Biden Is Poised To Make Freight Trains Less Safe. You Can Thank Special Interests.
Once again, Washington is giving us every reason to believe it's selling favors to cronies even if it means everyone else loses.

It's well-known that President Joe Biden—who regularly rode the Amtrak train between Wilmington and Washington as a senator and to his 2021 presidential inauguration—loves trains, always touting their environmental efficiency and value to the U.S. economy. Yet the Biden White House has been noticeably hostile to the variety of trains that play a far larger role in American life than the ones that carry passengers: trains that carry freight.
Worse, this animus may lead to a more dangerous industry and is aided by crony special interests poisoning policymaking and sowing uncertainty among investors.
Specifically, the president's team at the supposedly independent U.S. Surface Transportation Board (STB) just finished a marathon two-day hearing on a controversial regulatory proposal. The idea would force private railroads to subsidize their own competitors and disregard their property rights through a burdensome regulatory change to what is known as forced "reciprocal switching"—the practice of allowing one carrier access to another's infrastructure and customers.
Reciprocal switching already occurs voluntarily through private agreements between railroads. Now, the administration wants to give more power to Washington bureaucrats to force open these privately owned networks for use by competitors and to offer below-market rates to shippers.
While the rule sounds like a backdoor price control, the government asserts that turning more control over to Washington will promote competition. Their argument is that the railroad industry acts like a monopoly. However, data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that over the past few decades, freight rail rates have not significantly increased, a fact difficult to square with the claim that freight rail is abusing its position to charge its customers excessive prices.
More worrisome, my colleague Patrick McLaughlin makes a convincing case that mandated reciprocal switching would likely cause more railroad-worker accidents and casualties. In a public comment, he writes:
"Reciprocal switching would presumably lead to more switching. Data from the Federal Railroad Administration clearly show that switching work is far more hazardous than normal operation of an over-the-road freight train. For Class I railroads, the casualty incident rate in 2019 was 2.79 per 200,000 hours of normal train operation, whereas the casualty incident rate was 7.55 per 200,000 hours of switching operations."
Based on 2019 and 2020 accident incident rates, McLaughlin calculates that "a 1 percent increase in switching hours would lead to 107,185 additional switching hours, which would, in turn, lead to 4.18 additional casualties and 11.59 additional accidents." These assumptions are conservative.
To understand why something that sounds simple could be so dangerous, it's useful to know that a typical switch of one car between two railroads can be complicated—either on its own or in the context of broader network operations. Basically, the only time when it is worth taking on this heightened risk is when it makes economic sense, not when the government says it must be done.
The rule change is opposed by a large and varied number of interested parties. These include key allies of the administration such as labor unions, passenger train companies, and environmentalists, as well as both libertarian and major Democrat-aligned think tanks. Call me a cynic, but under these circumstances, I wonder who the administration, via the intermediary of the Surface Transportation Board, is trying to please. Especially considering it would be doing it at the expense of its continually stated goals to reduce emissions and improve the supply chain.
The answer, as always, seems to be powerful special interests. In this case, it's shippers. The Rail Customer Coalition's letter to the STB makes it clear that they are trying to get the government to artificially deflate their costs. The hearing also demonstrated an uncomfortable chumminess between the regulators—particularly the agency's chair—and the ring of regulatory proponents led by multinational chemical companies. Indeed, as it has been from the beginning, the biggest cheerleader for the change is the powerful American Chemistry Council, which includes Delaware-based DuPont—a longtime political ally and campaign contributor of the president.
So here you have it: Once again, Washington is giving us every reason to believe it's selling favors to cronies even if it means worker safety, railroad efficiency, supply chains, and the environment lose in the process.
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Ah, the Rail Unification Plan - - - - - - - - - -
Put together by decades long grifter Warren Buffett. He never met a government subsidy he didn't love or a regulation he could make hay with.
You can't win with reason. You say you're for more competition then when it arrives it's not what you want.
The word petulant comes to mind.
… turning more control over to Washington will promote competition.
LOL. You actually believe that.
We really need to out these Marxist fucks in landfills.
