A Possible Railroad Strike During the Holiday Season Would Risk $2 Billion Per Day
Four of the 12 unions representing workers on America's freight rail lines have voted to reject a new contract.

A threatened railroad worker strike that appeared to have been derailed by the Biden administration is now back on track and chugging quickly toward the holiday season.
Four of the 12 unions representing workers on America's freight rail lines have voted to reject a new contract proposed by a special presidential mediation board, once again raising the possibility of an economy-crippling strike next month. The unions that rejected the deal are now indicating that they want additional concessions from the railroads beyond what was negotiated by the Biden administration during the summer, The Wall Street Journal reports.
Those last-second negotiations by the Presidential Emergency Board (PEB) seemed to have averted a threatened strike. Though the details of the proposed contract were not made public, the unions reportedly scored several of their top priorities, including graduated pay increases of 24 percent that will be doled out over several years and five annual payments of $1,000 to all union members (a major carrot to get workers to approve the new deal). However, the unions did not receive paid sick leave—which the Biden administration opposed for being "very costly."
The lack of paid sick leave in the contract seems to be the major sticking point for the unions that are once again threatening to strike.
"This is the railroads' last chance to do the right thing by voluntarily agreeing to provide paid sick leave to all employees," warned the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes (BMWE), one of the four unions that rejected the deal, in a statement. "If the railroads fail to give up one penny of every dollar of profit for paid sick leave for their highly valued employees by December 8th, and there is either a strike or lockout or both, then the railroads will be responsible for the imposition of a shutdown of their operations and the economic harms to its customers, the country's economic supply chain and the entire U.S. economy."
The unions have asked for 15 paid sick days per year, but the railroads settled on giving one additional personal day on top of existing vacation allowances, Reuters reports. A potential shutdown—the result of either a strike or a lockout—could cost the U.S. economy as much as $2 billion per day, according to the news agency.
It is possible that the conflict gets settled without further intervention from the federal government, but both the White House and Congress could put more pressure on the two sides. Sens. Richard Burr (R–N.C.) and Roger Wicker (R–Miss.) have introduced a bill that would prohibit a strike and force the unions to accept the PEB-authored contract, which could be the ultimate last-gasp plan to avoid a devastating strike.
"There's no counterproposal in Congress to rewrite the PEB's agreement to give the unions what they want," notes Sean Higgins, a research fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a free market think tank. "In short, the holdout unions don't have a strong hand to play this time. They probably know this and are just pushing things as far as they can."
Indeed, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce responded to the new strike threats by immediately asking Congress to get involved. "Congress must now impose the deal President Biden negotiated, and the railroads and union leadership agreed to," Suzanne P. Clark, president and CEO of the chamber, said in an emailed statement. "If Congress fails to do so, a rail strike would substantially exacerbate inflation and the economic challenges Americans are facing today."
Everything at this stage is a negotiating tactic, but it is hard to believe that Congress and the White House would allow the unions to hold a huge swath of the U.S. economy hostage in the weeks before Christmas.
That's especially true because even the labor-friendly Biden administration has shunned the unions' request for 15 days of paid sick leave. That proposal would be "an overly broad and very costly proposal," Biden's PEB wrote in its final report on the agreement that the unions recently voted on. If adopted, it "would create 15 paid days a year that, while nominally labeled as sick leave days, would be structured to be used on demand as a means of permitting employees to better balance work-life needs and would effectively be personal days."
The four unions that rejected that proposal are probably hoping that the railroads will offer a more limited sick leave package in order to avoid a strike. It would obviously be preferable to see the two sides come to an agreement that does not require further intervention from the federal government. But there's no doubt that the unions are playing a dangerous game by putting a strike back on the timetable.
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Higher the trademarked rev's union busters! You got union scum we can bust their kneecaps! Rev's union busters! (local 142)
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Socialist bullshit. Welcome to the democrat utopia, where people hold you hostage demanding all your money, despite their ability to:
A) Work the fuck somewhere else.
