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Breaking News BNSF dispatchers on Strike

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Posted by arbfbe on Friday, March 4, 2005 4:21 PM
JOdom'

So why is it the union that srewed up the lives of innocent parties? It takes two or more to tangle and you have no idea of what the railroad management might have done to precipitate the walkout. So far the only news I have found about the reason for the strike is here;

http://www.ble.org/pr/news/headline.asp?id=12953

Don't let the union website address scare you the story is from the Fort Worth newspaper and is posted witout any union spin or comment.

It does not even suggest the BNSF denies there is a dispute. This is for public dissemination and the reality is probably a lot more messy. The railroads are so understaffed it is amazing. They are planning on new technology to reduce the numbers of dispatchers and others to reduce the total numbers of employees they need. Unfortunately, they enacted the job reductions before the installed the technology.
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Posted by SALfan on Friday, March 4, 2005 3:56 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by BaltACD

QUOTE: Originally posted by JOdom

Ever heard the old saying, "Your rights stop at the end of my nose"?


You nose stops at the entrance to my life and my wallet!


I don't deny for a minute that railroads treat their employees like crap. And believe me, I'm in the same boat as those railroad people - if I could find a better situation I would, in a heartbeat. That isn't feasible, so I'm going to wait it out and retire ASAP, even though I'll have to work at something else afterwards.

That said, NOTHING GIVES THE DISPATCHERS THE RIGHT TO SCREW UP THE LIVES OF INNOCENT THIRD PARTIES. If you have a dispute with the railroads, fight it out amongst yourselves and LEAVE ME OUT OF IT. There's more than enough aggravation in my life already.
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Posted by AntonioFP45 on Friday, March 4, 2005 3:10 PM
Having worked at a transit company for 15 years I could easily picture the types of abuses that can occur on a railroad. For several years I thought unions were obsolete until my fellow co-workers were regularly threatened and intimidated, by new aggressive managers, to violate written contract agreements and work to the point of fatigue. Of course, if an accident occured as a result, it was just the worker's negligence and he or she was hung-to-dry.

I've spoken to professional railroaders and one of the common themes I keep hearing is that the top brass are too far removed from the lower ranks to really know or care what's actually going on. People in the lower ranks often don't even know what the company Vice President or Board members look like. This has always been my point that mega-mergers have this major flaw.

Even back in the 70s there were strikes sometimes, but it seemed that communication between the ranks was much better with smaller Class One roads, like the Rio Grande, Southern or SCL. Railroad presidents like Graham Claytor or Prime Osborn were known for touring their systems and making contact with employees. Simple actions like this helped the work envrionment.

With the inevitable changes, America has really slid down since then. The public will be angry with those dispatchers, but we can't dismiss a hard-charging management team's tactics either.

"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"

 


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Posted by arbfbe on Friday, March 4, 2005 2:33 PM
Eolafan,

What a simple black and white lifestyle you live in. Would it be that life on the railroads were so simple. Work less for more pay. The Dispatchers are not asking for more pay though the railroads have beed dumping more and more work on them for decades now. Management wants it all their way and will violate the spirit of the labor agreement as well as the specific language of the contract to get it. Due to court decisions and government edict railroad labor organizations can only walk off the job for "major disputes" which translates to contract negotiation issues. Not for safety, not for personal welfare, not on a whim. You see how quickly BNSF was able to force the dispatchers back to work in this instance.

I have two suggestions for you. Check your anti union bias at the forum door. To get a better appreciation of the issues involved make your next move to a career in railroad dispatching. Almost all of the major railroads are short and training is available. It might even pay more than what you are making now.
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Posted by eolafan on Friday, March 4, 2005 1:49 PM
Obviously we have let loose some real emotions here folks, but that is not suprising when some people are involved who are frustrated with their professional situaiton and can not / will not do anything about it but to lash out at the company they are employed by and wi***hey were not, and of course lash out as well at the customers of that comapny who do not control their personal situations but are impacted in a negative way by the frustrations of the company employees.[banghead]
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Posted by BaltACD on Friday, March 4, 2005 1:19 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by JOdom

Ever heard the old saying, "Your rights stop at the end of my nose"?


You nose stops at the entrance to my life and my wallet!

