The
Consolidated Rail Corporation, commonly known
as
Conrail , was the primary
Class I railroad in the
Northeast U.S. between 1976 and 1999. The
federal government created
it to take over the potentially profitable lines of
bankrupt carriers, including the
Penn Central Transportation
Company and
Erie Lackawanna
Railway. With the benefit of regulatory changes, Conrail began
to turn a profit in the 1980s and was turned over to private
investors in 1987.
The two remaining Class I railroads in the
East
, CSX Transportation and the Norfolk Southern Railway (NS),
agreed in 1997 to split the system approximately equally, returning
rail freight competition to the Northeast by essentially undoing
the 1968 merger of the Pennsylvania Railroad and New York Central Railroad that
created Penn Central. Following
Surface Transportation Board
approval, CSX and NS took control in August 1998, and on June 1,
1999, began operating their portions of Conrail.
The old company remains a jointly-owned subsidiary, with CSX and NS
owning respectively 42% and 58% of its
stock,
corresponding to how much of Conrail's lines they acquired. Each
parent, however, has an equal
voting
interest.
The primary asset retained by Conrail is
ownership of the three Shared Assets
Areas in New
Jersey
, Philadelphia, and
Detroit
. Both
CSX and NS have the right to serve all shippers in these areas,
paying Conrail for the cost of maintaining and improving trackage.
They also make use of Conrail to perform
switching and terminal
services within the areas, but not as a
common carrier, since contracts are signed
between shippers and CSX or NS. Conrail also retains various
support facilities including
maintenance-of-way and training, as well
as a 51% share in the
Indiana Harbor Belt
Railroad.
History
Pre-history: 1973-1976
In the years leading to 1973, the freight railroad system of the
U.S. was collapsing. Even after the government-funded
Amtrak took over
intercity
passenger service in 1971, railroad companies continued to lose
money due to extensive government regulations, competition from
other transportation modes, and other factors. The
Penn Central Railroad, formed in 1968
by the merger of the
New York
Central Railroad and
Pennsylvania Railroad (and
supplemented in 1969 by the
New York, New Haven
and Hartford Railroad), declared bankruptcy in 1970, less than
three years into its existence. The PC was a hopelessly entangled
mess with almost no planning carried out prior to the merger
between the Pennsylvania Railroad and New York Central. For
instance, each company's corporate cultures could not have been
more different, creating much of the problems Penn Central
experienced. At its lowest point the PC was losing over $1 million
a day and trains were becoming lost all over the railroad. In 1972,
Hurricane Agnes extensively damaged
the already run-down Northeast railway network and threatened the
solvency of even more railroads, including the somewhat more
solvent
Erie Lackawanna. In
mid-1973, under Judge
John P.
Fullam, the bankrupt Penn Central
threatened to end all operations by the end of the year if they did
not receive government aid by
October 1.
At that time it would
liquidate and cease
operating completely, immediately threatening freight and passenger
traffic in the United States. The
Congress quickly came up with a bill
to
nationalize the bankrupt railroads.
The
Association of
American Railroads, which opposed nationalization, submitted an
alternate proposal for a government-funded private company. Fullam
kept the Penn Central company operating into 1974, when, on
January 2, after threatening a
veto,
President Nixon
signed the
Regional
Rail Reorganization Act of 1973 into law. The 3R Act, as it was
called, provided interim funding to the bankrupt railroads and
defined a new
Consolidated Rail Corporation under
the AAR's plan.
The 3R Act also formed the
United States Railway
Association, another
government corporation, taking over
the powers of the
Interstate Commerce
Commission with respect to allowing the bankrupt railroads to
abandon unprofitable lines. The USRA was incorporated February 1,
1974, and
Edward G. Jordan, an insurance executive from California
, was named president on March
18 by Nixon. Arthur D.
Lewis of
Eastern Air Lines was appointed chairman
April 30, and the rest of the board was
named
May 30 and sworn in
July 11.
Under the 3R Act, the USRA was to create a Final System Plan to
decide which lines should be included in the new Consolidated Rail
Corporation. Unlike most railroad consolidations, only the
designated lines were to be taken over. Other lines would be sold
to Amtrak, various state governments, transportation agencies, and
solvent railroads. The few remaining lines were to remain with the
old companies along with all previously abandoned lines, many
stations, and all non-rail related properties, thus converting most
of the old companies into solvent property holding companies. The
plan was unveiled July 26, 1975, consisting of lines from Penn
Central and six other companies—the
Ann Arbor Railroad (bankrupt
1973),
Erie Lackawanna
Railway (1972),
Lehigh Valley
Railroad (1970),
Reading Company
(1971),
Central Railroad
of New Jersey (1967) and
Lehigh and Hudson River
Railway (1972). Controlled railroads and jointly owned
railroads such as
Pennsylvania-Reading
Seashore Lines were also included (see
list of railroads
transferred to Conrail for a full list). It was approved by
Congress on
November 9, and on February
5, 1976
President Ford signed the
Railroad
Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976, which
included this Final System Plan, into law.
