Datafever wrote: wrote:...greyhounds has been intentionally misreading and misrepresenting the GAO report and its conclusions. He has done nothing else in his career but misrepresent facts.Can we please refrain from personal attacks and insults in this forum? Such statements are highly unprofessional and never add to the discussion at hand.
wrote:...greyhounds has been intentionally misreading and misrepresenting the GAO report and its conclusions. He has done nothing else in his career but misrepresent facts.
Well, I miised that one.
I've done "nothing else in my career but misrepresent facts?"
I deny that. Obviously. I have the traditional Christian belief that lying is a sin. But if I disagree with Mr. Sol "I have done nothing else in my career but misrepresent facts?"
What kind of mentality does he have to say that about another person?
So here's my decision. I'll not respond to any personal attacks by Mr. Sol. I'll just respond with facts and logic. And I'm confident where the chips will fall.
greyhounds wrote: doghouse wrote: Open Access / Captive Shippers ... as long as the trains run! Doghouse, Although I do appreciate your aparent offer of a house, I am troubled by your attitude. That's not the objective. I think trains are one of the most interesting things on the planet. But one of the things that makes them interesting to me is their wonderful efficiency. I don't want trains for trains sake. When I look at a stack train or a shuttle grain train I admire its usefulness and productivity. There are people who want to turn trains into vehicles of subsidization for farmers and other elements of our society. I'd then look at them they way I look at any other government waste of our hard earned money.
doghouse wrote: Open Access / Captive Shippers ... as long as the trains run!
Open Access / Captive Shippers
... as long as the trains run!
Doghouse,
Although I do appreciate your aparent offer of a house, I am troubled by your attitude.
That's not the objective. I think trains are one of the most interesting things on the planet. But one of the things that makes them interesting to me is their wonderful efficiency. I don't want trains for trains sake.
When I look at a stack train or a shuttle grain train I admire its usefulness and productivity. There are people who want to turn trains into vehicles of subsidization for farmers and other elements of our society. I'd then look at them they way I look at any other government waste of our hard earned money.
Don,t worry, Grey. I,m a capitalist. Pure and simple. I live in a socialist state(Maine) and I see the damage it causes. But if we digress into a socialist nation, somehow or someway the trains will run.
Datafever wrote: futuremodal wrote: 10,000 tons of coal are not going to move by highway. 250 containers bi-weekly are not going to move by highway. A million bushels of grain bought on the market is not going to move by highway. Not entirely accurate. Back in the 60's/70's, many grain elevators switched from rail transportation to truck transportation. The rail service could not compete with trucking rates.
futuremodal wrote: 10,000 tons of coal are not going to move by highway. 250 containers bi-weekly are not going to move by highway. A million bushels of grain bought on the market is not going to move by highway.
10,000 tons of coal are not going to move by highway. 250 containers bi-weekly are not going to move by highway. A million bushels of grain bought on the market is not going to move by highway.
No, they didn't just "switch" per free market incentives. The railroads stopped providing timely service (kind of hard to compete in real time markets when the railroad can't get the hoppers you ordered until three weeks later), or they abandoned the line serving the rail shipper altogether.
When rail shippers can get timely rail service at reasonable rates, they use it, because there is no other mode that can compete with railroads when railroads are running on all cylinders, metaphorically speaking.
futuremodal wrote: Datafever wrote: futuremodal wrote: 10,000 tons of coal are not going to move by highway. 250 containers bi-weekly are not going to move by highway. A million bushels of grain bought on the market is not going to move by highway. Not entirely accurate. Back in the 60's/70's, many grain elevators switched from rail transportation to truck transportation. The rail service could not compete with trucking rates. No, they didn't just "switch" per free market incentives. The railroads stopped providing timely service (kind of hard to compete in real time markets when the railroad can't get the hoppers you ordered until three weeks later), or they abandoned the line serving the rail shipper altogether. When rail shippers can get timely rail service at reasonable rates, they use it, because there is no other mode that can compete with railroads when railroads are running on all cylinders, metaphorically speaking.
jeaton wrote: FM You are so squirrely that your comments go beyond funny. Your knowledge of the history of and the reasons for the shift of business from railroads to other modes is non-existent. The simple truth of the matter is that a huge portion of the modal shift came because rail carload based distribution had higher costs even though the rail rates were often well below the rates of the competing modes. A competent distribution manager doesn't see himself as buying some form of container-rail freight car, truck van, barge or air cargo hold. Rather he is buying space to hold his freight and move from one point to another at a speed and for a price that meets his needs. That is why your notion that there is no competition between modes is so bizarre.
