How America's Largest Railroads are Ruining our Supply Chains

Time to scare them with muh "big government"
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Time Stamps:
0:00 Intro
0:42 US Rail History 101
4:00 Class 1's the Beginning
5:26 PSR and Issues
9:35 Railroad Workers
11:32 Solutions
13:39 Outro

Пікірлер: 4 700

  • @TheRuralUrbanist
    @TheRuralUrbanist Жыл бұрын

    The railroads: "But Alan, how will we pay our shareholders if we have to pay our employees and improve our infrastructure? We can't possibly do both."

  • @jonathanredacted3245

    @jonathanredacted3245

    Жыл бұрын

    The correct answer should be "do it or just sell the railroads to the public, or else we will put our entire being into ensuring you and your shareholders end up in prison for god knows how many counts of tax evasion and fraud.

  • @Coolsomeone234

    @Coolsomeone234

    Жыл бұрын

    Do what New Zealand did with the internet and give out loans to these companies to upgrade infrastructure

  • @jonathanredacted3245

    @jonathanredacted3245

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Coolsomeone234 not enough, there needs to be a element of force to this, the companies have proven they won't willingly do what needs to be done

  • @GeneralLiuofBoston1911

    @GeneralLiuofBoston1911

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jonathanredacted3245 Won't use the loans for capital investment? No funding.

  • @traaztek1996

    @traaztek1996

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Coolsomeone234 how about we do something actually effective and nationalize the industry

  • @weightswrenches
    @weightswrenches Жыл бұрын

    As a railroader, I can tell you that these aren't railroads, they're investment and exchange companies that just so happen to back their value by trains, not gold. Big, crappy, nasty, glorious trains

  • @Neville60001

    @Neville60001

    Жыл бұрын

    Have you got a better alternative that will actually work? Nationalisation isn't a widely accepted thing beyond this KZread video, you know.

  • @weightswrenches

    @weightswrenches

    Жыл бұрын

    Nope, this is how businesses are run. There's nothing we can do about it, besides just ride out what it is. It would be great if UP could focus on the work they do and the people that work for them, but that's not what makes the most money. That's how They make record profits every single quarter. The fact is, we can deal with the failings of the railroad as a money printer or we can deal with them as a government entity but opening the can of worms that would allow a cascade like that to happen would take a monumental failure on part of the railroads to move freight. Besides, the amount of government overlap In the railroad industry is actually mind boggling. Even the craft has been considered federal employees, when convenient. Any time the rail road has been in trouble, here's a government grant to the rescue. We're where we are now Mainly because of PSR though. Cutting too deep and catching back up too slowly. There's a lot of thing that allowed PSR to happen, but that could probably fill a whole video 😅

  • @777jones

    @777jones

    Жыл бұрын

    I used to work in airlines. Airline staff thought they owned the company. Nope, other than pilots it is just another job, and you should come to grips with that 🎃

  • @PoKeKidMPK1

    @PoKeKidMPK1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@777jones were you not paying attention or just talking to yourself? did you not watch the video, read his comments, or care to be here for whats said? is it a political belief or did you completely misphrase what you said while not being in the same room, conversation, topic, and thought process but still talking?

  • @logicNreason2008

    @logicNreason2008

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Neville60001 it is a widely accepted thing. Just not in the country we live in. If you ever get to travel to Asia though, you will be amazed at the level of development of the railway system and overall pleasant experience using the trains in countries like Singapore, China, Japan, etc

  • @DieselDucy
    @DieselDucy Жыл бұрын

    9:50. I am a locomotive engineer for Norfolk Southern. We are treated terrible and it is 6 days a week. And conductors don’t get ANY days off and we are only given 2 hours call. Also. THANKS FOR MAKING THIS VIDEO!!!

  • @kleenexbox974

    @kleenexbox974

    Жыл бұрын

    you needa get the fuck outta there damn

  • @DietRecruit-BootCamp

    @DietRecruit-BootCamp

    Жыл бұрын

    DieselDucy, do they still call it the “Nazi Southern”?

  • @notarotomwithhair5637

    @notarotomwithhair5637

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you

  • @uneverjack158

    @uneverjack158

    Жыл бұрын

    How is everything in the company now with the Ohio Incident?

  • @Badhabit4590

    @Badhabit4590

    Жыл бұрын

    I wouldn’t be proud of this buddy. Norfolk southern = lying killers 😢 Ohio

  • @RK-xv9rp
    @RK-xv9rp Жыл бұрын

    I worked for Union Pacific. I remember one train went from West Colton, California to Houston and back without ever having the train switched out and the cars delivered to customers. It was on its third round trip between West Colton and Houston, and I had to switch the train out at an intermediate point even though none of the cars were destined there. This was a 14K ton train. Up and down the hills burning thousands of gallons of fuel and delivering no cars to customers. This was considered 'precision scheduled railroading'.

  • @rjohnson1690

    @rjohnson1690

    Жыл бұрын

    I saw a lot of the same empty center beams going back and forth. UP loves doing rolling storage.

  • @markfryer9880

    @markfryer9880

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rjohnson1690 That's what it is, rolling storage. Trouble is that it costs more than storing cars because of track occupancy, locomotive and crew use, fuel consumption, car hire and other costs that I haven't mentioned. Now, how on earth can that be contributing to making a profit for the company? I can't see any way that it can.

  • @rjohnson1690

    @rjohnson1690

    Жыл бұрын

    @@markfryer9880 yeah I don’t get it either. UP does a lot things that are pretty baffling. They are always robbing Peter to pay Paul with their screwball plans.

  • @torqzebrawoody

    @torqzebrawoody

    Жыл бұрын

    @@markfryer9880 It's a tax dodge, plain & simple.

  • @highjohnroot

    @highjohnroot

    Жыл бұрын

    I bet weekly carloadings were up during that period! ; )

  • @VetGamer718
    @VetGamer718 Жыл бұрын

    I am a railroader and I agree with everything you said except 1 thing. That 1 thing is we are on call 7 days a week and we have 90 mins to get to work after our call at any time of the day or night. Other than that your spot on lol

  • @jesusjimenez3766

    @jesusjimenez3766

    Жыл бұрын

    My god, your sleep schedule must be awful

  • @VetGamer718

    @VetGamer718

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jesusjimenez3766 Very much so. That is why we demand to be paid for what we give up with this job.

  • @jesusjimenez3766

    @jesusjimenez3766

    Жыл бұрын

    @@VetGamer718 completely understandable

  • @GlennTXstate10

    @GlennTXstate10

    Жыл бұрын

    But you choose to work that job under those stipulations for an agreed upon wage correct?

  • @johnledhalen2903

    @johnledhalen2903

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GlennTXstate10 NO that's not correct. We used to be able to get more days off. This all changed in FEb.2022. Days off used to be manageable and the company would let you take them but now they don't.

  • @AlexBaldwin440
    @AlexBaldwin440 Жыл бұрын

    I worked for Norfolk Southern for 8 years. I was purposely told on several occasions to not serve a customer. We would not have the time to make it back and they did not want to spend the money on another crew to come relieve us and finish everything. The managment in the last 5 years made the job awful. No schedule, I was home 10 hours and gone for 48 hours. I was on the clock over 18 hours several times even though we legally can not operate the train after 12 hours. PSR destroyed an already rough industry.

  • @DarkVoidIII

    @DarkVoidIII

    Жыл бұрын

    "... not have the time to *not* make it back ..." I think the second "not" in your comment above shouldn't exist, you just made a double negative there. 😊

  • @AlexBaldwin440

    @AlexBaldwin440

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DarkVoidIII Good catch. I must have over looked that.

  • @youtubesnamingpolicysucks

    @youtubesnamingpolicysucks

    Жыл бұрын

    Second the notion that PSR was the railroads downfall. Do you get held away pay after 12 like the UP? My old boss sat for 33 hours waiting for relief in an inaccessible area during a winter storm, got back to the terminal and was told to be ready in 12 hours on Christmas Eve. He cleaned out his locker and told the corridor manager to eat 💩.

  • @tomt9543

    @tomt9543

    Жыл бұрын

    I hired out on Southern Railway in April of ‘79, retiring 41 years later from Norfolk Southern in 2020. The last two years I worked were beyond unbelievable! How such a great and strong industry as the American class 1 railroads could be so quickly raped, pillaged, and left for dead in such a short time is beyond outrageous! Wall Street did this via activist hedge fund robber barons, and the Federal government just sat back and let it happen! Of course I’m sure they received large envelopes under the table to encourage blindness! And now the RR’s are baffled as to why the thousands upon thousands of employees they unceremoniously dumped two years ago turn down offers to come back to work, even with healthy bonuses!

  • @rjohnson1690

    @rjohnson1690

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tomt9543 I think the carriers are purposely driving us off. I quit UP after 13 years and went to Amtrak. It’s nice to work for a company that treats us like human beings.

  • @beverly9486
    @beverly9486 Жыл бұрын

    This video goes well with the current new with Norfolk Southern and the derailment in Ohio.

  • @jre617

    @jre617

    Жыл бұрын

    How does one have anything to to with the other? You think a failed axle is due to poor management?

  • @beverly9486

    @beverly9486

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jre617 I feel that cutting corners and ignoring the safety of stakeholders has a direct correlation to poor management

  • @jre617

    @jre617

    Жыл бұрын

    @@beverly9486 And to answer my question?

  • @beverly9486

    @beverly9486

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jre617 Your first question was how does one have to do with another? ​the video’s intro points out that the industry is slow to adapt new technology and fights any changes made. Little innovation and updates to the the trains and infrastructure along with lobbying to block and undue policies that promotes safety yet cuts profits…I think that lines up with your second question.

  • @artistwithouttalent

    @artistwithouttalent

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jre617 How are you not making the connection? A company that literally _will not replace its infrastructure unless it fails catastrophically_ is *not* doing the maintenance that would catch the failed component before it derails and causes a mess. There's a reason there are so many videos of diesel trains spewing fire from a blown turbo.

