Wednesday, December 31, 2008

NY-NE Holiday Potpourri



Three of us were prepared Monday to make an overnight run to the Albany area when the Wheelman had to back out for a family emergency. Paul Lodge (Train Time CEO and Chief Video Tape Rewinder) and I carried on since the motel was no longer refundable and here are a few of the results. It was cold and overcast most of the time but could have been worse.

We took up the chase on the B&A main west of Worcester. The first real stop was Palmer. We thought we had a westbound autorack following us since about Spencer or Brookfield. It was in sight once but the crew was on the horn with Jacksonville to revive one of the units so we thought they might stop. They did not. It met us in Palmer. Neat. I thought I was seeing things when I saw two sets of lights coming at us at the bridge though. None other than "lightning striped" Mass Central #960 was in town. That was a personal "good catch". As he moved off, the westbound autorack blew through on the controlled siding. (Take another look at the logo on that one above.) Not bad for just passing through. NECR was quiet and the Steaming Tender Restaurant was closed (Mondays and Tuesdays - figures!) so we moved west.

Closer to Springfield, Amtrak 449 hit town while we were away from the tracks. The scanner chatter indicated that we may get to the edge of town before it would. We stayed on Rt. 20 through town and met it at the former Agawam depot in West Springfield. No more chatter to indicate another westbound or incoming eastbounds so we headed west again.

Staying on Rt. 20 we headed toward Chester. Beyond Huntington we began to hear chatter. We finally saw headlights ahead and turned back to downtown Huntington and the bridge. We caught an eastbound mixed freight with a pair of new 900 series GE's there (4400hp, AC, high adhesion trucks). That's 944 on the lead followed by 941(?) but I mainly include these shots to show Paul doing his thing with video on the left by the buildings. His shots are probably useable. My shots are a lesson in "mis-firing" and other forms of goof. I tried to re-shoot the first bad shot with a second but ran afoul of the branches on the right before my digital fired off. A faster firing mode would have worked, but who uses the "motor-drive" setting for railfanning? Here's one place it would have helped, assuming I could work with the clutter, overcast sky and small space to begin with. That train was moving right along. At least you can see the new and very bright number boards of the high adhesion units.


We moved on to Chester to finish off the daylight. All we needed was a train. While we waited Paul shot some video of the granite cars being unloaded by a specially equipped excavator. A tractor-trailer would pull up to the ramp and the operator would get out of his warm pickup truck, fire up the machine and load up a few pieces of stone from the CSX gondolas lined up on the siding. Neat to see how it worked. It will likely show up in a Train Time episode. Just as I was down to almost no light, a westbound could be heard working the hill. I goosed the digital to 1600 ISO and gave it a whirl. Paul's video didn't suffer as much. A pair of "washing machines" and a geep led a mixed train. It had construction debris cars so it may have been Q421, which coincidentally is the last freight train I saw here years ago (with "the devil's unit" #666 trailing no less). I only include the shot here because I like the Christmas decorations on the depot. Light ran out so we pretty much made a fairly straight run to Palatine Bridge and the trackside views of the Roadway Inn.


I was hoping for a morning parade of trains to photograph but for some reason it didn't pan out once we got the gear ready and the sun was bright. We did see the all UP consist of an eastbound produce train in the semi-dark. 3 UP units and all white UP reefers in tow. Naturally this passed as we were waking up. A couple more trains, including Amtrak, passed while we got ready, but only one passed while Paul was trackside. He did get a passing Amish buggy and a westbound hi-rail truck, but the radio was quiet. Tough luck this trip. At around 8:30am we headed for the diner in Canajoharie for breakfast then crossed the mountains to see the CP/D&H. Not a bad drive except we found blizzard conditions once we gained any altitude.

The scanner came to life once we got within range of Cobleskill. It sounded like a southbound and a maintainer clearing switches. We hadn't yet found a mile post so we had little idea which way to go. We went the wrong way first. But, the chatter did not cease so we headed out and caught up around the siding at Richmondville. Actually we saw the northbound NS168(?) clearing the siding and chose to keep going to see if we could catch some CP power on the southbound. We sure did. Gaining some lead time, we got out at Cooperstown Jct. by the GG-1's and caught some good photos. We decided that our time would be better spent returning east so we broke off the chase. Following Rt. 7 we caught up with NS168 at Delanson. It appeared to be waiting on someone so we set up at the other end of the siding by the Albany main. NS169 appeared through the blowing snow after a short wait, then NS168 moved north under the signal bridge. Not a bad series of catches for a line a lot of us routinely get skunked on.