FM
You are so squirrely that your comments go beyond funny. Your knowledge of the history of and the reasons for the shift of business from railroads to other modes is non-existent. The simple truth of the matter is that a huge portion of the modal shift came because rail carload based distribution had higher costs even though the rail rates were often well below the rates of the competing modes. A competent distribution manager doesn't see himself as buying some form of container-rail freight car, truck van, barge or air cargo hold. Rather he is buying space to hold his freight and move from one point to another at a speed and for a price that meets his needs. That is why your notion that there is no competition between modes is so bizarre.
Well, I'm talking to a liberal, so I guess such simple concepts will go right over your head.
Each mode has a particular advantage over the others, to which certain types of shipping needs will gravitate. We've gone over this countless times, yet when all is said and done there are certain folks on this forum that cannot mentally concieve of the need for this modal differentiation. You think that if a railroad stops service to a grain elevator, that elevator is just as well off by switching to trucks. It's not, and you should know that implicitly. Elevators that have lost rail service usually scrap by to survive, but eventually they shut down. That's because there are more costs involved in having to truck grain from an elevator to a shuttle facility and transload the grain from truck to bin to hoppers, than there is in moving that grain by carload to the same aggregation point as part of the shuttle consist.
Now, if trucks were true competition for rail service, wouldn't those elevators be thriving right now?
I suppose you will now tell me that with the tremendously enhanced competition that would come from open access rail would produce such great advancements in efficiency that rail service could match truck service. When you have it figured out just how one or several freight cars can make a passing move around another car or set of cars at any point along the rail line, let me know. I'll put up my farm to get the cash to invest in the system.
So how are those lines hosting multiple users (via trackage rights, et al) doing it now? Ever heard of sidings? CTC?
It is the ultimate in abject stupidity to say that an integrated rail system can support multiple users, but an OA rail system cannot.
Datafever wrote: futuremodal wrote: Datafever wrote: futuremodal wrote: 10,000 tons of coal are not going to move by highway. 250 containers bi-weekly are not going to move by highway. A million bushels of grain bought on the market is not going to move by highway. Not entirely accurate. Back in the 60's/70's, many grain elevators switched from rail transportation to truck transportation. The rail service could not compete with trucking rates. No, they didn't just "switch" per free market incentives. The railroads stopped providing timely service (kind of hard to compete in real time markets when the railroad can't get the hoppers you ordered until three weeks later), or they abandoned the line serving the rail shipper altogether. When rail shippers can get timely rail service at reasonable rates, they use it, because there is no other mode that can compete with railroads when railroads are running on all cylinders, metaphorically speaking. Well, the grain elevators that I know of, switched because of "free market incentives". The railroad did not stop anything - their service continued normally. The railroads agents were fairly ticked off at the elevator operators for switching to truck transportation.
Unless you're talking about a relatively short haul for the truck transport, you're missing something. Could it be that the elevator in question was given incentive to truck their grain to another railroad's facility, or a barge facility?