  • @coffeeandkhaos
    @coffeeandkhaos Жыл бұрын

    This is all 100% true. Having worked with them directly for intermodal transportation, they are all awful to deal with and increase prices for customers in completely unnecessary ways. The worst by far is Union Pacific. Got a container stuck in a stack that you need to move? Well screw you. We will charge you a daily fee for leaving your container here, but we won't let you pull it on a private chassis. You need to use one of our chassis's, which we don't currently have enough of, so you just wait your turn and pay up til we say you can do something. And don't even hope to accurately track your container in motion. I could go on but who has the time.

  • @admiraltroll5255

    @admiraltroll5255

    11 ай бұрын

    My buddy works at a grain shipper and there the crew has a saying that "You can't spell stupid without UP"

  • @flipshod
    @flipshod Жыл бұрын

    I've lived in a "railroad town" much of my life (near a major yard), and one maddening (and dangerous) thing that has happened the last few years is that trains get backed up and block street crossings. You can be many miles away from an under- or overpass with a train just sitting there, sometimes for hours. This is a hassle passed along to all drivers and can be dangerous for emergency vehicles. It's a typical form of pushing external costs onto the communities, essentially using our towns as extensions of their yard, another form of "pollution".

  • @silverbackag9790

    @silverbackag9790

    Жыл бұрын

    You realize these towns built up around the railroad yards right? Not the railyards invading a "community." Use the gray matter between your ears. I know its hard. Don't like it? Move.

  • @Thomaskarren

    @Thomaskarren

    Жыл бұрын

    @@silverbackag9790 that’s absolutely no excuse for the railroads making the trains unnecessarily and unsafely long, then paying the meager fines they receive for the behavior as a cost of business rather than the warning it should be.

  • @alb12345672

    @alb12345672

    Жыл бұрын

    They are trying to reactivate a line here and the town is worried they will block two rr crossings with the long trains. That is a problem for emergency vehicles. The trains they are talking about running are much longer.

  • @marioxerxescastelancastro8019

    @marioxerxescastelancastro8019

    Жыл бұрын

    The word you are looking for is “externalities”.

  • @An0xymoron127

    @An0xymoron127

    Жыл бұрын

    @@silverbackag9790 clown moment

  • @maple7093
    @maple7093 Жыл бұрын

    I feel like THE CONRAIL ERA is slowly becoming more and more of a meme until Conrail will actually be brought back.

  • @jintabix3758

    @jintabix3758

    Жыл бұрын

    Somebody actually made the Penn central again

  • @AlRoderick

    @AlRoderick

    Жыл бұрын

    In-fuckin-shallah

  • @JohnDoe-my5ip

    @JohnDoe-my5ip

    Жыл бұрын

    Get the conrail X dark Brandon memes going and maybe we’ll have a shot of something good happening for once…

  • @chuckabbate5924

    @chuckabbate5924

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jintabix3758 yeah coast to coast

  • @truedarklander

    @truedarklander

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jintabix3758 Conrail*

  • @rjohnson1690
    @rjohnson1690 Жыл бұрын

    Four hours!? Five days a week!? I routinely worked seven days a week (when I was in the yard often twice a day) with only ten hours rest, and I only got a 90 minute phone call. One of the final straws for me was the horrible train lineups. Before PSR the lineups were bad, after PSR they were like reading a Magic Eight ball. The way class 1 freight companies treat their employees is downright criminal.

  • @AnontheGOAT

    @AnontheGOAT

    5 ай бұрын

    EMD POWER!!

  • @VulcanLogic
    @VulcanLogic Жыл бұрын

    I was offered a job at CSX about 25 years ago. Turned it down flat after they told me about the schedule. Thankful I did.

  • @Maniac3020
    @Maniac3020 Жыл бұрын

    Ah, the mental pandemic known as "cost cutting", currently rampaging throughout the US business world.

  • @TheOwenMajor

    @TheOwenMajor

    Жыл бұрын

    Cost-cutting is called running a business. Socialists don't run functioning systems, they keep stealing from people to pay for their fantasies. That's how you get 20 year waiting times to get a car in the soviet union and people living in 400sqft block apartments in the largest country on Earth.

  • @KRYMauL

    @KRYMauL

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, it's the the only way to create "record" profits. You didn't seriously think greed had any bound did you?

  • @arkeuzarts5140

    @arkeuzarts5140

    Жыл бұрын

    the real trick is continuously growing year over year profits, sustained by unsustainable business practices, and without improving underlying infrastructure. That now that is flawless.

  • @KRYMauL

    @KRYMauL

    Жыл бұрын

    @@arkeuzarts5140 How do you think "record" profits are achieved what is this Singapore.

  • @xaviercopeland2789

    @xaviercopeland2789

    Жыл бұрын

    The US and everywhere else.

  • @Cptn.Viridian
    @Cptn.Viridian Жыл бұрын

    I think there are two facts that just add salt to the wound. 1: These companies are not financially struggling in any way. Despite their poor maintenance and labor practices, as well as continually degrading the quality and speed of the service they provide. 2: These companies could make even more money if they literally put ANY money into upgrading their infrastructure. On the low end, double tracking or even just maintaining a few lines would allow them to run trains even more profitably and faster. On the high end, electrification would basically reduce running costs on that railroad to almost zero.

  • @shopshop144

    @shopshop144

    Жыл бұрын

    How would faster trains make the companies more money. More wear and tear on equipment and how is a 40' container getting from LA to Chicago 2 or 4 hours faster going to benefit them, where rates are based on all sorts of factors, time not being one of them. Shippers of bulk, which is what rail does, care more about predictability than speed.

  • @laylalululuna

    @laylalululuna

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shopshop144 Time dependent goods = High value goods. Like yeah nobody cares how long it takes a car full of coal to get somewhere but maybe railroads shouldn't be relegated to only carrying the least time dependent of goods. The only market railroads can gain is that which they take away from trucks

  • @Heatherder

    @Heatherder

    Жыл бұрын

    Electricity isnt free lmao

  • @Cptn.Viridian

    @Cptn.Viridian

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shopshop144 1: Faster Train = More equipment utilization and less labor costs. 2: With how the companies have their infrastructure set up, there could be DAYS saved on a trip that long. Many sections of track are so bad they have been downgraded to 10mph ratings for dead straight track. Combine that with most lines being single tracks, and a trains could spend a 12 hour shift waiting for a green signal.

  • @jorinlutz4363

    @jorinlutz4363

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Heatherder But if you use electrified Trains you dont need to drive all the diesel around. that makes the Trains lighter so they dont need as much energy to move stuff around. Also electrisity can be made from renewable sources.

  • @bkzach
    @bkzach Жыл бұрын

    I love trains, I did ever since I was a kid, I had a model railroad then and now as a 25 year old I have one again. Nothing is more fun than watching that little train except for watching the real ones go by, but hearing about how poorly run they are and how they treat their workers is atrocious. I hope one day we realize how important and beneficial trains are and can be again, especially with upgrades like you mentioned with the Swiss trains.

  • @billclemons5593
    @billclemons5593 Жыл бұрын

    As a CONRAIL employee… there’s alottta facts in this post because I live it everyday!

  • @FJA---
    @FJA--- Жыл бұрын

    I worked for BN for 38+ years. During that time our management made it abundantly clear that their job would be perfect if they didn’t have customers and employees to deal with.

  • @NavyVet2243

    @NavyVet2243

    Жыл бұрын

    Trucking companies are basically the same way!!!

  • @BTin416

    @BTin416

    Жыл бұрын

    This is, in fact, a storyline of all of modern America (and in extension, all of western culture in general). People who just want to be managers and finger pointers and tell people what to do, without any feedback or talk back, and get richly rewarded for being the person telling others to do work, while despising the very people that make any organization wealthy in the first place. Until it changes overall, in every facet of society, this won't improve anywhere. We are told we are free and democratic, yet in the most important part of any person's life (their work and economic life) they have none of either of those.

  • @jerjerferson

    @jerjerferson

    Жыл бұрын

    My dad said it got even worse after it became BNSF.

  • @FJA---

    @FJA---

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jerjerferson He's not wrong. Before I retired on some jobs there were more scabs than employees working. I doubt that has changed in the 10 years I've been retired.

  • @jerjerferson

    @jerjerferson

    Жыл бұрын

    @@FJA--- my dad retired back in 2000 so I imagine it's much worse now than it was back then. He said that the worst part of the whole thing was that his BN leadership was decent but they were all replaced by SF company men

  • @micah7516
    @micah7516 Жыл бұрын

    As a Factorio player, the concept of running double length trains thru old infrastructure is a quick way to completely jam your tracks

  • @TheOwenMajor

    @TheOwenMajor

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm sure the tens of thousands of people who manage the logistics of rail freight transport as a full time job will greatly appreciate your factorio knowledge.

  • @therealextractedjuice

    @therealextractedjuice

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheOwenMajor Incompetent people tend to exist in groups you know.

  • @TheOwenMajor

    @TheOwenMajor

    Жыл бұрын

    @@therealextractedjuice Yeah, they usually offer their comments on Europhile KZread videos.

  • @Androfier

    @Androfier

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheOwenMajor So calling for the implementation of common sense policies makes you a Europhile?

  • @tippa7328

    @tippa7328

    Жыл бұрын

    starting literally any argument with experience from a video game as your proof of legitimacy instantaneously invalidates everything you have to say

  • @MenaceIN
    @MenaceIN Жыл бұрын

    10 year railroader and now in management. This video nailed it right on the fucking head

  • @raxcentalruthenta1456
    @raxcentalruthenta1456 Жыл бұрын

    BNSF literally has like 5 or 6 very long trains parked outside of rathdrum Idaho. And some look like they've been parked there for a while. Really makes you wonder what clients and companies are waiting on some of the items in those train cars.

