Houston Chronicle

Officials scramble to avert freight strike

Supply chain could be further roiled by labor disruption

- By Niraj Chokshi NEW YORK TIMES

Biden administra­tion officials are racing to prevent a strike by tens of thousands of freight railroad workers that could further disrupt an already strained supply chain and cause billions of dollars in economic damage.

The industry failed to reach a contract agreement with two unions representi­ng much of the workforce, and a federally mandated 30-day “cooling off ” period ends Friday, opening a door to strikes and lockouts. Some freight companies have started to limit services, and Amtrak, which carries many travelers on lines operated by freight railroads, said it would cancel some passenger service starting Tuesday.

Labor Secretary Martin Walsh pressured both sides over the weekend to reach an agreement, and administra­tion officials have held dozens of calls with the industry and the unions, according to the Labor Department.

“All parties need to stay at the table, bargain in good faith to resolve outstandin­g issues and come to an agreement,” the department said in a statement. “The fact that we are already seeing some impacts of contingenc­y planning by railways again demonstrat­es that a shutdown of our freight rail system is an unacceptab­le outcome for our economy and the American people, and all parties must work to avoid that.”

The deadlock puts President Joe Biden in a complicate­d position. His administra­tion has taken pains to restore and fortify the supply chain, which was deeply disrupted by the coronaviru­s pandemic. It has also worked hard to protect and endorse union rights.

“A strike doesn’t help anybody,” Walsh said in an interview late last month. “A strike doesn’t help the workers. A strike doesn’t help the general public. A strike certainly doesn’t help the supply chain.”

In July, Biden establishe­d an emergency board to help mediate the dispute between the industry, which includes six of the largest freight rail carriers, and about a dozen unions. Last month, that board recommende­d a resolution with a cumulative raise of 24 percent from 2020 through 2024, including an immediate 14 percent wage increase covering the first three years.

Most of the unions agreed to the proposal, pending a vote of their membership. But two major unions are holding out for improvemen­ts to working conditions, which they say have steadily worsened in recent years as rail carriers have cut staffing.

The Brotherhoo­d of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen and the SMART Transporta­tion Division, which represent engineers and conductors, say workers must often stay on call for several days at a time, working 12-hour shifts with little notice, and are penalized for calling in sick.

“Our unions remain at the bargaining table and have given the rail carriers a proposal that we would be willing to submit to our members for ratificati­on, but it is the rail carriers that refuse to reach an acceptable agreement,” they said in a joint statement. “In fact, it was abundantly clear from our negotiatio­ns over the past few days that the railroads show no intentions of reaching an agreement with our unions.”

Together, the two unions represent nearly half the 115,000 freight rail workers covered by the negotiatio­ns. While the unions have not committed to striking Friday, a walkout remains an option, a spokespers­on said, noting that more than 99 percent of participat­ing members of the locomotive engineers union voted in July to authorize a strike.

In an interview Monday, Dennis Pierce, president of that union, said the unions had just advanced a proposal that included an allowance that workers can take unpaid time off for a doctor’s appointmen­t without being discipline­d.

“It’s no longer about money — it’s about unpaid time off to go to the doctor without getting fired,” Pierce said. He added that if the railroad carriers agreed to the proposal, the unions would put it to a vote, which would avert a labor stoppage for at least a few weeks as the count unfolded.

The industry fared well last year, with some large freight carriers reporting record income from operations.

A disruption could be farreachin­g, affecting a wide range of goods. Trade groups representi­ng the agricultur­al industry and manufactur­ers of consumer products said disruption­s would hurt their members and have called on Congress to intervene if necessary.

“Failure to finalize an agreement before the Sept. 16 deadline will hurt U.S. consumers and imperil the availabili­ty, affordabil­ity and accessibil­ity of everyday essential products,” the Consumer Brands Associatio­n, which represents manufactur­ers of food, beverage, household and personal care products, said in a letter to Biden last week.

In a statement over the weekend, Corey Rosenbusch, the president of the Fertilizer Institute, an industry group, said a potential work stoppage would be “bad news for farmers and food security.”

In a message Friday, Steve Bobb, the chief marketing officer of one of the rail carriers, BNSF, encouraged customers to ask Congress to intervene. His counterpar­t at Norfolk Southern echoed that request to its customers over the weekend, too.

Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississipp­i, the top Republican on the Committee on Commerce, Science and Transporta­tion, said Friday that he was hopeful that a strike could be averted but was prepared to act if not.

“The Presidenti­al Emergency Board has put forward a comprehens­ive and fair set of recommenda­tions that, if adopted, could end this standoff today,” Wicker said. “I will be calling on my colleagues in Congress to join the administra­tion in endorsing these recommenda­tions as written and advance legislatio­n to resolve this dispute if it is clear that a shutdown in rail service is imminent.”

A work stoppage would affect passenger rail, too. Amtrak, the national passenger railroad, owns only 3 percent of the tracks that its trains use, with the remaining 97 percent mostly owned and maintained by freight carriers.

Because Amtrak operates most of the tracks along the bustling Northeast Corridor, which runs from Boston to Washington, travel along that stretch would be generally unaffected, it said in a statement. But the railroad said it would cancel three long-distance routes starting Tuesday, in preparatio­n for a freight rail disruption, which it said could “significan­tly impact intercity passenger rail service.”

 ?? Charlie Riedel/Associated Press ?? The rail freight industry failed to reach a contract agreement with two unions representi­ng much of the workforce, and a federally mandated 30-day “cooling off ” period ends Friday.
Charlie Riedel/Associated Press The rail freight industry failed to reach a contract agreement with two unions representi­ng much of the workforce, and a federally mandated 30-day “cooling off ” period ends Friday.

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