The
Canadian National Railway is a Canadian
Class I railway operated by the Canadian National Railway
Company headquartered in Montreal
, Quebec
.
CN is the
largest railway in Canada, in terms of both revenue and the
physical size of its rail network and is currently Canada's only
transcontinental railway
company, spanning Canada from the Atlantic coast in Nova Scotia
to the Pacific coast in British Columbia
. Following CN's purchase of Illinois Central (IC) and a number
of smaller US railways it also has extensive trackage in the
central United States along the Mississippi River valley from the Great Lakes
to the Gulf of Mexico
. Today CN owns approximately 20,400 route
miles of track in 8 provinces (the only two not served by CN are
Newfoundland
& Labrador
and Prince Edward Island
), as well as a 70 mile stretch of track into the
Northwest
Territories
to Hay River
the southern shore of the Great Slave
Lake
; it is the northernmost rail line anywhere within
the North American Rail Network, as far north as Anchorage,
Alaska
(although the Alaska
Railroad goes further north than this, it is isolated from the
rest of the North American network.The railway was referred
to as the
Canadian National Railways
(
CNR) between 1918 and 1960 and as
Canadian National/
Canadien
National (CN) from 1960 to present.
The Canadian National Railway is a public company with 22,000
employees and market capitalization of 21 billion USD in
2008.
History
The Canadian National Railways (CNR) was created between 1918 and
1923, comprising several railways that had become bankrupt and
fallen into
federal government
hands, along with some railways already owned by the government. In
1995, the federal government privatized CN. Over the next decade,
the company expanded significantly in the United States, purchasing
Illinois Central Railroad
and
Wisconsin Central
Transportation, among others. Now primarily a
freight railway, CN also operated
passenger services until 1978, when they were
assumed by
VIA Rail. The only passenger
services run by CN after 1978 were several mixed trains (freight
and passenger) in Newfoundland, and a couple of commuter trains on
CN's electrified routes in the Montreal area. The Newfoundland
mixed trains lasted until 1988, while the Montreal commuter trains
are now operated by Montreal's
AMT.
Creation of the company, 1918–1923

One of the early logos or
heralds of the Canadian National Railways.
It would later be replaced by the CN "worm" in 1960.
In response to public concerns fearing loss of key transportation
links, the
Government of Canada
assumed majority ownership of the near bankrupt
Canadian Northern Railway (CNoR)
on September 6, 1918, and appointed a "Board of Management" to
oversee the company. At the same time, CNoR was also directed to
assume management of
Canadian Government Railways
(CGR), a system comprising the
Intercolonial Railway of
Canada (IRC),
National Transcontinental
Railway (NTR), and the
Prince Edward Island Railway
(PEIR), among others. On December 20, 1918, the federal government
created the
Canadian National Railways (CNR) - a
title only with no corporate powers - through a
Privy Council order as a means to simplify the funding
and operation of the various railway companies. The absorption of
the Intercolonial Railway would see CNR adopt that system's slogan
The People's Railway.
Another Canadian railway, the
Grand Trunk Pacific Railway
(GTPR), encountered financial difficulty on March 7, 1919, when its
parent company
Grand Trunk
Railway (GTR) defaulted on repayment of construction loans to
the federal government. The federal government's
Department of
Railways and Canals took over operation of the GTPR until July
12, 1920, when it too was placed under the CNR. The Canadian
National Railway was organized on October 10, 1922.
Finally, the bankrupt GTR itself was placed under the care of a
federal government "Board of Management" on May 21, 1920, while GTR
management and shareholders opposed to
nationalization took legal action. After
several years of arbitration, the GTR was absorbed into CNR on
January 30, 1923. In subsequent years, several smaller independent
railways would be added to the CNR as they went bankrupt, or it
became politically expedient to do so, however the system was more
or less finalized following the addition of the GTR.
Canadian National Railways was born out of both wartime and
domestic urgency. Railways, until the rise of the personal
automobile and creation of taxpayer-funded all-weather highways,
were the only viable long-distance land transportation available in
Canada for many years. As such, their operation consumed a great
deal of public and political attention. Many countries regard
railway networks as critical infrastructure (even to this day) and
at the time of the creation of CNR during the continuing threat of
the
First World War, Canada was not the
only country to engage in
railway nationalization.
In the early 20th century, many governments were taking a more
interventionist role in the economy, foreshadowing the influence of
economists like
John Maynard
Keynes. This political trend, combined with broader
geo-political events, made nationalization an appealing choice for
Canada.
The Winnipeg
General Strike of 1919 and allied involvement in the
Russian Revolution seemed to
validate the continuing process. The need for a viable rail system
was paramount in a time of civil unrest and foreign military
intervention.
CNR Radio
In 1923 CNR's first president,
Sir Henry Thornton, created
the CNR Radio Department in order to provide passengers with radio
reception in order to keep them entertained during their passage
and in order to give the railway a competitive advantage over its
rival, CP. This led to the creation of a network of CNR radio
stations across the country, North America's first
radio network. As anyone in the vicinity of a
station could hear its broadcasts the network's audience extended
far beyond train passengers to the public at large.
Claims of unfair competition from CP as well as pressure on the
government to create a
public
broadcasting system similar to the
British Broadcasting
Corporation led the government of
R.B. Bennett (who
had been a corporate lawyer with Canadian Pacific as a client prior
to entering politics) to pressure CNR into ending its on-train
radio service in 1931 and then withdrawing from the radio business
entirely in 1933. CNR's radio assets were sold for $50,000 to a new
public broadcaster, the
Canadian Radio
Broadcasting Commission, which in turn became the
Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation in 1936.