One thing that happened frequently during the abandonment years was that some line hauls became longer as the direct line was cut off by abandonment. This caused more circuituous routings, and subsequently higher rates to cover those higher direct costs. Other lines could not handle the "new" 264k cars, so you get incentives to truck to 264k compiant railheads. You may call that "free market", but I call it government sanctioned market skewing.
futuremodal wrote: Datafever wrote: futuremodal wrote: Datafever wrote: futuremodal wrote: 10,000 tons of coal are not going to move by highway. 250 containers bi-weekly are not going to move by highway. A million bushels of grain bought on the market is not going to move by highway. Not entirely accurate. Back in the 60's/70's, many grain elevators switched from rail transportation to truck transportation. The rail service could not compete with trucking rates. No, they didn't just "switch" per free market incentives. The railroads stopped providing timely service (kind of hard to compete in real time markets when the railroad can't get the hoppers you ordered until three weeks later), or they abandoned the line serving the rail shipper altogether. When rail shippers can get timely rail service at reasonable rates, they use it, because there is no other mode that can compete with railroads when railroads are running on all cylinders, metaphorically speaking. Well, the grain elevators that I know of, switched because of "free market incentives". The railroad did not stop anything - their service continued normally. The railroads agents were fairly ticked off at the elevator operators for switching to truck transportation. Unless you're talking about a relatively short haul for the truck transport, you're missing something. Could it be that the elevator in question was given incentive to truck their grain to another railroad's facility, or a barge facility? One thing that happened frequently during the abandonment years was that some line hauls became longer as the direct line was cut off by abandonment. This caused more circuituous routings, and subsequently higher rates to cover those higher direct costs. Other lines could not handle the "new" 264k cars, so you get incentives to truck to 264k compiant railheads. You may call that "free market", but I call it government sanctioned market skewing.
Okay, that does it..... I am going to read that GAO report, and see what the heck it is all about.... With the same antagonists going at it yet again, I guess I am going to have to reach my own conclusions about the document.
Datafever wrote: futuremodal wrote: Datafever wrote: futuremodal wrote: Datafever wrote: futuremodal wrote: 10,000 tons of coal are not going to move by highway. 250 containers bi-weekly are not going to move by highway. A million bushels of grain bought on the market is not going to move by highway. Not entirely accurate. Back in the 60's/70's, many grain elevators switched from rail transportation to truck transportation. The rail service could not compete with trucking rates. No, they didn't just "switch" per free market incentives. The railroads stopped providing timely service (kind of hard to compete in real time markets when the railroad can't get the hoppers you ordered until three weeks later), or they abandoned the line serving the rail shipper altogether. When rail shippers can get timely rail service at reasonable rates, they use it, because there is no other mode that can compete with railroads when railroads are running on all cylinders, metaphorically speaking. Well, the grain elevators that I know of, switched because of "free market incentives". The railroad did not stop anything - their service continued normally. The railroads agents were fairly ticked off at the elevator operators for switching to truck transportation. Unless you're talking about a relatively short haul for the truck transport, you're missing something. Could it be that the elevator in question was given incentive to truck their grain to another railroad's facility, or a barge facility? One thing that happened frequently during the abandonment years was that some line hauls became longer as the direct line was cut off by abandonment. This caused more circuituous routings, and subsequently higher rates to cover those higher direct costs. Other lines could not handle the "new" 264k cars, so you get incentives to truck to 264k compiant railheads. You may call that "free market", but I call it government sanctioned market skewing. Let me tell you what I know. On one branch line, during the late 60s to mid 70s, five elevators switched from rail transport to truck transport. This led to the abandonment of the branch line. The branch had been served by a weekly local and all grain hauled in box cars. One of the elevator managers was my next door neighbor. His position was that it was a matter of rates, and I have no reason to doubt him.Another elevator was located on a main line. Again, the switch was made from rail transport to truck transport. The RR agent and the elevator manager were next door neighbors, and after the switch to truck transport, the agent (retired by then) never spoke to the elevator manager again. It was my understanding that it was a matter of rates.In neither case was RR abandonment an issue in any decision to switch to truck transport. Where was the grain trucked to? I don't know. Not barge. Another railroad? Unlikely. To another elevator that was able to get volume discounts? Possibly.
Boxcars! That explains it. Labor intensive to unload, less capacity than hoppers. The likelyhood is that the line was just too light in the rail to support hoppers, and hoppers are prefered for unloading or transloading whether it be at a mill or ship loading facility. The railroad in question probably used the backdoor method of abandonment - not actually filing for abandonment what with five active customers, but rather using rate manipulation vis-a-vis boxcar vs hopper to *encourage* the clients to truck their grain to another terminal on the same railroad that could handle hoppers. That's the "matter of rates" to which your friend refers.
