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Oct
07

NJ Transit seeks TOD partners for River Line light-rail system

Rail News Home Passenger Rail 10/7/2019 Rail News: Passenger Rail
NJ Transit seeks to obtain information to assess the viability of making all or a portion of its River Line station area parcels available for redevelopment.Photo – NJ Transit

New Jersey Transit last week issued a request for expressions of interest (REOI) to identify a partner interested in developing transit-oriented development (TOD) projects on agency-owned property adjacent to the 37-mile River Line light-rail system.

The agency seeks to obtain information and feedback to assess the viability of making all or a portion of its River Line station area parcels available for redevelopment, NJ Transit officials said in a press release. 

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Oct
07

Class Is sue SMART-TD over minimum train crew issue

Rail News Home HomePage 10/7/2019 Rail News: HomePage
Class Is and a few other freight railroads are suing the International Association of Sheet Metal, Air Rail and Transportation Workers' Transportation Division (SMART-TD) to force the union to negotiate over the size of train crews in upcoming collective bargaining talks, Law360.com reported last week.The case was filed Oct. 3 in federal court in the Northern District of Texas. BNSF Railway Co., CSX and the other railroads said the the union has refused to negotiate over the "crew consist" issue, arguing that such negotiations are prohibited under existing contracts, Law360.com reported.The railroads said the dispute should be resolved through arbitration. According to a statement by the railroads' lead attorney, proposals for the current bargining round can be exchanged starting Nov. 1, when the railroads hope to share their ideas for the future of train crews.In their lawsuit, the railroads stated they will be "will be unable to progress the bargaining in the face of SMART-TD's ... tactics to delay or obstruct any negotiations over crew consist. Every day that the railroads are unable to obtain new agreements is another day that they are unable to realize the benefits of more efficient and productive operations, and there is no way for the railroads to recover those lost potential savings," Law360.com reported.The railroads' suit is not the first time that rail carriers have tried to "attack" the crew consist issue, SMART officials said in a press release."This latest attempt is nothing new, and it will once again be met with a vigorous defense," said SMART-TD President Jeremy Ferguson.

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Oct
04

U.S. Reps. Ruppersberger, Pence talk short-line tax credit with rail suppliers

U.S. Reps. Dutch Ruppersberger (D-Md.) and Greg Pence (R-Ind.) visited rail-industry suppliers this week to discuss transportation infrastructure and legislation that calls for reviving the short-line tax credit.

On Sept. 30, Ruppersberger visited Oldcastle Infrastructure's plant in Edgewood, Maryland. The company manufactures premium precast concrete crossing and track support systems. The company's rail crossings are engineered for freight-, commuter- and light-rail applications.

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Oct
04

Rail supplier news from HDI, WSP, Schneider, Dewberry, TKDA and HDR (Oct. 4)

Rail News Home Railroading Supplier Spotlight 10/4/2019 Rail News: Railroading Supplier Spotlight
HDI Global SE has appointed Carisa Winters to senior engineering lines underwriter, Brad Wilkinson to engineering lines property underwriter, and Alexander LaBelle to senior construction liability underwriter. Winters is responsible for leading the civil engineering completed risks and special risks segments. Wilkinson will work alongside Winters in developing and executing the strategy for the engineering lines division in the U.S. LaBelle will be responsible for developing and implementing strategic and operational tactics to drive growth and profitability for HDI’s U.S. construction liability portfolio.WSP USA hired Brian Dwyer as vice president and transit rail market lead in the Northeast region of the U.S. to support business development and sales activities. Previously, Dwyer served as VP and director of transit for an architectural and engineering firm and in various positions at the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, starting as a Red Line train attendant in 1988 and retiring in 2011 as director of light rail operations. He also has served as the American Public Transportation Association’s safety auditor and peer reviewer.Schneider received the Military Friendly Employer Award from Viqtory for the 13th time. The company was recognized for offering military employees guaranteed home time for weekend drill and annual training, benefits and differential pay during extended deployments and the option to convert military experience to Schneider driving experience which equates to increased starting pay, Schneider officials said in a press release.Dewberry hired Tanja Brix as a senior associate in the transportation group to provide technical and operational leadership support to office staff and clients in Long Beach, California. Brix has more than 22 years of experience in project management, transportation engineering and land development, Dewberry officials said in a press release. She recently served as the roadway engineer lead for design and permitting of the BNSF Railway Rosecrans/Marquardt grade separation, and as the lead civil engineer for the site design of a 65-acre data center in Las Vegas.TKDA named Justino Cruz group manager of West Coast rail offices. Cruz comes to TKDA with more than 20 years of experience serving the rail industry, leading large-scale, multidisciplinary public improvement projects for Class Is in the United States and Mexico, TKDA officials said in a press release.HDR promoted Nugent Laing to rail and transit systems lead in the east region. Laing will lead planning, design and implementation of core technical systems for rail and transit projects. He'll also work with other transportation modes that correlate with rail and transit systems, particularly on emerging technology applications, HDR officials said in a press release. Laing also recently stepped up to lead HDR’s automated people mover practice group.

