Thousands of rail workers
back at Buffett's BNSF as volumes rise
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[August 28, 2017]
By Eric M. Johnson
SEATTLE (Reuters) - BNSF Railway Co has
called back roughly 4,000 of the 5,000 workers who were furloughed
across its system last year, reflecting stronger volumes of coal, grain
and intermodal containers and trailers, a spokesman said.
Like other major U.S. railroads, the company owned by billionaire
investor Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc <BRKa.N> has shed
thousands of union and management jobs in recent years as it strives to
improve efficiency and cut costs.
BNSF, the top U.S. coal carrier, laid off roughly 5,000 employees from
mid-2015 to early 2016. The Texas-based company and its peers faced cost
pressures from plunging coal volumes as the strong U.S. dollar hurt
exports of the fuel and utilities switched to burning cheaper natural
gas.
BNSF brought back roughly 4,000 of those workers as coal volumes rose
this year, along with high levels of grain and upticks in intermodal
containers and trailers, and sand used in hydraulic fracturing,
spokesman Zak Andersen said.
"We have seen an increase in coal due mainly to increased natural gas
prices and higher electricity demand driven by seasonal trends," he
said. "Although we anticipate the long-term trend to decline."
The company had not previously disclosed the scale of the callbacks.
Even after the rehirings, BNSF has downsized to around 42,000 employees
from 48,000 in 2014 through layoffs, attrition and cutting two operating
divisions, Andersen said.
Union Pacific Corp <UNP.N> said earlier this month it would cut roughly
500 management jobs and 250 railroad workers by mid-September, while CSX
Corp <CSX.O> has laid off hundreds of management and rail employees
since the beginning of the year, as both companies pursue cost-cutting
plans. [L2N1L223Y][L2N1L01W8]
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A BNSF train is pictured delivering Boeing 737 fuselages in Renton,
Washington February 26, 2014. REUTERS/Jason Redmond/File Photo
Railroads furlough workers, rather than fire them, to guard against variations
in volume, but they risk a labor shortage if employees sidelined during freight
recessions find jobs elsewhere, said independent analyst Tony Hatch.
"Longer term there are still labor rules causing inefficiencies, and padding the
payrolls, so railroads strive to not replace costly employees on a one-to-one
basis with recovered growth," Hatch said. "This is also the end of a major labor
negotiation round."
The major U.S. railroads, including BNSF, are locked in strained contract
negotiations with six unions representing more than 85,000 workers.
BNSF's worker recall has not been uniform across its system, which spans 32,500
miles of track across the western two-thirds of the United States. Fewer workers
were back along traditional coal routes in the lower Midwest, Andersen said.
People also remained out of work in Superior, Wisconsin, one employee said. BNSF
laid off 25 machinists in Glendive, Montana, and closed its Murray Yard in
Kansas City, cutting 29 machinists, the International Association of Machinists
and Aerospace Workers said in April.
(Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)
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