  • @user-qe2me7wo2f
    @user-qe2me7wo2f Жыл бұрын

    As a Russian I didn't even know that passing sidings were a thing because I've literally never seen a railroad that wasn't double-tracked. The realization that it isn't like that in America was a huge cultural shock

  • @MarioFanGamer659

    @MarioFanGamer659

    Жыл бұрын

    Even with double tracked lines, you still need some passing loops to accomodate trains of different stops and speeds. But of course, they're much less necessary when you don't need to make space for a train coming from the other direction.

  • @ninyaninjabrifsanovichthes45

    @ninyaninjabrifsanovichthes45

    Жыл бұрын

    "Poor Russians living under Soviet Communism don't know the freedom of single tracked railroads."

  • @ninyaninjabrifsanovichthes45

    @ninyaninjabrifsanovichthes45

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MarioFanGamer659 And you don't have to worry about an incident like Hinton in 1986 happening.

  • @Mas4449

    @Mas4449

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s interesting. And there are of course exceptions here in the US like BNSFs triple track mainline over Cajon and many many others but yes a lot of single track lines still exist

  • @rmsteutonic3686

    @rmsteutonic3686

    Жыл бұрын

    In Australia we only have single lines way out in the outback.

  • @SaveMoneySavethePlanet
    @SaveMoneySavethePlanet Жыл бұрын

    The duopolies remind me of what the author of Donut Economics says about the free market: “The free market doesn’t exist because whoever has the most money makes rules up so that they can keep their money. So don’t you want to use your vote in order to have a say in what those rules are?”

  • @troy3456789

    @troy3456789

    Жыл бұрын

    All of these problems can be solved with a magical money tree. It's magical, because even though it spits out more money to solve problems, it doesn't devalue currency already in circulation. It's the wonderful magic of socialism and communism.

  • @FrodoTbag

    @FrodoTbag

    Жыл бұрын

    @@troy3456789 If there is one entity I trust less than government, its corporations and they have ruined the ideals of free market and directly caused the rise of socialism and communism.

  • @legoboy468

    @legoboy468

    Жыл бұрын

    @@troy3456789 you mean taxes?? Who said we have to print money, we use taxes to pay for things which, newsflash, Doesn’t increase inflation. Most inflation is caused either by banks creating money through fractional reserve banking or through a cut of supply while demand rises (ie what we’re experiencing rn)

  • @troy3456789

    @troy3456789

    Жыл бұрын

    @@legoboy468 Only the government can create inflation. All the governments that printed money during covid created their inflation as well. None of the countries that did not print money and hand it out experienced inflation.

  • @ixiairisborne1695

    @ixiairisborne1695

    Жыл бұрын

    To be clear, this quote really just pertains to plutocracies (rule by the rich), like the USA. Also, frankly, the USA is far enough into the realm of plutocracy that the people's votes don't ever count, unless they're accompanied by a large suitcase full of cash. I'm not saying "don't vote," but don't expect the voices of a million everyday people to have the same weight as the vote of any given corporate CEO.

  • @mailstorminurbox
    @mailstorminurbox Жыл бұрын

    the us government: ill use the n word railways: nationalisation? us government: *NI-* railways: *AAAAAAHHHHHH*

  • @rustingparts
    @rustingparts Жыл бұрын

    Alan, for someone who attacks other youtubers for fact checking, you need to check you 4 hour status call. It can and typically is 1.5-2 hours notice for the big orange guy. :)

  • @hakeemsd70m

    @hakeemsd70m

    Жыл бұрын

    He also got the locomotive order part so wrong, I can't even fathom. NS just bought a fairly sized order of brand new SD70ACe Tier 4 credit units from EMD/Progress Rail over the past two years. UP bought a significant number of SD70ACe/AH units during the 2010's, SD70AH-T4 units during the last couple of years. BNSF, UP, CN, CSX, and NS have received a large number of brand new GEVO units, both tier 3 and tier 4, from GE Transportation (now wholly owned by Wabtec). I believe CP is the only Class 1 to not have bought brand new diesel locomotives, not rebuilds or ex-lease units, in more than 10 years.

  • @rustingparts

    @rustingparts

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hakeemsd70m I like Alan, I just wish he drop this arrogant attitude he's taken on recently. He's not infallible either

  • @hakeemsd70m

    @hakeemsd70m

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rustingparts I feel you and see what you're saying, there was a lot of him acting out in this video. The old "railroading is outdated, they need to get with the times" theme and attitude as well, it's tiring rhetoric.

  • @rustingparts

    @rustingparts

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hakeemsd70m he's not wrong, he's just pretentious about it

  • @hakeemsd70m

    @hakeemsd70m

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rustingparts Agreed.

  • @floodtheinbox
    @floodtheinbox Жыл бұрын

    Our call is a 2 hour call. And we work 11 of 14 days. And they regularly run us out of town the day before our "day off" and it absolutely crushes any ability to plan or schedule things in our personal lives.

  • @juggernaut808

    @juggernaut808

    Жыл бұрын

    This is what the public doesn’t understand. Then they say “well why do you work there? Get another job”. I wish we had went on strike so they could see the devastation it would have caused and why what we do is so important and worth what we were asking for was well deserved. I’m not in the field. I’m a dispatcher and finally able to hold a regular schedule because so many are quitting. But we still get tagged a lot and are forced to work our off days because of a shortage of workers. It pisses us off when we have a crew out there on the law and can’t get them off the train for hours and management just acts like ‘oh well. It is what it is’. I had a train master just yesterday cancel a taxi I ordered because they feel it’s a waste of money. The crew had to wait 2hrs for the yard shuttle to get back and take them to the hotel. Let me stop now because I’m ready to start ranting 😂

  • @jamisojo

    @jamisojo

    Жыл бұрын

    I would quit tomorrow. No money is worth that.

  • @jamisojo

    @jamisojo

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@juggernaut808 your problem is that you are helping make your own situation desperate. The world won't end if some people don't get their stuff... but then somebody might actually do something about it without ruining your life. Don't live your life like they own you.

  • @StandingForLight

    @StandingForLight

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah well welcome to the US. We're all just slaves to upper management in the Corporations. I mean I feel for you and it is wrong. But your industry isnt the only industry that has to deal with shit like that. Welcome to the club.

  • @zachbunch8701

    @zachbunch8701

    Жыл бұрын

    I went back to truck driving after being laid off during the pandemic.

  • @alexwithclipboard
    @alexwithclipboard Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for including the part about freight trains not fitting in sidings, making the shorter Amtrak train always be the one that waits. I seriously regretted not putting that in my own Amtrak video last winter.

  • @FGH9G

    @FGH9G

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh hey! It's you! Loved your Amtrak video haha. Very educational and I learned many things I didn't know before!

  • @DTD110865

    @DTD110865

    Жыл бұрын

    I've noticed this as soon as I started taking Amtrak in the early-21st Century. Unfortunately, because of this, travel time to and from NYC was actually the same as Greyhound. There's slightly more room on the train, but the keyword in that sentence is "slightly." If you're close to 6 feet or taller it's not much. You'd have to rent a room in a sleeping car, but good luck being able to afford that.

  • @alexwithclipboard

    @alexwithclipboard

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DTD110865 The problems vary by route. Where were you riding from?

  • @ifyourmarriedyourasimpanda7440

    @ifyourmarriedyourasimpanda7440

    Жыл бұрын

    Amtrak doesn't own the lines so they wouldn't have the right of way anyway

  • @DTD110865

    @DTD110865

    Жыл бұрын

    @@alexwithclipboard Three places. One was Dade City, which no longer has Amtrak trains, one was Orlando, and one was Tampa. That was in the early-to-mid-2000's though.

  • @spacetruckin6555
    @spacetruckin6555 Жыл бұрын

    The ghost of Hunter Harrison is alive and well on all the lines. I work for NS and the operating ratio is all management talks about.

  • @dakota5932
    @dakota5932 Жыл бұрын

    I enjoy the blunt and straightforward commentary. Good video, you seem to actually have a clue what's going on in the industry.

  • @R4baDader
    @R4baDader Жыл бұрын

    The 4 organized crime syndicates that are fighting to kill trains

  • @shopshop144

    @shopshop144

    Жыл бұрын

    Five, counting the unions which more often than not look out for the union leaders and the union elites long before the rank-and-file members.

  • @scopie49

    @scopie49

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shopshop144 I feel like the union leaders fucked us completely by agreeing to this TA that literally zero of my coworkers have said they'd vote for. Congress might not have prevented the first strike but now that a TA has been achieved, I think our leverage went straight out the window. Can't wait to see how many more people quit after their backpay.

  • @corxc997

    @corxc997

    Жыл бұрын

    @@scopie49 it still has to be voted on...

  • @scopie49

    @scopie49

    Жыл бұрын

    @@corxc997 Yes. Supposedly congress wasn't going to stop the strike and that forced the carriers to negotiate. But now the union leadership came to a TA and I'm 99% certain it will be voted no. There's no guarantee congress will allow us to actually strike the second time around. It will most likely be after midterms and they might be less willing to let us strike since the "union leadership thinks the TA is good enough so everyone else should be satisfied, too."

  • @VestedUTuber

    @VestedUTuber

    Жыл бұрын

    Except it's _because_ they're following the law that things are getting screwed over. The Buy America act prevents Class 1 and 2 rail operators, among other things, from purchasing foreign equipment even if they wanted to. So, while the companies are being shit, the government is definitely NOT helping.

  • @birbeyboop
    @birbeyboop Жыл бұрын

    they all lived in harmony before alan attacked

  • @matthewtymczyszyn8948

    @matthewtymczyszyn8948

    Жыл бұрын

    I mean... weebs have more friends than train buffs do. Trust me, I know...

  • @rapcreeperproductions3269

    @rapcreeperproductions3269

    Жыл бұрын

    @@matthewtymczyszyn8948 "young" train buffs

  • @calestial2457

    @calestial2457

    Жыл бұрын

    Reminds me, I ended up quitting the anime community for the train one, The anime one gets pretty repetative and compared to trains which isn't fictional.

