Wednesday, December 16, 2015

"The Password is ....triad"

If you are as old as I am, you might remember the game show "Password", where celebrities and guest would pair off and try to guess the secret word.

They played "Password" on last night's debate.  The result was amazing....italics are mine.  The rest is pure Trump.  You can't make this stuff up.

HEWITT: Mr. Trump... Dr. Carson just referenced the single most important job of the president, the command, the control and the care of our nuclear forces. And he mentioned the triad. (Thought balloon:  "triad?"  Was that just in my doctor's report?) (hint #1:"tri" is a prefix for three) The B-52s (that's one thing) are older than I am. The missiles (that's two things) are old . The submarines (that's three things) are aging out. It’s an executive order. It’s a commander-in-chief decision.What’s your priority among our nuclear triad?
TRUMP: Well, first of all, I think we need somebody absolutely that we can trust, who is totally responsible; who really knows what he or she is doing. That is so powerful and so important.  (Translation: Nuclear bombs are dangerous to own and operate, so don't leave them with a fool - they could go off! Good idea! )  
 (Thought balloon:  I don't want to talk about nukes.  Hmmm.  Wonder what "triad" means?  Nukes....hmmmm.  Iran! Iran want nukes!  Middle East! Iraq!  Hey, I was against it once we found out there were no WMDs. I'll say that, sort of...
And one of the things that I’m frankly most proud of is that in 2003, 2004, I was totally against going into Iraq because you’re going to destabilize the Middle East. I called it. I called it very strongly (Translation:  Strong is better than weak, because it's stronger.  I'm a very strong predicting kind of guy!)  And it was very important. (Translation:  Everything I say and do and think is important to me) 
But we have to be extremely vigilant and extremely careful when it comes to nuclear.  (Translation:  No casual nukes, anymore! (Thought balloon:  Keep stating the obvious and make is sound like wisdom.  Maybe I can figure out this "triad" thing...Nuclear changes the whole ball game.  
 (Thought balloon:  Still no idea about this triad thing.  Lets talk about something else. hmmm.  Iraq, no did that one.  How about Syria!?!)
Frankly, I would have said get out of Syria; get out – if we didn’t have the power of weaponry today. The power is so massive that we can’t just leave areas that 50 years ago or 75 years ago we wouldn’t care. It was hand-to-hand combat.  (Thought balloon:  I have no idea what I just said, but I said it so it must sound good.  No worries.) 
(Thought balloon:  Still have time.... hmmm... Triad?  Screw that!  Any more middle east countries I can talk about?    Can't think of anything....  Let's blame Obama!  He was just at that climate thing...nukes > climate.  Go with that!)
The biggest problem this world has today is not President Obama with global warming,  which is inconceivable, this is what he’s saying. The biggest problem we have is nuclear – nuclear proliferation and having some maniac, having some madman go out and get a nuclear weapon. (Translation: No more casual nukes!  Bad guys with nukes are a bad thing  I'm against that.) That’s in my opinion, that is the single biggest problem that our country faces right now.  (Translation:  Absolutely!  What?)
HEWITT: Of the three legs of the triad  (Thought balloon:  "triad" again.  WHAT IS THAT!?!  It has three legs?  A Martian thing?  Nukes on Mars?...no clue...) , though, do you have a priority? I want to go to Senator Rubio (Though Balloon:  Rubio, what a wimp...) after that and ask him.
TRUMP: I think – I think, for me, nuclear is just the power, the devastation is very important to me. (Translation:  Powerful nukes are important because they are powerful. We should only have the devastating kind because I like them better.)

So, when asked how he will prioritize the management and upkeep of our three primary methods of delivering nuclear power around the globe, Trump said:

1. Nukes are powerful.
2. Bad guys shouldn't have them.
3. The Middle East is messed up and I told you so.
4. Obama!  That guy....

Time to go back to hawking real estate, buddy.

Sunday, November 22, 2015

Parallel Universe

What if...

Back in 1996, NS had not fought the CSX/Conrail merger, but, instead, extracted a pound of flesh during the STB approval process. Let's assume that "pound of flesh" was intended to dilute the Conrail stronghold on NY/NJ.

Let's assume:

1. NS gets to purchase:


  • The Southern Tier and Croxton Yard
  • The B&O from DC/Phila/Baltimore to Chicago
  • Conrail's ex-Reading line from Phila to Bound Brook and rights beyond to connect to the port and Croxton.


