Skip to content

Railroads, Union Agree; Possible Strike Averted


2/3/2012 9:00:00 AM
Write a Letter to the Editor



Print This
 


Tom Biery/Trans Pixs

The largest U.S. freight railroads reached a tentative agreement last week with a union representing track and bridge maintenance workers, eliminating the possibility of a nationwide work stoppage.

Working against a Feb. 8 deadline, the National Carriers Conference Committee, representing Union Pacific and other railroads, announced the agreement with Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees on Thursday.

That union was the only labor group that had not reached a contract agreement in the current round of bargaining. A total of 12 other agreements have been ratified.

A key issue was reimbursement to union members for travel to job sites that may be hundreds of miles away to work in track gangs, the union said in a statement posted on its website. The last adjustment of that compensation was made in 2005.

The U.S.-based carriers and the union agreed early in December to 60 additional days of talks, heading off a walkout at that time.

During the same week, unions that represent locomotive engineers and train dispatchers reached last-minute agreements.

Follow Transport Topics on RSS Twitter Facebook


 Print This
 


© 2012, Transport Topics Publishing Group. All rights reserved.

 

 

RELATED ARTICLES

Editorial: A Little Progress (2/6/2012 8:00:00 AM)
House Panel Drops Big-Truck Plan (2/6/2012 3:45:00 AM)
Highway Funding Is Urgently Needed, CEOs of Two Top Trucking Fleets Say (2/6/2012 2:00:00 AM)
Railroads, Union Agree; Possible Strike Averted (2/3/2012 9:00:00 AM)
Weekly Intermodal Traffic Rises 5.5% (2/2/2012 4:45:00 PM)
Truck Weights, Size to Be Considered in House Transportation Bill (1/31/2012 2:30:00 PM)
 

JOIN OUR NEWSLETTER
We'll deliver tax strategies to your inbox from our CPA firm.
We hate spam. Your email address will not be sold or shared with anyone else.