The point is, the railroad didn't lose the business to trucks, it rather used available trucks to force consolidation of the terminal operations, and "massage" a loss of online business on the branch to eventually *show* the ICC that the line had no more customers.
Ergo, trucks were not the competition.
futuremodal wrote:Boxcars! That explains it. Labor intensive to unload, less capacity than hoppers. The likelyhood is that the line was just too light in the rail to support hoppers, and hoppers are prefered for unloading or transloading whether it be at a mill or ship loading facility. The railroad in question probably used the backdoor method of abandonment - not actually filing for abandonment what with five active customers, but rather using rate manipulation vis-a-vis boxcar vs hopper to *encourage* the clients to truck their grain to another terminal on the same railroad that could handle hoppers. That's the "matter of rates" to which your friend refers. The point is, the railroad didn't lose the business to trucks, it rather used available trucks to force consolidation of the terminal operations, and "massage" a loss of online business on the branch to eventually *show* the ICC that the line had no more customers. Ergo, trucks were not the competition.
Boy, Dave, you're reading a lot into this! There's no reason to read between the lines on this. All the info is written on the lines. The railroad did lose the business to trucks. It lost it, because it couldn't be competitive, with the boxcar rates it offered. If the railroad could have made money by lowering the *boxcar* rate to the *hopper* rate, as you infer,they would have. The point is, they couldn't make money doing that,so they didn't do that. At that given point, under those circmstances. the railroad lost the business to trucks, due to that "matter of rates". The railroad *could* have kept all the business away from the trucks. All they would have had to do was charge a nickel per carload. That wouldn't profitable either. So, yes-the railroad did lose business to trucks. To reach a different conclussion isn't being realistic.
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
futuremodal wrote:The point is, the railroad didn't lose the business to trucks, it rather used available trucks to force consolidation of the terminal operations, and "massage" a loss of online business on the branch to eventually *show* the ICC that the line had no more customers. Ergo, trucks were not the competition.
Datafever wrote: futuremodal wrote: The point is, the railroad didn't lose the business to trucks, it rather used available trucks to force consolidation of the terminal operations, and "massage" a loss of online business on the branch to eventually *show* the ICC that the line had no more customers. Ergo, trucks were not the competition. You sure have a way of twisting words to fit things into your own scenario.
futuremodal wrote: The point is, the railroad didn't lose the business to trucks, it rather used available trucks to force consolidation of the terminal operations, and "massage" a loss of online business on the branch to eventually *show* the ICC that the line had no more customers. Ergo, trucks were not the competition.
Oh, I'm twisting words?
Let's look at some basic facts. Feel free to disagree with any if you so choose:
1. Railroads are better at the long haul. Agree or disagree?
2. Trucks are better at the short haul. Agree or disagree?
3. Amending #'s 1 and 2 above, railroad unit trains are better at the short haul than trucks. Agree or disagree?
4. Specific to your anecdotal example, the likelyhood that the truck hauls were long hauls is zero percent. Agree or disagree?
5. The likelyhood is that boxcar grain shipments were anything but prefered by mainline managers and grain terminal handlers. Agree or disagree?
6. By your own admission, it is likely that the railroad in question kept the longhaul, therefore trucks did not take this business from the railroad. Agree or disagree?
Datafever
Typical simpleminded use of a convential wisdom generalization to try to prove something. The guy is really good.
Be warned. Don't disagree with anything he says as you will then be branded as a (gasp) liberal.
"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics
jeaton wrote:Don't disagree with anything he says as you will then be branded as a ... liberal.
Don't disagree with anything he says as you will then be branded as a ... liberal.