  • @birbeyboop

    @birbeyboop

    Жыл бұрын

    @@calestial2457 they certainly feel fictional in my neck of the woods

  • @matthewtymczyszyn8948

    @matthewtymczyszyn8948

    Жыл бұрын

    @@calestial2457 It amazes me some of the stuff the Thomas fandom digs up. Wilbert Awdry's papers were largely preserved so people are constantly digging up new details. And I swear to God, the wooden toys will survive the Apocalypse. Mine look right out of the box!

  • @PacificDev1995
    @PacificDev1995 Жыл бұрын

    12:05 🤣🤣🤣 that was so hularious af

  • @gabrielrussell5531
    @gabrielrussell5531 Жыл бұрын

    Fun Simpsons trivia: Springfield is in Union-Pacific territory. It's also a coastal state, since their radio station starts with K they're west of the Mississippi river, and it gets snow. infer from those data points what you will.

  • @user-jf4nj3ez2k

    @user-jf4nj3ez2k

    2 ай бұрын

    No.clue. I suck at geography.

  • @gabrielrussell5531

    @gabrielrussell5531

    2 ай бұрын

    @@user-jf4nj3ez2k It's in the Northwest. It can only be Washington or Oregon.

  • @cordingdesert9566
    @cordingdesert9566 Жыл бұрын

    I recently was reading an article how a large number to rail workers were on strike due terrible treatment they were receiving. And the train companies had the Gaul to try to say the workers were holding America hostage.

  • @victorhopper6774

    @victorhopper6774

    Жыл бұрын

    brother-in-laws dad was a railway worker. just a track maintainer. died worth millions.

  • @RailfanRowan

    @RailfanRowan

    Жыл бұрын

    That's correct, we were told it was our fault!

  • @alexbrown1050

    @alexbrown1050

    Жыл бұрын

    *gall

  • @davidmunoz8171

    @davidmunoz8171

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, that strike affected GM here in the DFW area. I work for "GM & Universal" , a warehouse that handles most of the individual parts of a vehicle and sorts them for the correct order for GM to build their cars. Anyway, about a month ago or so, we were told we'd be closed for the weekend, (our week here usually ends on Saturdays) and possibly into Monday. Come Monday and well, we had no parts. We were grabbing from the reserves. Our shifts have been all over the place since then. Cherry on top, they did the strike during our time to change parts for the yr 2023/24. So it's been chaotic. To clarify, I'm not blaming the strike for our chaos necessarily, just stating how it's affected the warehouse in which I work at in terms of production output.

  • @Homer-OJ-Simpson

    @Homer-OJ-Simpson

    Жыл бұрын

    What do the ancient Celtic of modern day France have to do with railroads? Oh, gall!

  • @LastIcebear
    @LastIcebear Жыл бұрын

    As a Rail Worker (DB), I feel pretty comfortable in saying that your system in the US Fucking sucks. For a Rail company to actually work you need a few things: -Excellent Planning (ik, DB isn't good in that either but a) its slowly changing and b) I know my schedule for the next 6 months) -Good Working Conditions (Paid illness leave for example is a standard here) -Investments both in infrastructure (expansion) and in your train fleet -And lastly, people in HR who are more dedicated to keep the railroad running rather than company profits.

  • @starinq

    @starinq

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah, this is true, there's no way we can defend our shitty rail system

  • @naturallyherb

    @naturallyherb

    Жыл бұрын

    Well said!

  • @montiro8999

    @montiro8999

    Жыл бұрын

    The German system also sucks, the DB has no competition in long distance rail, Fernverkehr is a monopoly in Germany. Railinfrastructure and railway have to be strictly separate into different companies.

  • @oldtechnobodycaresabout

    @oldtechnobodycaresabout

    Жыл бұрын

    @@montiro8999 that's also changing: I believe that open access operators are coming.

  • @abhinavs4326

    @abhinavs4326

    Жыл бұрын

    I hate unionized workforce period . they made indian railways like shit

  • @samuelitooooo
    @samuelitooooo Жыл бұрын

    I've been waiting for videos like this that address the freight railroads. Can't wait for all the future ones.

  • @jamesmccarthy4777
    @jamesmccarthy4777 Жыл бұрын

    Tough to swallow considering I'm a UP and BNSF rail fan. I like seeing the diesel freight trains run and appreciate how many old work horses have been saved from scrap but I absolutely hate the corporates who have chosen to trash these good names. This especially applies to the evil Norfolk Southern. Especially after the big rail accident that resulted in contaminating a whole town in Ohio, they should ashamed of the way they disgrace the great names they inherited such as the PRR, New York Central, Norfolk and Western, Western Maryland and many others. And for all the neglect of infrastructure and treatment of employees, dangerous cost cutting measures that led to the disaster, ALL the Executives, Stockhders, and the CEO should all be thrown in jail and fined into bankruptcy!

  • @LeahK2018
    @LeahK2018 Жыл бұрын

    I been a railroad conductor for 22 years. Since about 2006 the railroads have been run by Wall Street investors buying railroad stock to a point they have a say how railroads are run. These Wall Street investors all want large profits quickly from the rail companies. The easiest way to get shareholders rich is extream cost cutting measures. That in detail is cutting employment from all departments from a rail road especially the T&E Department. Trainmen and Engineers (T&E) jobs have been cut the most in the past 20 years running the rest of us T&E employees into the ground. My work load during my shift has increased by at least 75%. Jobs that have had 3 people on them are cut to 2 man jobs and even into 1 man jobs. The railroad has basically crippled me in the past 22 years, it's a physically takes a toll on your body each and every day. Only reason I stayed with the railroad was $35 a hour working in the railyard and a pension after 30 years. So in the past year or two railroad engineers and conductors are burnt out and are quitting the profession in masses. Less employees means trains aren't moving as quickly as they once were. The railroads are reluctant to do mass hiring as there profits goes down with more employees. I'm writing this before I watch this video. But I'm sure the person who is responsible for it has no clue on how a railroad works. I Believe trains only carry about 20% or less in the transport of good. We need more truck drivers and more railroad employees PERIOD !!! These 7 major railroads in America (CP, CSX, CN, NS, UP, KCS, BNFS) ALL MAKE BILLONS IN PROFITS 📈 EACH YEAR BUT CRY WHEN FEDERAL RAILROAD AGENCIES TELL THEM TO HIRE MORE PEOPLE !!!

  • @abyssstrider2547

    @abyssstrider2547

    Жыл бұрын

    Some industries shouldn't sell stocks.

  • @nvoshallow9181

    @nvoshallow9181

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah me too. Been working for only a year. I’m already realizing how hungry the CEO’s are.

  • @t42press15

    @t42press15

    Жыл бұрын

    I think this guy alan fisher who made this video is a wall street schill trying to hurt the railroad. Afterall what is left after reducing the rail worker volume to a skeleton crew but to claim it is old, dirty, inefficient and ultimately unnecessary. They want to kill the rail roads. This guy's video sucks and he can get stuffed. I love railroads and the people who work them - there needs to be more hires - this alan fisher guy is the one who is old, dirty, inefficient and unnecessary.

  • @theresabrownfield131

    @theresabrownfield131

    Жыл бұрын

    Yup. I'm a conductor also

  • @ianhomerpura8937

    @ianhomerpura8937

    Жыл бұрын

    @@t42press15 why stick with diesel locomotives though? Why are companies resisting electrification at all costs?

  • @Mr9Guns
    @Mr9Guns Жыл бұрын

    The best way to describe PSR: Doing less with less. You hit the nail on the head with this video, glad to be back in school and going into a different field of work. FYI Canada has almost all the same problems as the US, only difference is our duopoly is between CP and CN. The biggest single thing that could be done to help workers is to repeal legislation that forces striking workers back to work. Then there would be negotiations in good faith. Right now it's so bad that new workers like myself see the best option is to walk away and pursue a different career whereas railroad jobs used to be coveted.

  • @skinnflint

    @skinnflint

    Жыл бұрын

    Boring storytelling

  • @matthewandrews3036
    @matthewandrews3036 Жыл бұрын

    The biggest problem here is NO ONE CARES! It's sad really we have such a limited bandwidth in our gov't attention span only a few issues at a time ever get dealt with unless your shoveling money at a congressman or a huge disaster occurs.

  • @tibbers3755
    @tibbers3755 Жыл бұрын

    So... anyone came back to this vid after that shitshow in ohio?

  • @Blackcat41641

    @Blackcat41641

    Жыл бұрын

    A good reminder that eventually, these kind of monopolies kill people. Regulations are written by blood.

  • @chromediesel444
    @chromediesel444 Жыл бұрын

    As a Pennsylvania native, Pennsylvania was well known with Pennsylvania Railroad. They ran electric freight trains between DC to NYC, Harrisburg via Philly to NYC, and Harrisburg to DC. That carried on through Penn Central years and Conrail until early 1980s they stopped running electric trains. Conrail retired their electric roster such as GG1 and E60. Enola yard, Port Road branch, Campben-Amboy and Columbia Secondary got de-electricfied. All the freights diverted onto non electric routes (Harrisburg Line, Reading Line, Lehigh Line) just so they wouldn't conflict with Amtrak on Northeast Corridor and so as on Keystone.

  • @Marconius6
    @Marconius6 Жыл бұрын

    Wow, it's almost like leaving natural monopolies in the hands of private companies will lead to monopolies! And monopolies are like, bad? I am shocked.

  • @alexanderfretheim5720

    @alexanderfretheim5720

    Жыл бұрын

    Probably the best answer to railroad monopolies is making it easier to operate barges on American rivers, lakes and canals. Trucks already compete with rail on fast cargos, so having barges, which can literally be a mom-and-pop operation, competing with rail on slow, cheap cargos should bring a great deal of balance to the system.

  • @boblynch2802

    @boblynch2802

    Жыл бұрын

    and a Government monopoly is better?