B) honor their agreement to a work contract as an employee, which includes their ability to sever that relationship at any time.
Then the "government" gets involved, because they are "here to help" and start the takeover.
The obvious solution was to fire, fucking immediately, anyone that goes on strike, and replace them with more eager, willing, and able workers who
voluntarilydesire the job for the conditions agreed upon.
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it is hard to believe that Congress and the White House would allow the unions to hold a huge swath of the U.S. economy hostage in the weeks before Christmas.
What event in the past 2 years convinces you of this?
Why don't they have the freedom to strike? I don't like it either, but don't they have the freedom to advance their own goals without the government intervening?
They (or more precisely, their predecessors) waived that right as part of their lobbying for preferential treatment under other laws. Apologies that I don't remember exactly which laws but I do remember an article a couple years back (I think on the Volokh Conspiracy) that laid out the legislative history very nicely.
Railroad antitrust exemption?
https://www.congress.gov/congressional-report/110th-congress/senate-report/252
Or the Sherman Act.
https://www.jstor.org/stable/725339
It's because railroads worked hard to be declared critical infrastructure, and thus get sweet deals from the government (which usually helped build the rails in the first place). But with getting declared critical infrastructure came obligations.
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Where did I say they didn't?
Decades. Not years.
In reference to the current administration and congress.
I am shocked that union Joe Biden could not avoid this, especially given how long his track record of exceptional competence is to date.
I think it is one more planned step in Biden's destruction of America.
why don't we just send them 38 billion dollars too?
38 billion for everyone!
You get 38 billion! And you get 38 billion! And you get 38billion!
Mine went to Ukraine =/
Don't be cheap, send everyone a trillion!
The rail unions decided to #FuckJoeBiden.
Let's go Brandon.
No they didn’t. They put off their strike until after the midterms.
Exactly.
If Biden amazingly decides to run again in 2024 (apparently his puppetmasters are mulling this over right now), then the unions will definitely have fucked him hard if they strike before then. And with this pre-hyper-inflationary economy, the railworkers are not likely to wait that long to make their demands.
Probably 95% of union workers are Democrats. This is their kick in the face to their premier, Joe Brandon.
People can’t get much more dumb than this.
Unions screwing over the entire economy for their own gain, and they wonder why people have been abandoning unions for decades. Can I get two weeks guaranteed leave and another two weeks of paid sick leave no questions asked? That'd be great.
If I were able to wrangle an eleventy thousand percent pay hike, 29 hour work weeks and a six figure pension, I’d join a union tomorrow.
Fuck the railway union. The last time they pulled this shit with a democrat president (Truman) he threatened to draft the whole union into the military. I’m sure mush for brains Brandon will force the railroads into caving in.
"Unions screwing over the entire economy"
You can't blame the unions here. The union negotiated a package with the mediators, and presented it to the workers for ratification. It was the workers who rejected the package, so blame them.
This isn't the unions. It's a younger crowd amongst railroad workers that always votes NO in hopes of getting more. In addition, most union members in favor of the current deal failed to vote at all, because it takes 5 minutes they're not being paid for. Apathy wins the day.
"In addition, most union members in favor of the current deal failed to vote at all, because it takes 5 minutes they’re not being paid for. Apathy wins the day."
That sounds remarkably similar to registered Democrat voters. They got early voting, late voting, mail in voting, harvested voting, no signature voting, no ID voting, change the laws retroactively voting, whatever it takes to win voting, I am sure I have left something out voting. It worked, and it will continue to work but it has destroyed our faith in a system that most of us believed was largely trustworthy.
My first experience with unions was being told to "stop working so fast, you're making us look bad" when I was young and eager to work hard to get ahead. I was one of the non-union IT workers not directly in competition for their manufacturing jobs; my hustle still made them look slow/lazy even though I wasn't one of them.