The snow returned so we headed for I-88 and headed east to Mass. We tried Rt. 20 again at Lee but nothing moved before darkness fell. A repeat visit to Chester, complete with granite loading, was all we had but no trains this time. We returned to the Mass Pike at Westfield and eventually got to Worcester and caught up with Skull for the previously posted "summit". This more than made up for any lack of action since Delanson. I hope Paul's videos show something because that place was hopping while we were there. Well worth the hypothermia to see the P&W come down from Gardner between the two CSX trains (Q427 then Q426). We left after 7:30pm so we missed even more activity, but we got home late enough from this trip.

Not a bad way to celebrate the holidays!

BC

THE JOINT W.F.P.T. / H.A.P.T. Worcester Sumitt.











P-519 @ 17:40 1135 - 7 cars cabcar 1707.
P-530 @ 17:48 Cabcar 1707 - 7 cars 1135 pushing (Boston).
B-722 @ 18:00 6206(W) - 6211(E) west # 2 main to CP-45 then east # 1 to train and back to Framingham as the local.
P-523 @ 18:17 1058 - 8 cars cabcar 1533.
Q-427 @ 18:30 910 - 944 18 cars from PanAm Railways (WASE) Ayer,Ma. Hill Yard.
P&W @ 19:09 3003(S) - 3001(N) 7 General Freight, 70 Empty Coal Cars from PanAm Railways
Via The Gardner Branch.
P-527 @ 19:12 1070 - 7 cars cabcar ???.
Q-426 @ 19:20 5105 - 5120 16 cars to PanAm Railways (SEWA) Ayer,Mass .
P-529 @ 19:23 1118 - 6 cars cabcar 1705.
P-536 @ 19:45 Cabcar 1705 - 6 cars 1118 pushing (Boston).
P-448 @ 20:08 Amtrak "Lakeshore Limited" 172 - 15, baggage car 1162 3 AmFleet Cars, Horizon Fleet Dinette 53509 (Boston) from Chicago / Albany.
Q-115 @ 20:14 4821 - 8732 - 4769.
P-533 @ 20:50 1025 - 6 cars cabcar 1518.
P-535 @ 21:52 1117 - 7 cars cabcar 1715.
Q-117 @ 21:57 4742 - 7590 - 582.
Another Fun Summit In Worcester,Mass,Cold and windy,But fun. Paul Lodge shot some video of the action,AND YES Joey, plenty of "PURPLE TRAINS".The Gardner branch / Worcester main line was rockin with three trains in less than an hour.
Till Next Time Railfans.
Billy Leazer W.F.P.T. / H.A.P.T.
Brad Conant H.A.P.T.
Paul Lodge H.A.P.T.


The Worcester Foreign Power Team. The Heart And Soul Of Railfanning.Hebron Any Power Team. The Guardians Of Danville Junction.