  • @georgetsokanis3542

    @georgetsokanis3542

    Жыл бұрын

    More proof of a corrupted government. Covid killed 500,000 Americans per year. Cigarettes kill 750,000. Imagine if covid was caused by a known product but was still allowed and was indemnified against lawsuits in exchange for an annual payment.See Master Tobacco Settlement.

  • @alexanderfretheim5720

    @alexanderfretheim5720

    Жыл бұрын

    @@boblynch2802 Basically no, but why do you assume that the only alternatives are a monopoly of private railroad companies and a monopoly of government? Most operators of barges on the Mississippi River are small business owners. We need to ask what we can do to help small ma and pa barge operators compete with the big railroads! The parts of America that contain the majority of our population are traversed by navigable rivers and canals.

  • @mamarussellthepie3995

    @mamarussellthepie3995

    Жыл бұрын

    Just wait! "The government railroad monopoly will be infinitely better than shareheld monopolies!" - Said literally no one with a brain Lol

  • @DR4eva84
    @DR4eva8411 ай бұрын

    So I decided to take Amtrak for the first time outside of the NEC by riding from Tucson to Arizona rather than the bus. Sure enough, our train is delayed because Union Pacific cut in front of the Amtrak train and we have to wait for them to go through.

  • @firebat128
    @firebat128 Жыл бұрын

    Perfectly narrated, informative, and hilarious. You called out the exact problems.

  • @erikwiseman1702
    @erikwiseman1702 Жыл бұрын

    I feel like a lot of large businesses in the US have been taken over by "bean counters" who have game-ified spread sheets and strategies to maximize financial output for a minimum financial input - not maximum profit or long-term viability, mind you, just extracting max profit for the least possible investment.Sure, they'll slowly wreck the company; but, they maximized everyone's investment!

  • @snarkylive

    @snarkylive

    Жыл бұрын

    It's not the bean counters, it the consumers. Capitalism is just unsustainable, you figured it out when you were a kid. You cannot have infinite growth with finite resources. Cutting waste using computers was the last golden age for this type of economy, you cannot cut any more. That's why it's trying to expand into space instead of addressing any of the issues with scarcity. Capitalism doesn't understand the concept of priceless, and there are some thing you cannot buy back.

  • @outlawruby

    @outlawruby

    Жыл бұрын

    That just sounds like capitalism

  • @Mike-jv8bv

    @Mike-jv8bv

    Жыл бұрын

    @@outlawruby not really. these analysts are harvard/yale business school scammers. capitalism is actually providing the services for what you charge.

  • @thebravesirrobin.

    @thebravesirrobin.

    Жыл бұрын

    Capitalism only works on paper because human beings are not rational agents and have finite lifespans. Saving a buck today to pay 10 bucks in a week seems ridiculous, except when you're the CEO of an unchecked monopoly and you have the power to move that cost to future generations or to the government-funded competition (e.i. the highway network).

  • @the_expidition427

    @the_expidition427

    Жыл бұрын

    @@outlawruby No that is just cronyism with spreadsheets and not effort.

  • @oadka
    @oadka Жыл бұрын

    Nice to see the Indian Railways being mentioned in a positive light. Only very few foreigners seem to realize how good it is given the conditions it operates in. I'm very proud of projects such as Kavach, Train 18, DFC and the massive WAG 12 locomotive.

  • @danielbliss8014

    @danielbliss8014

    Жыл бұрын

    high-reach pantographs and double-stack intermodal with flatbed cars instead of gondolas even on the electrified track. Don't forget that part. Nobody does intermodal in a more energy efficient way than IR.

  • @turdferguson2982

    @turdferguson2982

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, they're probably still operating as a public service instead of just a corporation that profits as well by claiming losses as by showing a profit.

  • @alexanderfretheim5720

    @alexanderfretheim5720

    Жыл бұрын

    Honestly it's a great system. It's a (very cost effective) mass transit system, a intercity passenger system and a freight system all-in-one. The Indian Railways are a great example of how to responsibly use your resources to do the most good.

  • @suprashank

    @suprashank

    Жыл бұрын

    WAG 12 is amazing!

  • @prabhatsourya3883

    @prabhatsourya3883

    Жыл бұрын

    @@turdferguson2982 Well, it IS a PUBLIC SERVICE. It is COMPLETELY OWNED and operated by the government, so the regulations about right of way and train priorities can be properly enforced.

  • @CFRF13
    @CFRF13 Жыл бұрын

    If you want to learn more about how Precision Schedule Railroading came to be, look up Paul Hilal, Mantle Ridge, and Ewing Hunter Harrison.

  • @beyondEV
    @beyondEV Жыл бұрын

    It's interesting, that you First mention Switzerland (my country) and then Nationalization of the infrastructure. As we actually went the other way, all railways where denationalized and turned into corporations. Still, the Public does hold majority stakes (so in a sense they still are nationalized). At the same time, regulation was created, which allows anyone to operate trains. this has created a more competitive environment, while the properly formulated regulation ensures that you get only paid if you actually maintain the stuff. As freight is concerned: being a small country is a main disadvantage. freight rail gets it easier to outcompete trucks the longer the distance. so increasing efficacy was important. also making trucks pay for the high wear and tear the inflict on roads did help, as well a public vote to not make the mistake to ignore induced demand (no additional road tunnels through the alps). The main difference is: Switzerland has a CPI (Corruption Index) of about 85 (100 = perfect), placing it in the top 10), the US has about 70. (This does not even include the legalised forms.) So whether it's state run or regulated, the have a hard time to wiggle out of their responsibilities. And the Swiss people always have the damocles sword hanging over any industry sector: One Direct Democratic Vote and you're gone and nationalized. If you do worse, as people except a nationalized version would do, you're gone. (Also the reason we do have (a somewhat) working privatized healthcare industry.) It's a really helpful tool, if you're economy is mainly a bunch a juristic psychopaths (more fitting acronym for corporation). And yes, having someone on call, you have them pay half salary for the time (general rule, there are some exemptions). So either management gets their S*** together or they're bankrupt in no time at all. So we only allow somewhat capable useful juristic psychopaths to exist.

  • @12345fowler

    @12345fowler

    2 ай бұрын

    The difference beeing, in Switzerland they privatize once all the infrastructure and equipment is paid in by the taxpayers, (That goes for the railroads as other previous public services like Skyguide (ATC), the postal office etc. and they don't even try to charge anything for the huge previous capital cost invested already. Just the promise to break the so called "too high salaries" of the staff and other running cost is enough for a private company to gain access to these ex-public markets.

  • @jukeboxdude
    @jukeboxdude Жыл бұрын

    I see this with just about every company that decides it needs to adopt the corporate mindset. They let the bean counters dictate their actions while ignoring the experienced people that are actually dealing with the processes first hand. Everything looks great in the office setting while all the big shots sit in meetings all day to justify their wages. Outside the fancy offices is pure chaos and gross mismanagement. It's everywhere now and infested just about every industry.

  • @alanaadams7440

    @alanaadams7440

    Жыл бұрын

    Health care suffers from the same thing bean counters don't consider patients needs

  • @JeffreyJakucyk
    @JeffreyJakucyk Жыл бұрын

    The property tax situation is something that's very often overlooked. More/better infrastructure leads to higher taxes, disincentivizing capital improvements and maintenance, and incentivizing de-electrification, single-tracking, and demolishing historic stations and other buildings. No other transportation system faces such a burden. Quite the opposite in fact. The big tax receipts from railroads helped fund the highways that put many of them out of business.

  • @alexanderfretheim5720

    @alexanderfretheim5720

    Жыл бұрын

    I wonder if we could work out an alternative legal situation, similar to a British letters patent, that has the rail right of way as a fiefdom rather than real estate, which would exempt it from property taxes and instead require the company to provide passenger services and support for the military and evacuations in the place of tax.

  • @noirekuroraigami2270

    @noirekuroraigami2270

    Жыл бұрын

    @@alexanderfretheim5720 Easy Tax cuts for those that hit a specific Criteria. I do not believe in subsidies but Tax Cuts for compliance to regulations

  • @alexanderfretheim5720

    @alexanderfretheim5720

    Жыл бұрын

    @@noirekuroraigami2270 Most businesses are required to comply with regulations WITHOUT tax cuts.

  • @nightrunner1456
    @nightrunner1456 Жыл бұрын

    Solid information. I always (had) respect for the trains, that been changing fast, the 3 weeks.

  • @MrTedTederson
    @MrTedTederson Жыл бұрын

    I've been a truck driver since 2003 and can say the railroads have a very robust lobby in DC and are constantly trying to get government to further regulate trucking as to make it less attractive as a shipping option. Theyre endlessly trying to get our hours of service- the number of hours in a day we can drive - decreased, along with blocking all attempts to increase the weight amount trucks can legally haul. They lobby the government to rig the system against their competition

  • @kelvintorrence5994

    @kelvintorrence5994

    Жыл бұрын

    Preach it until I see a tanker car at a gas station or refrigerator car at my grocery store, they can shut up or put up,ive been driving trucks going on 28 years now and it's getting worst out here,with ever body in our business.

  • @mikeingeorgia1
    @mikeingeorgia1 Жыл бұрын

    In my experience, I’d have to say that gross incompetence of management is the major factor that disrupted everything. Many managers became managers simply by being related to someone that was a manager. And then they started making having a college education crucial to becoming management instead of having experience. There is no amount of college that will make you a better manager than having actual experience at what you’re doing. Every single aspect of the job was normally pandemonium.

  • @planescaped

    @planescaped

    Жыл бұрын

    Having a pointless college education to do a job that a trained monkey could do is pretty much standard these days.

  • @bassplayer2011ify

    @bassplayer2011ify

    Жыл бұрын

    This is a universal problem, promotions and raises are no longer based on merit. Its based on who you know, what you say, and if you have a 200 grand plus piece of paper that says I can do things. Despite having no real world experience or understand the world at all for that matter.

  • @ritamariekelley4077

    @ritamariekelley4077

    Жыл бұрын

    Not gross incompetence--GREED.