2. CSX/CR have to accept reciprocal switching in North Jersey and Detroit.

3. NS would still have a big pile of cash to spend...and buys CP. Which is a bit of a train wreck, and pretty cheap and not a horrible fit.

East is sort of balanced again.  NS + CP is significantly large enough to keep UP or BNSF from swallowing them whole.

Mergers go fairly smoothly because they are end - to -end and solid "Day One" operating plans can be developed and gradually implemented (not like the CR split!)

Smooth integration means that BNSF + CN is allowed.

UP + NS/CP follows on less than a decade later and finally BNSF/CN + CR/CSX.

And we're done.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Why I'm not the boss of Norfolk Southern

I listened in to Norfolk Southern's third quarter Wall Street analyst webcast.  I was disappointed.  Not so much in the results - which were lousy, but not as lousy as Wall Street thought they'd be - but in the rhetoric that went along with the presentation.

What I heard versus what I wanted to hear

Heard: Our strategy is:
1.       Rate increases
2.       Small growth
3.       Small, targeted  capacity investment
Wanted to hear:  Investment in velocity to reduce cost, create value, fill RR up with IM traffic

Heard:  Triple Crown to do auto-parts.  IM will try to convert existing FAK, but lanes don’t match well. 
Wanted to hear:  Triple Crown expertise in door to door service will be applied to existing IM lanes

Heard:  Velocity trend is headed right direction
Wanted to hear:  An actual plan or strategy to increase velocity

Heard: (analyst:  less than 2006 traffic but 2006 employee count) Velocity is good.  Reduces recrews and overtime
Wanted to hear:  Aggressive pursuit of long pool crews through process improvement/targeted investment

Heard: comparisons to 2014
Wanted to hear: comparisons to 2013

Heard:  implications that RR the way  is will be just fine in the long run, we just have to get back to previous performance levels.
Wanted to hear:  There is a fundamental shift from coal to intermodal and we have plans to configure our assets accordingly. 




Heard: nothing
Wanted to hear:  something about PTC risk, workforce transition and training, how technology is helping velocity

Heard: employee safety stats lead off operation’s slides
Wanted to hear:  to hear almost nothing about employee safety.  It’s just one of many internal processes that are important.  Safety is not our value-added product.

Heard:  We are keeping assets because coal may turn around
Wanted to hear:  Coal is dying, we are planning accordingly, specifically X, Y, Z.

Heard:  we have enough crews.
Wanted to hear:  We have enough crews.  I know we’ve said it before, but this time you can believe it  - here’s proof, or tell about a new process that tells us how many is enough

Heard: nothing
Wanted to hear:  Here’s what we’ve done to make sure 2014 meltdown doesn’t happen again.


Conclusion:  Management is completely in “reaction” mode with short term goal of driving up share price to avoid a near-term take over.  There is little or no vision beyond the next 12 months.  Where we’ve been is all we ever need to be.   This is a recipe for a slow death and/or a yard sale.  

I suspect that my view of where Norfolk Southern should be headed is either not realistic or feather's the wrong nests.  

That's why (among a whole host of reasons) I'm not the boss.

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Broken Railroads

I went to a rail planning conference last September.

I learned a few things.

One of them was:  Every North American railroad has great planning tools and processes.

Elaborate marketing forecasts.  Network modeling tools.  Asset analysis tools.  All highly integrated to work quickly and seamlessly.  Optimized operating plans.  "Right sized" assets - crews, locomotives, freight cars.  Targeted capital investment plans.  A shining example of modern, technologically driven, efficient industry!

FAIL!

The railroads  - all of them - are having trouble moving freight.

BNSF can't move all the oil and grain out of North Dakota.  They can't get the Amtrak's Empire Builder over the road between Minneapolis and Seattle.  Poor service put a refrigerated produce hauler out of business.  They doubled the transit time for goods coming into Seattle destined for the midwest.

NS can't get traffic into or out of or through Chicago and the congestion metastasized throughout the network.  Amtrak's Capitol Limited and Lake Shore Limited haven't been on time more than a handful of times since spring.  In the worst of it in October, Intermodal trains got parked.  Oil trains got parked.  Trains fill up controlled sidings in bunches. There are no crews available to move the trains.  Sometimes the clog moves around settling in Toledo, Cleveland, Pittsburgh or Harrisburg, but there has been a clog somewhere on the line for months.

