“Do Your Job.” How the Railroad Industry Intimidates Employees Into Putting Speed Before Safety
“Do Your Job.” How the Railroad Industry Intimidates Employees Into Putting Speed Before Safety

“Do Your Job.” How the Railroad Industry Intimidates Employees Into Putting Speed Before Safety

Jesus Christ, I knew this was going to be bad, but holy shit. There's some real zingers in there.
That's just one among the most egregious examples. They track downtime due to safety issues and penalize managers for delays due to things being unsafe rather than just fucking fixing it. I've worked for some really shitty employers over the years, and the only ones who ever tried to skirt safety issues due to costs were the places that were being run as vulture capital operations. I'm becoming increasingly convinced that the plan is to eventually declare insolvency because the costs to fix their bullshit is going to be too much, and have the government buy them out and remake CONRAIL. Once the government fixes their infrastructure on the taxpayer dime, they're going to start lobbying Congress to re-privatize CONRAIL for pennies on the dollar because of "free market efficiency".
Automated signaling exists and can manage all sections at the maximum safe speed. Trains shouldn't even have anyone inside to drive normally. The job is obsolete today. (drivers might be useful in yards, or little used branches, but not the main line - in both cases the driver should live near their section and work when there is a train then go home)
Of course automatic signaling is programmed to be safe. Thus if that section cannot be driven faster than 10mph (or whatever speed) there is no override to go faster anyway.
Exists, yes, but is not installed throughout the US rail systems.
But there should still be a human on the trains. Automatic signaling won't stop a train when there's a stalled car on a crossing, or someone walking on the tracks.
I'm not 100% sure about that. Can you give me a little context as to where your knowledge comes from? Railroaders I've seen discussing fully automated trains seemed to have some doubts about the viability of the technology.
They should 100% nationalize it... But I'm not sure that's their plan. It would be an extremely risky plan on their part to let the government take over the company in hopes that they can maybe possibly convince them to give it back after they fix it up.
You're not thinking like a modern CEO. This isn't long term growth capitalism, this is slash and burn capitalism. The only thing that matters is next quarter's profits (and, increasingly, this window is narrowing to single months or smaller). They're going to extract as much wealth out as they can for as long as they can until it's completely impossible to sustain it. If they can't get the government to hand it back in the future, oh well, but that's what lobbyists are for.