  • @beyondEV

    @beyondEV

    Жыл бұрын

    If you have 10 levels of management micromanaging to S*** out of the guy actually doing the job, you can no longer afford to hire a actually competent guy to do the job. even if by some miracle you do get someone good, the micromanaging will interfere with his work to the point where the job doesn't get done. but how would you justify the huge overhead and the big salaries, if they did nothing at all? There was a company in belgium which went belly up. bankruptcy guys talked to the workers, fired all top management, and they immediately went back to making a profit.

  • @ryanfisch7047
    @ryanfisch7047 Жыл бұрын

    As someone who grew up in the Chicago Metro Area, the railroad capital of the US. I can confirm all these opinions are true in the 90s and early 00s there were tons of trains but usually quick. But as time went on train took what seemed like forever and more and more stopped on the tracks. And getting crossings repaired took just as long .

  • @monica012077

    @monica012077

    Жыл бұрын

    New York is the passenger railroad capital of the US. Chicago's passenger rail network pales in comparison.

  • @texastuna

    @texastuna

    Жыл бұрын

    @@monica012077 Well that's nice, but that comment and the video are not about passenger rail.

  • @buk6708

    @buk6708

    Жыл бұрын

    I was going to say Atlanta, but I looked it up on google. It’s Chicago.

  • @kosjeyr

    @kosjeyr

    Жыл бұрын

    As someone that was born, raised and lives in Aurora, freight trains have to wait until after the Metra morning rides to be able to go through.

  • @darth3911

    @darth3911

    Жыл бұрын

    @@monica012077 New York’s passenger trains are also the ones with the worst staff service. I personally despise New York’s passenger trains.

  • @LauraBow
    @LauraBow Жыл бұрын

    There's a railroad that runs next to my work building and the train (which is actually waaaay too long) regularly stops on it and blocks both roads in and out.

  • @rebeckylee157
    @rebeckylee157 Жыл бұрын

    December 9th is one day away when I type this. I know that the UP, BNSF, CSX, and NS companies treat their conductors and engineers like absolute crap. Shame on them! The conditions of operating a train are incredibly dangerous, intense (but can also be monotonous), frustrating, and exhausting. I’m a not an engineer or a conductor, but I am an OTR trucker who had once applied for a career with Norfolk-Southern in Philadelphia over 15 years ago. I almost got the job, but was eliminated in the last round of two applicants. I was probably lucky. As a driver who long-hauls heavy cargo across the USA with HOS dictating how long I can drive/work, rather than a normal 9-5/5 day work week of set days and hours - I can respect what these men and women have to endure. Compile greedy & ambivalent railroad owners with idiot automobile drivers who throw themselves into danger trying to beat the train… well, the engineers and conductors go through so much nail-biting, hair-pulling, ranting, raving, stress of unimaginable levels. To make matters worse, the trains have gotten longer and longer. I have watched three mile long trains barrel down the tracks of Kearney, NE. It’s gotta suck balls when an air-line snaps or a knuckle breaks 2 miles back on those beasts. I love to watch trains. I enjoy feeling their rumble across the ground as they approach and listening to their horns as they come to a crossing…..but I don’t like the abuse that the people who operate them have to go through. NO man or woman should be treated worse than an insect and thought of as just an expendable piece of trash. We need trains in this country, because they control much of the economy moving massive bulk, industrial materials and cargo through long distances into difficult terrain that tractor trailers could not navigate. The infrastructure in America is failing. If the railroad employees strike, it will cripple our economy. (I’m sure that’s what this video is about, but I’m typing this before watching the video). Still human rights are a thing to be enforced for EVERYONE! C’MON CSX, UP, NS, BNSF - STOP BEING ASSININE DOUCHBAGS! You’ll get more loyal employees if you treat them better, hire more people to relieve shifts more often and make trains easier to manage by shortening them a bit. I’m not even sure that what they do to their employees is federally legal by workforce and employment laws.

  • @jamesphillips2285
    @jamesphillips2285 Жыл бұрын

    I decided against applying for CP rail up in Canada because they expect you to be on call 24/7 (no weekends off; only vacations and holidays) with only 2 hours of notice (not 4 as described in the video). In researching the company I learned that they have had several rail strikes recently. But the news media did not cover the actual issues very well. Apparently the main things under dispute were "wages and working conditions": but they were offering near $6000/month to start, so I concluded the the real point of contention was working conditions.

  • @lesdmark

    @lesdmark

    Жыл бұрын

    6000$/month is not nearly enough to have your free will removed. Actually no amount is enough for that sh*tshow of a schedule.

  • @fench1234567

    @fench1234567

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bilbobaggins1934 HR is a misnomer. HR does what's best for company, not the humans.

  • @Shipwright1918
    @Shipwright1918 Жыл бұрын

    This is why they got hauled in front of Congress recently, and were sternly reminded that they are common carriers under the law, which means they are legally obliged to serve anyone who wishes to ship things with them. That obligation has not gone away, nor is likely to anytime soon, and if it takes something like steep penalities or straight up nationalizing the entire system altogether, so be it. Precision scheduled railroading was also called out for the fraud it was, and it was something to sit and watch the railroad execs sit and sweat.

  • @memethief4113

    @memethief4113

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah but if we nationalized the railroads can you imagine the amount of people bleeding from their eyes and screaming about "MUH COMMUNISM!!" that's a big part in our problems with the government actually getting anything done

  • @Shipwright1918

    @Shipwright1918

    Жыл бұрын

    @@memethief4113 You can't please everyone, but I'd rather have a rail system that works for all than one that only lines the pockets of rich corporate types.

  • @robertharper3754

    @robertharper3754

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Shipwright1918, same, and I HATE the idea of nationalizing most anything, but as far as railroads and real crappy utility companies go, it really should be done at this point. Maybe we give them one last chance, find everyone in management/investors that has been criminally negligent, pushing dangerous conditions, neglecting infrastructure, ect, which is most of them, have the government seize all their assets and sentence them to 20 years of VERY hard labor, enforce stricter labor + safety laws on the companies, as well as force the companies to invest 90% of all profit into infrastructure repair until their respective industries are the best in the world. That or the government should straight up seize these companies and fire almost all of the management and prevent them from working in their industries ever again, oh, and no golden parachute for them. That's the only 2 ways sadly to fix those industries at this point.

  • @bobbygetsbanned6049

    @bobbygetsbanned6049

    Жыл бұрын

    As if congress has ever had any idea wtf they are talking about.

  • @sillymesilly

    @sillymesilly

    Жыл бұрын

    Bruh. Congress is literally making railroad workers life harder

  • @engineer_07-present14
    @engineer_07-present14 Жыл бұрын

    Usually I'm for less regulation. But, in this case when the supply chains are monopolized, you have to due 2 things 1. Create new railroad companies to create competition or 2. Regulate the railroads so safety is a priority. If railroads push back, hit them with anti trust cases.

  • @gusmc2220
    @gusmc2220 Жыл бұрын

    10:30 4 hour calls? wow not here. more like an hour and a half!

  • @gusmc2220

    @gusmc2220

    Жыл бұрын

    p.s. the companies just walked away from the negotiating table about an hour ago. basically they're happy with the public law board ruling and are sticking their finger in the face of workers

  • @jredmondson2459
    @jredmondson2459 Жыл бұрын

    The most screwed up thing about it is that their lack of volume is hurting not only the consumer but also the producer. I work in the grain shipping industry and due to precision railroading there have been many small town grain elevators that lose service due to not being able to load enough cars. Then the elevator eventually shuts down and the town around it also implodes. F the railroads

  • @retro_wizard
    @retro_wizard Жыл бұрын

    9:39 this is EXACTLY the reason I did my best to land a spot at a passenger railway when I got qualified. I’m 90% sure a spareboard would kill me. Now I switch for a passenger railway, and while my hours are shit, they’re 𝘾𝙤𝙣𝙨𝙞𝙨𝙩𝙚𝙣𝙩𝙡𝙮 shit.

  • @kiefershanks4172

    @kiefershanks4172

    Жыл бұрын

    As a passenger rail guy too, I can confirm this consistency of shit personally. Haha

  • @jackniessen
    @jackniessen Жыл бұрын

    Watching this after the strike news now, Ironic

  • @ZimbabweanBugbite
    @ZimbabweanBugbite13 күн бұрын

    I showed this video to my dad who has worked for Union Pacific for 34 years, he said everything was “1000% true and those fucks are worse than you think” He did have one small gripe which was about the supply chain and covid, and once again quoting here. “the railroads were never entirely at fault cause we were still running, we never stopped, in fact when the unstated curfews we were considered essential workers and didn’t stop” He explained how for example if he hauled steel coils every two weeks pre covid, post covid he might have only done it once a month, the rest of the supply chain was slowing down and up had to lay people off, so while they seem like the crux of the issue since they were laying people off, the supply chain caused more issues. I am not sure if you have been made aware of this so I just wanted to share this with you and anyone else watching

  • @ltchugacast131
    @ltchugacast131 Жыл бұрын

    Once upon a time our rail lines were world famous. Representatives from all over came to study the layout and operations of our switch yards and stations to improve their own. Now it’s all stripped by the highway and what’s left is a joke.

  • @alexanderfretheim5720

    @alexanderfretheim5720

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think you should blame the highways for this. Britain built highways too, but was still able to maintain its trains: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_motorways_in_the_United_Kingdom Same is true of Germany, Poland and Italy.

  • @ltchugacast131

    @ltchugacast131

    Жыл бұрын

    @@alexanderfretheim5720 the difference is Britain kept them on as a utility service. Here in the US car companies sent representatives all over the US to shill the automotive future and some even went out of their way to buy up popular local transit services to shut them down and pave over the tracks. In my town a highway cuts right through downtown and if you look closer you’ll realize it’s paved right on top of the embankment for the double track that used to let trains and inter city trolleys take people out of town for cheap. Now if you wish to reach the next town within an acceptable time you MUST drop the 20k plus to get a car.