Friday, December 26, 2008

HOT ACTION In Worcester,CSX Boston Sub. 12-26-08


P-519 @ 17:24 1029 - 6 cars cabcar 1701.
P-530 @ 17:40 Cabcar 1701 - 6 cars 1029 pushing (Boston).
P-523 @ 18:16 1051 - 8 cars cabcar 1700.
Q-427 @ 18:39 624 - 611 - 668 - 648 53 cars From PanAm Railways (Ayer,Mass).
Q-436 @ 18:52 5105 - 5120 - 6212 10 Loaded Autoracks & 22 General Freight.
P-527 @ 19:10 1062 - 7 cars cabcar 1719.
P-529 @ 19:34 1135 - 7 cars cabcar 1707.
P-536 @ 19:45 Cabcar 1707 - 7 cars 1135 pushing (Boston).
Q-437 @ 20:00 945 - 949 - 7927 - 8831 - 8871 - 8805 - 641 - 8117 - 6235. 296 axles at the North Grafton DED.Also Q-437 dropped 11 loaded autoracks on the # 2 main east of CP-45 for the P&W.They went to Framingham instead of being dropped off at the Providence & Worcester RR.
P&W WX-2 came up with the 2216 to retreive them at 20:30.(HEADS UP JEFF!!!)
Q-426 @ 20:10 948 - 947 29 cars to PanAm Railways (Ayer,Mass).
P-533 @ 20:50 1052(GREENBUSH) - 6 cars cabcar 1523.
Q-114 @ 20:55 7394 - 169 - 296. Non stop thru East Worcester Yard to Beacon Park Yard.
Q-420 @ 21:04 5439 - 621 65 cars.
Q-115 @ 21:09 5216 - 7548 - 4716.
Q-117 @ 21:19 692 - 7490(CR) - 5489.
P-535 @ 21:50 1120 - 6 cars cabcar 1711
Till Next Time Railfans.
Billy Leazer W.F.P.T.
P.S. Amtrak # 448 "Lake Shore Limited" Is running 2.5 hours late.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Merry Christmas And Happy New Year!


I have always liked this tradition on the relatively young Downeaster. Probably worth the cost!


I hope all my HAPT brothers and our many friends have a warm and festive holiday season this year.

Enjoy your friends and family now as you probably should year round. The news headlines are bleak but your spirits don't have to match it. Just remember that poverty is as much a state of mind as it is an economic situation. Prosperity works the same way. Ring in a prosperous new year!



Now, since this is a railroad forum, I must point out that the selection of F40's is pure coincidence and I've never been that fond of them. But, as they disappear, and with few old "covered wagons" to compare them to around, they are beginning to grow on me! Nothing like the combination of winter and passenger trains to lift the railfan's spirits!



Lower photos from Coteau (Montreal-Ottawa VIA, Dec. 2005) and the Dorval AMT Station, Quebec (Inbound Montreal, Dec. 2006).

Merry Christmas!

BC

Saturday, December 13, 2008

December Pictures Worth A Thousand Words












These are rough samples of some of my earliest railfan photography. Not something to brag about but as usual, it does bring up the normal regrets about shooting more of the stuff in the scenes. Just playing with the cheap slide scanner I bought recently. The shot on the left is from June 1978 and the one on the right is from Nov. 1975. Two different cameras, two different compositions, two different films and most of all, two different levels of locomotive identification skills.

Trilby Rd. was halfway between Ft. Collins and Loveland on the Colorado and Southern mainline that followed the front range of the Rockies through Colorado. Here the track was that new fangled continuous welded rail and 115# CF&I at that. Most of the main was still well maintained 90# stick rail. With six axle power the norm - to spread the weight and to climb the grades - I'm sure the track took a pounding. As you can see from the left photo, plenty of 3000 HP, 6 axle power was the norm. Actually, I recall dashing off in a family car to catch that odd 4 axle power on the point before going to my summer job. It was some time years later that I knew the significance of my catch. I had a U25b and a U25c or U28c (all rare on the old C&S and disappearing on the BN) in the same shot! At that time, the trailing SD45 and SD40-2 were "ho-hum" common. I took the shots with a recently acquired Olympus 35mm SLR that I kept until it died in 2005.

The earlier shot on the right reflects "youthful exuberance" but little photographic skill. I had a very old Kodak 35mm fixed lens camera that I should have left for a museum. I had to guess at all of the controls and even with a new light meter I couldn't make sense of the settings in a hurry. But, it was my first foray into 35mm and one learns from mistakes. Besides, the rig was given to me and it held up okay until I got my first SLR for Christmas.

Burlington Northern had a big presence in Denver in those days. Early on we learned to walk out onto the 32nd Street viaduct that went right over the old CB&Q roundhouse as well as affording a good view of nearly every line that passed through town. This also was the northern end of the now famous "Joint Line" between Denver and Pueblo. Coal trains were becoming common and BN was playing with remote controlled helper sets. This old "b-unit" was converted into a "radio control unit" to be coupled in with the normal helper units and provide operating controls for the lashup by a remote control set up front. I don't have much personal knowledge of those things but I was told that there were some exciting times in the experimental stages when radio signals cut out in rough terrain. Lots of emergency applications of the brakes and "pull aparts". They must have learned from their mistakes. By the time I saw this unit, most coal trains headed south had mid-train helpers and the radio controls were part of the locomotives. I guess they still had "master" and "slave" units that had to be in the mix, but easier than adding in a piece of dead weight. C&S had a set of SD40-2's like this. #996 was the "master" and #980 was the "slave". Those units were always on the "must photograph" list. Today, "DMU's" are a common sight on coal trains out of the Powder River Basin.

