Washington District of Columbia USA - Norfolk Southern has asked federal regulators to suspend
review of the CPKC and CSX Transportation proposal to create a new through route linking the Southeast and Mexico via
Myrtlewood, Alabama.
Earlier this month CPKC and CSX filed separate applications seeking Surface Transportation Board approval to acquire
and operate Genesee & Wyoming shortline Meridian & Bigbee.
Meridian & Bigbee's 168 mile route is the missing link between the CPKC system at Meridian, Mississippi, and the
CSX network at Burkeville, Alabama, just west of Montgomery, Alabama.
The Meridian & Bigbee, or MNBR, owns the 50.4 mile route west of Myrtlewood and leases from CSX the 107 miles
between Myrtlewood and Burkville.
MNBR operates the 10 miles between Burkeville and Montgomery via overhead trackage rights on CSX.
CPKC subsidiary Kansas City Southern will acquire the 50.4 mile segment of the MNBR between Meridian and Myrtlewood,
which it's calling the Western Line.
MNBR will continue to provide local service on the route after the transaction.
In a separate transaction, CSX will resume operations on its line between Myrtlewood and Burkville, Alabama, dubbed the
Eastern Line, which has been leased to MNBR since 2003.
As part of that transaction, MNBR will cease operations on the Eastern Line.
CPKC and CSX said the transactions will enable them to make the investments necessary to create a Class I railroad
freight corridor that will expand shipping options for intermodal, automotive, and forest products moving between the
Southeast and Texas and Mexico.
Between the KCS hub at Shreveport, Louisianna, and Meridian the CPKC-CSX interline service would rely on the Meridian
Speedway, the KCS-NS joint venture that dates to 2006, and would compete head-to-head with existing NS-CPKC interline
moves in the corridor.
NS, in a filing with the STB yesterday, said the CPKC and CSX applications should be considered as what they truly
are, a single deal with potentially wide-ranging impacts.
"The Board should order consolidation of these proceedings and a resubmittal of an application that covers what is
patently a unified Transaction," NS said.
"The Board's order for consolidation should set the current proceedings in abeyance until such time as a revised,
unified, application is submitted by the Applicants. Finally, the Board should clarify that the revised, unified,
application to be submitted by the Applicants includes regulatorily-required data and analysis that covers the entirety
of the impacted rail network, specifically including the Meridian Speedway and the Meridian gateway."
NS said that the separate applications don't consider the potential impact new CSX-CPKC interline trains would have on
current Meridian Speedway operations, the Meridian gateway, Amtrak's Crescent service, or proposed new Amtrak
service.
NS currently runs about 17 trains per day through Meridian.
"There is no discussion, whether the additional premium run-through train anticipated by CPKC to move off the
Meridian Speedway and onto the Western Line would fit into the constrained sidings of the Meridian gateway and be in
compliance with the same type of length limitation that it recently imposed on operations over the Meridian
Speedway," NS said.
CPKC now limits Meridian Speedway trains to 8,500 feet.
The move affects just one train, the daily eastbound domestic intermodal train that CPKC receives from Union Pacific at
Shreveport and delivers to NS at Meridian.
The train was typically 11,000 feet long before CPKC mandated that trains fit into the Meridian Speedway's passing
sidings.
The single-track, 302 mile Speedway route between Shreveport and the connection with NS at Meridian has 21 passing
sidings, most of which are around 8,500 feet long.
Only three of the Speedway's passing sidings can handle an 11,000 foot train.
"CPKC claims that no commuter or passenger service moves on the Western Line, but does not address the fact that
the through train service accesses the Meridian-Myrtlewood route through the Meridian gateway and that Amtrak operates
through that very gateway, together with CPKC and Norfolk Southern," NS said.
"Further, CPKC omits the fact that, as a condition of STB approval for the acquisition of Kansas City Southern,
the Board ordered CPKC to honor CP's commitments made under the settlement agreement with Amtrak, including CP's
agreement to support certain planned expansions of Amtrak passenger service. One portion of that settlement sets a goal
of introducing Amtrak service between Dallas, Texas, and Meridian, Mississippi. The new operations anticipated by the
current CPKC/CSXT/G&W transaction implicate the feasibility of that new Amtrak service, operations over the
Meridian Speedway, and the fluidity of traffic through all portions of the Meridian gateway (including that of Norfolk
Southern). However, the Applicants' current bifurcated Western Line and Eastern Line approach does not address any such
operational impacts."
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