When Grand Trunk Western bought DT&I in 1980, Batory’s star kept rising. Then in 1987 he jumped ship to become general manager of the bankrupt Chicago, Missouri & Western, formed from that part of Illinois Central Gulf connecting Chicago, St. Louis, and Kansas City. It was an ill-fated railroad, and Batory helped sell the pieces. The Chicago-St. Louis part went to Southern Pacific, and SP hired him to run it as general manager and assistant GM of its Central Region.
The Belt Railway of Chicago should commission a statue of Ron Batory. It was barely scraping by, switching a mere 200 cars a day, he maintains, when he brought it Southern Pacific’s traffic (including trains from Kansas City using Burlington Northern trackage rights). This saved newly arrived SP from having to buy its own Chicago terminal. The Belt did better than build a statue: It hired Batory as its president in 1994. By 1995, 40 miles of freight cars rolled down Clearing Yard’s twin humps every day. When CSX and NS came calling in 1997, asking if he’d become vice president of operations at Shared Assets, Batory briefly hesitated. ‘I could stay at the Belt — I knew Chicago like the back of my hand,’ he says. Yet the same itch to be part of something new and even untried that had lured him to CM&W also attracted him to Conrail. He started there in March 1998, more than a year prior to the split. ‘There was no Welcome Wagon awaiting me,’ he recalls. ‘I was the first evidence to people that big change was coming to the company. What I did was listen and watch. I learned how people thought. I learned the culture.’ But Batory (pronounced ba-TORY) didn’t know the half of it, as he later discovered.”
Batory and his wife, Barbara, reside in Mount Laurel, N.J. Until the inauguration of President Trump on Jan. 20, Sarah Feinberg was the Administrator of the FRA.
I worked with Ron at the SP. He made things work with minimal resources. He made an efficent railroad terminal in New Jersey out of a bowl of spaghetti.
“But Batory (pronounced ba-TORY) didn’t know the half of it, as he later discovered.” What a way to end a new article! Don’t keep us in suspense! What did he later discover?
What a great man and a great choice! Congratulations, Mr. Batory.
What a positive change! A railroader replaces a political operative.
A great leader and a great man – congratulations, Ron!