Now, aside from the RCU, which was the reason for the shot, there are two "ho-hum" SD45's. Who wouldn't want a shot of those now! These two probably ended up on the Wisconsin Central, Montana Rail Link or the Susquehanna. Odds are they've been scrapped or re-engined by now. I used to take a lot of pictures around this spot. It's the only place I ever saw the unique C&S SD9 #828 which was customized for winter operations on the Climax branch out of Leadville. I saw plenty of the other SD45 variants and the AT&SF showed up from time to time because of the "Joint Line" and the "C&S/AT&SF" joint subsidiary that switched their yards.

We used to walk from 32nd St. to the CRI&P/D&RGW's North Yard, or over to Union Station the other way. Following the various mains in that short stretch you could see Amtrak's SF Zephyr, the Rio Grande Zephyr, UP, CRI&P, D&RGW, BN, C&S, AT&SF, not to mention a lot of interesting industry and street trackage. The 23rd St. viaduct was another interesting perch nearer to Union Station. At North Yard there was a public road right through the yard throat and up to the tower. How I'd love to go back in time to walk that area again! Most of these places are gone now since Coors Field and the relocated Elitche's Amusement Park sit in the middle of things between the viaducts and Union Station. The yards have been moved to better utilize the real estate. I'm sure access at North Yard has changed too for safety and efficiency.

"You can never go home again" is probably the saying best applied here.

BC

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Return Of The Railroad Robber Barrons!



