Business World

US freight railroads prepare for potential strike disruption

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LOS ANGELES — Major US freight railroads said on Friday they were preparing for a possible strike and service disruption a week before a deadline in protracted labor talks.

BNSF, owned by Berkshire Hathaway, and CSX said they were taking necessary steps to secure the shipments of hazardous and security-sensitive materials in the event of a strike.

“While these preparatio­ns are necessary, it does not mean that a work stoppage is inevitable,” BNSF said in a statement to Reuters.

Contract negotiatio­ns between railways including BNSF, Union Pacific, CSX and unions representi­ng 115,000 workers hit an impasse this summer after more than two years of talks. Failure to reach a settlement before a cooling-off period expires on Sept. 16 could open the door to strikes, employer lockouts and congressio­nal interventi­on.

Talks are “active and ongoing” a spokespers­on for the Associatio­n of American Railroads said on Friday. Union Pacific did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment outside business hours.

Last month, President Joseph R. Biden appointed a presidenti­al emergency board that made settlement recommenda­tions to help avoid disruption­s to food and fuel supplies and worsening inflation. BNSF said the remaining unions and other railroads continue to work to reach voluntary agreements based on the board’s recommenda­tions to avoid interrupti­on to rail service.

The largest US trucking industry group on Friday urged Congress to be prepared to prevent railroad shutdowns if the negotiatio­ns fail to produce contracts by the deadline.

“Congress should take swift action ... to avoid a debilitati­ng and unnecessar­y labor disruption that could cost the country billions each day,” Chris Spear, chief executive of the American Trucking Associatio­ns (ATA), wrote in a letter to congressio­nal leadership.

In the early 1990s, Congress required the two sides to engage in final and binding arbitratio­n to prevent disruption­s to shipping activities.

Unions and freight railroads have so far reached tentative agreements covering 21,000 workers represente­d by five of the 12 unions involved in the negotiatio­ns.

A railroad work stoppage would cost the US economy $2 billion per day in output and require 467,000 longhaul trucks daily to handle shipments diverted from rail — exceeding supply, the railroad associatio­n said.

“Additional insecurity placed on the still fragile US supply chain — as we recover from COVID-19 and other supply chain stressors and move towards the holiday season — will harm the economy at large and individual Americans,” ATA’s Mr. Spear said. —

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