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

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Posted by eolafan on Friday, March 4, 2005 11:30 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by JOdom

There's a lot about my job that is miserable. I've made the decision to stick with it and retire at the first opportunity. Apparently most railroaders have made the same or similar decision. If it's that terrible, leave. If the pay makes the misery bearable, stay and quit whining. Too many people are like a dog whining because he's lying on a sharp rock; he keeps whining because he's too lazy to get up.

If the dispatchers want to strike to get management's attention, that's fine with me - AS LONG AS THEIR ACTION DOESN'T ADD MISERY TO MY LIFE. Ever heard the old saying, "Your rights stop at the end of my nose"?


THANKS A LOT, YOUR POINTS SUPPORT MY CONTENTIONS EXACTLY.
Eolafan (a.k.a. Jim)
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Posted by SALfan on Friday, March 4, 2005 10:59 AM
There's a lot about my job that is miserable. I've made the decision to stick with it and retire at the first opportunity. Apparently most railroaders have made the same or similar decision. If it's that terrible, leave. If the pay makes the misery bearable, stay and quit whining. Too many people are like a dog whining because he's lying on a sharp rock; he keeps whining because he's too lazy to get up.

If the dispatchers want to strike to get management's attention, that's fine with me - AS LONG AS THEIR ACTION DOESN'T ADD MISERY TO MY LIFE. Ever heard the old saying, "Your rights stop at the end of my nose"?
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Posted by spbed on Friday, March 4, 2005 9:16 AM
Well I am no longer a commuter nor did I ever work for a freight RR but maybe I am incorrect vut are not dispatchers covered by some craft union & at this moment that union has a signed agreement with the BNSF? If I am correct then actually the dispatcher strike was illegal the way I see it. [?]


QUOTE: Originally posted by coborn35

QUOTE: Originally posted by JOdom

The striking dispatchers should be locked into a large room with the commuters they delayed. No future dispatchers would repeat that nonsense, because none of the strikers would survive.

Hey, buddy, their just fighting for their rights and trying to get a decent salary and good hours, come on. That was really harsh. I take it you are a commuter and dont work on a freight railroad. I can tell because you obviously have a crappy attitude about people who work on freight railroads and want fair pay and fair working hours. Not trying to p.o. any body but those are my feelings.

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Posted by eolafan on Friday, March 4, 2005 8:56 AM
OK, I will take another approach here. I apperciate that many of you can not simply quit your jobs as you have mortgages to pay and kids to feed, SO DO I...and I appreciate that you all work hard for your salaries, SO DO I...and I appreciate your point about having worked hard to earn the rights you now have, SO HAVE I.

I have worked in my current position (not a railroad) for over 14 years now and it keeps me traveling away from home about 65-70% of the time and I DON'T LIKE IT, but it is the job I have chosen and I feel obligated to do the job as best I can until I am ready to move on (if it comes to that). Would I like to sleep in my own bed each and every night, SURE WOULD, but I can't and still earn the money they pay me each month, so I continue to do the job well. Do I keep my eyes and ears open for alternate opportunities that would possibly combine more money and a more "normal" work/family mix, YES I DO...and so should you...but until then, DO THE JOB YOU WERE HIRED TO DO AND WHICH YOU ACCEPTED AND ARE TAKING A SALARY TO DO...AND P-L-E-A-S-E STOP GRIPING ABOUT NOT HAVING ANY CHOICES, we all have choices, perhaps not attractive ones, but choices none the less. AGAIN, IF YOU DON'T LIKE THE ENVIRONMENT YOU WORK UNDER, QUIT OR SIMPLY SHUT UP, BUT PLEASE DON'T TAKE YOUR PERSONAL FRUSTRATIONS OUT ON THE INNOCENT COMMUTERS OR RAILRAOD CUSTOMERS WHO INDIRECTLY PAY YOUR WAGES, they don't deserve it! Also, strikes frequently do not garner the strikers much support from the general public and can hurt the unions long term. Take for example the New York City garbage collectors strike in the late 1960's...they thought they would hold all the cards as the public would get behind their cause and force the city to settle and get the garbage off of the streets (believe me that it was a real mess, I lived there at the time), but the real result was the public being anti-union as a result and the bottom line was that the union for the collectors did not get nearly the results for their membership that they had banked on...same thing can happen when you alienate commuters, Amtrak riders, and freight customers.

I believe I have offered enough of my opinions and will now leave it up to fate (that of the union members and of the commuters/customers of the railroads)...LET THE CHIPS FALL WHERE THEY MAY!
Eolafan (a.k.a. Jim)
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Posted by zardoz on Friday, March 4, 2005 7:36 AM
Just think of the potential excitement if the dispatcher's union had decided to do a nationwide strike on all railroads!