Return of the railroad robber barons
Monopoly is anything but a game to elevator managers in the Upper Midwest, reports the publication -- not when they feel as if they're being raked over the pricing coals by a railroad industry gone berserk while the responsible oversight agency has been asleep at the switch for years. So reports the publication, AG Week.
The power of the railroads to slice up the lower 48 into four territorial servings rivals even that of the 19th-century railroad barons, says to Bob Szabo, executive director of Consumers United for Rail Equity, one of several coalitions of freight rail customers seeking changes to federal laws that would require railroads to provide more competitive pricing and reliable service. "The railroads today have more monopoly power over shippers than they did in the late1800s when they passed the first anti-trust law," he says. "They've divided up the country.
The day in 1869 that the famous golden spike was driven to complete the first transcontinental railroad saw the advent of modern transportation across the continental United States. Stage coach travel and Pony Express mail stepped aside, giving way to the speedy, high-tech mass transportation provided by the original iron horses. The railroads laid thousands of miles of east-west rail, paving the way for the builders of the new West.
But historic battles between the railroad owners, characterized by some of the earliest and nastiest hostile takeovers in U.S. history, left the growing nation with just a handful of transcontinental railroads. The owners of these carriers carved up the 36 existing states and the remaining terrtories, including the Dakota Territory, until each of them enjoyed absolute pricing and scheduling control over its slice of the country. Competitive rail service virtually disappeared, leaving the West with sky-high rail rates for bringing men and materials west of the Mississippi River.
Public opinion began turning on the railroads. Names such as Gould, Vanderbilt and Carnegie soon became synonymous with empire and monopoly, and "robber baron" became a new term in the American vocabulary. In 1887, the federal government stepped in. Bowing to public outcry, it created the first U.S. regulatory agency, the Interstate Commerce Commission.
Though mandated to divest the monopolies of the railroad barons, the new ICC initially was too weak in regulatory powers to effect real change. In response, Congress enacted the Sherman Antitrust Act in 1890, steering American free enterprise toward competition and away from the influence and manipulation of the barons. Passage of the Hepburn Act in 1906, under President Theodore Roosevelt, gave the ICC long awaited price control over the railroads. Carriers around the country suddenly were required to compete with each other for their customers' business.
Prices leveled off and shippers gained more evenhanded access to rail transportation.
The early years of the 20th century saw railroads growing into a competitive, vigorous industry, crucial to the U.S. economy. But the Great Depression of the 1930s and increasing competition from trucking and air freight began to take their toll, and profit margins began to shrink. Even with the unprecedented rail use during World War II, followed by a revitalized U.S. economy, the rail industry found itself with far more rolling stock than it could fill, and a growing list of marginal service routes.
With the Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976, Congress began the reversal of much of the reforms established by the ICC. Through it, rail carriers gained greater flexibility in setting rates, while ICC's ability to enforce evenhanded pricing for shippers was weakened.
Later legislation also allowed ICC to require that railroads grant access to another railroad's track, eliminating traffic bottlenecks, but enforcement of this legislation was largely ignored. A last result of this legislation was a series of railroad mergers that reduced the number of competing major railroads from more than 40 to seven. Four of these now control more than 90 percent of the nation's rail transportation.
Nearly a century of regulation, begun with the establishment of the ICC in 1887, passed into history, and U.S. shippers were confronted with a fresh set of monopolistic practices.
In 1996, the Surface Transportation Board handed down a decision that said railroads are not required to move a customer's cars to a junction or terminal where that customer could reach competition on another railroad. This bottleneck decision resulted in a form of captivity for many rail customers.
Though their goods could be delivered to yards where other carriers might offer competitive rates, their local carrier did not have to comply, so the customer and their goods were "captives" of that railroad and its non-competitive prices. These prices often were double or even triple of comparable competitively priced routes.
The STB decision was not outwardly monopolistic. It says that if a shipper could get a contract with a competing railroad, the other railroad then would be bound to move the shipper's goods to them. But since 1996, no one has been able to get such a contract from the major railroads.
Szabo says this is because the railroads all have people behind their own bottlenecks. If railroad A offered competitive rates to shippers coming out of railroad B's territory, then railroad B likely would feel free to do the same in return. "I guess the railroads decided if they started poaching on each other, it would be chaos," he says. This may be why competitive contracts dried up.
According to economic doctrine, an oligopoly exists when an industry is dominated by a small number of sellers. In the cases of the northern and westernmost of the Lower 48 states, those railroads are BNSF and Union Pacific. If BNSF and Union Pacific ceased to write competitive contracts after the Surface Transportation Board's bottleneck decision, as more than one shipper has claimed, then it could be argued that they are in collusion with each other, violating antitrust law.
Because there are few participants in this type of market, each is aware of the actions of the others, according to Wikipedia's definition of oligopoly: "Strategic planning always takes into account the likely responses of the other market participants, causing oligopolistic industries to be atthe highest risk for collusion."
In 2006, then-incoming STB chairman Charles Nottingham, in his confirmation testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee, said the bottleneck issue was the one he heard about most often during his pre-confirmation visits with stakeholders. Yet, since becoming chairman, Nottingham claims he hasn't had time to "get his ears around" this issue, according to an industry source who declined to be named.