Hotels
Canadian railways built and operated
their own resort hotels,
ostensibly in order to provide rail passengers travelling long
distances a place to sleep overnight. These hotels became
attractions in and of themselves - a place for a rail passenger to
go for a holiday. As each
railway
company sought to be more attractive than its competitors, they
each attempted to make their hotels more attractive and
luxurious.
Canadian National Hotels
was the CNRs chain of hotels and was a combination of hotels
inherited by the CNR when it acquired various railways and
structures built by the CNR itself. The chain's principal rival was
Canadian Pacific
Hotels.
Pros and cons of nationalization
Regardless of the political and economic importance of railway
transportation in Canada, there were many critics of the Canadian
government's policies in maintaining CNR as a
Crown corporation from its inception in
1918 until its
privatization in 1995.
Some of the most scathing criticism came from the railway industry
itself, namely the commercially successful
Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR)
which argued that its taxes should not be used to fund a
competitor. Some argue that the CPR could well afford to make this
criticism, having been itself the child of government and recipient
of untold wealth by virtue of land and resource grants, as well as
its position as a
monopoly from its
completion in 1885 until the CNoR started operations on the
Prairies at the turn of the century.
As a
result of history and geography, the CPR served larger population
centres in the southern Prairies,
while the CNR's merged system served as a de-facto government
colonization railway to serve remote and underdeveloped regions of
Western Canada, northern Ontario
and Quebec
, and the
Maritimes.
Also, CN was disadvantaged by being constituted from a hodge-podge
of bankrupt rail systems that were not intrinsically viable, as
they seldom had the shortest route between any major cities or
industrial centres; to this day, CN has many division points far
from significant industries or traffic sources. The only notable
exception is the former Grand Trunk mainline between Montreal and
Chicago.
The
company also became a convenient instrument of federal government
policy from the operation of ferries in Atlantic Canada
, to assuming the operation of the narrow-gauge
Newfoundland
Railway
following that province's entry into Confederation, and the partnership
with CPR in purchasing and operating the Northern Alberta
Railways.
CNR as a social and economic tool
It is generally accepted that government policy dictated CNR
commercial decisions, whether such decisions were in the nation's
interest, or in the political interest of the party in power. As
such, CNR lost money for many years, except during the
Second World War when its extensive network
reaching into the resource hinterland proved beneficial, and during
the late 1980s and early 1990s following
deregulation of the Canadian railway industry.
Where CNR failed to address costs was largely due to government
interference, such as the requirement to purchase locomotives from
all Canadian locomotive manufacturers, resulting in operational
inefficiencies.
CNR was
considered to be competitive with CPR in several areas, notably in
Central Canada, prior to the age of
the automobile and the dense highway network that grew in Ontario
and Quebec
.
The former
GTR's superior track network in the Montreal
–Chicago
corridor has always been a more direct route with
higher capacity than CPR's. CNR was also considered a
railway industry leader throughout its time as a Crown corporation
in terms of research and development into railway safety systems,
logistics management, and in terms of its relationship with
labour unions.
Deregulation and recapitalization
Another problem that hobbled CNR was in the sheer number of
low-volume branch railway lines which did not produce sufficient
traffic to pay for their operation. Without
deregulation in the railway industry permitting
abandonment or sale of a railway line, or even the ability to set
prices to match those of
trucks, both
CNR and CPR paid dearly for owning these inefficient lines. One
tactic that CNR perfected was to
demarket a line by
providing sufficiently poor service to its few customers, that
those customers would turn to trucks for improved service and lower
costs. Once customers ceased to exist on a small branch line, the
federal government would permit the line's abandonment. Had
deregulation been in place several decades earlier, it is
conceivable that many Canadian
branch
lines would have been viable in the hands of short line
operators, saving millions of dollars for taxpayers funding
highways, since the railway lines had already been publicly funded
in their construction.
From the creation of CNR in 1918 until its recapitalization in
1978, whenever the company posted a deficit, the federal government
would assume those costs in the government budget. The result of
various governments using CNR as a vehicle for various social and
economic policies was a subsidization running into billions of
dollars over successive decades. Following its 1978
recapitalization and changes in management, CN (name changed to
Canadian National Railway, using the shortened
acronym
CN in 1960) started to operate much more
efficiently, by assuming its own debt, improving accounting
practices to allow depreciation of assets and to access financial
markets for further capital. Now operating as a for-profit
Crown corporation, CN reported a profit in
11 of the 15 years from 1978 to 1992, paying $371 million in cash
dividends (profit) to the federal government during this
time.
Cutbacks and refocusing
CN's rise to profitability was assisted when the company started to
remove itself from non-core freight rail transportation starting in
1977 when subsidiary
Air Canada (created
in 1937 as
Trans-Canada Air
Lines) became a separate federal Crown corporation. That same
year saw CN move its ferry operations into a separate Crown
corporation named
CN Marine, followed
similarly by the grouping of passenger rail services (for marketing
purposes) under the name
VIA-CN. The following year
(1978), the federal government decided to create
VIA Rail as a separate Crown corporation to take
over passenger services previously offered by both CN and CPR,
including CN's flagship transcontinental train the
Super Continental and its eastern
counterpart the
Ocean. CN Marine was renamed
Marine Atlantic in 1986 to remove
any references to its former parent organization. CN also grouped
its money-losing Newfoundland operations into a separate subsidiary
called
Terra Transport so that
federal subsidies for this service would be more visible in company
statements.
