement needs. That is, as soon as everyone bought a washing machine, we wouldn't be shipping so much weight across the country -- just a few replacement machines as the old ones wore out.

That was pretty naive thinking. In fact, heavy and durable goods did decline, once everyone had one of everything, but in the meantime, transportation capacity had been built to haul all that stuff, and now it had spare capacity. That allowed people to leverage that spare capacity and transportation productivity to source things from a lot farther away that we used to produce locally. So what we've quit shipping in terms of heavy goods we've filled right back up with things like food, clothing, paper goods, and other consumables. To leverage labor costs, the U.S. and Canada will continue to source things from farther and farther away, and transportation GTMs will continue to grow. In the very long run, wages in foreign countries will rise a little, while ours fall off a cliff to meet them at the bottom, and these labor advantages of foreign countries will evaporate. But we'll still have a huge transportation infrastructure in place which can move things very cheaply, so then natural geographic advantages will come into play.

While there might be a day in the future when averaged GTMs begin to decline, I don't think it will be in my lifetime. Wages are already on the decline, though.

OS
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, February 12, 2005 3:59 PM
Good insights O.S.
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, February 13, 2005 1:29 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by BNSF railfan.

Sounds like it's time to build a new by pass around the windy city.


There already is one, and it was built 100 years ago... The EJ&E. The other roads, and even the EJ&E itself, are finally starting to take advantage of the route around Chicago. Hard to believe, but for decades, EJ&E itself was actually against allowing bridge traffic. But with the continued congestion and the expansion of the city, they've finally come around, and are actually building up the system. New outer hubs like Logistics in Joliet will start bypassing the inner city altogether. This is why they've held onto it for so long. But the payoff will be huge. And no, contrary to the rumors that have gone around for decades, nobody is buying it.

Dave
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, February 13, 2005 2:20 PM
I wish I were as confident of the EJ&E's becoming a true belt line as you are, Dave. I'm just not seeing what you're seeing. The fundamental problem is that most of the yards are deep inside the EJ&E belt, will not and cannot move outside the belt for good economic reason, and once the traffic is beyond the belt, backtracking isn't going to happen -- not so much because of the added circuit length, but because it would require doubling of capacity on the main lines between the yards and the belt. In the meetings I attend in Chicago, the EJ&E is rarely even mentioned, and the CREATE project essentially doesn't include it. I agree that traffic will grow on the EJ&E, but not by leaps and bounds. There just aren't that many trains that arrive in Chicago that actually go through Chicago, untouched.

OS
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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, February 14, 2005 2:01 PM
The following are some of the projects that the Railroads operating in the Chicago have planned to enhance capacity and velocity.

QUOTE: BELTWAY CORRIDOR PROJECTS

B-1 CP double mainline connection to Beltway at B12

B-4 Install TCS signaling on all tracks CP LaGrange - CP Hill. Includes upgrade of 21 runner to mainline.

B-15 Install TCS between CP Harvey and Dolton

B-2 Construct new main on UP: Elmhurst-Provo Jct and upgradeIHB connection to 25 mph.

B-3 Install a second parallel connection between the IHB and Proviso Yard through the Melrose Connection to facilitate simultaneous moves.

B-5 Install Universal crosover, to include switches and signals, at CP Broadview, and power connection to the CNIC

B-6 Construct 2nd southwest connection between IHB and BNSF. Install single left crossover for BNSF to Argo

B-7 Install new interlocked northeast connection at CP Canal.

B-8 Upgrade TCS signalling Argo to CP Canal. Note: Costs included in B5, B7, and B8

B-11 Add Additional Mainline CP 123rd St to CP Ridge.

B-10 Add Additional Mainline CP Ridge to CP 87th St.

B-12 Add Additional Mainline CP Francisco to CP 123rd St St

B-14 Construct double track connection between GTW and IC routes into Markham Yard

B-16 Install new interlocked southwest connection between CN and UP/CSXT

B-13 Upgrade IHB-CN connection at Blue Is Jct.

B-9 Provide double track connection,BOCT to BRC, East / West Corridor. Project includes crossovers at 71st St.

EAST-WEST CORRIDOR PROJECTS

EW-1 Constuct 2 new main tracks, reconstruct thoroughfare, and rearrange connections.

EW-2 Improve track & signals for flexibility of routes from 80th St to Forest Hill & 74th St.

EW-3 Re-align Pullman Jct. to incorporate BRC and NS mains from Pullman to 80th Street

EW-5 Install interlocked southwest connection between CN and BRC at Lemoyne

EW-4 Improve connection from East-West Corridor to NS Mainline at CP 509



PASSENGER PROJECTS

P-4 Install interlocked southwest connection between CN and NS

P-1 Grade separate Metra and NS

P-2 Grade separate Metra and BRC and connect Metra to Rock Island route.

P-3 Grade separate Metra and BOCT. Impacts East - West and Western Ave Corridors.

P-5 Grade Separate CN over CSX / NS. Impacts Western Ave Corridor

P-6 Grade Separate CN over IHB Impacts Beltway Corridor

P-7 Grade Separate Metra over IHB. Impacts Beltway Corridor

P-8 Grade Separate CN over BNSF Impacts Western Ave Corridor

P-9 Grade Separate CN over BRC

P-10 Grade Separate CN over UP

WESTERN AVENUE CORRIDOR PROJECTS

P-3

WA-2 Install TCS signaling on BOCT between Ogden Jct and 75th Street (Forest Hills)

WA-1 Re-align & Signalize Ogden Jct for double track connection from UP to BOCT & CJ Mains

WA-3 Install TCS signalling CJ tracks between Ogden Jct and Cp518, add additional mainline along Ashland Ave Yard, and extension of Yard Switching Lead

WA-4 Construct connection directly linking BNSF Chicago and Chillicothe Subs. Ash Street interlocking done in conjunction with CN to facilitate WA-7

WA-5 Upgrade track, signal, and reconfigure Corwith Interlocking and remote CN Corwith Tower

WA-6 Upgrade track, switches, and signalize BNSF track between Corwith Jct. and end of double track.

