Redmond Washington USA
North America - For generations, unionized jobs tasked with building, operating, and maintaining
our freight and passenger railroads (plus shipping and logistics industries) have provided workers and their families
with fair pay and dependable long-term employment.
America's railroad system has undergone decades of consolidation.
The system reached its peak a hundred years ago and both trackage and employment have consistently declined
since.
While change is inevitable, the recent accelerated pace of consolidation has defied reasonable
expectations.
Fifty years ago, our country had 63 Class I railroads, now we have seven.
The Big Seven own or operate virtually all the long-distance track and determine when passenger trains may pass, with
four of the seven controlling 83 percent of America's rail freight.
If the pending US$30 billion merger between Canadian Pacific and Kansas City Southern is approved, the Big Seven will
become the Bigger Six.
Across industries, consolidation has led to higher prices, worse service, and reduced customer choice.
We've seen it happen in telecommunications, where a few enormous companies now control cellular and land communications
services across the nation.
We've seen it in media and entertainment, where a few conglomerates own almost every company that makes the content you
see on your screens.
Most of all, we've seen it in Big Tech, where four or five companies, you know their names, dominate everything about
your online life, from how you search, use social media, to how you get your online purchases.
What happens when fewer and fewer companies control an entire industry, as the Biden administration is considering
letting happen now with railroad freight?
Three things:
1) As they eliminate competition, surviving companies are empowered to hike prices, even as consumers are left with
fewer alternatives. In the upper Midwest, where the non-viability of waterway shipping makes industry dependent on
rail, consolidation has led shippers to reportedly pay twice the rates charged elsewhere in America. This has led to
hundreds of price-fixing lawsuits against the Big Seven in recent years.
2) Companies with longer networks and the capacity to serve larger contracts tend to prioritize long-distance and
high-volume customers, which gives unfair preference to big corporate customers. For manufacturers, shipping is not an
optional cost. When local manufacturers are forced to deal with giant rail conglomerates that can charge whatever they
want, we put their businesses, the communities they serve, and the supply chain at risk. These reasons alone are enough
to make railroad industry consolidation deeply alarming, which is why a wide range of industry groups are on record
expressing their concerns about the KCS and CP merger.
3) But there's a third reason to be alarmed by our shrinking railroad industry. Its impact on families who've built
their lives around secure, well-paying jobs in the sector. As the Big Seven face competition internationally, and from
other shipping modes, they are trying to squeeze every possible drop of profit out of their railroads, putting these
cherished jobs and communities that depend on them on the chopping block if action isn't taken. The Big Seven have
adopted tactics such as Precision Scheduled Railroading (PSR), a scheduling approach that maintains service between
busy city-to-city pairs at the cost of flexibility and reliability, especially for smaller shippers on lower-traffic
routes. Most routes have no competition nowadays, and if your railroad says you have to wait, you have no choice but do
so while your inventory sits in a warehouse costing you money. According to the federal Surface Transportation Board
(STB), which regulates freight rail, the industry has cut almost one-third of its headcount in just six years. STB
chair Martin Oberman stated at an April hearing that "in my view, all of this has directly contributed to where we
are today, rail users experiencing serious deteriorations in rail service because, on too many parts of their networks,
the railroads simply do not have a sufficient number of employees." The STB knows the railroad sector better than
anyone, and Americans should listen to the agency's warning that our railroads have cut their employees too deeply to
provide safe and reliable service.
The disproportionate market power created by rail consolidation doesn't just put railroad jobs at risk, but also other
well-paying jobs in other crucial sectors, such as ports jobs CP has admitted that some of the growth that the proposed
merger could generate would harm competing U.S. ocean ports.
Workers in the ports of Seattle and Tacoma expect that if their port becomes too expensive, most of that cargo will
shift north to cheaper Canadian alternatives.
Our nation can't maintain its global competitiveness without a healthy freight logistics sector, which includes safely
operated and sufficiently staffed railroads.
If our nation is serious about supporting small businesses (President Biden issued an executive order about it a year
ago), it can't let one company control of a rail corridor running west to east across Canada, north to south through
the middle of the U.S., and deep into Mexico's industrial heartland.
Matt Kent..
(likely no image with original article)
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provisions in Section 29 of the Canadian
Copyright Modernization Act.