CN also divested itself during the late 1970s and throughout the
1980s of several non-rail transportation activities such as
trucking subsidiaries, a
hotel chain
(sold to CPR), real estate, and telecommunications companies. The
biggest telecommunications property was a company which was
co-owned by CN and CP (
CNCP
Telecommunications) which originated out of a joint venture
involving the railways' respective
telegraph services. Upon its sale in the 1980s,
was successively renamed
Unitel (United
Telecommunications),
AT&T
Canada, and
Allstream as it went
through various owners and branding agreements.
Another more-famous
telecommunications property wholly-owned and built by CN was the
CN
Tower
in Toronto which still keeps its original name but
was divested by the railway company in the mid 1990s. All
the proceeds from such sales were used to pay down CN's accumulated
debt. At the time of their divestitures, all of these subsidiaries
required considerable subsidies which partly explained CN's
financial problems prior to recapitalization.
CN also was given free rein by the federal government following
deregulation of the railway industry in the 1970s, as well as in
1987, when railway companies began to make tough business decisions
by removing themselves from operating money-losing branch lines. In
CN's case, some of these branch lines were those which it had been
forced to absorb through federal government policies and outright
patronage, while others were from the heady expansion era of rural
branchlines in the 1920s and early 1930s
and were considered obsolete following the development of local
road networks.
During
the period starting in the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s and
early 1990s, thousands of kilometres of railway lines were
abandoned, including the complete track networks in Newfoundland
(CN subsidiary Terra
Transport, the former Newfoundland Railway
ended railway freight operations and mixed
freight-passenger trains in 1988. Mainline Passenger
rail service in Newfoundland ended in 1969.) and Prince Edward
Island
(the former PEIR), as well as numerous
branch lines in Nova
Scotia
, New
Brunswick
, Southern Ontario, throughout the Prairie provinces, in the British
Columbia
interior,
and on Vancouver
Island
. Virtually every rural area served by CN in
some form was affected, creating resentment for the company and the
federal government. Many of these now-abandoned
rights-of-way were divested by CN
and the federal government and have since been converted into
recreational trails by local
municipalities and provincial governments.
CN's U.S. subsidiaries prior to privatization
CN's
railway network in the late 1980s consisted of the company's
Canadian trackage, along with the following U.S. subsidiary lines:
Grand Trunk Western
Railroad (GTW) operating in Michigan
, Indiana
, and Illinois
; Detroit, Toledo and Ironton
Railroad (DTI) operating in Michigan
and Ohio
; Duluth, Winnipeg and
Pacific Railway (DWP) operating in Minnesota
; Central Vermont
Railway (CV) operating down the Connecticut River valley from Quebec
to Long Island
Sound
; and a former GT line to Portland, Maine
, known informally as the Grand Trunk
Eastern, sold to a short line operator in 1989.
The US subsidiaries kept their identities due to their ownership.
Technically, foreign governments were not allowed to own railroads
in the US. However, a railroad owned by another railroad was
allowed to operate, regardless as to if that "other railroad" was
owned by a foreign government.
Privatization
In 1992 a new management team led by ex-federal government
bureaucrats,
Paul Tellier and
Michael Sabia, started preparing CN for
privatization by emphasizing increased
productivity. This was achieved largely through aggressive cuts to
the company's bloated and inefficient management structure,
widescale layoffs in its workforce and continued abandonment or
sale of its branch lines. In 1993 and 1994 the company experimented
with a rebranding that saw the names
CN,
Grand Trunk
Western, and
Duluth, Winnipeg, and Pacific replaced
under a collective
CN North America moniker.
During this time, CPR and CN entered into negotiations regarding a
possible merger of the two companies. This was later rejected by
the federal government, whereby CPR offered to purchase outright
all of CN's lines from Ontario to Nova Scotia, while an
unidentified U.S. railroad (rumoured to have been
Burlington Northern Railroad)
would purchase CN's lines in western Canada. This too was rejected.
In 1995, the entire company including its U.S. subsidiaries
reverted to using
CN exclusively.
The
CN Commercialization Act was enacted into law on July
13, 1995, and by November 28, 1995, the federal government had
completed an
initial public
offering (IPO) and transferred all of its shares to private
investors.
Two key prohibitions in this legislation
include, 1) that no individual or corporate shareholder may own
more than 15% of CN, and 2) that the company's headquarters must
remain in Montreal
, thus maintaining CN as a Canadian
corporation.
Retraction and expansion since privatization
Following the successful IPO, CN has recorded impressive gains in
its stock price, largely through an aggressive network
rationalization and purchase of newer more fuel-efficient
locomotives. Numerous branch lines were shed during the late 1990s
across Canada, resulting in dozens of independent
short line railway companies being established to
operate former CN track which had been considered marginal. This
network rationalization resulted in a core east-west freight
railway stretching from Halifax to Chicago and Toronto to Vancouver
and Prince Rupert. The railway also operated trains from Winnipeg
to Chicago using trackage rights for part of the route south of
Duluth.
In addition to the retraction in Canada, the company also expanded
in a strategic north-south direction in the central United States.
In 1998,
during an era of mergers in the U.S. railway industry, CN purchased
the Illinois Central
Railroad (IC), which connected the already existing lines from
Vancouver
, British
Columbia
to Halifax
, Nova
Scotia
with a line running from Chicago,
Illinois
to New Orleans, Louisiana
. This single purchase of IC transformed CN's
entire corporate focus from being an east-west uniting presence
within Canada (sometimes to the detriment of logical business
models) into a north-south
NAFTA railway (in reference to
the
North American
Free Trade Agreement. CN is now feeding Canadian raw material
exports into the U.S. heartland and beyond to Mexico through a
strategic alliance with
Kansas City Southern Railway
(KCS).