The Erie Lackawanna had been formed in 1960 as a merger of the
Erie Railroad and
Delaware, Lackawanna
and Western Railroad. It too was bankrupt, but was somewhat
stronger financially than the others. It was ruled reorganizable
under
Chapter 77 on April 30, 1974 (as
had the
Boston and Maine
Railroad), but on January 9, 1975, with no end to its losses in
sight, its trustees reconsidered and asked for inclusion.
The Final
System Plan assigned a major section of the EL, from northern
New
Jersey
west to northeast Ohio
, to be sold
to the Chessie System, which would
help spur competition in Conrail's
territory. Chessie however could not reach an agreement with
EL
labor unions, and in February 1976
announced that it would not be buying the EL section.
The USRA hurriedly
assigned large amounts of trackage
rights to the Delaware
and Hudson Railway, allowing it to compete in the Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania
and Washington, DC
markets.
On the
other hand, the State of
Michigan
decided to keep the full Ann Arbor Railroad, of which
Conrail would only run the southernmost portion,
operational. Michigan bought it and the whole line was
operated by Conrail for several years until it was sold to a
short line.
A large system becomes profitable: 1976-1997
Conrail was incorporated in Pennsylvania on October 25, 1974, and
operations began April 1, 1976. The theory was that if the service
was improved through increased
capital investment, the economic basis of
the railroad would be improved. During its first seven years,
Conrail proved to be highly unprofitable, despite receiving
billions of dollars of assistance from Congress. The corporation
declared enormous losses on its federal income tax returns from
1976 through 1982, resulting in an accumulated net operating loss
of $2.2 billion during that period. Congress once again reacted
with support by passing the
Northeast Rail Service Act of
1981 (45 U.S. Sec. 1101 et seq.), which amended portions of the
Regional Rail
Reorganization Act by exempting Conrail from liability for any
state taxes (45 U.S.C. 727(c)) and requiring the Secretary of
Transportation to make arrangements for the sale of the
government's interest in Conrail (45 U.S.C. 761). After NERSA was
implemented, Conrail began to improve and reported taxable income
between $2 million and $314 million each year from 1983 through
1986.
Although Conrail's government-funded rebuilding of the heavily
dilapidated railroad infrastructure and
rolling stock it inherited from its six
bankrupt predecessors succeeded by the end of the 1970s in
improving the physical condition of tracks,
locomotives, and
freight
cars, the fundamental economic regulatory issues remained, and
Conrail continued to post losses of as much as $1 million a day.
Conrail management, recognizing the need for more regulatory
freedoms to address the economic issues, were among the parties
lobbying for what became the
Staggers
Act of 1980, which significantly loosened the
Interstate Commerce
Commission's rigid
economic
control of the rail industry. This allowed Conrail and other
carriers the opportunity to become profitable and strengthen their
finances.
The Staggers Act allowed the setting of rates that would recover
capital and operating cost (fully allocated cost recovery) by each
and every route mile the railroad operated. There would be no more
cross-subsidization of costs between route-miles (i.e., rates on
profitable route segments were not set higher to subsidize routes
where rates were set at intermodal parity, yet still did recover
fully allocated costs). Finally, where current and/or future
traffic projections showed that profitable volumes of traffic would
not return, the railroads were allowed to abandon those routes,
shippers and passengers to other modes of transportation. With the
Staggers Act, the railroads, including Conrail, were freed from the
requirement to operate services with open ended losses for the
public convenience and necessity of those who simply chose rail
services as their mode of transportation.
Conrail began turning a profit by 1981, the result of the Staggers
Act freedoms and its own managerial improvements under the
leadership of L. Stanley Crane, who had been chief executive
officer of the Southern Railway. While the Staggers Act helped
immensely in allowing all railroads to more easily abandon
unprofitable rail lines and set its own freight rate it was under
Crane's leadership that Conrail truly became a profitable
operation. Soon after Crane took office in 1981 he shed another
4,400 miles off the Conrail system in the following two years,
which accounted for only 1% of the railroad's overall traffic and
2% of its profits while saving it millions in maintenance costs.
The
Northeast Rail Service
Act of 1981 relieved Conrail of its requirement to provide
commuter service on the
Northeast Corridor, further improving its
finances.
After considerable debate in Congress, the
Conrail Privatization Act of 1986
was signed into law by
President
Reagan on October 21, 1986. The largest
initial public offering in US
history came on March 26, 1987 when Conrail's stock, worth $1.9
billion, was sold to private investors.
Shift of passenger operations to State or Metropolitan rail
authorities
Conrail inherited the
commuter rail
operations of its predecessor rail lines, and operated them until
1983, when these services were transferred to state or metropolitan
transit authorities. Except for MARC, the transit authorities
purchased the track and right-of-way on which their commuter
operations ran, leaving Conrail freight operations as a
tenant.