I'd be willing to bet that the conditions that led to the strike are not that much different on other railroads.

Although, perhaps a nationwide strike might not be such a good idea--think of what happened to the air traffic controllers.

Too bad MWH is no longer posting; I bet he could have given us a good perspective on the situation.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, March 4, 2005 5:26 AM
Just get up and quit you say. OK..Let's do just that. Four pm on a weekday afternoon, and the whole lot of dispatchers have all found other "fair paying jobs" at Pizza King, dispatching tasty pies throughout the land. Meanwhile, the railroad, in one swell foop, has found that there is no one except a few management folks to dispatch one of the busiest railroads in the country. The hours of service laws say that they can only work 12 hours at a time. But this is an emergency so they're there for perhaps 16 hours. Now they're fatigued beyond belief, and someone creates a head-on wreck. How long would it take the railroad to train and qualify hundreds of new dispatchers at once and keep the railroad running?
In order to be a train dispatcher, or any other craft in railroading you have to be dedicated. Dedication to duty doesn't include the phrase,"Just quit." As time has gone on in this society, many areas of employment have become overburdened with responsibility. Simplistic answers have never solved much, but created a whole lot more. Not necessarily for the positive.

Mitch
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, March 4, 2005 4:13 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by eolafan

I've said it before and I will say it yet again...NOBODY FORCED THEM TO TAKE THEIR JOBS AND THEIR SALARIES, AND IF THEY WANT TO QUIT AND GO ON TO A "BETTER" JOB SOMEWHERE ELSE...GO FOR IT! I have gotten tired of former jobs that I did not feel were paying a fair wage, and I quit and moved on, but I did not strike and screw things up for my (former) employer, I SIMPLY QUIT, and these folks have that right as well...I DON'T KNOW WHY THEY WON'T EXERCISE THAT RIGHT...perhaps it's because they really like their jobs????


We as labor have won the right to organize and bargain for a better situation at the work place. And through collective bargaining we help the employer understand what a fair wage is, along with some basic rights like safety and security on the job, which determines working conditions.

I'm sorry, but everything that you've written so far, has been written before. Many years before, these are the same old tired phrases used 70 to 100 years ago by anti-union folks.

Get some new material, please!

Jim - Lawton, NV MP 236
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, March 4, 2005 3:46 AM
QUOTE: Frankly folks I personally have no toleracne for what seems here to be a "WORK LESS, GET PAID MORE" attitude and that same attitude of the unions in general (oh, boy am I going to stir up a hornets nest here). The way I was raised by my parents (my Dad was a union member in a blue collar profession by the way), was that you got paid a fair wage for a fair days work and if you didn't like what you were getting paid, YOU WERE FREE TO QUITE YOUR JOB AND FIND A NEW ONE AT ANY TIME.


First off, lets get some stuff straight here, most important is a job action such as a walk-out (strike) is the last thing a union and its membership wants. Fact is that most (98%) contract negotiation or grievances are solved without any jobs actions.

Next, the only tool that labor has is a job action, the act of withholding work from the employer. Over the last 30 years and the erosion of labor law protection from the federal government, the strike is labors only tool left.

You assume that you know what the issue was about, and then summarize it for us "trains forums" members by saying something like, lets see - quote: "WORK LESS, GET PAID MORE" as the issue over this stoppage. The only report for the reason for this stoppage in the accounts I've read is a BNSF management spokespersons quoted as follows:

"The walkout was over a dispute concerning personal leave, according to BNSF spokesman *** Russack."

The above quote from BNSF's *** Russack in no way equates to your "WORK LESS, GET PAID MORE" summation.

Then you go on to make this statement:

"that you got paid a fair wage for a fair days work and if you didn't like what you were getting paid, YOU WERE FREE TO QUITE YOUR JOB AND FIND A NEW ONE AT ANY TIME." This is completely managements answer to the world of employment, this not any statement that would be spoken by any rank and file bother or sister.

This job action by BNSF represented "American Train Dispatchers Association" employees was not done lightly, but it was planned to optimize its affect. The union knew there would be an injunction against the walkout and looked for the optimum window, seems they found it

The union, after much negotiation with less than a good faith effort by BNSF, wanted to bring home to the company their membership was united in solidarity over the issue at hand.