  • @alexanderfretheim5720

    @alexanderfretheim5720

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ltchugacast131 Technically they're run as utilities in the US too. The replacement of streetcars with buses actually makes sense because there's literally nothing you can do with a streetcar that you can't do with a bus, whereas buses have the definite advantage that they can be run on regular city streets and thus don't require expensive and difficult track construction and maintenance. Yes, buses are ugly and offputting to the middle class, but that's a product of utilitarian 1970's era design that would likely have happened to the streetcars too if they had remained in use. (It didn't happen in Europe because the aristocracy put their foot down.) Further, the aesthetic and comfort failures of buses are a design choice that can be undone without changing the basic transit technology.

  • @teranova5566

    @teranova5566

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes it is a fault of car companies GM, Ford, Chrisler etc that lobbied government in USA to sell off train tracks and instead build massive highways. That should never have happened. Now highways are government owned even that these are very expensive and ineffective, in opposite train tracks are privately owned even if these are highly efficient and cheap. It is like USA is walking on hands instead on legs. You can do it only for short time until collapse. 🥴

  • @alexanderfretheim5720

    @alexanderfretheim5720

    Жыл бұрын

    @@teranova5566 Very few train tracks were sold off to become highways. Most were maintained as freight routes.

  • @IchiEyes
    @IchiEyes Жыл бұрын

    I worked for a water analysis lab for a few years, Norfolk Southern was one of my many personal clients. Never had anything but mediocre to bad experiences with them as a company. Took forever to actually pay invoices, unaccomodating to realistic issues presented when sampling, and woefully inept from my experiences.

  • @birgitnazarian8767
    @birgitnazarian8767 Жыл бұрын

    Very good thanks for making this video. My dad was a railroad worker.

  • @michaelguerin56
    @michaelguerin56 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you. Good video. I had read and heard bad things about modern U.S. freight railways but what you have reported here, is on a similar level to your national roading infrastructure scandal. Keep up the good work. Cheers from NZ.

  • @mastershake4145
    @mastershake4145 Жыл бұрын

    I remember you guys talking about the rail workers troubles on the "building 7 well theres youre problem" episode. It was the first time Ive heard anything about it so thanks for getting the word out. I feel like all we hear from mainstream news is "supply chain issues" and no specific info as to what those issues are.

  • @ixiairisborne1695

    @ixiairisborne1695

    Жыл бұрын

    For the mainstream media to give specifics would require research. Remember that "the news" isn't about informing the viewer, but rather about emotionally investing the viewer enough that they'll stay tuned through commercials. Hence the whole "is a serial killer living in YOUR neighborhood?! find out after these messages" stuff.

  • @thecalham

    @thecalham

    Жыл бұрын

    Alot of the terms in this video appeared in that podcat lol

  • @kartik_sinha
    @kartik_sinha Жыл бұрын

    I am happy that you mentioned something positive about Indian railways. I know it is not good but it is definitely improving fast and I can see that in front of me. From punctuality to rolling stock to safety, everything is much better then what it was 10 years ago and will be much better in the next 10 years. You have atleast not stereotyped Indian railways as some old sluggish system where people travel on roofs of trains because they don't. I have travelled a lot and have never seen anybody on the roof of a train in my entire life. Yes the trains are still crowded for unreserved class but that will also improve as more and more sections are being tripled or quad tracked. So that will allow more trains to operate and that will ease congestion. On electrification aspect, we are electrifying 6,000km+ track km every year. Now I am aware that the energy being used for it is not clean but it will be. Plus that is not an excuse not to electrify because burning fossil fuels in thermal power plant is more efficient than these locomotives. Plus it is electricity at the end of the day, so switching sources will not be difficult because locomotives don't care what was the source of the electricity the are using.

  • @ianhomerpura8937

    @ianhomerpura8937

    Жыл бұрын

    Most of the pics of those trains with people on the roof are from Bangladesh afaik, and even they are massively improving their railway system.

  • @kartik_sinha

    @kartik_sinha

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ianhomerpura8937 and if you look at them they look really old.

  • @Hermoan4120

    @Hermoan4120

    Жыл бұрын

    6000 km per year? holy fucking shit that's incredible

  • @ChasmChaos

    @ChasmChaos

    Жыл бұрын

    Indian railways is not good? It sounds like a dream compared to North America!

  • @KRYMauL

    @KRYMauL

    Жыл бұрын

    That's passenger rail, and that only happens in times of depression. Last I checked India isn't in a recession it just has a housing problem.

  • @Trombone_crochet9021
    @Trombone_crochet9021 Жыл бұрын

    I wish Iowa would do more protecting our environment, especially because we are an agricultural state.

  • @VN-hi4vr
    @VN-hi4vr Жыл бұрын

    Multi million dollar company CN Railroad. And they couldn’t supply PPE for the first 6 months of COVID. I personally bought gloves, disinfectant spray, wipes, hand sanitizer, hand soap, masks, etc… for my husband and his crew. Just to keep them safe. CN has never repaid my husband, no thank you, no essential worker pay. Almost 27 yrs in, he’s always the 1st one at work in the morning and the last to leave at night. He’s extremely under paid, $32 and some change an hour is a spit in the face. The cost of fuel, food and everyday essentials has sky rocketed. Their union rep is a joke. He has no fight in him and hasn’t gotten his hand dirty in years. There’s so much talk about gang pay, food allowance and hotel pay and sick time. But the real problem is the wage. The wage is horrendous. No matter if your section or mobile, it’s extremely low pay for hard work, labor intensive and dangerous working conditions. But then again CN doesn’t think much of their employees especially with the comment the their work force didn’t contribute to their profits. What a joke!!! Maybe the Corporate Suits should get their backsides out on the 100 plus degree track and get their hands dirty for a change. If you can talk the talk, then walk the walk. No one and I mean no one at the corporate office in Canada can hold a candle to the hard work, dedication and responsibility my husband has put forth for this company. He bleeds Railroad. So, stop with your bullsh*t CN and give your employees a fair wage (not a piddling small % either). sick time, away from home reimbursements….etc…..oh and let’s not forget the back pay and the measly $1000.00 payments. Another joke!! Come on, like that’s going to amount to much after we’re taxed the f out of it. Not to mention I’m sure it’ll all be paid in a regular pay period check which means the tax bracket will be higher and your employee’s will see nothing from their regular worked hours. So basically two weeks of pay all gone to taxes. That’s your MO though CN. Anything to f your employee’s over.

  • @AlexanderSkinnerVids
    @AlexanderSkinnerVids Жыл бұрын

    OH SNAP ALAN GOING AFTER THE RAILROADS *LETS GOOOO*

  • @ossieeskar5145
    @ossieeskar5145 Жыл бұрын

    You’re right, scooby doo probably would counter argue “well Switzerland is so small compared to the United States”

  • @collectorguy3919

    @collectorguy3919

    Жыл бұрын

    It's actually Shaggy's argument, but Scooby Doo repeats it mockingly.

  • @alexanderfretheim5720

    @alexanderfretheim5720

    Жыл бұрын

    Switzerland is. Russia, China and India are not.

  • @jimmyb.video2116
    @jimmyb.video2116 Жыл бұрын

    I was just at a town hall with my local representatives. Congresswoman Debbie Dingell was there and I shook her hand, looked her right in the eye, and asked her to bring back Conrail. Also I’m emailing her office director this video and few more from the channel. Thanks for your content

  • @liamhodgson
    @liamhodgson Жыл бұрын

    After this last week private ownership of rrs is no longer just inefficient, it is unjust

  • @r.c.daviesbooks1138
    @r.c.daviesbooks1138 Жыл бұрын

    Hand an already shit system created by lawyers and accountants to our stunningly ineffective federal bureaucracy. What could possibly go wrong?

  • @ianhomerpura8937

    @ianhomerpura8937

    Жыл бұрын

    How about let the state governments operate their own rail networks?

  • @Thisisahandle957
    @Thisisahandle957 Жыл бұрын

    Certified big business moment

  • @KeyesThrasher
    @KeyesThrasher Жыл бұрын

    Love the music :) my favorite band! And great video, loved the information and ideas

  • @admiraltroll5255
    @admiraltroll525511 ай бұрын

    I don't want to imagine the economic disaster that would make the feds nationalize the railroads

  • @ianhomerpura8937

    @ianhomerpura8937

    11 ай бұрын

    Try another World War. They already nationalized the railways back in 1917.

  • @mancavestudios8955
    @mancavestudios8955 Жыл бұрын

    As a Michigander, when I see a thumbnail that excludes my state from a disaster map, I am legally obligated to watch.

  • @jamesodell3064

    @jamesodell3064

    Жыл бұрын

    Amtrak had its own problem on a recent trip to Chicago. A 5.5 hour trip turned into a 19 hour nightmare. Electrical went out on the train and the toilets would not flush.

  • @videocollectorguy

    @videocollectorguy

    Жыл бұрын

    I mean as another michigander we probably cant even afford railroads have you seen how bad our roads our?

  • @garykordyzon5032

    @garykordyzon5032

    Жыл бұрын

    I think our geography works against us w.r.t. railroads. Railroads can't pass the straits, and the UP and northern LP aren't population centers demanding high-volume service. I think the map showed service going as far north as Flint. Maybe Saginaw and GR have rail service, I don't know. Beyond that, it's a lot of delivery trucks.

  • @QuintonMurdock
    @QuintonMurdock Жыл бұрын

    I am so happy to work for a railroad that is small enough that when they boast record profits that means we workers are going to be getting a huge bonus that quarter

  • @BruceWaynesaysLandBack
    @BruceWaynesaysLandBack Жыл бұрын

    Love your horse winnie voice when you mentioned Switzerland

  • @davidorth4906
    @davidorth4906 Жыл бұрын

    But, grocery stores have no competition. Companies buy shelf space now. Inflation guaranteed...