CSX and UP haven't been hurt as badly, but all their operating metrics are way down.

Shippers everywhere are angry.  The STB has written nasty letters to the railroads.  Amtrak is angry. Politicians are yelling.

What the heck is going on?

I think it's just the nature of the beast.

Railroads used to move everything everywhere.  People. Coal. Goods. Parcels.  Everything.   Then, mid 20th century, traffic started drying up.  Small volume, high value stuff went to trucks.  People started driving and flying.  All that was left was bulk goods and low value goods.  Being highly regulated, there was little the railroads could do to complete for any other traffic.

Railroads started paring away assets they no longer needed, but couldn't do this very quickly because of regulation.  Every prospective line abandonment or sale required a long, long hearing with the ICC and often the answer was "no" because a single shipper on the line would object.  A whole generation of railroaders got used to having plenty of spare assets around to handle whatever came their way.  (See http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/2014/02/war-stories-episode-7-where-who-why-what.html)

 Then, partial deregulation occurred.  Railroads started competing for long haul highway traffic with intermodal services.  They sped up the paring of unneeded lines.  They merged with each other.

...and they started making money - enough to stay in business for the long term.

New tools and techniques helped them figure out how to improve efficiency and further trim assets to fit optimized operating plans.  ...and now the money really started pouring in!

They plowed a good chunk of that money into growing the intermodal business.

Growth.  This was something new.  But that old time mindset of "we have excess capacity out the wahzoo" was hard to shake.  There were real financial reasons to add assets slowly, too.  Having a "cushion" of assets seems like a good idea, but it adds expense and generates no revenue.  This hurts the ability of the railroad to borrow money to invest in new capacity.  So, there was a real push to keep things tight - and it nobody really worried about it.  We've muddled through before, right?  A tweak here, and tweak there and we can "manage" our way out of any crisis.

The problem was and is, nobody really knew, or had a measure of, how tight "tight" was.  That was okay until...

...2014 happened.  Oil traffic boomed.  Intermodal kept up it's recent pace.  BNSF's old Great Northern was swamped.  Chicago, that ancient maze of trackwork, that is the lynchpin of North American rail traffic, felt the effect.  Traffic flow slowed down and backed up onto other lines.

Crew supply was already tight.  Track space was already tight.  The railroads had used their planning tools to figure out exactly how little was needed for the traffic.  There was scant cushion.

The downward spiral began.  Trains that couldn't get through Chicago parked on sidings and had to wait for rested crews to continue on.  Each replacement crew used meant there was one less to handle the normal traffic.  Trains started being held in yards.  Locomotives sitting on trains couldn't be used elsewhere in the network.  Everything slowed down.

A slow railroad seems really busy.  There are lots of trains out on the main tracks.  There is a great need for locomotives.  Crews turn as fast as the law allows.  Yards are full of cars.  Lots of stuff going on.  Lots of equipment.  Lots of motion - but not much getting done.

The response?  "Lets shift traffic to where we have excess capacity!"  Uh, oh.  That superb planning meant things were tight everywhere.  There wasn't much that could be changed and any significant change risked creating a downward spiral elsewhere on the network.

When a highway gets into a traffic jam, it clears itself naturally once rush hour is over and the demand slacks off below the jammed capacity.

When an airline gets into a jammed condition, it clears itself overnight as the airline has time to reposition equipment and crews for a clean start the next day.

Railroads typically run steadily 24/7.  There is no low demand time of day.  There is no overnight reset period.  When things get jammed up, it's really hard to "unjam" them.  You need to apply more resources to clear the clog.

Uh, oh.  The lead time on those resources is really, really long.

More track takes engineering, planning and manpower.  Want to lengthen a siding or expand a yard?  Many months to years.

Need more train crew personnel?  Schedule a hiring session, screen, hire, train for months - and you have a conductor.  You need engineers, too.  Add on another year of training.  Can you move folks around the network?  Only if you have a surplus - and you can entice them to go - and you can get them qualified on the new territory.

Need more locomotives?  The order books of the locomotive manufacturers are full for more than a year.  You can beat the bushes and finds some second hand junkers for lease or purchase.  If you can get them to run well enough, you might scrape by.

So, what's the solution?  In the relatively short run, you have to do everything.  Reduce the demand as best you can in the clogged area.  Move traffic.  Divert trains.  Entice crews to move temporarily.  Buy or lease some used power.  Minimized trackwork delays.