Datafever wrote:Okay, I have managed to obtain a little more information. The railroad agent (who is now 82 years old) maintains that it was not a case of the railroad raising rates. Trucking companies managed to do a good job of marketing and selling a niche market - short haul transportation of grain to facilities that were able to negotiate lower rates because of volume (i.e. units trains), thereby providing an overall cost savings to the customers in question. Which is kind of what I had been trying to say. The agent was given early retirement and the line was abandoned years later under a rule that allowed lines to be abandoned is there had been no traffic over the line for at least two years.I don't know how you see it, but the agent and I see it this way - the trucking industry was able to undercut the railroad and drive them out of business (the business of providing short-haul transportation). To me, that sounds like competition.Now, I can't say that this was the case in a majority of cases, or even in a small minority of cases, but it was the case on this particular branch line. Therefore, it is not always the case that only another railroad can be competition for a railroad that is servicing a "captive shipper". Which is possibly why researchers have a difficult time in trying to determine exactly which shippers are captive and which are not.
That was interesting.....I suppose one could then approach the argument about how if trucks had to pay for the road they were driving on perhaps this would have leveled the playing field with the railroads. Railroads had to pay for their land, maintenance, and so on while trucks get to drive on a big federal subsidy - the road.
Datafever wrote: jeaton wrote: Don't disagree with anything he says as you will then be branded as a ... liberal. Me? A liberal? That's a real hoot!
jeaton wrote: Don't disagree with anything he says as you will then be branded as a ... liberal.
Well, from Idaho Ronald Reagan looked like a liberal, so if it comes up don't take it too hard.
futuremodal wrote: Datafever wrote: futuremodal wrote: The point is, the railroad didn't lose the business to trucks, it rather used available trucks to force consolidation of the terminal operations, and "massage" a loss of online business on the branch to eventually *show* the ICC that the line had no more customers. Ergo, trucks were not the competition. You sure have a way of twisting words to fit things into your own scenario. Oh, I'm twisting words? Let's look at some basic facts. Feel free to disagree with any if you so choose: 1. Railroads are better at the long haul. Agree or disagree? DISAGREE 2. Trucks are better at the short haul. Agree or disagree? DISAGREE 3. Amending #'s 1 and 2 above, railroad unit trains are better at the short haul than trucks. Agree or disagree? AGREE 4. Specific to your anecdotal example, the likelyhood that the truck hauls were long hauls is zero percent. Agree or disagree? INSUFFICIENT INFORMATION TO FORM OPINION 5. The likelyhood is that boxcar grain shipments were anything but prefered by mainline managers and grain terminal handlers. Agree or disagree? INSUFFICIENT INFORMATION TO FORM OPINION 6. By your own admission, it is likely that the railroad in question kept the longhaul, therefore trucks did not take this business from the railroad. Agree or disagree? DISAGREE
1. Railroads are better at the long haul. Agree or disagree? DISAGREE
2. Trucks are better at the short haul. Agree or disagree? DISAGREE
3. Amending #'s 1 and 2 above, railroad unit trains are better at the short haul than trucks. Agree or disagree? AGREE
4. Specific to your anecdotal example, the likelyhood that the truck hauls were long hauls is zero percent. Agree or disagree? INSUFFICIENT INFORMATION TO FORM OPINION
5. The likelyhood is that boxcar grain shipments were anything but prefered by mainline managers and grain terminal handlers. Agree or disagree? INSUFFICIENT INFORMATION TO FORM OPINION
6. By your own admission, it is likely that the railroad in question kept the longhaul, therefore trucks did not take this business from the railroad. Agree or disagree? DISAGREE
As usual FM you are engaging in gross over generalizations to fit a square peg in a round hole. It can be done, but it is very messy and not what was intended.
Concerning railroads and short hauls you should read George Betke's article in this month's RAILWAY AGE.
LC
solzrules wrote: That was interesting.....I suppose one could then approach the argument about how if trucks had to pay for the road they were driving on perhaps this would have leveled the playing field with the railroads. Railroads had to pay for their land, maintenance, and so on while trucks get to drive on a big federal subsidy - the road.
futuremodal wrote: Oh, I'm twisting words? Let's look at some basic facts. Feel free to disagree with any if you so choose: 1. Railroads are better at the long haul. Agree or disagree?