Anyway, just my thoughts on the matter.

Jim - Lawton, NV MP 236

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, March 4, 2005 1:37 AM
It is pretty clear that some of you have no clue what kind of garbage big companies, and the railroads in particular get away with! Obviously the dispatchers are unhappy and have probably tried many avenues before it came to this!!! I am sure this did not just occur over night. But with the unions basically being busted in this country they will not really be able to strike anyway.
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Posted by brazos87 on Thursday, March 3, 2005 10:59 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by eolafan

I can' t help but wonder if these dispatchers were getting off of work and had to be at a family outing, pick their kids up from school, etc. and found that the sand truck/snow plow drivers had gone on strike that afternoon and there was a big ice storm (yes, they do get such storms in the DFW area), and the dispatchers could not get home, wonder what they would think and say...THEY NEED TO WALK IN THE OTHER GUYS SHOES FOR A WHILE.
Have you been a BNSF Dispatcher? Or a dispatcher for any railroad at all? Sounds like you might want to take your own advice. Pick up the kids from school? Railroading is a 24 hour a day business, weather doesn't matter--not a lot of railroaders, in any craft, have much of a "home" life, let alone are picking up the kids from school. In your scenario, the schools would have already been closed account of the weather! But the dispatcher still has to make it to work.

From what I understand, the dispatchers walked to try and improve their quality of life over personal leave. Bet you like being home every night or when your kid is sick.

It's easy to say just find another job, another thing to find one where you can actually afford to give your family a decent standard of living.

Most railfans have no idea of how complex or demanding "real" railroading can be. As far as dispatchers go, try running record volumes of freight on lines whose capacity was met several years ago.

I applaud the the dispatchers in their solidarity--picking and choosing lines to walkout on would show BNSF that the dispatchers weren't united. Unity is the basis of a union. Railroading is one industry where unions are certainly needed. For all the union bashers out there, take a swipe @ the Screen Actors Guild or any of the major sports unions. Got hockey?

Take a walk in a dispatcher's shoes, or an MOW gang, or a conductor and then get on your soapbox.
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Posted by BaltACD on Thursday, March 3, 2005 10:08 PM
Work Stoppages - Strikes - Withdrawal of Service or any other euphanism for employer/employee work actions are not taken lightly by either side in a dispute.....they are an action of last resort.

Of course to those that are not a party to the dispute, it appears that the work action is the first inkling that anything is wrong. It is like the duck moving across the still pond....on the surface everything is calm and serene.....beneath the surface the duck is paddling for all get out.

Work Actions are the action of last resort when nothing else has worked. While they don't reflect all that well on the union, they also throw a very bad light up on the responsible Company Official, and a company official is responsible in every work action.....Some are supported by the company, some find themselves reassigned after the work action.

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Posted by ValleyX on Thursday, March 3, 2005 10:05 PM
In other words, you were a boomer and some of the times you moved on, it was probably because you were furloughed and things weren't looking good. That's 37 years of bouncing around, speaking as one who gave up his seniority a couple of times to try something different, that's a risky move and you never know quite how the landing is going to be. However, you post it so matter-of-factly and you know you were the exception, many who come stay and stick it out and build that seniority or else leave within the first three to five years, if not sooner.
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Posted by klahm on Thursday, March 3, 2005 10:02 PM
There are thousands of miles of Big New Santa Fe that don't carry commuters and could have been the targets of a selective wildcat walkout, which would not have offended the Chicagoland and Puget Sound commuters but gotten the point across to management. Any more of these wildcat actions and it will start seeming French!

The conductor on my train deserves significant recognition for exceptional effort at keeping passengers continuously informed of departure status. This guy could never work for an airline, where delay information is seldom prompt and routinely inaccurate, seemingly as a matter of policy.
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Posted by bobwilcox on Thursday, March 3, 2005 7:19 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by amtrak-tom

Simply quit and move on? To where in today's economy? Unrealistic!! I wish I could just find another job, frankly, a mortgage and child support and everything else in life that "aren't free" stops me. If you're not a railroader, then, you wouldn't and couldn't begin to understand! How about 5 years without a raise and being held in limbo because a fair agreement cannot be negoitiated, and, 4 years without a raise before that! No more retro-active pay either after being held out all of these years. It's just reaching that retirement age is all that keeps me where I'm at. It's a trap. I like what I do, no doubt, but there are many, many labor issues and rules that the typical rail fan doesn't see or hear about. You have to live it.


