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U.S. rail regulator tackles railroads over customer complaints

Published 03/19/2018, 04:30 PM
Updated 03/19/2018, 04:30 PM
© Reuters.  U.S. rail regulator tackles railroads over customer complaints

By Nick Carey

(Reuters) - The top U.S. rail regulator has asked major railroads for information on service levels before meeting disgruntled shippers and other customers over complaints about service delays and higher costs.

In letters to the chief executive officers of the railroads dated March 16 that were posted on the U.S. Surface Transportation Board's (STB) website on Monday, the regulator requested locomotive and employee numbers, and asked whether the railroads have sufficient numbers of each to meet demand.

The STB said last week it would start meeting with customers next month, signaling the agency could be open to new paths to relieve shipper pain.

The letter signed by STB acting chairman Ann Begeman and vice chairman Deb Miller cites the regulator's "increasing concerns regarding service across the rail network," and asks for a service outlook for the near term and for 2018.

"Please discuss your expectations for service demand in 2018, ability to serve this demand, and whether internal projections for demand in 2018 have been accurate based on actual volumes year-to-date," the letters said, among other requests.

The letters were sent to the CEOs of Union Pacific Corp (N:UNP), Warren Buffett's BNSF Railway Co (N:BRKa), CSX Corp (O:CSX). Norfolk Southern Corp (N:NSC) and Kansas City Southern (N:KSU). They were also sent to the CEOs of Canada's two major railroads, Canadian National Railway Co (TO:CNR) and Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd (TO:CP), which have significant U.S. operations.

Representatives of these railroads did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

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The STB's last major public hearing was in October and focused on service issues at No. 3 U.S. railroad CSX.

As U.S. economic growth has revved up, railroads and truck fleets have not expanded capacity to keep pace - a decision applauded by Wall Street.

The drive for cost cuts and higher margins at U.S. trucking and railroad operators is pinching their biggest customers, forcing the likes of General Mills Inc (N:GIS) and Hormel Foods Corp (N:HRL) to spend more on deliveries and consider raising their own prices as a way to pass along the costs.

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