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Weembles
Apr 19, 2004

Goast posted:

that can't be a nyt guest opinion piece, it is too coherent

why read op-eds if it isn't to mock the lunatic writing it?

So you. can read the replies from people saying "well actually monster trains are better because they're more aerodynamic!"

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Danann
Aug 4, 2013

https://archive.ph/DSWpR

quote:

By Justin Roczniak
Mr. Roczniak is the co-host of “Well There’s Your Problem,” a podcast about engineering disasters.

The United States averted a national freight rail strike a few weeks ago, when the Biden administration stepped in to broker a deal between rail companies and their union employees. Rail workers have not yet ratified that agreement, and a strike is still on the table. According to a railway trade group, a shutdown could cost the economy more than $2 billion a day. Among the disasters that could ensue, power plants would lack the coal needed to produce electricity and water treatment plants would lack the chemicals needed to provide clean water. If the companies don’t come to an agreement with rail workers, eventually, grocery shelves would go empty.
Rail workers’ demands are not outrageous — union members have little to no predictability in their schedules and are subjected to draconian attendance policies. But the current standoff is about more, and is the result of a deliberate, half-century-long conversion of the nation’s rail system from a network that could deliver many kinds of goods to market (while also hosting hundreds of passenger train lines), to a fleet of land barges that are good for coal and containers — not much else.

After World War II, railroad companies ceded freight including mail and perishables to semi trucks and instead favored goods like newsprint, chemicals and steel coils, which could sit in rail yards for days. Many freight companies made this change enthusiastically; trucking’s rise gave them a strong reason to stop servicing goods that were financial and logistical pains to ship. So long to the rail cars full of livestock.
Despite shifting to nonperishable goods, railroads did not stay profitable. By 1976, several railroad companies had gone bankrupt, threatening to collapse rail shipping along with them. Sensing disaster, Congress stepped in to create Conrail, a mostly government-owned company to keep service functional in the Northeast and Midwest. Its executives saw austerity as the way to profitability.

Conrail cut costs everywhere it could, abandoning redundant tracks. It took a while, but it worked. The company was making strong profits by the ’80s and was re-privatized in 1987. Conrail may have begun by trimming excesses, but soon railroads across the industry would take those lessons in cost-cutting to an extreme.

In pursuit of efficiency, railroad companies across the entire industry adopted the theory of precision scheduled railroading (P.S.R.), developed by the railroad executive E. Hunter Harrison in the 1990s. Before P.S.R., freight shipping meant rail cars full of goods typically crossed the country on multiple trains, getting dropped off and picked up in yards and terminals in a time-consuming process. Harrison, seeing idle train cars and sitting inventory as waste, envisioned a system of shipping freight directly to its destination with consistent schedules for crew and customers. Goods, in theory, could arrive just in time for our lean supply chains.
If only it worked out. Alas, the actual implementation of P.S.R. led neither to precision nor scheduling nor railroading.

When companies implemented P.S.R., they also adopted new technology that allowed for locomotive engines to be placed along the length of a train. Now, instead of engines pulling the train from the front, additional engines in the middle and the back help move even more train cars. Average train length grew around 25 percent from 2008 to 2017, and companies now regularly run trains that are three miles long.

Our infrastructure isn’t built for these “monster trains,” which are now so long that many no longer fit the tracks designed to allow trains to pass one another. These trains are almost always overseen by a crew of just two people, who must walk for miles if a problem is found, in all kinds of weather. The trains are difficult to control, and if weight is unevenly distributed along them, they may break apart or even derail.

Precision schedules imply that trains run on some semblance of a schedule. But monster trains and longer distances often lead to a series of small delays that can easily cascade into much longer ones. This means that when a rail crew’s shift ends, its replacement is often called at odd hours to their station, usually with less than two hours’ notice.

Ten years ago, railroading was a middle-class job where workers might not get typical weekends, but they could at least get some equivalent time off. With new attendance policies, conductors and engineers would be disciplined for activities such as visiting the doctor or attending a funeral. Effectively, for these workers, a weekend or an eight-hour workday does not exist.

These problems are rarely highlighted on companies’ accounting metrics. During union contract negotiations, rail companies asserted that their capital investment, not worker’s labor, led to their profits. Union Pacific and B.N.S.F., two of the largest rail companies in the country, posted record figures in 2021. However, simply looking at profits hides a more complicated story.

Nearly two decades ago, companies used to spend around 80 percent of their revenues on running trains and covering operating expenses like payroll, fuel and maintenance. The remaining 20 percent could then be used for stock dividends and buybacks for shareholders. Today that operating ratio is much closer to 60 percent. Since 2010, rail companies have spent $196 billion in stock dividends and buybacks for shareholders. Pursuing these financial goals has actively surrendered railroads’ market share to trucks, delayed trains and angered both unions and customers. It’s not sustainable.

Capping the length of our monster trains should be the first step that the United States takes toward reform, and it should take lessons from other countries as it pursues substantive change. Countries with huge levels of freight — including China, Russia and India — have nationalized railroads that reduce the financial incentives that clog up tracks with the longest trains possible. Switzerland has resisted trucking dominance through a herculean effort that combines upgrades to tracks and stations with centralized management. This benefits railway shippers and passengers, not just the private profit of shareholders.