In 1999,
CN and BNSF, the second largest rail system in the U.S., announced
their intent to merge, forming a new corporate entity North
American Railways to be headquartered in Montreal
to conform with the CN Commercialization
Act of 1995. The merger announcement by CN's
Paul Tellier and BNSF's
Robert Krebs was greeted with skepticism by the
U.S. government's
Surface
Transportation Board (STB), and protested by other major North
American rail companies, namely
Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) and
Union Pacific Railroad (UP).
Rail
customers also denounced the proposed merger, following the
confusion and poor service sustained in southeastern Texas
in 1998
following UP's purchase of Southern Pacific Railroad
(SP). In response to the rail industry, shippers, and
political pressure, the STB placed a 15-month moratorium on all
rail industry mergers, effectively scuttling CN-BNSF plans. Both
companies dropped their merger applications and have never refiled.
The roadblock dates back to the Carnegie era "robber barons" when
the concept of "anti-trust" was born. Therefore, when it comes to
railroad mergers, the federal government is more rigid than
usual.
After the
STB moratorium expired, CN purchased Wisconsin Central (WC) in 2001, which
allowed the company's rail network to encircle Lake Michigan
and Lake
Superior
, permitting
more efficient connections from Chicago to western Canada. The deal also
included Canadian WC subsidiary Algoma Central Railway (ACR), giving
access to Sault Ste.
Marie
and Michigan's Upper Peninsula. The purchase
of Wisconsin Central also made CN the owner of
EWS, the principal freight train operator in the United
Kingdom.
On May
13, 2003, the provincial government of British Columbia
announced that the provincial Crown corporation, BC
Rail (BCR), would be sold with the winning bidder receiving
BCR's surface operating assets (locomotives, cars, and service
facilities). The provincial government is retaining
ownership of the tracks and right-of-way. On November 25, 2003, it
was announced that CN's bid of $1 billion CAD would be accepted
over those of
CPR and
several U.S. companies. The transaction was closed effective July
15, 2004. Many opponents – including CPR – accused the government
and CN of rigging the bidding process, though this has been denied
by the government. Documents relating to the case are under court
seal, as they are connected to a parallel
marijuana grow-op investigation connected with two
senior government aides also involved in the sale of BC Rail.
Also contested was the economic stimulus package that the
government gave the cities along the BC Rail route – some saw it as
a buy-off done in order to get the municipalities to cooperate with
the lease, though the government has asserted that the package was
intended to promote economic development along the corridor.
Passenger service along the route had been ended by BC Rail a few
years earlier due to ongoing losses resulting from deteriorating
service. The cancelled passenger service has recently been replaced
by a blue-plate tourist service, the
Rocky Mountaineer, with fares well over
double what the BCR coach fares had been.
CN also announced in October 2003 an agreement to purchase
Great Lakes Transportation (GLT),
a holding company owned by Blackstone Group for $380 million USD.
GLT was the owner of
Bessemer & Lake Erie
Railroad,
Duluth, Missabe and Iron
Range Railway, and the Pittsburgh & Conneaut Dock Company.
The key
instigator for the deal was the fact that since the Wisconsin
Central purchase, CN was required to use Duluth, Missabe and Iron
Range Railway trackage rights for a short 17 km
(11 mi) "gap" that existed near Duluth, Minnesota
on the route between Chicago and Winnipeg.
In order to purchase this short section, CN was told by GLT that it
would have to purchase the entire company. Also included in GLT's
portfolio were 8 Great Lakes vessels for transporting bulk
commodities such as coal and iron ore as well as various port
facilities. Following Surface Transportation Board approval for the
transaction, CN completed the purchase of GLT on May 10,
2004.
On December 24, 2008, the STB approved CN's purchase for $300
million of the principal lines of the Elgin, Joliet & Eastern
Railway Company (EJ&E) from US Steel Corp originally announced
on September 27, 2007. The STB's decision was to become effective
on Jan. 23, 2009, with a closure of the transaction shortly
thereafter. The EJ&E lines create a bypass around the western
side of heavily congested Chicago-area rail hub and its conversion
to use for mainline freight traffic is expected to alleviate
substantial bottlenecks for both regional and intercontinental rail
traffic subject to lengthy delays entering and exiting Chicago
freight yards. The purchase of the lightly used EJ&E corridor
was positioned by CN as a boon not only for its own business but
for the efficiency of the entire US rail system.
CN today

CN train at the busy East Junction,
Edmonton, 2006
Since the company operates in two countries, CN maintains some
corporate distinction by having its U.S. lines incorporated under
the
Grand Trunk Corporation
for legal purposes , however the entire company in both Canada and
the U.S. operates under
CN, as can be seen in its
locomotive and rail car repainting programs.
Since the Illinois Central purchase in 1998 CN has been
increasingly focused on running a "scheduled freight
railroad/railway", meeting on-time performance with rail
industry-leading consistency. This has resulted in improved shipper
relations, as well as reduced the need for maintaining pools of
surplus locomotives and freight cars. CN has also undertaken a
rationalization of its existing track network by removing double
track sections in some areas and extending passing sidings in other
areas.
CN is also a rail industry leader in the employment of
radio-control (R/C) for switching locomotives in yards, resulting
in reductions to the number of yard workers required. CN has
frequently been touted in recent years within North American rail
industry circles as being the
most-improved railroad in
terms of productivity and the lowering of its
operating ratio, acknowledging the fact that
the company is becoming increasingly profitable.Due to the rising
popularity of ethanol, shuttle trains, and mineral commodities, CN
Rail Service is increasing in popularity.