WA-7 Install interlocked northwest connection between Western Avenue Corridor and CN Joliet Line

WA-8 Automate/interlock, upgrade & repair IC/NS/BOCT manual crossing. Automate & Interlock Westend Ashland Yard . Connect BOCT #239 to CJ. Upgrade track and signals Corwith Jct. East to end of double track.

WA-9 Construct 2nd interlocked northeast connection between BOCT and BRC.

WA-10 Install universal interlocked connections between BOCT and CN to facilitate directional running.

WA-11 Upgrade and reconfigure Dolton interlocking



The eventual implementation of these plans will take many years and the investment of Billions of dollars of private investment.






Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

  • Member since
    December 2001
  • From: Crozet, VA
  • 1,049 posts
Posted by bobwilcox on Monday, February 14, 2005 2:17 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by BaltACD

The eventual implementation of these plans will take many years and the investment of Billions of dollars of private investment.

If this happens it will take billions but I think doing it with private investment will just not happen. BNSF, CN, CPRS, CSXT, NS and UP have many many other more rewarding projects to soake up their scarce capital money. However, this could be a good platform to restart big public investments in rail infrastructure.





Bob
  • Member since
    May 2004
  • From: Valparaiso, In
  • 5,921 posts
Posted by MP173 on Monday, February 14, 2005 9:50 PM
BaltACD:

Where did you find that list?

That is some serious pork, Chicago style!

ed
  • Member since
    April 2003
  • 305,205 posts
Posted by Anonymous on Monday, February 14, 2005 10:27 PM
Vote early, vote often!

I don't consider it pork. It's a bare bones project. There's nothing I can see in that list that shouldn't be, and a lot that isn't in it that should be. It's essential work, and it will have positive results that will be significant to every consumer in North America.

I was in error when I picked up the number "1,200" from the original post in this topic and said it was freight trains. It's actually 500; the other 700 are passenger. (I reread the reports that are now buried in my office). If you figure there are 20 main lines into Chicago, then there would only be an average of 25 train per day per line. If everything was perfectly balanced -- each line shared equal traffic with each other line in Chicago --each line shares with each of the other 19 only 1.3 trains per day in each direction. While the traffic is of course anything but equally balanced, this gives some indication why there aren't going to be that many through trains through Chicago, and why there will be a lot of cars coming off any one route that are split among many other routes.

Five hundred trains sounds like a lot, but what's REALLY a lot is the number of combinations of routes: 190. That's the nature of a hub, and it's why Chicago resembles a tangle of yarn that can't be untangled -- only managed.

OS
  • Member since
    May 2003
  • From: US
  • 25,292 posts
Posted by BaltACD on Tuesday, February 15, 2005 4:11 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173

BaltACD:

Where did you find that list?

That is some serious pork, Chicago style!

ed



There are only 42 projects listed.....the reality is that there could very easily be 142 projects or more, because of the complexity of Chicago's mission in the railroad industry.

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

  • Member since
    October 2003
  • From: Milwaukee & Toronto
  • 929 posts
Posted by METRO on Tuesday, February 15, 2005 5:17 PM
What about the Feds providing incentives to creating a consolidated belt line around Chicago. Maybe paving the way for a merger between several of the smaller players like EJ&E, South Shore Line, Harbor ect. I think some centralization could help make a true belt line economical and realistic.

Also, there's one more thing to add to the mess: Metra wants to expand north and has been in talks with the state of Wisconsin and particularly the city of Milwaukee to create a system in South Eastern Wisconsin. The problem is that the line north to Milwaukee is already a very busy two track main and there is no room to lay more parallel lines once you get into urban areas. This could create a northern bottleneck with the CP main having Amtrak, Metra and heavy CP traffic at all times.

~METRO
  • Member since
    April 2003
  • 305,205 posts
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, February 15, 2005 6:36 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by METRO


Also, there's one more thing to add to the mess: Metra wants to expand north and has been in talks with the state of Wisconsin and particularly the city of Milwaukee to create a system in South Eastern Wisconsin. The problem is that the line north to Milwaukee is already a very busy two track main and there is no room to lay more parallel lines once you get into urban areas. This could create a northern bottleneck with the CP main having Amtrak, Metra and heavy CP traffic at all times.

~METRO

Doesn't Metra plan to restore the Kenosha line to Milwaukee as well?
  • Member since
    April 2003
  • 305,205 posts
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, February 15, 2005 6:44 PM
METRO: In effect, the rail industry IS asking the federal government for incentives for creating a belt line, except instead of going around the city, it goes through the city for reasons I've already elaborated in this thread. IHB and BRC, as agents of the Class Is -- they are owned by the Chicago Class Is -- are fully integrated into Chicago operations already. They all sit in the same office in the same building. There isn't any point to rearranging deck chairs; that just creates turmoil and confusion. EJ&E, for reasons known only to itself, prefers not to participate in the Chicago Transportation Coordination Office.

South Shore Line doesn't really figure into any of the line-haul freight picture for Chicago now or in the future. It is not laid out or engineered in a way that would make it useful, though it's right of way could be incorporated in some future scheme if someone has a few hundred million dollars to pay for it. It's an interurban/switching road, not a line-haul or terminal road. It wouldn't work.

There is room to add a third main track to CPR between Chicago and Milwaukee. It would just cost money. But before that was necessary, considerable capacity could be added with additional 60-mph crossovers, long leads at stations, etc.

OS

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