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Oct
04

MBTA begins Orange Line station, track repairs

Rail News Home Passenger Rail 10/4/2019 Rail News: Passenger Rail
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority crews will begin station improvements and track replacement on the Orange Line.Photo – MBTA

The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) today began a six-weekend closure of the Orange Line between Sullivan Square and Tufts Medical Center stations in Boston, to accommodate station improvements and track replacement. 

The work includes repairs and new signage installations at the Downtown Crossing, Haymarket and State stations; replacement of 2,250 feet of track at Chinatown Station; and removal and replacement of the decades-old pit track.

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Oct
04

Metra to construct third track on Union Pacific West Line

Rail News Home Passenger Rail 10/4/2019 Rail News: Passenger Rail
Metra's UP West Line becomes bottlenecked on a section of track at Maywood Station.Photo – Metra

Metra and Union Pacific Railroad announced that on Oct. 8 crews will begin constructing a third track on the UP West commuter line through Maywood, Illinois. 

The line through Maywood Station is part of a section of a track that becomes bottlenecked, Metra officials said in a press release. UP and Metra are working to add a third track on the north side of the existing tracks and construct a new inbound platform to alleviate congestion.

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Oct
04

Melius Energy tests shipping semi-solid bitumen by intermodal rail

Rail News Home Shippers 10/4/2019 Rail News: Shippers
The shipment was the energy company's first BitCrude transportation process demonstration.Photo – Melius Energy

Melius Energy announced last week that it successfully shipped bitumen from Edmonton, Alberta, to the Port of Prince Rupert, British Columbia, using custom 20-foot shipping containers transported by rail and ocean vessel.

The shipment was the energy company's first BitCrude™ transportation process demonstration, which showed Melius Energy's ability to transport bitumen safely and efficiently as required by Canadian regulations, company officials said in a press release.

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Oct
04

Caltrain OKs 20-year business plan

Rail News Home Passenger Rail 10/4/2019 Rail News: Passenger Rail
Caltrain's 2040 Service Vision sets targets that ensure the railroad can to meet growing mobility needs.Photo – Caltrain

Caltrain’s board yesterday adopted its long-term business plan for the next 20 years of commuter-rail service in California. 

The 2040 Service Vision sets a target for the railroad that ensures Caltrain can continue to meet the region's growing mobility needs, while making the best use of the projects and investments planned and under construction along the corridor, Caltrain officials said in a press release.

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Oct
04

WMATA should run more eight-car trains, Virginia commission says

Rail News Home Passenger Rail 10/4/2019 Rail News: Passenger Rail
The Northern Virginia Transportation Commission (NVTC) is recommending several efficiency-improvements strategies to the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA), including a recommendation that the agency maximize its use of eight-car trains.The NVTC included the recommended strategies in its draft 2019 report on WMATA's condition and performance, which the commission approved yesterday. The report serves as NVTC's primary mechanism for expressing its priorities for controlling costs and improving efficiencies at WMATA.The report documents WMATA-funded capital projects that use dedicated funding."The success of WMATA remains vital to the economy and quality of life of northern Virginians," said NVTC Chairman Matt Letourneau in a press release. "NVTC’s report stresses the need for diversifying WMATA's income and making sure existing programs operate more efficiently. We look forward to working with WMATA and its leadership to move these priorities forward."NVTC's recommended strategies include:
• operating eight-car trains during peak periods, which would enable the system to carry more riders per hour through the system's core;
• examining additional solutions to better balance maintenance work on weekends to minimize the impact of service disruption on ridership;
• rebuilding ridership and efficiency of Metrorail and Metrobus, which would improve WMATA's farebox revenue;
• continuing ongoing initiatives and efforts to increase and/or optimize non-fare revenue to contain growth in annual operating subsidies; and
• continuing efforts to reduce cost increases and improve operational efficiency by enhancing employee performance management.The Virginia statute that authorizes dedicated funding for WMATA requires that the NVTC produce the annual report. The commission's final report will be posted on novatransit.org by Oct. 31.