In the long run, you need to change the game.  Here are some suggestions.

Maintain a bigger cushion of assets.  This is the Fred Frailey solution. This is expensive and might make investor's upset.  Might work for BNSF, but will be a hard sell for roads whose stock is "out in the wilds of Wall Street."

Don't overreact and be flexible.  The is the Jim McClellan solution.  His point is that you really don't know how traffic will ebb and flow, so don't overbuild, but don't paint yourself in a corner, either.

Specifically, Bakken crude could dry up.  Pipelines appear to be inevitable.  The price of oil is dropping in large part due to the success of crude by rail.  If you don't build out for a crude boom and one occurs, you risk a major league traffic clog, angry shippers and money on the table.  If you build out for a crude boom and it drys up, you have lots of stranded assets making no return at all.

The key is flexibility.  Easier said than done.  How would a railroad, with such long lived assets, become flexible?

Here's some thoughts:

Make assets cheaper.  How?

Reduce the initial cost and life.

Make things flexible.  Not sure oil boom will last?  How about disposable tanks in IM wells instead of building a bunch of tank cars.

 DPU could allow lighter weight cars.  There are benefits besides longer trains....

Speaking of DPU...get serious about it.  UP is pretty serious.  No reason others can't follow - even if it does mean having to install some radio repeaters here and there.

Improve assets.  100+ year old alignments breed hurry up and slow down - waste crews and fuel. If we think these will carry us into the future, we are missing the boat.  Get smarter about turning locos and cars and crews.  

Doubling up crew districts by raising crew speed.  You don't need to do much with train speed, but you do have to reduce crew idle time.  How?... 

 Improve on duty to depart.  No, it's not okay for a crew two spend two hours each time they come on duty before they get the train on the road - particularly if it's a "step off/step on crew change.  

Have trains that fit in and out of places - no doubling in and out.  ...unless you can figure out how to do it fast and easily.  Maybe DPU + ECP?  Is that cheaper than reconfiguring yards or trying to run more, shorter trains on the network?  ECP might not just be about "better braking".

Don't stop trains on main tracks!  That's a valuable asset.  Stopping, in general, is bad enough. 

Service equipment while it's idle.  No, it's not okay to top off locomotive fuel tanks every chance you get.  Don't service locomotives at every place there is a servicing facility "just because".  Give a once-around, sweep the cab and let's go!  Minimize mainline fueling.  Fuel when the locomotive is not on a train - even if it does cost a nickel more a gallon.

You don't have to do all these things at once.  You don't have to do any of these things if they don't make sense.  But, you do have to focus on the goals of these things because this is where the game is going to be won or lost.

The railroads have the tools to figure all this stuff out.  They have the people in place who can use  the tools.  All they need is the will to do it and the vision to get it done.

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Streetcar ride

The Atlanta Streetcar is finally up and running.  It took a quick ride last week.  Rode west from Peachtree Center to Centennial Olympic Park and back.  Took a few pictures.

A few observations:

The whole deal has been much critized. "No one will ride it."  "It's not useful."

Some of the criticism is valid.  The route could be better.  Stopping on the east side of the park, it misses some of the big hotels and attractions that are on the west side of the park, plus the World Congress Convention Center and Philips Arena.

None-the-less, the two mid-day, weekdays trains I rode had respectable ridership.  About 15 on the westbound train and 35 on the eastbound train.  Headway seemed about 15 minutes (which is too long!)

The vehicles themselves are really nice.  Clean, bright, smooth, quiet.

Operating on traffic lanes on city streets works okay, but speeds are very slow. I think we topped out at 18 mph between stops and spent lots of time waiting for lights.  They seem to use the park stop at the west end as a timing stop.  They dwell there was about 10 minutes for the two trains I observed, so there is a lot of slop in their current schedules.

Overall, I'll give it a "B".  Hopefully, they'll be able to speed things up and decrease the headway once they've been at this for a while.

Arriving Peachtree Center

High Tech controls

At the east side of the park

Headed back towark the King Center

Next train arriving Centennial Olympic Park

I used MARTA to get to and from my office.  MARTA is much maligned but is really pretty decent.  Improvements continue to be made and there are supposed to increased operating frequency soon.  New prez. Parker seems to have a clear idea of what he's doing.

MARTA Peachtree Center Station - new, brighter lighting!

New, better info board - same old headways. though