Having older co-workers put pressure on me (not quite threats) to stay poor turned me off to unions forever. I'd grown up poor--there's no way I would ever stay down for their sake.
It'll be interesting to see what the harsh economic conditions do to the unions. Will more people unionize to demand higher wages and then demand nationalization of their industries and later demand full-on communism? Or will they trust in their own ability to adapt and work harder to get ahead of everyone else?
The unions are following the Democrat’s playbook - after someone does you a favor, you throw them under the bus.
Or tie them to the tracks.
If we just vaccinate them, they won’t need the sick days.
It didn't seem to help Amtrak.
One way or the other.
Biden’s “deal” consisted solely of the unions promising not to strike before the elections. Now the deal is that the feds will cave on behalf of the railroads before the house switches to the republicans.
Jim Cramer said this morning on CNBC that the President thinks his deal is fair to both sides. If it appears that a strike will happen, he will ask Congress to impose his deal under the Railway Labor Act.
Now, will that irritate the unions? Yes. But with a 39% approval rating, Biden can't afford to irritate Americans who aren't union members and want to do Christmas shopping and shipping.
Why would Biden give a shit about his approval ratings? There's no way he's running a second time and the demoncrats aren't about to impeach him for any reason. You think it's a coincidence he's writing out massive checks to all his friends and cronies? He knows he will face no consequences.
He might really believe he’s running again. He is pretty stupid, even if you factor out his dementia.
Why would Biden care about his approval rating *after* midterms and *two years* before the next presidential election?
Why would Biden ask congress to bless his deal? Just issue an executive order ala student loan forgiveness. The media will trip over each other to sell it just like they are doing for the student loan scam.
Willing workers for the win! Sign up today for a high paying job with decent enough benefits.
15 days of sick pay? That doesn't strike anyone as excessive?
In fact, everything about this smells foul. I did union payrolls for years. The employers I worked for paid $2 an hour for "Vacation" directly to the union as part of the contract and each worker had a vacation fund. The employer only pays for actual hours worked and the union workers draw from their vacation fund whenever they don't work.
If I had to guess this is something about getting access to protection under the FMLA from repercussions when these lazy fucks go on a weekend bender.
The employers I worked for paid $2 an hour for “Vacation” directly to the union as part of the contract and each worker had a vacation fund. The employer only pays for actual hours worked and the union workers draw from their vacation fund whenever they don’t work.
^
One of the main purposes of unions for the trades. You go through so many employers based on when and where the work is, that you get your benefits through the union.
Construction workers go through lots of jobs because they are essentially gig workers: construction contractors hire when they get a contract and fire when it's over.
However, unless the railroads have changed a lot since my father-in-law retired in the 1990's, most railroad jobs are working directly for the railroad company in operations and maintenance. A contractor may have built the railbed in the first place, but when they replace worn-out rails and ties, those are RR employees. In my experience, these jobs are generally for life. The RR was my grandfather's only job other than the family farm; he started as a teenager in 1925, rose from carrying rails around by hand to managing the signalmen over several states, and retired after about 48 years. My father in law had a shorter career; he hired on with a railroad in his thirties and retired after nearly 30 years. The railroad companies were merged and renamed several times, but the only effect on their jobs was a different company name on the paystubs.
Congress has even established a separate retirement system for RR employees (the RRA). They don't have to pay social security and medicare taxes because they have their own government-approved plan, much more generous than most non-governmental workers get.
But the work hours can be pretty bad. My father-in-law was one of very few "machinists" (mechanics maintaining the engines and cars) covering several hundred miles of track in rural Michigan, and for decades he had to carry a beeper every time he left the house. I don't know the details for my grandfather, but I expect in his last position he got a phone call every time there was a problem with the signals or signalmen over a division that stretched from the Missouri in Nebraska to across the Rockies in Montana.
I agree with everything in this article except that "it's hard to believe" that Biden and the Democrats would let unions hold the American economy hostage.