It depends.
futuremodal wrote: 2. Trucks are better at the short haul. Agree or disagree?
futuremodal wrote: 3. Amending #'s 1 and 2 above, railroad unit trains are better at the short haul than trucks. Agree or disagree?
They can be, but it's situation specific.
futuremodal wrote: 4. Specific to your anecdotal example, the likelyhood that the truck hauls were long hauls is zero percent. Agree or disagree? 5. The likelyhood is that boxcar grain shipments were anything but prefered by mainline managers and grain terminal handlers. Agree or disagree?
Disagree, if they preferred carboxes, they wouldn't have switched to trucks.
futuremodal wrote: 6. By your own admission, it is likely that the railroad in question kept the longhaul, therefore trucks did not take this business from the railroad. Agree or disagree?
How do you know the grain moved a long distance? What do you define as a long distance? Most US grain never gets in a railcar. (rail market share of grain is 32%) Most grain is trucked to a river terminal or a processor that turns it into flour, animal feed. ethanol, whatever. It's a low value commodity that can't support much in the way of transportation costs.
What you've got to realize is that the branch line/small country elevator grain gathering system was built when farmers moved the grain out of the fields with a team of horses pulling a wagon. (I grew up in Mason County, IL - which had around 14,000 folks. It was rural. There was one farmer on the sand ground southwest of town who still used draft horses. I remember seeing his team and wagon in line with the trucks to unload at the Rickett Grain Company. This would have been about 1960.)
True story told to me by my father. Happened before I happened. He was harvesting his corn. He had my mother driving the team while he walked through the corn throwing the ears into the wagon.
Pull the ears of the stalks by hand and give 'em a toss in to the horse drawn wagon. Hell of a way to harvest corn. But it was the best system available.
So he gets careless, lets one fly, and clobbers my future mother right side of the head with an ear of Illinois field corn. She cried. Years latter, he'd still laugh and she'd still get mad about the story. He had married a "town girl" and had to put up with such softness.
Today, the grain comes out of the fields in a tractor trailer. Please don't tell me that it doesn't, I see it. They're harvesting the Illinois corn and soybeans now and I drive by those fields every day. I live about 1/4 mile from what was this year a soybean field. I see the freaking semis in the fields taking on the loads.
Now don't you think that change from draft horses to tractor trailers changed the economics? It did. And it eliminated the need for very costly and very inefficient rail branches and the equally costly and inefficient small country elevator system. That's why those branches and elevators went away. The more efficient trucks made 'em obsolete. Railroads don't make money by not hauling freight. They would have kept the business if they could. But things changed, and the railroads had to adapt or die.
You contradict yourself. You say trucks were the competition, yet you admit the trucks were hauling to the railroad's unit train terminal. Since the railroad didn't lose the business other than the carload traffic off the branchline, the trucks acted as collaberators with the railroad rather than competitors.
It's not competition if said *competitors* are delivering to the same railroad's facility. Sounds more like the trucks were the non-union alternative to local carload. All the railroad cared about is the unit train facility, how the grain got there wasn't important to them. Remember, under carload service the branchline didn't have to pay for itself (e.g. variable costs + fixed cost of the branchline) since the branchline fed revenue loads out onto the mainline. Then railroad management figured out that they could keep that same traffic on the mainline without the hassles of keeping the branchline up to speed - just build a consolidation terminal. It's too bad that the railroads have used these tactics to force trucks onto our roads and highways, and it's also more of a burden for the former shippers on that branchline. Question: How many of those 5 elevators and 2 mills have since shut down? I would be suprised if all the players are still alive and kicking.
Murphy Siding wrote: So, yes-the railroad did lose business to trucks. To reach a different conclussion isn't being realistic.
Guess again, cluss! If you read Datafever's explanation, the railroad kept the business via terminal consolidation. The trucks just delivered to the unit train terminal to save the railroad the hassle of operating a marginal branchline. It was the railroad's preference.
So, no - the railroad did not lose business to trucks. They simply utilized trucks to feed the consolidated terminal, e.g. the trucks acted as the railroad's cargo collection system. The trucks were probably non-union, so there was a certain degree of labor cost reduction in the supply chain.