If he had, a coal-fired power plant in Louisiana would not have to pay captive rates for coal shipments from Montana's Powder River. While the vast majority of track between Montana and Louisiana is served by both BNSF and Union Pacific, the last 20 miles of track are considered "captive." Because of this, the entire 1,700 mile route can be and is charged at captive rates.
To top it all off, getting rates issues resolved through STB can be an expensive proposition. With application fees topping $140,000, just getting started is not an option for shippers without access to lots of cash. That means that the majority, if not all, of elevators in the Upper Midwest have almost no access to rate relief.
Shippers that can afford those kinds of filing fees are typically the power and chemical companies. Regardless of who applies, their expenses wouldn't stop there. "Let's say an ag elevator wants to challenge a rate that the railroads have imposed on him,"Szabo says. "He has to prove that he could build his own railroad and operate it at a price cheaper than what it's costing the railroad.
"Before deregulation, it was the railroads' responsibility to prove that its prices were reasonable and in keeping with regulations. "When they deregulated, they just shifted everything over to the shipper," he says. "I don't think they were anticipating that, but that's what they did.
"Shippers say it costs $6 million to $7 million to prosecute a rate challenge. "They've got to get all this discovery from the railroads about what their costs are and then they have to build a replica railroad," he says. "They have to have economists to put together a railroad and cost out all this stuff."
Szabo says the Surface Transportation Board admits to the high costs, which seldom payoff. "Since 2000, there have been about 15 cases filed, all by utilities and a couple chemical companies," Szabo says. "One shipper (the Wisconsin Public Service utility) has won meaningful relief. So your chances are one in 15 of getting relief.
"New legislation designed to make the appeal process more reasonable will go before Congress in 2009, but the railroads are against it. A statement from the Association of American Railroads says, "Freight railroads are subject to most antitrust laws, including those that prohibit agreements among railroads to set rates, allocate markets, or unreasonably restrain trade.
The few, very limited antitrust exemptions applicable to railroads pertain only to conduct for which the Surface Transportation Board has regulatory authority over the railroads.
Why would the Surface Transportation Board, charged with oversight of the rail industry in the public's name, just sit by and watch all this happen? Many say there are lucrative jobs to be had in the rail industry for those leaving the Surface Transportation Board and that this is leading to preferential treatment while they are still with STB.
Frank Wilner, a former chief of staff at the STB, has authored four books on public policy rail issues. In August 2007, he compiled and published a list of migrations since deregulation, which was meant to explain why "shippers perceive a bias in decision making, and why Congress is advancing legislation to force the STB to protect shippers from rail monopoly power as promised by the Staggers Rail Act of 1980."
According to his information, the previous two chairmen of the STB were hired by the railroads they regulated. "Linda Morgan became UP’s principal outside legal counsel at Covington & Burling, filling a vacancy created when UP hired her predecessor to head its law department in Omaha," Neb., he states in the article. "Meanwhile, Roger Nober departed the STB to become outside legal counsel to BNSF (and other railroads) at the firm of Steptoe & Johnson; and, one year later, was hired directly by BNSF to head its law deparyment in Ft. Worth."
His article goes on to name more than 20 people who transitioned from STB offices to the rail industry.
"Captive shippers have felt abused for some time," says Glenn English, chairman of CURE and CEO of the National Rural Electric Cooperatives Association. They "do not feel that they are able to get a fair deal out of the Surface Transportation Board. The captive shippers believe that we have regulators who are biased and certainly captive shippers are very uneasy with the fact that the intent of the deregulation of the railroads. . . is not being cared out."
This may be partially responsible for a widespread reluctance by shippers to speak out against the railroads. "We've had numerous stories from shippers that are very fearful," English says. "They fear retaliation from the rail industry. They are well aware of the fact that in the past, the railroads have been very heavy-handed and certainly have not taken a favorable view of critics who are shippers."
Indeed, his opinions go a step further. "The fact that we started out with over 40 railroads that were competing in 1980 and now we're down to four or five major railroads in this country, and the fact that the antitrust laws don't apply to railroads, we certainly feel that the days of the robber barons are back."
More than 120 years after public opinion forced the federal government to step in against the old railroad barons, public outcry is again being heard on Capitol Hill. Several members of Congress, especially from areas such as the Upper Midwest, where captive shippers are the norm, are supporting a pair of transportation bills designed to reign in the railroads.
The bills, which are set to go before Congress in 2009, modify some STB decisions that have denied rail customers access to railroad competition. Its intent is to address the inadequacies in STB's rate reasonableness processes, improve service to rail customers and provide new remedies for rail carriers where inadequate remedies exist.
(The preceding article was published by Ag Week.)

Welcome to HAPT's Railfan Adventures


The Hebron Any Power Team is actually just a bunch of fun-loving rail enthusiasts who enjoy photographing and chasing all things railroad with friends. This bunch of guys cover a lot of ground for a group based way up "nawth" in Maine. We also have friends scattered around the country who contribute well to our hobby. In fact, our name is derived from our actual friends in the Worcester Foreign Power Team, except that Hebron hasn't seen a train since the 1950's so we'll settle for "any power".

Welcome and enjoy the eclectic collections of the contributors. Maine idealizes "life in the slow lane" so we present this blog as an effort to share our less time sensitive findings and to add to our hobby.