Modern Railroading: Unrestrained Monopoly Power - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Modern Railroading: Unrestrained Monopoly Power

Description:

Congress passed the Staggers Act in 1980 to partially deregulate the railroad industry. The Surface Transportation Board (STB) has been an unintended roadblock to full ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:51
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: rail1
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Modern Railroading: Unrestrained Monopoly Power


1
Modern Railroading Unrestrained Monopoly Power
2
Defining the Problem
  • Congress passed the Staggers Act in 1980 to
    partially deregulate the railroad industry.
  • The Surface Transportation Board (STB) has been
    an unintended roadblock to full deregulation,
    continually preventing rail customers from
    accessing transportation competition.
  • In 1980, Congress also failed to remove railroad
    exemptions from antitrust laws.

3
STB Falls Short
  • On its watch the STB has
  • Approved mergers and acquisitions that have left
    only four rail major carriers in the country.
  • Handed down policies that consistently favor
    railroad companies.
  • Created a costly and time consuming rate
    challenge process that is inaccessible to rail
    customers.

4
Mergers, Rail Consolidation
  • The STB has allowed Union Pacific, BNSF, CSX and
    Norfolk Southern to control over 90 percent of
    the nations freight traffic.

Remainder of American Railroads
Four Major Railroads
5
Consequences of Mergers
  • Many Rail Customers Face
  • Little to no competitive alternatives for rail
    and
  • Drastic price increases in shipping rates and
    service failures.
  • Railroads know they face little to no
    consequences from the STB.

6
STB Policy Favors Railroads
  • The STB continues to give their stamp of approval
    on issues that favor the railroads bottom lines.
  • Examples
  • Paper Barriers
  • Bottlenecks
  • Terminal Switching Arrangements

7
Paper Barriers
  • Paper barriers are financial agreementsapproved
    by the ICC and the STBbetween rail companies and
    short lines.
  • In the agreements, short lines that lease track
    from a major railroad are required to serve just
    that major railroadcreating a barrier to
    competition.
  • The STB continues to approve paper barriers,
    denying shippers access to competition.

8
Bottlenecks
  • A bottleneck occurs when a railroad controls a
    length of track that can prevent a rail customer
    from reaching a competing railroad.
  • In the 1996 bottleneck decision, the STB ruled
    that
  • A railroad controlling a bottleneck line segment
    does not have to provide a rail customer with a
    rate quote over that segment to a point where the
    rail customer would have access to a competing
    major railroad.

9
Terminal Switching Agreements
  • Terminal switching agreements are historical
    arrangements by which railroads changed traffic
    with other railroads. Congress required the ICC
    and STB to maintain terminal agreements on
    reasonable terms when to do so is in the public
    interest.
  • The agencies have decided they will only maintain
    these agreements where monopoly abuse is shown.

10
STB Failures Mean Higher Rates for Captive
Customers
11
Rate Relief Process
  • An October 2006 Government Accountability Office
    (GAO) report found STB processes to be
    inaccessible to rail customers.
  • The complaint process allows the railroads to
    collect any rate they desire while rail customers
    bear all burdens of proof to try to challenge the
    rate.

12
Bearing the Burden of Proof
  • Rail customers bear all burdens of proof in a
    rate challenge.
  • In contrast, the railroad does not have to
    justify its rate.
  • CURE knows of no other American regulatory
    process where the monopolist does not have to
    justify its rates.

13
Stand Alone Costs
  • To the STB, a rail rate is not unreasonably high
    unless the rail customer can build and maintain
    its own railroad at current costs to ship its
    freight at a lower cost.
  • Determining these Stand Alone Costs is a
    multimillion dollar exercise.
  • No rail customer has won meaningful relief since
    2001.

14
Case Study Basin Electric
  • When Basin Electrics contract expired in 2004,
    BNSF doubled their rail rates.
  • Basin Electric filed a rate challenge with the
    STB in 2004.
  • On September 10, 2007, the STB denied Basin
    Electric relief from the outrageous rate despite
    Basin showing that the railroad was charging five
    times what it costs railroads to move its coal.
  • 26 expert witnesses 1,200 pages of narrative
    testimony 116 exhibits 7,223 pages of
    hardcopy working pages
  • 6 million dollars

15
Case Study DuPont Kevlar Facility
  • CSX increased the rates it charges DuPont to
    transport raw materials.
  • The rates increased by 9 to 102 depending on
    the move and product despite poor service. The
    increases amounted to over 2 million annually.
  • DuPont was threatened with plant closure due to
    late delivery of goods and forced to increase
    their cost of goods.

16
STB is in Need of Reform
  • The STB has turned a blind eye to unfair
    practices and unreasonable rates of the major
    railroads.
  • The agency charged with protecting customers has
    created policies that reinforce the monopoly
    power of the major railroads.

17
STB Reform Legislation
  • The Rail Competition and Service Improvement Act
    (HR 2125, S. 953) directs the STB to do its job
    and regulate railroad monopoly power.
  • This reform legislation would also repeal the
    railroad industrys antitrust exemptions, forcing
    the railroads to allow rail customers access to
    competition.

18
For More Information on CURE or the Captive Rail
Issue Contact
  • Bob Szabo
  • Executive Director and Counsel
  • Consumers United for Rail Equity
  • Member, Van Ness Feldman
  • (202) 298 1920
  • rgs_at_vnf.com
  • www.railcure.org
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com