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Oct
04

STB proposes new rules for rail service data reporting, cost of capital methodology

The Surface Transportation Board (STB) on Sept. 30 announced two proposed rulemakings, one affecting the reporting of rail service data and the other relating to the agency's methodology for determining the rail industry's cost of capital.

The board proposed amending its railroad performance data reporting rules to include chemical and plastics traffic as a distinct reporting category to the Class Is' weekly reporting of the "cars-held" metric. That metric tracks the average number of loaded and empty rail cars that have not moved for at least 48 hours.

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Oct
03

NJ State Senate launches committee to investigate NJ Transit

Rail News Home Passenger Rail 10/3/2019 Rail News: Passenger Rail
Left to right: Republican Sens. Tom Kean, Kristin Corrado and Kip Bateman were announced as NJ Transit Senate Select Committee members earlier this week.Photo – New Jersey Senate Republican Office

The New Jersey State Senate earlier this week formed a committee to investigate New Jersey Transit's failures and develop an action plan for improving the commuter-rail service, according to a press release issued by New Jersey Senate Republicans.

The Senate Select Committee will include New Jersey Democratic Sens. Loretta Weinberg, Sandra Cunningham, Patrick Diegnan; and Republican Sens. Tom Kean, Kip Bateman and Kristin Corrado. 

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Oct
03

Metrolinx tests anti-trespass track panels

Rail News Home Safety 10/3/2019 Rail News: Safety
Metrolinx crews are installing specialized rubber panels over sections of track to deter people from walking over them.Photo – Metrolinx

Metrolinx has begun testing the use of specialized rubber panels on track sections as part of a larger effort to deter people from trespassing on rail tracks, the Toronto transit agency announced late last week on the agency’s Metrolinx News blog.

The anti-trespass panels (ATPs) are made of hard rubber in a cone shape pattern making it difficult to walk over. By implementing ATPs, the aim is to reduce the number of times people come into contact with trains within Metrolinx corridors; minimize delays; and increase public safety, agency officials said.

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Oct
03

Washington transportation panel OKs grade-crossing safety grants

Rail News Home Communication and Signal 10/3/2019 Rail News: Communication and Signal
The Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission (UTC) has approved nearly $1.5 million in rail safety improvement grants between 2017 and 2019, including funds for projects along crude-by-rail routes, state officials announced Monday.Awarded through the state's Grade Crossing Protective Fund, the commission approved $1.14 million to install or improve active warning devices at three crossings along oil routes, and $344,000 to improve safety pedestrians and drivers around railroad tracks.The grants for safety projects along oil routes included:
• $438,174 to Snohomish County to install active warning devices at the 48th Avenue NW crossing near Stanwood;
• $406,060 to Skamania County to upgrade active warning devices at the Butler Road crossing near Stevenson; and
• $295,311 the city of Millwood to install active warning devices at the Marguerite Street crossing.Other grants distributed for safety improvements included:
• $90,840 to Puget Sound & Pacific Railroad to upgrade train detection, replace batteries and battery chargers, and update signal plans and software at the East Heron Street, Chehalis Street, Newell Street and Tyler Road crossings in Aberdeen;
• $77,096 to Central Washington Railroad to upgrade train detection at the West Second Street and Grandridge Road crossings in Grandview and Division Street and Sunnyside Avenue crossings in Granger; and
• $40,597 to Cascade & Columbia River Railroad Co. to upgrade the train detection system at the Fourth Street crossing in Tonasket.“Washington’s railroads are vital to our economy, transporting passengers and valuable cargo, as well as hazardous materials,” said UTC Chairman Dave Danner. “These grants help ensure that rail operations do not compromise the safety of Washington communities.”

