Deregulation
Crashes and Burns
By
Phil Mattera in the Dirt Diggers Digest
Canada’s
Transportation Safety Board is far from reaching a conclusion on what caused an
unattended train with 72 tanker cars filled with crude oil to roll downhill and
crash into the Quebec town of Lac-Megantic, setting off a huge explosion that
killed at least 15 people. But that hasn’t stopped Edward Burkhardt, the chief
executive of the railroad, from pointing the finger at everyone in sight —
except himself.
Burkhardt first tried to blame local firefighters who had extinguished a small blaze in the train before the larger accident, and now he is accusing his own employee — the person who was operating the train all by himself — for failing to apply all the hand brakes when he parked the train for the night and went to a hotel for some rest after his 12-hour shift.
Whatever were the
immediate causes of the accident, Burkhardt and his company — Montreal, Maine
& Atlantic (MMA) Railway and its parent Rail World Inc. — bear much of the
responsibility.
Burkhardt is a living
symbol of the pitfalls of deregulation, deunionization, privatization and the
other features of laissez-faire capitalism. He first made his mark in the late
1980s, when his Wisconsin Central Railroad took advantage of federal railroad
deregulation, via the 1980 Staggers Rail Act, to purchase 2,700 miles of track
from the Soo Line and remake it into a supposedly dynamic and efficient
carrier. That efficiency came largely from operating non-union and thus
eliminating work rules that had promoted safety.
Wisconsin Central —
which also took advantage of privatization to acquire rail operations in
countries such as Britain, Australia and New Zealand — racked up a questionable safety record. Burkhardt was forced out of Wisconsin
Central in a boardroom dispute in 2001, but he continued his risky practices
after his new company, Rail World, took over the Bangor and Aroostook line in
2003 and renamed it MMA.
Faced with operating
losses, Burkhardt and his colleague Robert Grindrod targeted labor costs with
little concern about the safety consequences. In 2010 the Bangor Daily
News reported that MMA was planning to reduce its crews to one person in
Maine, which, amazingly, was allowed by state officials. Grindrod blithely told
the newspaper: “Obviously, if you are running two men on a crew and switch to
one man, you’re saving 50 percent of your labor component.” The company also
succeeded in getting permission for one-man crews in Canada.
Inadequate staffing
may have also played a role in a 2009 incident at an MMA maintenance facility
in Maine in which more than 100,000 gallons of oil were spilled during a
transfer in the facility’s boiler room. In 2011 the EPA fined the company $30,000 for Clean Water Act violations.
MMA continued to have
safety problems even before the Lac-Megantic disaster. The Wall Street
Journal reported that MMA had 23 accidents, injuries or other reportable
mishaps from 2010 to 2012 and that on a per-mile basis the company’s rate was
much higher than the U.S. national average.
The Lac-Megantic
accident is prompting calls in Canada for a reconsideration of the policy of
allowing a high degree of self-regulation on the part of the railroads. A
review of lax regulation, including the elimination of work rules, should also
occur in the United States. There’s also a scandal in the fact that railroads
like MMA are still allowed to use outdated and unsafe tanker cars.
Yet some observers are
seeking to exploit the deaths in Quebec by making the bizarre argument that the
real lesson of the accident is the need to rely more on pipelines rather than
railroads to carry the crude oil gushing out of the North Dakota Bakken fields
(the content of the MMA tankers) and the tar sands of Canada. North Dakota
Senator John Hoeven, for instance, is using the incident to argue the need for the controversial XL
Pipeline.
How quickly these
people forget that the safety record of pipelines is far from unblemished.
Hoeven’s neighbors in Montana are still recovering from the 2011 rupture of an
Exxon Mobil pipeline that spilled some 40,000 gallons of crude oil into the
Yellowstone River.
The problem is not the
particular delivery system by which hazardous substances are transported but
the fact that too many of those systems are under the control of executives
such as Burkhardt who put their profits before the safety of the public.