I lived the life of a railroader from June 1966 to July 2003. When I did not like the job I moved on to another job on the railroad where I was or to a new railroad. I did that about seven times.
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Posted by coborn35 on Thursday, March 3, 2005 7:02 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by amtrak-tom

Simply quit and move on? To where in today's economy? Unrealistic!! I wish I could just find another job, frankly, a mortgage and child support and everything else in life that "aren't free" stops me. If you're not a railroader, then, you wouldn't and couldn't begin to understand! How about 5 years without a raise and being held in limbo because a fair agreement cannot be negoitiated, and, 4 years without a raise before that! No more retro-active pay either after being held out all of these years. It's just reaching that retirement age is all that keeps me where I'm at. It's a trap. I like what I do, no doubt, but there are many, many labor issues and rules that the typical rail fan doesn't see or hear about. You have to live it.

I could not agree more.

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, March 3, 2005 6:36 PM
Simply quit and move on? To where in today's economy? Unrealistic!! I wish I could just find another job, frankly, a mortgage and child support and everything else in life that "aren't free" stops me. If you're not a railroader, then, you wouldn't and couldn't begin to understand! How about 5 years without a raise and being held in limbo because a fair agreement cannot be negoitiated, and, 4 years without a raise before that! No more retro-active pay either after being held out all of these years. It's just reaching that retirement age is all that keeps me where I'm at. It's a trap. I like what I do, no doubt, but there are many, many labor issues and rules that the typical rail fan doesn't see or hear about. You have to live it.
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Posted by eolafan on Thursday, March 3, 2005 6:00 PM
I've said it before and I will say it yet again...NOBODY FORCED THEM TO TAKE THEIR JOBS AND THEIR SALARIES, AND IF THEY WANT TO QUIT AND GO ON TO A "BETTER" JOB SOMEWHERE ELSE...GO FOR IT! I have gotten tired of former jobs that I did not feel were paying a fair wage, and I quit and moved on, but I did not strike and screw things up for my (former) employer, I SIMPLY QUIT, and these folks have that right as well...I DON'T KNOW WHY THEY WON'T EXERCISE THAT RIGHT...perhaps it's because they really like their jobs????
Eolafan (a.k.a. Jim)
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Posted by coborn35 on Thursday, March 3, 2005 5:27 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by JOdom

The striking dispatchers should be locked into a large room with the commuters they delayed. No future dispatchers would repeat that nonsense, because none of the strikers would survive.

Hey, buddy, their just fighting for their rights and trying to get a decent salary and good hours, come on. That was really harsh. I take it you are a commuter and dont work on a freight railroad. I can tell because you obviously have a crappy attitude about people who work on freight railroads and want fair pay and fair working hours. Not trying to p.o. any body but those are my feelings.

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Posted by BaltACD on Thursday, March 3, 2005 4:06 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by BNSF railfan.

Money is "POWER".


POWER takes money!

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, March 3, 2005 3:09 PM
Money is "POWER".
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Posted by eolafan on Thursday, March 3, 2005 3:02 PM
I can' t help but wonder if these dispatchers were getting off of work and had to be at a family outing, pick their kids up from school, etc. and found that the sand truck/snow plow drivers had gone on strike that afternoon and there was a big ice storm (yes, they do get such storms in the DFW area), and the dispatchers could not get home, wonder what they would think and say...THEY NEED TO WALK IN THE OTHER GUYS SHOES FOR A WHILE.
Eolafan (a.k.a. Jim)
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Posted by BaltACD on Thursday, March 3, 2005 2:37 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by JOdom

The striking dispatchers should be locked into a large room with the commuters they delayed. No future dispatchers would repeat that nonsense, because none of the strikers would survive.


I suspect that would be a picnic and a walk in the park compared to the daily dealings with BNSF managment that incited the action.

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, March 3, 2005 12:45 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by JOdom

The striking dispatchers should be locked into a large room with the commuters they delayed. No future dispatchers would repeat that nonsense, because none of the strikers would survive.


So railroad workers should be killed for delaying a commute? Life is cheap in the MidWest.
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Posted by SALfan on Thursday, March 3, 2005 12:37 PM
The striking dispatchers should be locked into a large room with the commuters they delayed. No future dispatchers would repeat that nonsense, because none of the strikers would survive.

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