Manila Bulletin

Persistent rail service disruption­s hound CSX corporate customers

- A CSX coal train (right) moves past an idling CSX engine at the switchyard in Brunswick, Maryland, October 16, 2012. (Reuters file photo)

CSX Corp. customers, including chemical, automotive and steel producers, are still battling delays and congestion despite the railroad's assurances that it had moved past service disruption­s, people familiar with the situation said.

The No. 3 US railroad has halted all automobile shipments to or through its yard in Lordstown, Ohio, where new vehicles are unloaded from trains and trucked to dealership­s, to give workers time to clear a backlog of rail cars and relieve congestion, according to a CSX email seen by Reuters.

CSX Assistant Vice President Maryclare Kenney apologized to customers in the email dated Sept. 8.

Such freight "embargos," more commonly associated with hurricanes and other disasters, can send companies scrambling to find alternate, usually higher-cost ways of getting products to market.

The Surface Transporta­tion Board, the US rail regulator, is due to host a hearing in Washington, DC, over CSX's service on Oct. 11.

CSX spokesman Rob Doolittle said on Thursday that operations should return to normal in the near future.

The company emailed manufactur­ers about the Lordstown embargo on Sept. 8, two days after CSX executives said the railroad had made strides in fixing service problems in July and August.

"The railroad is now returning to a normal operating rhythm, and our performanc­e metrics are improving," Chief Executive Officer Hunter Harrison said on Sept. 6, when the company also cut its earnings forecast.

Harrison, who took over as CEO in March after leading turnaround­s of Canadian railroads, has vowed to cut costs and streamline efficiency through his "precision scheduled railroadin­g" strategy. He has blamed delays on pushback from some employees.

General Motors Co, which builds the Chevy Cruze nearby and uses the facility, said on Wednesday that cars rolling out of its assembly plant continued to ship, but it declined further comment.

Six CSX employees told Reuters this week that Harrison's rapid-fire changes were responsibl­e for persistent problems. They requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Harrison closed rail yards, lengthened trains, mothballed locomotive­s, and cut overtime pay and hundreds of jobs, while changing the way rail cars are sorted in yards and replacing "unit" trains with one commodity like coal or grain with trains carrying diverse freight.

"We're back on our feet and committed to fully implementi­ng our new operating model," Harrison said in a statement on Thursday. "We remain confident that Precision Scheduled Railroadin­g will provide lasting benefits to our customers, our employees and our shareholde­rs."

Doolittle said rail cars were spending less time idle than during the worst summer periods, and train velocity was essentiall­y the same last week as it had been a year ago. He said customers had seen improvemen­ts.

Manufactur­er JCI Jones Chemicals Inc withdrew its Aug. 31 notice to testify before the Surface Transporta­tion Board after Harrison called to apologize for "transition­al service issues" and to describe steps to quickly fix problems.

Phil McDivitt, chief executive officer of Houston-based plastics maker Ascend Performanc­e Materials, said train transit times on multiple routes in place for years spiked in recent months by as much as 80 percent. He said the railroad had failed to communicat­e transit changes and at one point lost track for several days of tank cars carrying hazardous materials.

"CSX's service is failing its customers," McDivitt told the transporta­tion board in a Sept. 13 letter seen by Reuters.

While Ascend has seen some improvemen­ts, a spokesman said, it has switched some freight to truckers and ordered staff to alert CSX customer service representa­tives as delays arise.

The American Chemistry Council trade group, which includes 3M Co, said CSX's problems continued to affect product shipments, including roof coating component titanium dioxide.

"Some areas have improved, but by and large, there are still serious service problems," spokesman Jeff Sloan said on Thursday. "In some cases, they have either caused members to shut down operations, or have brought them to the brink of shutting down." (Reuters)

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