News & Reviews News Wire Canadian National to acquire Iowa Northern Railway

Canadian National to acquire Iowa Northern Railway

By David Lassen | December 6, 2023

| Last updated on December 15, 2023


Short line on former Rock Island route, founded in 1984, handles more than 60,000 cars per year

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Freight train with seven red, gray, and yellow locomotives
Canadian National will acquire Iowa Northern Railway, the short line operating on a portion of the former Rock Island founded in 1984. Iowa Northern

MONTREAL — Canadian National Railway will acquire Iowa Northern Railway, which operates approximately 253 route-miles and 275 track-miles, primarily between Cedar Rapids and Manly, Iowa, CN announced today.

Iowa Northern was founded in 1984 on a portion of the former Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific. The Class III short line serves 19 counties in eastern Iowa, has 110 employees, 24 locomotives (plus six slugs), and 450 freight cars (all covered grain hoppers), according to the railroad’s website. It serves 20 grain elevators, two ethanol plants, and two mineral processing facilities, and handles other commodities including fertilizer, food, farm machinery, chemicals and lumber. The railroad hands more than 60,000 cars per year.

CN and Iowa Northern intersect in Cedar Falls, Iowa. Iowa Northern also interchanges with Union Pacific, Canadian Pacific, and the Cedar Rapids & Iowa City (or CRANDIC) Railway.

“We are delighted to have reached an agreement with Iowa Northern Railway,” CN CEO Tracy Robinson said in a statement. “We look forward to the opportunities our combined network will provide customers, farmers, and our partners to respond to the needs of their existing and new markets. By enabling all of us to play an even more important role in this critical supply chain and densifying our southern network, we are accelerating sustainable, profitable growth.”

The companies said the transaction represents an opportunity to support the growth of local businesses by creating single-line service to North American destinations while preserving access to existing carrier options.

“We are very pleased to have reached a deal with CN,” said Iowa Northern Chairman Daniel Sabin. “We believe CN shares IANR’s commitment to local stakeholders and that this transaction will be beneficial for customers, employees and the local Iowa economy. We are confident that, as part of CN, IANR will be able to continue to provide reliable first and last mile service to our local customers while providing them access to a much broader network and market.”

CN said the deal has closed into an independent voting trust pending regulatory review by the Surface Transportation Board. Terms were not disclosed. An STB decision is expected in 2024.

Map of Iowa Northern Railway
The Iowa Northern connects with Canadian National at its midpoint and also interchanges with Union Pacific, Canadian Pacific, and the Cedar Rapids & Iowa City. Iowa Northern

13 thoughts on “Canadian National to acquire Iowa Northern Railway

  1. This doesn’t add up. CN doesn’t have a need for IANR with the parallel line running to the east. The line to Oelwein and the line between Forest City and Belmond will be kicked to the wayside.

  2. Mr Hergert, you are correct. The Cedar Falls-Oelwein segment is ex-CGW, one of the few remaining pieces of the Great Western still extant. At one point, that line went through Marshalltown, Des Moines, and St. Joseph, Missouri, on its way to Kansas City, and the Marshalltown-KC segment was a main line until the mid-80s, last used by CNW, who bought the Chicago Great Western in 1968. That purchase was basically the CNW buying out & eliminating a competitor, as they paralleled each other quite a bit, and the CNW had far superior routes & grades, so they abandoned the vast majority of the smaller granger road. The STB should block this purchase on similar grounds.

  3. I doubt CN has the same commitment to the local stakeholders. If I was a small shipper on the IANR I would be afraid if I wanted to keep using rail. Dan Sabin and crew looked for ways to expand and gain business. The Forest City to Belmond line is an example. I would expect CN will jettison that line.

    I believe UP still owns a segment of the old CGW in the Waterloo area. A few years ago, they contracted out the operation and maintenance to IANR. If that arrangement is still in place, I wonder if UP will end it.

    1. I agree 100%. Time and time again, the Class I’s, and I feel especially CN, have shown they don’t give a rip about them.

      I grew up in WI and seeing what CN did to the WC lines other than Duluth to Chicago for the most part is so sad and frustrating.

  4. Why? IANR is a rounding error on CN’s books. Need more traffic to prop up the Iowa Division? Or was their staff at or near retirement?

    1. Defensive move? At the moment, I don’t have time to look at detailed maps, but could CN see this as a possible puzzle piece for CPKC to build a shortcut between Minneapolis and Kansas City?

    2. Like Andy, my first thought was this could be CPKC related. CN got denied the Springfield line in IL, so maybe they feel they still need to make a move of some sort.

    3. They (CN) already have the Osage District from Owatonna MN to Cedar Falls IA which nearly parallels IANR on the east. It just doesn’t have access to all of those local customers that IANR developed over the last 25 years south of Manly.

      Did they think CPKC was going buy the IANR business and switch it in and out at Nora Springs and shed the trackage rights through Mason City?

      To get a little sarcastic, maybe CN will buy up all the grain capacity north of KCMO so UP doesn’t have to gripe to the STB about the MKT Treaty UP agreed to at the Port of Galveston.

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