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Norfolk Southern plans more employee furloughs
Norfolk Southern plans more employee furloughs as shipping demand remains weak

NEW YORK (AP) -- Railroad operator Norfolk Southern Corp. said Wednesday it has reduced the number of its train and engine service employees by 6 percent in the last eight months through furloughs and a hiring slowdown, and more job cuts are likely.

Norfolk Southern said Tuesday its fourth-quarter profit rose 13 percent as higher shipping prices and lower fuel costs offset tumbling demand for goods.

The company has cut its train and engine service crew from a high of 12,380 in April to 11,622 as of last week, Chief Operating Officer Stephen Tobias said in a conference call with analysts. About 400 of those employees were furloughed and the rest of the reduction was the result of a hiring slowdown.

Norfolk Southern expects to furlough more train and engine employees -- including 100 in the next month. Tobias also said reductions in other areas are possible, such as mechanical, as engine crews are reduced.

Norfolk Southern has also reduced shifts at some terminals. It cut shifts at its Buckeye terminal in Columbus, Ohio, to one from three, and its Sheffield, Ala., terminal, now has two shifts instead of three. The company has also has fewer workers at its terminal in Reading, Pa.

Norfolk Southern also reduced the number of scheduled trains it operates by almost 44,000 and put 60 trains out of service as a result of deteriorating demand. The reductions began in October.

Norfolk Southern shares rose $1.50, or 4 percent, to $39.15 in morning trading.

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Chilean Night Skies



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Cy Valley wrote:
Norfolk Southern also reduced the number of scheduled trains it operates by almost 44,000 and put 60 trains out of service as a result of deteriorating demand. The reductions began in October.


Damn, even trains are being pulled out of serivce, LAMCO is ruthless.

and LAMCO has reduced its scheduled trains by 44,000?  Then I guess it will have to layoff other 88,000 of its remaining 12,000 T&E employees.

 



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http://columbusdispatch.com/live/content/business/stories/2009/02/02/railroad_layoffs.html?sid=101  

A drop in rail traffic has led Norfolk Southern Corp. to lay off 150 railroad workers in Ohio, including a reduction in shifts at the Buckeye Yard on the West Side. The Norfolk Va.-based company said the cuts began in early December. A total of 475 workers have been laid off companywide. The reduction in shifts at the Buckeye Yard was from three shifts to one. "Our traffic volumes are down significantly," said spokesman Rudy Husband. Chief Operating Officer Stephen C. Tobias told analysts last week that Columbus was one of three locations where the company is able to "substantially reduce" operations. The other two are Reading, Pa., and Sheffield, Ala. Tobias said the reduction in traffic is tied to low auto sales, which is cutting the number of vehicles and parts shipped by rail.


-- Edited by Cy Valley at 16:07, 2009-02-03

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Chilean Night Skies



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What gets me is theres twice as many guys furloughed in Bellevue and Ft Wayne as there is in Columbus.

I also see that they keep cutting trains.

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There's a bunch in Elkhart and Toledo. A few in Peru. Don't know about the Windy City.

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printLowered auto demand drives Norfolk Southerners off train
by PAMELA SCOTT JOHNSON Staff Writer
02.07.09 - 11:52 am

The railroad workers getting on and off the train in Williamson yesterday are more fortunate than the 570 laid off from Norfolk Southern since early December 2008.slideshow The future is looking grim for not only local coal mines but the railroad industry as well.

Not even a year has passed since coal businesses and Norfolk Southern Railroad were begging for workers. Now, after promises from several experts that West Virginia would be exempt from the economic slump hitting the rest of the country with phrases like this is not your grandfathers coal boom, coal mines are not only laying off workers but closing several. Adding to the fear spreading throughout the area, 12 men from the Williamson NS railroad yard have recently been furloughed with more rumored to come.

NSC Manager Public Relations Robin C. Chapman confirmed the furlough status of 12 people via email to the Daily News.

Furloughs are done by seniority, he wrote. It starts with the most junior employees and goes up the seniority roster, and employees are recalled by seniority, starting with the most senior.

Chapman said all furloughed employees have recall rights, however, according to the agreement between Norfolk and Brotherhood of Railway Carmen Division, rule 14 (A), the seniority of any employee whose seniority under an agreement with BRC is established after the date of this agreement (Jan. 1, 2003) and who is furloughed for 365 consecutive days will be terminated if such employee has less than three years of seniority.

All 12 men recently furloughed have less than three years of seniority and are therefore in danger of permanently losing their jobs if not recalled within the 365 days. Each man was offered transfers to yards in New York but had they accepted, rule 16 states employees transferred from one point to another, with a view of accepting permanent transfer, will, after 60 days, lose their seniority at the point they left and their seniority at the point to which transferred will begin on date of transfer. Not one of the 12 accepted the transfer.

Chapman explained the furloughs are a result of a slow-down in traffic. While rumors are that up to 42 employees will be laid off by the time all is said and done, Chapman said, at this time, there are no plans for additional furloughs, but that could change with changing in business conditions.

The company, based in Norfolk, Va., said the cuts began in early December. Company wide, Chapman said 570 workers have been laid off.

The lower demand for new autos and parts has contributed to less traffic for the railroad. Another element factored in the slow down of traffic is production of coal has been slashed along with idled mines and a reduction in jobs.

One AP report states that at least 1,310 jobs have been trimmed at various Appalachian mines.

Massey Energy Chief Executive Office Don Blankenship said Wednes-day that in addition to cutting production, the company could reduce its workforce, cut overtime and Saturday shifts, and even idle some mines.

Massey shares fell over nine percent Feb. 4 after the company posted less than expected quarterly earnings.

"There are a lot of customers with blast furnaces down," Blankenship told Wall Street analysts. "Some customers are looking for longer-term contracts, some want discounts, it's a hodgepodge.

A collapse in demand for steel from automakers, the construction industry and others have cut demand and prices for metallurgical grade coal used to fire blast furnaces. Now mine operators have begun scaling back steam coal production in response to a decaying demand from electric utilities.

Two more big U.S. producers, Arch Coal Inc. and Foundation Coal Holdings, also announced cutbacks. Peabody Energy, Consol Energy, Alpha Natural Resources, Alliance Re-source Partners and Patriot Coal have begun to curtail as well.

When asked if Massey will close mines Blanken-ship said, "We will be able to reduce the workforce by attrition and can deal with less production with reduced overtime. We can cut back on Saturday and idle some mines, but we will try to avoid that."

AP reports Blankenship said the company had improved production efficiency in the fourth quarter, but pricing and market demand were weaker than expected because of a continuing economic slump.

Massey expects to transfer 44 million to 46 million tons of coal this year. These numbers are down from its previous mark of 46 million to 48 million. It said the average price is expected to be $65 to $67 per ton, down from an earlier estimate of $78.

The director of Work-force West Virginia's Unemployment Compensation Division Michael Moore says 10,407 claims had been filed with the state through the week ending Jan. 17. This is a jump of 36 percent over the same period in 2008.

These numbers do not yet include the rounds of layoffs that hit the state this week which includes the mining industry.


© williamsondailynews.com 2009

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Chilean Night Skies



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Wonder how much of that is the seasonal downturn.

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