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Oct
03

LA Metro lowered emissions in 2018

Rail News Home Sustainability 10/3/2019 Rail News: Sustainability
The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (LA Metro) yesterday released a report evaluating the agency’s sustainability performance, including its reduction in greenhouse gas emissions and criteria air pollutant emissions in 2018 compared with 2017.In 2018, LA Metro reduced its greenhouse gas emissions by 10 percent and its criteria air pollutant emissions by 14 percent compared with 2017. The agency attributes the improvement to the transition to renewable natural gas and near zero-emission engines, officials said in a press release.The agency also cut energy use by 6.5 percent and reduced the amount of waste it sends to the landfill.Meanwhile, LA Metro’s systemwide water usage rose nearly 4 percent and total solid waste produced by the agency grew nearly 6 percent in 2018, according to the report.The energy and resource report provides an annual evaluation of the agency measured across 10 specific performance metrics. These include unlinked passenger trips, vehicle miles traveled, operating expenses, criteria air pollutant emissions, greenhouse gas emissions, greenhouse gas displacement, energy use, water use, total solid waste and diversion from landfill.

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Oct
03

CN: Unifor affiliated truck drivers ratify pact with CNTL

Rail News Home Canadian National Railway - CN 10/3/2019 Rail News: Canadian National Railway - CN
CN yesterday announced that Unifor affiliated truck drivers for CN subsidiary CNTL have ratified a four-year contract retroactive to Sept. 16.The pact covers 950 owner-operators under the recently negotiated collective agreement with CNTL in Canada, CN announced in a press release.CNTL is a key link in the railroad's integrated supply chain, said Keith Reardon, senior vice president of consumer product supply chain at CN. “The ratification of this contract allows CNTL to move forward with our driver-partners, ensuring we can provide seamless, uninterrupted, exceptional service to its many customers across Canada and beyond," Reardon said.

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Oct
03

CN: Unifor affiliated truck drivers ratify pact with CNTL

Rail News Home Canadian National Railway - CN 10/3/2019 Rail News: Canadian National Railway - CN
CN yesterday announced that Unifor affiliated truck drivers for CN subsidiary CNTL have ratified a four-year contract retroactive to Sept. 16.The pact covers 950 owner-operators under the recently negotiated collective agreement with CNTL in Canada, CN announced in a press release.CNTL is a key link in the railroad's integrated supply chain, said Keith Reardon, senior vice president of consumer product supply chain at CN. “The ratification of this contract allows CNTL to move forward with our driver-partners, ensuring we can provide seamless, uninterrupted, exceptional service to its many customers across Canada and beyond," Reardon said.

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Oct
03

CTA breaks ground on Red and Purple rail line modernization project

Rail News Home Passenger Rail 10/3/2019 Rail News: Passenger Rail
CTA’s Red and Purple Line Modernization project includes construction of a bypass bridge to ease congestion on the rail lines.Photo – Walsh Construction

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot, Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) President Dorval Carter and other officials yesterday helped mark the start of construction on the first phase of the Red and Purple Line modernization project.

The $2.1 billion project — the largest in CTA's history — is scheduled to be completed in 2025.

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Oct
03

CSX appoints Boone, Boychuk to executive roles

Rail News Home CSX Transportation 10/3/2019 Rail News: CSX Transportation
Kevin Boone (left) and Jamie BoychukPhoto – CSX

CSX yesterday announced the appointments of Kevin Boone as executive vice president and chief financial officer, and Jamie Boychuk as EVP of operations.

Boone was named interim CFO in May. He joined CSX in 2017 as VP of corporate affairs and chief investor relations officer, then was appointed VP of marketing and strategy to lead research and data analysis to advance growth strategies. He has more than 18 years of experience in finance, mergers and acquisitions, and accounting, primarily focused on the transportation and industrial sectors.

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Oct
03

CSX appoints Boone, Boychuk to executive roles

Rail News Home CSX Transportation 10/3/2019 Rail News: CSX Transportation
Kevin Boone (left) and Jamie BoychukPhoto – CSX

CSX yesterday announced the appointments of Kevin Boone as executive vice president and chief financial officer, and Jamie Boychuk as EVP of operations.

Boone was named interim CFO in May. He joined CSX in 2017 as VP of corporate affairs and chief investor relations officer, then was appointed VP of marketing and strategy to lead research and data analysis to advance growth strategies. He has more than 18 years of experience in finance, mergers and acquisitions, and accounting, primarily focused on the transportation and industrial sectors.

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Oct
03

U.S. rail traffic declined through September

U.S. freight-rail traffic fell 6.4 percent to 2,054,025 carloads and intermodal units compared with levels during the same month a year ago, according to Association of American Railroad (AAR) data.

U.S. railroads last month originated 992,542 carloads, down 7 percent, and 1,061,483 intermodal containers and trailers, down 5.9 percent, versus September 2018's levels, AAR officials said in a press release.

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