Where's this "more competition" you claim?
Between the lobbyists.
Between his 2 remaining synapses.
I think he means competition between companies to see who can donate the most to accrue the most political capital.
Lots more competition for "access" in the cronyist system.
Centralized power increases the value of a purchased official, which increases the price they can demand from the private sector. It also increases the need for access on the part of the private sector and creates incentives to pay for "consideration".
Something has to replace the income legislators are going to lose if they're actually going to be banned from insider trading, and they can only get away with so many 20% raises.
"When buying and selling are controlled by legislation, the first things to be bought and sold are legislators." -- P.J. O'Rourke
This isn't more competition.
Once again water turns out to be wet.
Where's Hunter in this?
Over in the islands, making another deposit.
Epstein's island is for sale.
What's the porn stars name?
Getting Railroaded of course!
It's well-known that President Joe Biden—who regularly rode the Amtrak train between Wilmington and Washington as a senator and to his 2021 presidential inauguration—loves trains
Trains? He must be a real fan of Atlas Shrugged.
Communists love trains.
Fascists, as well. Particularly when they meet their schedules.
MENSA too, so long as they run on metric time.
I don’t think our fascists are so good with the “run on time thing”
Particularly the ones that end up at the gulag or concentration camps.
a controversial regulatory proposal ... would force private railroads to subsidize their own competitors and disregard their property rights
The Anti Dog-Eat-Dog Rule?
Now, the administration wants to give more power to Washington bureaucrats to force open these privately owned networks for use by competitors and to offer below-market rates to shippers.
Prelude to nationalization?
of course
Regulate or deregulate. You can’t have both.
Fucking STUPID Nazi.
You again!
I thought you’d still be hiding your lying face in shame after the last time I rubbed your face in your own bullshit.
Looking for more, fuckwit?
WTF? All you do is rant and rave, embarrass yourself, then gibber about some article that you claim undoes the Holocaust. Against millions of records and tens of thousands of eye witness accounts. Much of it of legal record.
Sadly, I don’t have the opportunity of tearing your larynx out of your head, so please just go ahead and kill yourself.
Thanks in advance sugarbear.
You’re a bigoted liar who doesn’t have the ability to cite any proof for your lies.
You should just admit that up front and save us the few seconds it takes to demonstrate it and destroy you.
Mention cattle cars and he’s THERE! (He thinks they’re a real GAS!)
ALL ABOARD! WHOO WHOOOO
Nazi piece of shit.
Cool it, Fuehrer Cat! No need to go off the rails by stoking the furnace!
The government allowing mergers to create true coast-to-coast railroads would eliminate much of the need to switch at present interchange cities like Chicago and Kansas City.
Coast-to-coast trains already run.
Yes, but there are an artificially low number of them due to government interference. Though I'm not sure they would prevent some companies from building infrastructure that let them effectively act like coast to coast trains that could skip Chicago or KC.
How much is Buffet paying for this?
Ask Hunter
"...the government asserts that turning more control over to Washington will promote competition..."
Hen hell freezes over.
Horribly reasoned article across the board, and with an insight to the RR industry that lacks even what you could find in Wiki.
Let's start with the title: "Biden Is Poised To Make Freight Trains Less Safe." 1st, the exploitative tile ignores that ~4 RR worker deaths a year is the same kind of numbers that justify mask and vac mandates for grade schoolers... pure fear mongering, or, in this particular case, click bait. Being a RR worker today is safer than at any point in history, so it is not like this is not an issue which cannot be fixed. RR Unions are powerful organizations and if the death and injury toll become intolerable, they have the power to force change.
"Especially considering it would be doing it at the expense of its continually stated goals to reduce emissions and improve the supply chain." What? How exactly is that supposed to work? The idea of forced reciprocal switching would give more RR carriers more access to more of the country. How would that hurt our supply chain? How would less long haul trucks on the road increase emissions when trains are far more efficient carries per ton? Because the environmentalists are against it? Jesus, they are against anything that is not a self grown vegan lifestyle in a fully recycled high efficient round house heated solely by the smugness of their own farts.