Rail companies seem set on their self-destructive tendencies, often proposing one-man crews in labor negotiations that would further squeeze workers. Even with a successful negotiation, train yards and mainlines would still be full of long, slow, trudging trains on congested tracks with overworked crews. Through disinvestment, private rail management has shown for decades a disinterest in building a rail system that works for workers and shippers. If they can’t figure out how to run a functioning railroad, maybe it’s time to take it out of their hands.

Speleothing
May 6, 2008

Spare batteries are pretty key.
What's funny is that there were some parts of that opinion I could read in his voice and some parts that sounded like NYT voice

TenementFunster
Feb 20, 2003

The Cooler King
upon further examination, "justin" is such a goofy name.

bedpan
Apr 23, 2008

TenementFunster posted:

upon further examination, "justin" is such a goofy name.

he just loves blackface so much!

darthbob88
Oct 13, 2011

YOSPOS

bedpan posted:

he just loves blackface so much!

Look, it's just a harmless Christmas tradition.

RandomPauI
Nov 24, 2006


Grimey Drawer
https://twitter.com/GrittyMoSports/status/1581034865138749440?t=Sszvom84PpHfH5_JbsSxTQ&s=19

Corky Romanovsky
Oct 1, 2006

Soiled Meat
It's been 2 years and 2 weeks since we last heard from dne, who's writing the eulogy?

FreeRangeHexagon
Apr 17, 2022

Corky Romanovsky posted:

It's been 2 years and 2 weeks since we last heard from dne, who's writing the eulogy?

bigshot podcaster forgets the goons who helped him get his start, it's maxnmona all over again

i say swears online
Mar 4, 2005

the polandball art in that pic is cool

SamDabbers
May 26, 2003



Franklin stream starting in ~13 minutes!

https://www.youtube.com/live/MyRexa5XA7k?feature=share

Insanite
Aug 30, 2005

lol it can’t be real. it’s been so long.

e: real

Insanite has issued a correction as of 02:14 on May 25, 2023

Weembles
Apr 19, 2004

The dead speak!

Xaris
Jul 25, 2006

Lucky there's a family guy
Lucky there's a man who positively can do
All the things that make us
Laugh and cry

holy poo poo

i say swears online
Mar 4, 2005

omg

KoRMaK
Jul 31, 2012



it's loaded

Twincityhacker
Feb 18, 2011

Franklin lives! And I can't belive I actually checked in on this thread after several months and something related to Franklin is happening!!!

tokin opposition
Apr 8, 2021

The dialectical struggle of history has always, essentially, been a question of how to apply justice to matter. Take away matter and what remains is justice.
Liam is still the worst part of wtyp, sorry dne your ex-roommate sucks

PlateNoise
Jul 1, 2023

tokin opposition posted:

Liam is still the worst part of wtyp, sorry dne your ex-roommate sucks

gently caress you dudes rock <3

TenementFunster
Feb 20, 2003

The Cooler King

tokin opposition posted:

Liam is still the worst part of wtyp, sorry dne your ex-roommate sucks
agreedo.

bedpan
Apr 23, 2008

tokin opposition posted:

Liam is still the worst part of wtyp, sorry dne your ex-roommate sucks

controversial yet true

PokeJoe
Aug 24, 2004

hail cgatan


*points at Liam* well there's your problem

PokeJoe
Aug 24, 2004

hail cgatan


I've never watched/listened to wtyp and have no idea who liam is

darthbob88
Oct 13, 2011

YOSPOS

PokeJoe posted:

I've never watched/listened to wtyp and have no idea who liam is

Well There's Your Problem is a podcast with slides about engineering disasters, with a somewhat broad definition of "disaster"; they've covered the Titanic and Bhopal, as well as the field of traffic engineering and petrostate vanity projects. The three hosts are: Justin Roczniak, AKA "donoteat", who has a degree in civil engineering; Alice Caldwell-Kelly, who knows politics and a lot of history; and Liam Anderson, Rocz's old roommate, who knows sports, anarchism, and butting into the discussion to make dick jokes. Some people do not care for Liam's digressions.

90s Cringe Rock
Nov 29, 2006
:gay:
yay liam

Airconswitch
Aug 23, 2010

Boston is truly where it all began. Join me in continuing this bold endeavor, so that future generations can say 'this is where the promise was fulfilled.'

This is actually the correct take

DesperateDan
Dec 10, 2005

Where's my cow?

Is that my cow?

No it isn't, but it still tramples my bloody lavender.
can't be too angry at someone with the right opinions about fish, as grandpappy used to say

tokin opposition
Apr 8, 2021

The dialectical struggle of history has always, essentially, been a question of how to apply justice to matter. Take away matter and what remains is justice.
Liam posts like I did 10 years ago

This is not a compliment to a man who is nearly 40

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double nine
Aug 8, 2013

they streamed a thing with cities skylines 2.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rfXBcg7GiGY

franklin will remain dead.

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