News & Reviews News Wire STB Gulf Coast hearing, Day 2: Testimony explains CSX train movements (updated)

STB Gulf Coast hearing, Day 2: Testimony explains CSX train movements (updated)

By Bob Johnston | April 5, 2022

| Last updated on March 19, 2024


Chairman says board will continue questions characterized as ‘partisan’ by attorneys for CSX, NS

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Map showing seven drawbridges on rail line between New Orleans and Mobile, Ala.
A screen shot of a CSX exhibit during Tuesday’s hearing shows the location of drawbridges on the proposed New Orleans-Mobile Amtrak route. CSX, via STB YouTube Channel

WASHINGTON — The slow pace of the Surface Transportation Board hearing on Amtrak Gulf Coast service continued Tuesday, the proceeding’s second day, when just one additional witness testified and was questioned.

But the appearance of that witness, CSX Senior Vice President of Mechanical and Engineering Ricky Johnson, provided significant insight into how CSX operates on the New Orleans-Mobile, Ala., route where Amtrak seeks to add two daily round trips. Johnson illustrated his testimony with drone footage, maps, and track diagrams of Mobile and the area around New Orleans’ Gentilly Yard.

Testimony addresses drawbridge operation, train length

Much of the discussion revolved around operation of seven drawbridges on the route. Johnson repeatedly characterized bridge openings as “unpredictable” because “boat traffic has 100% priority over rail traffic.” He elaborated on CSX plans to remotely operate a number of the bridges, which the railroad had failed to account for in its modeling study.

Johnson said that although CSX has participated in a U.S. Coast Guard pilot project to schedule daily openings on a bridge north of Mobile’s Sibert yard, informal talks with the Coast Guard for coordinating that protocol on the New Orleans and Mobile Subdivision “were a non-starter” because there are “200,000 users of waterways and no one wants to take their priority away.”

More revealing, however, was his description of how freight trains are classified by length. “Non-clearing” trains of 10,000 feet or more don’t fit any of the line’s passing sidings, while “clearing” trains are 8,500 feet or less and will fit those sidings.

“If we run non-clearing trains from Mobile,” Johnson said, “then we plan the meets so that everything coming out of New Orleans is a clearing train, so they always take the siding and longer trains stay on the main line. Depending on the timing of our interchanges in New Orleans, the trains headed toward Mobile the next day may be all non-clearing trains.”

It isn’t clear whether this was built into the Rail Traffic Control modeling, which assumed all freight trains would have to clear for projected meets with Amtrak.

Issues at Gentilly Yard

Aerial view of rail yard
A frame from drone footage of CSX’s Gentilly Yard shows the diagonal ladder tracks that mark the point separating Gentilly’s North and South yards. The North yard is at the lower portion of the image. CSX, via STB YouTube channel

Johnson wasn’t aware that the state of Louisiana and Amtrak paid for signaling on a main track on the north side of Gentilly Yard when Sunset Limited operation was extended to Florida in 1993. That track, constantly blocked, has become just another yard track; CSX is now requesting a separate bypass track be built.

He also quoted a “4- to 5-hour” running time between Mobile and New Orleans for the Sunset prior to its discontinuance, compared to the 3½-hour schedule proposed for the new trains. But this was the schedule for the westbound Sunset, and included more than an hour of recovery time added to reflect delays on CSX en route from Orlando.

Drone footage of Gentilly shows how it consists of two smaller yards which may be ill-suited to assemble long trains. Overhead visuals and track diagrams for the Mobile terminal area showed how switching moves for short line Terminal Railroad Alabama State Docks are forced to run past the location of the former Mobile station in order to execute a backup move to get to the dock area from the TASD yard.

Railroad objections to questioning delay proceeding

Before questioning of witness Charles Banks resumed on Tuesday, attorneys from CSX and Norfolk Southern asserted STB board members, particularly Chairman Martin Oberman, were improperly cross-examining the witness on Monday, rather than simply listening to the testimony. They also objected to the members’ “reliance on press reports.” It was unclear if this referred to a Trains Magazine disclosure that a separate meeting had taken place between Southern Rail Commission members and CSX in September, in which CSX officials proposed a much lower capital expenditure than what was eventually put forth following the release of the RTC study.

After an hour of a closed “confidential” session in which Oberman conferred with fellow STB members, the chairman said he and the other members would not be “a passive arbiter” and had “an obligation to elicit the truth.” He subsequently overruled CSX objections to STB questions at least eight times.

The third day of the STB hearing will begin at 9:30 a.m. EDT Wednesday. A live stream of that session will be available at the STB’s YouTube channel, along with recordings of the Monday and Tuesday portions of the hearing.

Update, April 7

CSX has contacted News Wire to clarify that its criticism of STB questioning mentioned above was over the agency “acting in the role of an advocate.”

