BNSF,
the largest freight rail company in the U.S. and one of the largest transportation companies in the world, recently implemented new scheduling systems for their engineers and conductors that require 24/7 on-call notice, with the ability to report to work and run a train within 90 minutes of being paged. Taking any time off in this system is penalized, and it means that railroad employees frequently
cannot schedule doctor appointments, have weekends off, or
even attend funerals.
Unions are seeking the end of the punitive scheduling system and have already softened their bargaining request from asking for paid sick days to
any sick days at all, paid or unpaid. Despite this, railroad companies insist 24/7 scheduling is required for profitability, even though it's already the most
profitable industry in the U.S. by a wide margin. This comes after years of seeing labor costs
cut to the bare minimum as
precision scheduled railroading—and the 80-hour-long shifts required for it—has become the industry standard.
Hundreds of railroad employees have already resigned in large part due to the scheduling systems; others have
threatened to quit if a contract is signed that does not change how sick time and leave are handled. All of this comes against a backdrop of nearly
29 percent of rail workers—more than 45,000 in total—having been cut from the workforce in the past six years.