Recent controversies
In December 1999 the
Ultratrain, a petroleum products unit
train linking the Saint-Romuald (Quebec)
Ultramar oil refinery with a petroleum depot in
Montreal, exploded when it derailed and collided with a freight
train travelling in the opposite direction between Sainte-Madeleine
and Saint-Hilaire-Est, south of Montreal, killing the crew of the
freight train. The train derailed at a broken rail caused by a
defective weld; The report by the Transportation Safety Board of
Canada called into question CN's quality assurance program for rail
welds as well as the lack of detection equipment for defective
wheels. In memory of the dead crewmen, two new stations on the line
have been named after them (Davis and Thériault).
On May
14, 2003, a trestle collapsed under the weight of a freight train
near McBride,
B.C.
, killing both crew members. Both men had
been disciplined earlier for refusing to take another train on the
same bridge, claiming it was unsafe. Revealed that as far back as
1999, several bridge components had been reported as rotten, yet no
repairs had been ordered by management. Eventually, the
disciplinary records of both crewmen were amended
posthumously.
Controversy arose again in Canadian political circles in 2003
following the company's decision to refer solely to its acronym
"CN" and not "Canadian National", a move some interpret as being an
attempt to distance the company from references to "Canada",
particularly in the United States, where Canada's decision to not
participate in the
2003 invasion
of Iraq was unpopular. Canada's Minister of Transport at the
time called this policy move "obscene" after
nationalists noted it could be argued the
company is no longer Canadian, being primarily owned by American
stockholders. The controversy is somewhat tempered by the fact that
a majority of large corporations are being increasingly referred to
by acronyms. Despite this, the company is still legally called the
Canadian National Railway.
In March 2004 a strike by the
Canadian Auto Workers union showed
deep-rooted divisions between
organized
labour and the company's current management.

The short-lived "CN North America"
logo on a locomotive.
This design was used from 1993 to 1995, before the company
returned to the plain "CN" logo which is still in use.
The
residents of Wabamun
Lake
, in Alberta
, staged a blockade of CN tracks in August 2005,
when they were unsatisfied with CN's response to a derailment
catastrophe that spilled over 700,000 Litres of tarry fuel oil and
about 80,000 L of carcinogenic pole treatment oil into the
lake. Reporters found pre-spill evidence, and CN executuves
admitted, that CN failed to provide public safety information to
prevent public exposure to carcinogenic, toxic chemicals. The
tar-like oil and chemicals killed well over 500 large migratory
birds, many animals, fish and other aquatic life. It will take many
years for the lake to recover.
On August 5, 2005, a CN train had nine cars derail on a bridge over
the
Cheakamus River, causing 41,000
litres (9,000 Canadian
gal,
11,000 US gal) of
caustic
soda to spill into the river, killing thousands of fish by
caustic burns and asphixiation. The CBC reported evironmental
experts say that it would take the river 50 years or more to
recover from the toxic pollution. The Cheakamus River used to have
a vibrant fishing tourism industry which now faces an uncertain
future.
CN is facing accusations from local British
Columbians
over the
rail line's supposed lack of response to this issue, touted as the
worst chemical spill in British Columbia's history.
Transport Canada has restricted CN to
trains not exceeding 80 car lengths because of the multiple
derailments on the former BCR line north from Squamish
. CN had been allegedly running trains in
excess of 150 cars on this winding and mountainous section of
track.
A further
derailment at Moran, twenty miles north of Lillooet
, on June 30, 2006, has raised more questions about
CN's safety policies. Two more derailments, days apart, near
Lytton
in August 2006 have continued criticism. In
the first case, 20 coal cars of a CPR train using a CN bridge
derailed, dumping 12 cars of coal into the
Thompson River. In the second case half a
dozen grain cars spilled on a CN train.
Two CN
trains collided on August 4, 2007, on the banks of the Fraser River
near Prince George, BC
. Several cars carrying gasoline, diesel and
lumber burst into flames. Water bombers were used to help put out
the fires. Some fuel had seeped into the Fraser River.
On
December 4, 2007, a CN train derailed near Edmonton
in Strathcona County
, Alberta
, at 3:30 a.m Mountain
Standard Time. Of the 28 cars derailed, most of them
were empty or carrying non-hazardous materials such as lumber or
pipes.
A culture of fear
In response to such high-profile derailments, the federal minister
of transportation created an advisory panel to review the Railway
Safety Act in February 2007. The panel's report in March 2008
identified a culture of fear and discipline at CN in particular
that undermines the
safety management systemthat was introduced in
2001 to give rail companies more responsibility over safety.
"CN's strict adherence to a rules-based approach, focused largely
on disciplinary actions when mistakes are made, has instilled a
‘culture of fear and discipline’ and is counter to an effective
safety management system. CN needs to acknowledge this openly and
take concrete steps to improve," stated the panel.
The goal of the safety management system was to move away from a
compliance approach and toward a proactive approach in which
companies assess and mitigate risks on their own initiative. The
concept as applied to railways was born during the 1994 review of
the Railway Safety Act and amendments to act were introduced in
1999 that added requirements for railway companies to develop and
implement safety management systems.
"The key for railway companies was to become more proactive, to
refine their abilities to identify hazards, and to assess and
mitigate risks. The need for companies to build a safety
consciousness into their day-to-day operations was of paramount
importance. This represented a shift from the traditional reactive
approach of considering what had happened in a post-accident
environment", stated the panel's report.