Regarding the signaling of the north main track at New Orleans’ Gentilly Yard, paid for with public funds when the Sunset Limited began operations in 1993, CSX contends Amtrak was contractually required to pay to maintain the signal system but never did. The signal system is still there, according to CSX. News Wire has asked Amtrak officials for a response on this point. First-hand experience has shown that when Amtrak was operating on the route, scheduled passenger trains were detoured through the yard at restricted speed because that north main was blocked.

With respect to the layout of Gentilly, CSX says that trains are assembled on the long tracks in the large departure and arrival yard, located to the left of the two smaller yards in the screen shot above. However, Johnson testified that the two main tracks toward Mobile are tied up when trains are made up.

— Updated April 7 at 10:55 a.m. with clarifications and additional information from CSX.

13 thoughts on “STB Gulf Coast hearing, Day 2: Testimony explains CSX train movements (updated)

  1. The railroads came up with the idea of super long trains and were anxious to run them to save a crew even though their track was not ready for them. CSX’s current problems are management caused. Management forced the long trains on track not suited for it and the reduced speed of trains also started playing hell with a train to complete its run within the hours of service. And, during a business down turn they furloughed to many people who have finally gotten fed up with their lives being financially uprooted. Now they are having a problem hiring people. The STB should jump down railroad managements throat.

    Simply but, loads of bad management.

  2. Amtrak Joe and Mayor Pete got it right, along with Mr. Oberman. Congratulations! Run on it, ride on it and win again. . You understand Americans and bring us forward safely and undivided. The opportunity to grow and show is admirable. We can self-govern and build a transportation system to be admired. Class 1s needn’t say a word when THEY have gained enormous wealth and power and can’t run a train. Amusing, right? If they can’t figure this out, intelligent people can. Greed. Control. Power. Be adults and let’s grow together UNDEVIDED. Let true Americans travel. You might not take the train as an option. I will.
    cajuntrain
    R. Glenn Sypert

  3. Passed thru Mobile of Tuesday morning about 7:30 am going to Pensacola. Extremely long trains on track that runs along I-10 thru Mobile. Returned thru Mobile about 2:15 heading west. One of the two was still parked there (Couldn’t miss one Box car’s unique graffiti). Almost 7 hours later still hasn’t moved. Can’t blame that on bridges or Amtrak.

    As to the bridges, The Industrial Canal bridge just west of Gentilly yard sees more traffic than all the other bridges combined. Most of the time the bridge is down. Half the time is for other railroads are bringing trains to interchange with CSX. Other half is for switching the west end of the yard. Switch movements are constantly going as far west as Louisa street and back.

    As to CSX wanting another run around track on Amtrak’s dime. Tell them to stuff it and by the way we want our money back plus interest (say 5%).

    Then Johnson states that Gentilly yard is badly laid out for long trains. They should have fixed that problem after Hurricane Katrina. From my observation they totally rebuilt that yard after the storm (Everything was covered by 2 to 3 feet of floodwaters because of Katrina). They had plenty of time. It took CSX 5 1/2 to 6 months to rebuild the line between New Orleans to Pass Christian MS after the storm. CSX was using NS’s line to New Orleans for thru trains only.

  4. Two mile long trains (sometimes three miles long) are not safe from a public grade crossing standpoint. They should be outlawed.

    1. With no cabooses these days, 100 to 150 cars is plenty for a 2 man crew…sometimes 1. Having a brakeman on the crew for 3 members is safer but… that cost more and we see what that means.

  5. Sounds like the railroad is not suitable for the longer trains they are running,with or without passenger trains.

  6. “Johnson wasn’t aware that the state of Louisiana and Amtrak paid for signaling on a main track on the north side of Gentilly Yard when Sunset Limited operation was extended to Florida in 1993. That track, constantly blocked, has become just another yard track; CSX is now requesting a separate bypass track be built.”

    I’m glad someone was paying attention. CSX can build it and pay for it.

  7. State Docks RR trains absolutely do not need to pass by the former CSX station location to access’s the dock area from there yard. There is a crossover at the south end of the yard at least mile away that the State Docks use and have used ever since the line was double tracked 40 years ago to cross over to their yard area.
    Maybe once a day the Docks trains will pass by the staton area with most being light engine moves to or from the coal terminal.
    I’m not saying the CSX spokesman was lying but he definitely didn’t present the facts.

  8. Martin Oberman may be the best (maybe the only worthwhile) appointee of the Biden Harris administration.

    Yes Oberman is partisan. Yes he’s a Democrat. He’s also doing his job, which is more than I can say for whatever pinhead is running CSX.

    1. I don’t think there has been any truly non-partisan nominee in decades.

      However, your point stands. Oberman has done a very fine job in his capacity.

  9. CSX calling Marty Oberman and the questions “partisan” is laughable. All the objections as well. This is an administrative hearing, not a jury trial. Next thing you know CSX will say it was Russian disinformation. NS will say their plans were lost on Hunter Biden’s laptop.

    Someone tell CSX and NS lawyers that they have been watching too much late night news shows and that there is no conspiracy against them. Just tell the truth, good or bad and let everyone work things out.

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