However, there was no increase in supply chain efficiency, rather a reduction. Carload freight is still 3 to 4 times as fuel efficient as the largest trucks out there, and even with unit train consolidation there is no reason carload's cannot be aggregated into unit train configs.
A shortline outfit (read: non-union) probably could have run the line profitably, but this was pre-Staggers.
edbenton wrote:Same thing with alot of the produce yes there is that new train going to upstate New York however by the time they get it loaded and unloaded at each end a team truck could have been loaded made its run to Hunts Point in New York City dropped off and be on its way back to WA to PU another load. I for one have made a run from Salinas CA to Greencastle PA in 48 hours with spring mix which is baby lettuce mix and that stuff is hotter than hot trucks do offer some advantages over trains. And by the way Dave trucks do pay for the roads what do you think all the taxes they pay for on the fuel goes for right now the federal fuel tax on diesel alone is 33 cents a gallon plus the state taxes add all the other taxes the avarage trucke pays 30K a year in highway taxes a year alone that is BEFORE any income taxes.
Ed, pay close attention - I have never said that trucks don't pay their way. On the contrary, I have stated quite conclusively that truckers do pay most of the cost of maintaining inter-state highways (e.g. including but not limited to those blue and red shield Interstate Highways), with state and local highways being partially subsidized with property taxes, sales taxes, etc. This segues into one of the myths being perpetrated on this forum and other railroad information venues - that trucks are subsidized while railroads are not. Obviously, it's not a simple as that, there are complexities to the various levels (federal/state/local) of public road funding. The truth is that on the federal level trucks do pay their fair share, and since a comparison of railroads to highways is mostly limited to the interstate corridors, at that level it can be argued that there is an equivalence of "paying their own way" among both truckers and railroads. And since railroads more and more are using trucks as the intermediaries between railhead and dock, there is no partiality at the state and local funding levels either between trucking companies and rail companies.
Datafever wrote: solzrules wrote: That was interesting.....I suppose one could then approach the argument about how if trucks had to pay for the road they were driving on perhaps this would have leveled the playing field with the railroads. Railroads had to pay for their land, maintenance, and so on while trucks get to drive on a big federal subsidy - the road. Well, just to be a stick in the mud and point out the other side, it could also be argued that government ownership of the railroad infrastructure would be an equally acceptable solution. It isn't a stance that I would take, but...
Not the stance I would take either but I see your point. In other words, federalize the system, right? I think we would see disaster on a grand scale. Part of the reason railroads are doing so well now is that they are money making machines in a market - they survive because they trim and expand at will were needed in order to maximize their profits. Give this control to the government (just like the ICC before Staggers) and you will have a rash of bankruptcies and the like - just like the 70's.
Let me throw this hypothetical out there:
Let's say that the government said that trucks must pay their way on the road system - and I don't mean a small increase in their license fee, I mean someone actually sits down and figures out what a truck will do to a road during it's lifetime and how much it will cost to fix it. Then let's say that they charge trucks accordingly (in other words - the truck is paying for the infrastructure as if it owned the portion affected by the truck). Basically leveling the playing field with the railroads, so to speak.
Railroads already do this with their infrastructure - all the track, signals, land, etc. is bought and paid for. Which one would survive? Which one would turn a profit and continue to function with least amount of interruption? Which one is attuned to using their resources in the most cost-effective fashion?