How times have changed. I was talking to a retired public utility worker today (a VP-Human Resources with a telephone company) and was told that "back in the day" - even with liberal benefits and pension plans - if you took a sick day, you only got paid if you brought in a doctor's note.
Hey now, don't even suggest that Biden appears weak, what with caving to the Saudis and OPEC and thus the NRU feels it can take the nation to the cleaners.
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Sounds like the railroad companies should offer sick leave then.
The more critical infrastructure is, the more you don't want sick people coming into work. If the workforce sitting out a few days is that damaging, then you want a workforce that has more reliable schedules, can take off time when they're sick (so they don't get others sick), has people on-call in case others are unavailable, and so-on.
Critical infrastructure should have a more robust and reliable workforce, not one that is so "lean" that sick days are a catastrophe.
The more workers on the payroll and paying union dues the better, right? Maybe they can give the entire workforce 365 days sick leave, and hire an entire workforce to cover for them. More jobs! Double the workers!
It's almost like there's a gap the size of the Marianna Trench between what I wrote and what you mocked, but I just can't quite see it.
The railroads have been understaffing for years, squeezing their workers to the point of many exiting the industry, and ignoring maintenance/investment needs. All this at a time of fat profits. They can afford this, and it's shameful that the administration and Congress seem unwilling to force real concessions out of the railroads. Then we see articles like this that blame workers for using the one tool at their disposal, a strike, instead of considering that the railroads deserve blame.
Of course, they were always going to strike. The "negotiations" are a bit rigged from the beginning since there is hold-up value built into the game.
let the whole team gather rather than go on strike at work and go to the administration, to all whom they are unhappy with and make their claims there, but it’s better if they calmly come to the offices and ask questions that interest them, a simple one pulls a tidy sum and this is very painful for economy https://irs-offices.com/missouri-sales-tax/
Part of the problem is the implementation of Precision Scheduled Railroading. The railroad uses this as an excuse to cut job, thus forcing the remaining workers to work more, basically putting railroad workers on-call 24/7, forcing them to work if only a few hours since their last shift. It's ridiculous to blame the Union or the workers. People need to stop being apologists for the greed in this country. If there is a strike, its those at the top who are to blame. Its bullshit for people to be expected to work themselves to the bone for a fraction of what the CEOs make.
While conditions for workers have worsened, executives have reaped a jackpot: On average, the CEOs of five major rail companies were paid more than $16 million in 2021 alone:
Keith Creel, the CEO of Canadian Pacific Railway, scored a 58 percent raise in 2021, taking home $26 million in compensation.
James Foote, the CEO of the rail transportation holding company CSX, got a 17 percent raise that same year, earning $16.6 million.
Union Pacific’s CEO Lance M. Fritz was paid $14.5 million — 162 times the median employee salary at the company.
Norfolk Southern’s James Squires made just over $14 million, or 140 times the median worker.
Canadian National’s former CEO Jean-Jacques Ruest earned a paltry $9 million by comparison.
https://www.levernews.com/railroad-ceos-were-paid-over-200-million-as-workers-suffered/
Those unions "represent" workers the way trichinosis represents pigs and ticks represent cattle.
First of all, shipping has fallen drastically in the past couple months with imports lagging behind last year's total, meaning there will be less rail freight soon as the ports are cleared out and nothing left to transport. This is already happening at Long Beach and L.A. Once the backed up containers have been moved out, the rails will begin to slow down.
If diesel supplies continue to drop even to the point where there is none to be had, then all their huffing and puffing about a strike will be moot.
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...but, but, but Unions love Joe Biden and the Democrats, how can this happen? (sarc)
Where is the Secretary of Department of Transportation?
He was missing during the port crisis, and he's missing now.
Is he ducking, or is WH pushing him aside?
Is his name Jackie?
Democrats just love inflation: they can give cost-of-living adjustments to all their constituents and f*ck over everybody else.