"Basically, the only time when it is worth taking on this heightened risk is when it makes economic sense, not when the government says it must be done." [note: I have not read this particular proposal, so I am basing this on similar historical legislation] These sorts of mandate typically prevent corps from freezing out smaller competition by forcing the established one to used standardized pricing and terms in negotiations so that a select few established cannot freeze out specific or new competition. "Everybody has to play by the same rules." is not the same as forcing a carrier to take on more risks or eat costs. The government mandating forced reciprocal switching wouldn't force anyone to do anything which doesn't make economic sense.
"data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that over the past few decades, freight rail rates have not significantly increased, a fact difficult to square with the claim that freight rail is abusing its position to charge its customers excessive prices." Does anyone really believe that the only way a monopoly can abuse its position is by charging higher prices? That is some mind boggling stupid right there. Especially considering that rail freight is the slowest form of ground transport and it has to compete with several types of highly competitive types of faster freight, so abusing a monopoly to increase prices in this case has a pretty fixed upper limit. Entrenchment by the big players, especially when they have local market monopolies, is by far a bigger concern. Their is also some concern regarding the rail industries' lack of innovation, which is very typical in both socialism and monopiles.
It is my understanding that this is one of the biggest reasons you don't see more heavy rail being built by anyone but Big Rail. Take Amazon for example... UPS was costing to much, so they started their own fleet of delivery trucks. Airlines are costing to much, so they have started buying their own cargo jets. It very well might make economic since to move goods between the ports and the warehouses and between the warehouses themselves by building private rail. The problem would be that at some points they would have to move in and out of other carrier's rail. If those carriers just flat out say "no", because they want the end to end transit and have a monopoly on the infrastructure in that region, the idea would be dead before you laid track one. While that might not be price gouging, it could result in less competition and higher prices for the consumer.
It is well known that biden claims to have ridden the Amtrak/Acela train to and from DE. It is more likely that he was driven.
He's probably claimed to have taken the Acela to Hawaii.
Back before the Nazis bombed Pearl Harbor.
"property rights" LOL As if anyone gives a crap about that anymore. We only need look to the Soviet Union to see we don't need those anymore.
How do you think the railroads got the property to begin with? Do you Pacific Railroad Acts were bastions of free capitalism?
It is hard for me to care to much about the property rights of corporations who were gifted millions of acres of federal and state lands along with the security of a monopoly.
No, I don't. Where would you get that? Unlike you, I care about everyone's property rights then and now.
I got that from the fact that you commented on an article regarding proposed regulatory changes by comparing it to the lack of property rights in the Soviet Union.
But you are right that I don't care much about the property rights of corporations built on cronyism, corruption at all levels, bribery, back room dealings, nepotism, and other good ol' boy wealth enrichment legislation, especially when it results in government sponsored monopolies.
ten off the top for Big Papa.
Atlas Shrugged was not an instruction manual!
Did he put Harris in charge of them? Or Mayor Pete?
Growing the National Socialist 'feds' one law at a time...
Because that's what Nazi's do......
Tride and True Nazism believers everywhere.
Always the end result of [WE] mobs packing Gov-Guns without limits.
>Reciprocal switching would presumably lead to more switching
Why would it lead to more switching? Are you saying there's stock sitting idle because it can't be switched? Or would the railroads just do more switching for the fun of it? Maybe switching is more dangerous when you do less of it, because there's less OJT experience, and more switching would mean more training and therefore less accidents. Anybody can sit around and invent 1% assumptions. Even Sherlock Holmes had a 7% solution.
Am re-reading "Atlas Shrugged" and this sort of cronyism is prominently mentioned by Ayn Rand. She foresaw this sort of of corruption and destruction back in '57. "Who is John Galt?"
Freight rail has been losing customers for years and the big railroads don’t seem interested in keeping smaller clients. I see lots of intermodal trains going by though so the ups and Amazon trailers/containers so wouldn’t be surprised if this is intended to help them.
This smacks of government control over private means ofproduction. Say.. is't tht the defeinitioon of fascism? Seems to me it is.
One more step toward national control of our raul system, the unstated goal.