The effectiveness of SMS depends on the safety culture within the
organization. That's defined as a culture where safety is
entrenched in the thinking of managers and employees alike, where
open communication allow for ongoing practices to be compared,
reviewed and improved. It also depends on employee involvement, who
can be "a company's prime source of information for the
identification of hazards and assessment of mitigation
strategies."
However, the panel heard "from many railway employees who felt
neither involved nor informed about their company's safety
management system. Rather, employees often described their
organizational culture in such a way that the Panel could not
reconcile it with an effective safety culture."
The panel cited the example of passenger rail company Via Rail to
illustrate a safety culture needed for SMS. Via's implementation of
SMS is successful because the company makes safety management
important to all employees. While there are certain cardinal rules
that lead to disciplinary action if broken, Via also has processes
to build openness and trust between managers and employees. "For
instance, employees are observed at regular cycles, and corrective
coaching takes place immediately when errors are observed," the
panel report noted.
In contrast, CN manages safety through an "antecedent, behaviour
and consequences" process, which the panel said is based on a
traditional rule and discipline model. It quoted
United Transportation Union
leader Sylvia Leblanc's description of CN's attitude towards safety
as one that "seems to be ‘blame and punish’ instead of ‘educate and
correct.’ Frequently, employees involved in accidents… are simply
blamed for errors without followup or root cause investigation.
They are then punished without any other corrective action taken on
the part of the railway to prevent reoccurrences."
A management culture that relies on discipline, or threat of
discipline, to enforce rules has "a tendency to instil fear, and to
stifle employee participation and reporting," the panel report
stated. "A significant mistrust of management develops. People stop
communicating — and that can have a detrimental impact on
safety."
Corporate governance
Current members of the
board of
directors of the company are:
Michael Ralph Armellino,
A. Charles
Baillie,
Hugh J. Bolton,
Purdy
Crawford,
J.V. Raymond Cyr,
Gordon D. Giffin,
James K. Gray,
E. Hunter
Harrison,
Edith E. Holiday,
V. Maureen Kempston Darkes,
Robert H. Lee,
Denis Losier,
Edward C. Lumley,
David McLean (chairman), and
Robert Pace.
Passenger trains
When CNR was first created, it inherited a large number of routes
from its constituent railways, but eventually pieced its passenger
network into one coherent network. For example, on December 3,
1920, CNR inaugurated the
Continental Limited, which
operated over four of its predecessors, as well as the
Temiskaming and Northern Ontario
Railway. The 1920s saw growth in passenger travel, and CNR
inaugurated several new routes and introduced new services, such as
radio, on its trains.
The growth in passenger travel ended with the
Great Depression, which lasted between 1929
and 1939, but picked up somewhat during World War II. By the end of
World War II, many of CNR's passenger cars were old and worn down.
Accidents
at Dugald, Manitoba in 1947 and
Canoe
River, British Columbia
in 1950, wherein extra passenger trains composed of
older equipment collided with transcontinental passenger trains
composed of somewhat newer equipment, demonstrated the dangers
inherent in the older cars. In 1953, CNR ordered 359
lightweight passenger cars, allowing them to re-equip their major
routes.
On April 24, 1955, the same day that the CPR introduced its
transcontinental train
The
Canadian, CNR introduced its own new transcontinental
passenger train, the
Super
Continental, which used new streamlined rolling stock.
However, the
Super Continental was never considered to be
as glamorous as the
Canadian. For example, it did not
include
dome cars. Dome cars would be added
in the early 1960s with the purchase of six former
Milwaukee Road "Super Domes." They were used
on the
Super Continental during the Summer tourist
season.
Rail passenger traffic in Canada declined significantly between
World War II and 1960 due to
automobiles
and
airplane. In the 1960s, CN's
privately-owned rival CPR reduced its passenger services
significantly. However, the government-owned CN continued much of
its passenger services and marketed new schemes, such as the "red,
white and blue" fare structure, to bring passengers back to
rail.
In 1968, CN introduced a new high-speed train, the
United Aircraft
Turbo, which was powered by
gas turbines instead of
diesel engines. It made the trip between
Toronto and Montreal in four hours, but was not entirely successful
because it was somewhat uneconomical and not always reliable. The
trainsets were retired in 1982 and later scrapped at Naporano Iron
and Metal in New Jersey.

CN operates the Agawa Canyon Tour
excursion.
In 1976, CN created an entity called
VIA-CN as a separate
operating unit for its passenger services. VIA evolved into a
coordinated marketing effort with CP Rail for rail passenger
services, and later into a separate
Crown corporation responsible for
inter-city passenger services in Canada.
VIA
Rail took over CN's passenger services on April 1, 1978. CN
continued to fund its
commuter rail
services in Montreal until 1982, when the
Montreal Urban
Community Transit Commission (MUCTC) assumed financial
responsibility for them; operation was contracted out to CN, which
eventually spun-off a separate subsidiary,
Montrain for this purpose. When the
Montreal–Deux-Montagnes line was
completely rebuilt in 1994-1995, the new rolling stock came under
the ownership of the
MUCTC, until
a separate government agency, the
Agence métropolitaine de
transport (AMT) was set up to consolidate all suburban transit
administration around Montreal. Since then,
suburban service has resumed
to
Saint-Hilaire.
On CN's
narrow gauge lines in
Newfoundland, CN also operated a main line passenger train that ran
from St. John's to Port aux Basque called the
Caribou. Nicknamed the
Newfie Bullett, this train ran until June 1969. It was
replaced by the CN Roadcruiser Buses. The CN Roadcruiser service
was started in Fall 1968 and was run in direct competition with the
company's own passenger train. Travelers saw that the buses could
travel between St. John's and Port aux Basque in 14 hours versus
the train's 22 hours.
