U.S. railroad unions warn of cargo delays as contract deadline looms
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[September 12, 2022] By
Lisa Baertlein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Two unions
negotiating contracts for almost 60,000 workers at major U.S. freight
railways on Sunday said those employers are halting shipments of some
cargo to gain leverage ahead of this week's deadline to secure labor
agreements.
Unions and railroads, including Union Pacific, Berkshire Hathaway's
BNSF, CSX, and Norfolk Southern, have until a minute after midnight on
Friday to reach tentative deals. Failing to do so opens the door to
union strikes, employer lockouts, and congressional intervention.
Railroads late last week said they would begin halting shipments of
hazardous and toxic materials starting on Monday to ensure safety in the
event of a strike.
"They are locking out their customers ... and further harming the supply
chain in an effort to provoke congressional action," Jeremy Ferguson,
president of the transportation division of the International
Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, and Transportation Workers
(SMART-TD), and Dennis Pierce, president of the Brotherhood of
Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen (BLET), said in a joint statement on
Sunday.
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A CSX freight train crosses the Potomac River in Harpers Ferry, West
Virginia October 16, 2012. REUTERS/Gary Cameron/File Photo
The brinkmanship comes at a sensitive time for unions, railroads, shippers,
consumers, and President Joe Biden - who appointed an emergency board to help
break the impasse.
Widespread railroad disruptions could choke supplies of food and fuel, spawn
transportation chaos, stoke inflation, and cause $2 billion per day in lost
economic output.
As of Sunday, 8 of 12 unions had reached tentative deals, the National Railway
Labor Conference (NRLC) said. Those groups do not include SMART-TD and BLET,
which represent about half of the 115,000 workers affected by the talks.
"Railroads do not believe a national service interruption is inevitable but the
time has arrived when certain customers will begin to be impacted if agreements
are not reached," the Association of American Railroads (AAR) said of the
industry's decision to pause hazardous shipments.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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