solzrules wrote: Datafever wrote: solzrules wrote: That was interesting.....I suppose one could then approach the argument about how if trucks had to pay for the road they were driving on perhaps this would have leveled the playing field with the railroads. Railroads had to pay for their land, maintenance, and so on while trucks get to drive on a big federal subsidy - the road. Well, just to be a stick in the mud and point out the other side, it could also be argued that government ownership of the railroad infrastructure would be an equally acceptable solution. It isn't a stance that I would take, but... Not the stance I would take either but I see your point. In other words, federalize the system, right? I think we would see disaster on a grand scale. Part of the reason railroads are doing so well now is that they are money making machines in a market - they survive because they trim and expand at will were needed in order to maximize their profits. Give this control to the government (just like the ICC before Staggers) and you will have a rash of bankruptcies and the like - just like the 70's. Let me throw this hypothetical out there: Let's say that the government said that trucks must pay their way on the road system - and I don't mean a small increase in their license fee, I mean someone actually sits down and figures out what a truck will do to a road during it's lifetime and how much it will cost to fix it. Then let's say that they charge trucks accordingly (in other words - the truck is paying for the infrastructure as if it owned the portion affected by the truck). Basically leveling the playing field with the railroads, so to speak. Railroads already do this with their infrastructure - all the track, signals, land, etc. is bought and paid for. Which one would survive? Which one would turn a profit and continue to function with least amount of interruption? Which one is attuned to using their resources in the most cost-effective fashion?
futuremodal wrote: Datafever wrote:Okay, I have managed to obtain a little more information. The railroad agent (who is now 82 years old) maintains that it was not a case of the railroad raising rates. Trucking companies managed to do a good job of marketing and selling a niche market - short haul transportation of grain to facilities that were able to negotiate lower rates because of volume (i.e. units trains), thereby providing an overall cost savings to the customers in question. Which is kind of what I had been trying to say. The agent was given early retirement and the line was abandoned years later under a rule that allowed lines to be abandoned is there had been no traffic over the line for at least two years.I don't know how you see it, but the agent and I see it this way - the trucking industry was able to undercut the railroad and drive them out of business (the business of providing short-haul transportation). To me, that sounds like competition.Now, I can't say that this was the case in a majority of cases, or even in a small minority of cases, but it was the case on this particular branch line. Therefore, it is not always the case that only another railroad can be competition for a railroad that is servicing a "captive shipper". Which is possibly why researchers have a difficult time in trying to determine exactly which shippers are captive and which are not. You contradict yourself. You say trucks were the competition, yet you admit the trucks were hauling to the railroad's unit train terminal. Since the railroad didn't lose the business other than the carload traffic off the branchline, the trucks acted as collaberators with the railroad rather than competitors. It's not competition if said *competitors* are delivering to the same railroad's facility. Sounds more like the trucks were the non-union alternative to local carload. All the railroad cared about is the unit train facility, how the grain got there wasn't important to them. Remember, under carload service the branchline didn't have to pay for itself (e.g. variable costs + fixed cost of the branchline) since the branchline fed revenue loads out onto the mainline. Then railroad management figured out that they could keep that same traffic on the mainline without the hassles of keeping the branchline up to speed - just build a consolidation terminal. It's too bad that the railroads have used these tactics to force trucks onto our roads and highways, and it's also more of a burden for the former shippers on that branchline. Question: How many of those 5 elevators and 2 mills have since shut down? I would be suprised if all the players are still alive and kicking.
futuremodal wrote: Ed, pay close attention - I have never said that trucks don't pay their way. On the contrary, I have stated quite conclusively that truckers do pay most of the cost of maintaining inter-state highways (e.g. including but not limited to those blue and red shield Interstate Highways), with state and local highways being partially subsidized with property taxes, sales taxes, etc. This segues into one of the myths being perpetrated on this forum and other railroad information venues - that trucks are subsidized while railroads are not. Obviously, it's not a simple as that, there are complexities to the various levels (federal/state/local) of public road funding. The truth is that on the federal level trucks do pay their fair share, and since a comparison of railroads to highways is mostly limited to the interstate corridors, at that level it can be argued that there is an equivalence of "paying their own way" among both truckers and railroads. And since railroads more and more are using trucks as the intermediaries between railhead and dock, there is no partiality at the state and local funding levels either between trucking companies and rail companies.
If anyone would like to access some facts instead of FM's propaganda, the details are in the previously cited GAO report. Pages 62-63. "...combination unit trucks paid 80 percent of their cost responsibility and the heaviest combinations paid (only) half of their cost responsibility." Barges are also heavily subsidized.
The GAO concludes that this is a really bad idea.
Read it and realize it FM. This is the second time it's been linked to in this thread. Why don't you read the thing?
http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d0794.pdf
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