With the demise of the
Caribou in June 1969, the only
passenger train service run by CN on the island were the mixed
(freight and passenger) trains that ran on the Bonivista, Carbonear
and Argentia branch lines.
The only passenger service surviving on the
main line was between Bishop's Falls and Corner Brook
. Terra
Transport would continue to operate the
mixed trains on the branch lines until 1984. The
main line run between Corner Brook and Bishops falls made its last
run on September 30, 1988.
Terra Transport/CN would run the Roadcruiser bus service until
March 29, 1996. The Bus service was sold off to
DRL Coachlines of Triton, Newfoundland.
Since
acquiring the Algoma Central
Railway in 2001, CN has operated passenger service between
Sault
Ste.
Marie
and Hearst, Ontario
. As well, CN operates the Agawa Canyon
Tour excursion, an excursion that runs from
Sault
Ste.
Marie, Ontario
north to the Agawa Canyon
. The canyon tour train consists of up to 28
passenger car and 2
dining cars, the majority of which were built for
CN by Canadian Car and Foundry in 1953-54. These cars were
transferred to
VIA Rail in 1978 and bought
by the
Algoma Central Railway
in the 1990s. A "Snow Train" tour is also offered during the fall
and winter season.
Since CN
acquired BC Rail in 2004, it has operated a railbus service between Seton Portage
and Lillooet, British Columbia
.
Rolling stock
Locomotives
Steam
CNR acquired its first
4-8-4 Confederation locomotives
in 1927. Over the next 20 years, it ordered over 200 for passenger
and heavy freight service. The CNR also used several
4-8-2 Mountain locomotives, almost
exclusively for passenger service. No. 6060, a streamlined 4-8-2,
was the last CN steam locomotive, running in excursion service in
the 1970s. CNR also used several
2-8-2
Mikado locomotives.
Electric

First and last CN electric locomotive,
1918–1995
CN inherited from the
Canadian
Northern Railway several box-cabs electric used through the
Mount Royal Tunnel.
Those were built
between 1914 and 1918 by General
Electric in Schenectady
, New-York
. In order to operate the new Montreal
Central
Station
, which opened in 1943 and was to be kept
smoke-free, they were supplemented by nearly-identical locomotives
from the National Harbour Board; those engines were built in 1924
by Beyer-Garratt and English-Electric. In 1950, three
General Electric center-cab
electric locomotives were added to the fleet. In 1952
Electric Multiple Units (EMUs) were
also added. The EMUs were built by the
Canadian Car and Foundry Company in
Montreal.
Electrification was restricted to Montreal,
and went from Central Station to Saint-Lambert
(south), Turcot (west) and
Saint-Eustache-sur-le-lac, later renamed Deux-Montagnes
, (north). But as steam locomotives gave
way to diesels, engine changeovers were no longer necessary, and
catenary was eventually pulled from the west and from the south.
However until the end of the original electrification, CN's
electric locomotives pulled
VIA Rail's
trains, including its diesel electric locomotives, to and from
Central Station.
The last 2,400
V DC CN
electric
locomotive ran on June 6, 1995, the very same locomotive that
pulled the inaugural train through the
Mount Royal Tunnel back in 1918. Later in
1995 the
AMT's Electric
Multiple Units began operating under 25
kV
AC electrification.
Diesel
Image:Canadian National 4618.jpg|
Grand Trunk Western GP9R unit in Canadian National colors.Image:CN Loco
No.2442.jpg|CN #2442
Dash 8-40CM
heading east towards CN Battle Creek Yard with its CN North America
logo still on it.Image:CN Loco No.6019.jpg|CN #6019
EMD SD40-2Q sitting at the CN Battle Creek Yard's
Fuel Pad with its CN North America logo still on it.
In 1929, the CNR made its first experiment with
diesel electric locomotives, acquiring two
from
Westinghouse,
numbered 9000 and 9001. It was the first North American railway to
use diesels in mainline service. These early units proved the
feasibility of the diesel concept, but were not always reliable.
No. 9000 served until 1939, and No. 9001 until 1947. The
difficulties of the
Great
Depression precluded much further progress towards diesel
locomotives. The CNR began its conversion to diesel locomotives
after World War II, and had fully dieselized by 1960. Most of the
CNR's first-generation diesel locomotives were made by
General Motors Diesel (GMD) and
Montreal Locomotive
Works.
For its narrow-gauge lines in Newfoundland CN acquired from GMD the
900 series, Models
NF110 (road numbers
900-908) and
NF210 (road numbers 909-946).
For use on the branch lines CN purchased the
EMD
G8 (road numbers 800-805).
For passenger service the CNR acquired
GMD
FP9 diesels, as well as
CLC CPA16-5,
ALCO MLW FPA-2 and
FPA-4 diesels. These locomotives made up most of
the CNR's passenger fleet, although CN also owned some 60
RailLiners (
Budd Rail Diesel
Cars), some dual-purpose diesel freight locomotives (freight
locomotives equipped with passenger train apparatus, such as steam
generators) as well as the locomotives for the
Turbo trainsets. VIA acquired most of CN's
passenger fleet when it took over CN passenger service in
1978.
The CN fleet consists of 1548 locomotives, most of which are
products of either General Motors' Electro-Motive Division (EMD),
or General Electric/GE Transportation Systems.
Much of the current roster is made up of
EMD SD70I and
EMD
SD75I locomotives and
GE C44-9W
locomotives. Recently acquired are the new
EMD SD70M-2 and
GE
ES44DC. A large number of older locomotives still soldier on,
many more than 30 years old. CN has stayed firmly committed to
conventional direct current traction motors, instead of the new
alternating current motors being used by many railways in
heavy-haul service.