  • @nedt
    @nedt Жыл бұрын

    🤣🤣🤣🤣 I spat out my drink when you described the investment strategies into infrastructure.... It's almost the Same here in some parts of Australia

  • @Desmaad
    @Desmaad Жыл бұрын

    The big two up here in Canada are CN (which used to be a crown (state) corporation until it was privatised in 1995 (thanks Chrétien)) and CP. They seem to see passenger rail as a nuisance and therefore our passenger rail (provided by VIA) makes the US' look good.

  • @flare2000x

    @flare2000x

    Жыл бұрын

    I would be super happy if via was as good as Amtrak... And that's pretty depressing

  • @johnstudd4245

    @johnstudd4245

    Жыл бұрын

    They don't "seem" to see it as a nuisance. It is a nuisance to them, and they will tell you so(if they are being honest). The same in the US. Right now it is just the most reasonable solution. For better or for worse.

  • @TheOwenMajor

    @TheOwenMajor

    Жыл бұрын

    Passenger rail never made sense in North America. The railways were built to move freight, and passenger rail was a secondary good even back when it was the only option for long-distance travel. Once there were other options only train lovers used them. Driving and flying are better in 95% of cases, and you can survive on what remains.

  • @Desmaad

    @Desmaad

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheOwenMajor I'd stay it's still viable in denser parts of the continent (the Quebec-Windsor Corridor and the Northeast Corridor, for example).

  • @avroarchitect1793

    @avroarchitect1793

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Desmaad That's where it is least viable, all the land is bought up already to it would need to be taken with eminent domain and the government and corporations are not going to run in the expensive land. They will end up forcing the poor and the farmers off their land. The expansion of the cities is already destroying the good farm land let alone new infrastructure schemes like that.

  • @alc5792
    @alc579211 ай бұрын

    Shareholders never spend on logistics just reap profits.

  • @ianhomerpura8937

    @ianhomerpura8937

    11 ай бұрын

    They’re too stingy to think about capital costs.

  • @mailstorminurbox
    @mailstorminurbox Жыл бұрын

    no one: swiss railways: *gigachad music plays*

  • @S_Roach
    @S_Roach Жыл бұрын

    Oklahoma recently failed to get the Supreme Court to review an lower court ruling, that, had it gone the other way, might have led to shorter trains. They were told that, no, the States don't get to decide how long a train can block a crossing. That's the Federal government's purview. I'll see if I can find it. City of Edmond, Oklahoma v. BNSF Railway Company

  • @TheOwenMajor

    @TheOwenMajor

    Жыл бұрын

    If a city is concerned about crossing delays, the city is more then welcome to build an over or underpass. Almost guarantee you the rail line was there before the road was.

  • @silaskuemmerle2505

    @silaskuemmerle2505

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheOwenMajor the railroad owns the land, so the railroad would have to approve any overpass or underpass, and building one would mean that section of track would be unusable for the construction time so the railroad almost certainly would refuse to approve it.

  • @TheOwenMajor

    @TheOwenMajor

    Жыл бұрын

    @@silaskuemmerle2505 You think you can't build an over/underpass while keeping a line mostly active? Pardon me while I'm laughing. Why do people who obviously have no idea what they are talking about so freely give their opinions? Firstly, railways are perfectly fine with grade separations. In fact, having grade-separating crossings is better for the railroads too. Secondly, it's not very hard(Relatively). For an overpass, you build the approaches to the bridge( No closers needed) and then set pre-fab bridge spans onto the supports. This can( and is) done regularly, and only requires closing the line for a matter of hours. And underpass in also fairly You simply dig out the underpass section(Next to the rail line), construct the bridge and new railway, and then transfer the active line over. Again you only need to close the rail line for a matter of hours. Something that already occurs regularly for routine maintenance.

  • @Joesolo13

    @Joesolo13

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheOwenMajor "dibs" is only part of the issue. They also weren't running 2+ mile long freight trains when it was there. And that's if they even approve the overpass, which they likely wouldn't.

  • @TheOwenMajor

    @TheOwenMajor

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Joesolo13 Firstly, they are allowing a public crossing of their land. Your comment is like the person who moves next to a factor, then starts complaining the factor is noisy. A city doesn't get to complain about crossing delays when they decide to build a major road at level grade with a railway, instead of spending the money for a grade seperation. Secondly, where did you get this notion railways are refusing to allow overpasses to be built, lol. Bring up Google Earth and go to a fair-sized city. I guarantee you there will be plenty of over/underpasses.

  • @tylermckay2586
    @tylermckay2586 Жыл бұрын

    CN is the sole reason that my city doesn't have a commuter rail service that goes thru all of the most populated areas in the metro area

  • @drm9397

    @drm9397

    Жыл бұрын

    Commuter trains, unless bankrolled at exorbitant rates by the taxpayer, are NEVER profitable unless the population is ultra densely packed. Which means the northeast, and nowhere else.

  • @gaelfortier2668

    @gaelfortier2668

    Жыл бұрын

    In the town I used to live in, CN has a yard and tracks passing right next to the town center, near a college. On a map, the tracks are almost in a straight line to Montreal (the trip from the said town to Montreal by car is arround an hour), yet the county has to use buses to get to Montreal because the VIA train service is absolutely dog shit (it passes 0.5 times a day... one day to, one day from).

  • @kb_100

    @kb_100

    Жыл бұрын

    @@drm9397 road networks are also highly subsidized by taxpayers

  • @ihakker1416
    @ihakker1416 Жыл бұрын

    TIL, the US still doesn't have electrified railways?! I was born in the 90s and for all my life, I've only ever heard of or seen diesel locomotives as a special attraction. Like a riding museum. Our grid has been electrified for decades

  • @MidKnight_Sicario187
    @MidKnight_Sicario187 Жыл бұрын

    Hey thanks I really learned something new It’s never occurred to me how much our rail system needs to change

  • @skedzer4803
    @skedzer4803 Жыл бұрын

    Companies are so greedy. If the government owned the tracks but companies operated on them that is a good balance.

  • @SporkyMcFly

    @SporkyMcFly

    Жыл бұрын

    Who is responsible for maintenance and repairs?

  • @burgerpommes2001

    @burgerpommes2001

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SporkyMcFly gov

  • @SeanA099

    @SeanA099

    Жыл бұрын

    Kind of like airlines, where airports and air traffic are government controlled with private lines doing the actual shipping

  • @SporkyMcFly

    @SporkyMcFly

    Жыл бұрын

    @@burgerpommes2001 Anything sounds preferable to this, but the government sucks at managing anything.

  • @vadaing394

    @vadaing394

    Жыл бұрын

    that is how it works in france since the early 2000s and it literally killed freight rail in the country.

  • @Martive_Led
    @Martive_Led Жыл бұрын

    The refusal to maintain bridges in the same manner as they had been by the original railroad has created gross eyesores across the nation. A bridge near my home hasn’t been painted for decades, yet the bridge was always freshly painted in the 50s and 60s.

  • @bill0118
    @bill0118 Жыл бұрын

    I am very happy to hear your comments relating to the weaknesses of the rail network in the USA. I like to watch videos of trains and each time I am surprised to see all these videos showing derailments in the United States. The lack of maintenance of the tracks is obvious, and I say to myself "it's not possible, not in the greatest financial power in the world!", not to mention all the accident scenes at the level crossings... Besides, it's terrifying to see so many diesel locomotives spitting out all that black smoke; as you say, even in India they electrify, and in Russia which is also very large, the trains are electrified. I did not know the problem of the lack of consideration for the staff, but that adds to the rest: shame on these companies! In all Western European countries, all main lines are electrified, and there are few accidents (level crossings have often been replaced by bridges). On the other hand, governments tend to want to privatize national companies (at least in France where I live): will it work worse? Of course here everything is not perfect, there are delays, disgruntled passengers and railway workers on strike, the secondary lines have disappeared in favor of the road, but overall I tell myself that it is rather better than in the States

  • @justincole1510
    @justincole151011 ай бұрын

    I honestly didn’t know about all of this except for the going to battery locomotives which is stupid because it will be a waste of materials

  • @mr.coolaid1004
    @mr.coolaid1004 Жыл бұрын

    My father and grandfather have a combined time of almost 100 years working for BNSF and I can say for certain that right now it destroys me knowing that I can only see my dad 6 or so times out of the year or so because of the working hours and not having enough time to meet up and go do something for a bit before he get his call. Hell, growing up with in this environment I have developed the skill to listed out for a train horn amidst the sounds of cars construction equipment and even conversations I can still pick it up.

  • @spadesofpaintstudios1719

    @spadesofpaintstudios1719

    Жыл бұрын

    It hurts to see this I used to love trains going by but to know you don’t even get to see your dad it sucks

  • @jamisojo

    @jamisojo

    Жыл бұрын

    I hope you learned how to structure your life without that level of desperation. Unfortunately, I think some men get used to it and like being on the road.

  • @adamevans1989
    @adamevans1989 Жыл бұрын

    Oh god that bouncy train going over the level crossing at 6:00 is just giving me nighmares. That track is so awful.

  • @ianhomerpura8937

    @ianhomerpura8937

    Жыл бұрын

    Bouncy trains are the main reason for hunting oscillation, which makes transcontinental Amtrak trips MUCH worse.

  • @adamevans1989

    @adamevans1989

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ianhomerpura8937 I thought the ECML in the UK was a bit crap, but this is orders of magnitude worse.

  • @MarioFanGamer659

    @MarioFanGamer659

    Жыл бұрын

    Believe me, there are worse tracks. For example, The Four Foot has made a video on how bad the trains in the US are and one clip showed tracks which looked like they couldn't even be driven on.

  • @TianLong72k
    @TianLong72k11 ай бұрын

    i applied for freight conductor position, cant wait to start.

  • @ranterraver5959
    @ranterraver5959 Жыл бұрын

    Hey great video. I’m Canadian and I have known multiple train conductors over the years, the issues they face are much the same as the ones you reference. I know it might not be the most watched video you do, but if you ever felt like doing a deep dive on Canadian rail that would be awesome!