by NellieBly
Through the 1980s and into the early 1990s, CSX abandoned portions of a number of main lines, hamstringing their operations and leaving them without detour routes. Here is a partial list of the truly stupid actions:
1) Clarksburg to Cincinnati, mid 1980s. This left the railroad without a reasonable route between Baltimore and Cincinnati. They had just completed Queensgate Yard. This abandonment left the yard with no purpose.
2) Cedartown, GA to Birmingham. The line had just been rebuilt, sidings extended, and tunnels undercut to remove height restrictions. Official reason was "CSX didn't need to participate in this market" -- interchange with BNSF at Birmingham. Now all traffic from Birmingham east must move via Cordele and Waycross, a heavily congested route.
3) Petersburg to Raleigh. This abandonment of a fast piece of the former Seaboard main line left CSX without a relief route for north/south traffic. So now, anytime trackwork must be done on the former ACL main, service goes to hell. The supposed reason for the abandonment was the need to replace a long timber trestle over Lake Gaston. But with train delay costs running on the order of $500 per hour, maybe they'd like to think again about that?
4) Savannah to Kingsland, GA. This was the original Seaboard main, at 140 miles the short route from SAV to JAX. Silver Meteor used to cover it at an average speed of 74 MPH, including one stop at Thalman. The remaining route is the Nahunta "cutoff" at 170 miles -- or trains can run via Waycross, which is even longer. So let's see, 30 extra miles for every locomotive, at $1.25 per mile, and for every car, at $0.05. On a busy railroad, those numbers really add up. And CSX didn't abandon 140 miles, either, since the line is still intact from Kingsland to JAX. They saved about 100 miles of track maintenance, at maybe $60,000 per mile per year (average for all US track) or $6,000,000 annually. For an average-sized train, car and loco maintenance run about $7.50 per mile (three locos, 75 cars). With 30 miles of extra distance, that's $225 per train. At 50 trains per day, that's $4 million in extra equipment maintenance alone -- and we haven't dealt with train delay cost.
5) Saved the best for last: Starke to Brooker, FL. This 28-mile segment handled three million tons of coal a year to a power plant at Red Level, FL. There was another line, from Baldwin to Newberry. FL, that could also be used to reach the power plant. So CSX abandoned the Brooker Sub -- not realizing they had also filed to abandon the Burnett's Lake Sub (Baldwin to Newberry). They ended up having to *rebuild* 28 miles of track between Starke and Brooker. Now what was their savings on the Burnett's Lake abandonment?
For a number of years, the running joke in the railroad industry was that you could tell which line CSX planned to abandon because they'd lay welded rail on it first.
1) Clarksburg to Cincinnati, mid 1980s. This left the railroad without a reasonable route between Baltimore and Cincinnati. They had just completed Queensgate Yard. This abandonment left the yard with no purpose.
2) Cedartown, GA to Birmingham. The line had just been rebuilt, sidings extended, and tunnels undercut to remove height restrictions. Official reason was "CSX didn't need to participate in this market" -- interchange with BNSF at Birmingham. Now all traffic from Birmingham east must move via Cordele and Waycross, a heavily congested route.
3) Petersburg to Raleigh. This abandonment of a fast piece of the former Seaboard main line left CSX without a relief route for north/south traffic. So now, anytime trackwork must be done on the former ACL main, service goes to hell. The supposed reason for the abandonment was the need to replace a long timber trestle over Lake Gaston. But with train delay costs running on the order of $500 per hour, maybe they'd like to think again about that?
4) Savannah to Kingsland, GA. This was the original Seaboard main, at 140 miles the short route from SAV to JAX. Silver Meteor used to cover it at an average speed of 74 MPH, including one stop at Thalman. The remaining route is the Nahunta "cutoff" at 170 miles -- or trains can run via Waycross, which is even longer. So let's see, 30 extra miles for every locomotive, at $1.25 per mile, and for every car, at $0.05. On a busy railroad, those numbers really add up. And CSX didn't abandon 140 miles, either, since the line is still intact from Kingsland to JAX. They saved about 100 miles of track maintenance, at maybe $60,000 per mile per year (average for all US track) or $6,000,000 annually. For an average-sized train, car and loco maintenance run about $7.50 per mile (three locos, 75 cars). With 30 miles of extra distance, that's $225 per train. At 50 trains per day, that's $4 million in extra equipment maintenance alone -- and we haven't dealt with train delay cost.
5) Saved the best for last: Starke to Brooker, FL. This 28-mile segment handled three million tons of coal a year to a power plant at Red Level, FL. There was another line, from Baldwin to Newberry. FL, that could also be used to reach the power plant. So CSX abandoned the Brooker Sub -- not realizing they had also filed to abandon the Burnett's Lake Sub (Baldwin to Newberry). They ended up having to *rebuild* 28 miles of track between Starke and Brooker. Now what was their savings on the Burnett's Lake abandonment?
For a number of years, the running joke in the railroad industry was that you could tell which line CSX planned to abandon because they'd lay welded rail on it first.