CN locomotives have long featured unique features, unlike the stock
EMD and GE locomotives. CN introduced a wide-nosed four window
"Comfort Cab", the predecessor to the now standard North American
Safety Cab, which is now standard on new North American freight
locomotives. After a BC derailment, CN introduced ditch lights,
lights mounted on or just below the anti-climbers on the front
pilot of a locomotive. These are arranged in a "cross-eyed"
configuration, to make trains more visible at grade-crossings, and
to give better visibility around curves. Since then, ditch lights
have become standard features on all North American
locomotives.
CN continued to use class-lights on its locomotives, and the first
order of the new ES44DC locomotives have red class lights inset in
the upper corners of the nose which are illuminated when the
locomotive is operating in reverse, or as a DPU unit. The second
order of ES44DC's has only a single class light on each end,
mounted above the conductor's side ditch light. CN's ES44DC's, like
their C44-9W's, feature "tear-drop" windshields, windshields with
the outer lower corner dropped as opposed to the standard
rectangular GE windshield, to allow for better visibility. The
first order of SD70M-2 locomotives had their headlights mounted on
the cab, while the second order (8800 series) dropped the headlight
to the nose, and also features added class lights mounted above the
windshields on the cab.
While many railroads have ordered new "desktop" controls, where the
controls are arranged on a desk, CN has stuck with the conventional
control stands preferred by railroaders, which feature a stand
which is arranged more to the side of the engineer with the
controls sticking out horizontally. This arrangement makes reverse
operation easier, and allows engineers to "put their feet up",
without the feeling of being stuck at a desk all day.
CN's General Motors SD50F, SD60F, and General Electric C40-8M
feature a full width carbody which is tapered to allow for better
rear visibility. This is referred to as a "Draper Taper" after its
creator.
Freight cars
- Rotary gondola
- Open hopper
- Bi-level auto carrier
- Tri-level auto carrier
- Auto parts boxcar
- Low-cube covered hopper car
- Newsprint boxcar
- Wood pulp boxcar
- Woodchip gondola
- Log car
- Centrebeam car
|
|
- Bulkhead flat car
- Double-door boxcar
- Government hopper car
- High-cube and jumbo
covered hopper
- Metals box car
- Covered coil gondola
- Standard gondola
- Flatcar
- Ore gondola
- Open hopper
|
Overseas intermodal containers
- 20-foot containers
- 40-foot containers
- 45-foot containers
North American intermodal containers
- 48-foot containers
- 48-foot heater/reefer containers
- 50-foot reefer/heater containers(modified 48)
- 53-foot containers
- 53-foot heater/reefer containers
Container chassis
- Max Atlas 40-foot to 53-foot extendable container chassis
- Di-Mond 40-foot to 53-foot extendable container chassis
Major facilities
CN owns a large number of large yards and repair shops across their
system, which are used for many operations ranging from
intermodal terminals to
classification yards. Below are some
examples of these.
Active hump yards
Hump yards work by using a small
hill over which cars are pushed, before being released down a slope
and switched automatically into cuts of cars, ready to be made into
outbound trains. CN's active humps include:
Other major yards
- Calgary
, Alberta
: Sarcee Yard
- Champaign, Illinois
: Champaign Yard
- Chicago, Illinois
: Glenn, Homewood and Markham Yards
- Dartmouth
Nova
Scotia
: Dartmouth Yard
- Battle Creek, Michigan
: Battle Creek Yard
- Flat Rock, Michigan
: Flat Rock Yard
- Levis, Quebec
: Joffre Yard
- Moncton
, New
Brunswick
: Gordon
Yard
- Halifax
Nova
Scotia
: Rockingham
Yard
- Montreal
, Quebec
: Taschereau
Yard
- Fond du Lac, Wisconsin
: Shops Yard
- New Orleans, Louisiana
: Mays Yard
- Vancouver
, British
Columbia
: Thornton
Yard
- Windsor
, Ontario
: Van de Water Yard
Intermodal terminals
- Auburn, Maine
: terminal
serviced the St. Lawrence & Atlantic Railroad
- Calgary
, Alberta
- Chicago, Illinois

- Detroit, Michigan

- Edmonton
, Alberta
- Halifax, Nova Scotia

- Jackson, Mississippi
: terminal owned by the Kansas City Southern
Railway
- Memphis, Tennessee

- Moncton
, New
Brunswick
- Montreal
, Quebec
- New Orleans, Louisiana

- Prince George, British
Columbia

- Prince Rupert, British
Columbia

- Saskatoon
, Saskatchewan
- Toronto
, Ontario
: main terminal is located at Brampton
, Ontario
, as well as a smaller ramp and Roadrailer service at MacMillan Yard
- Vancouver
, British
Columbia
- Winnipeg
, Manitoba
See also
Former component railways
Former subsidiaries
References
Notes
-
http://74.125.95.132/search?q=cache:-s4WtXevEQ4J:dividendsvalue.com/1473/stock-analysis-canadian-national-railway-company-nysecni-a-value-buy-but-not-a-dividend-buy/+Canadian+National+Railway+Owns+Miles+Of+Track&cd=9&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us
-
http://www.aar.org/PubCommon/Documents/AboutTheIndustry/RRProfile_GTW.pdf
- Subsequent inquiry
- [1]
- See:
http://www.tc.gc.ca/tcss/RSA_Review-Examen_LSF/FinalReport/menu.htm
Bibliography
External links