Metropolitan Boston
Lower Hudson Valley of New York State and southwest
Connecticut
New Jersey
Metropolitan Philadelphia
Maryland
Breakup and shared assets: 1997-1999
With Conrail's increasing success, two eastern rail competitors of
Conrail engaged in a
takeover battle to
control the railroad and expand their systems. In 1997, however,
the two railroads,
CSX
Transportation and the
Norfolk Southern Railway, struck a
compromise agreement to jointly acquire
Conrail and split most of its assets between them, with Norfolk
Southern acquiring a larger portion of the Conrail network via a
larger stock buyout. Under the final agreement approved by the
Surface Transportation
Board, Norfolk Southern acquired 58 percent of Conrail's
assets, including roughly 6,000 Conrail route miles, and CSX
received 42 percent of Conrail's assets, including about 3,600
route miles.
The buyout was approved by the
Surface Transportation Board
(successor agency to the
Interstate Commerce
Commission) and took place on August 22, 1998. The lines were
transferred to two newly-formed
limited liability companies, to be
subsidiaries of Conrail but leased to CSX and Norfolk Southern,
respectively
New York Central
Lines (NYC) and
Pennsylvania
Lines (PRR). The NYC and PRR
reporting marks, which had passed to Conrail,
were also transferred to the new companies, and NS also acquired
the CR reporting mark. Operations under CSX and NS began June 1,
1999.
As the
names indicated, CSX acquired the former New York Central Railroad main
line from New York
City
and Boston, Massachusetts
to Cleveland, Ohio
, and the former Cleveland,
Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway (NYC Big Four) line
to Indianapolis,
Indiana
(continuing west to East St.
Louis, Illinois
on a former Pittsburgh,
Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad (PRR Panhandle Route
line), while Norfolk Southern got the former Pennsylvania Railroad main line and
Cleveland and
Pittsburgh Railroad from Jersey City, New Jersey
to Cleveland, and the rest of the former NYC main
line west to Chicago,
Illinois
. Thus the Conrail "X" was neatly split in
two, CSX getting one diagonal from Boston to St. Louis and Norfolk
Southern the other from New York to Chicago. The two lines cross at
a bridge southeast of downtown Cleveland ( ), where the former
Cleveland and Pittsburgh Railroad crosses over the NYC's former
Cleveland Short Line
Railway around the south side of Cleveland.
In three major metropolitan areas - North Jersey, South
Jersey/Philadelphia, and Detroit -
Conrail Shared Assets
Operations continues to serve as a terminal operating company
owned by both CSX and NS. The Conrail Shared Assets Operations
arrangement was a concession made to federal regulators who were
concerned about the lack of competition in certain rail markets and
logistical problems associated with the breaking up the Conrail
operations as they existed in densely populated areas with many
local customers. The smaller Conrail operation that exists today
serves rail freight customers in these markets on behalf of its two
owners.
A
fourth area, the former Monongahela
Railway in southwest Pennsylvania
, was originally owned jointly by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad,
Pennsylvania Railroad and
Pittsburgh and Lake
Erie Railroad. Conrail absorbed the company in 1993, and
assigned
trackage rights to CSX, the
successor to the B&O and P&LE. With the Conrail breakup,
those lines are owned by NS, but the CSX trackage rights are still
in place.
Locomotives
Though Conrail was divided in 1999 between Norfolk Southern Railway
and CSX Transportation, some locomotivesstill bear its name, albeit
with the current railroad's number "patched" over the original
Conrail number. Many CR units have similar features such as,
"Bright Future" blue paint, flashing ditch lights, and Leslie RS3L
horns.
Signals
Since Conrail acquired so many separate railways, and the North
American railway signalling system is not standardized, operators
needed to qualify on as many as seven different signaling systems.
The varying systems include, but are not limited to, the
Pennsylvania's
position light
signals, the NYC's
searchlight signals and
tri-light signals. Most of the existing technologies were defined
by
NORAC. Conrail itself even had its own,
unique tri-light signal modernization program that was applied to
many routes. Today, most Northeastern railroads associated with
former Conrail assets are working towards standardization of all
systems as
traffic-light-style
signals. Meanwhile, Amtrak uses a modified version of
Pennsylvania's position light signals called the Position Color
Lights.
Preservation
The
Conrail Historical
Society was formed to preserve and restore equipment, items
pertaining to, and photographs of the Consolidated Rail Corporation
(Conrail). The Society currently has over 700 members and they have
also preserved an operating class N7E former
Erie Lackawanna Railway
caboose.
See also
Notes
- Maryland Transit Administration
- answers.com
- http://www.railroad-signaling.com/aspects.html NORAC signal
aspect reference
References
- Timothy Jacobs, The History of the Pennsylvania Railroad, ISBN
0-517-63351-5
- PRR Chronology
- H. Roger Grant, Life and death of Erie Lackawanna, Trains February 1992
- Bill Stephens and Craig Sanders, Cleveland: center of
controversy, Trains July
1998
External links
Books
- Withers, Paul, (1997) Conrail, The Final Years
1992-1997 Withers Publishing. ISBN 978-1881411154