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07

The best news out of the collapse of Warner-Lieberman this week in the US Senate is that we will still have a railroad industry.  The impact on railroads was largely overlooked in the debate, but the fact is that if Warner-Lieberman had passed, three of the nation's four largest railroads would have collapsed.

And that would have been bad, very bad.

Nearly every ton of coal used in the United States travels by rail at one point in its life.  And that coal traverses that nation primarily on three railroads -- Burlington Northern-Sante Fe (BNSF), Norfolk Southern, and Union Pacific.  CSX hauls some coal, but primarily as a common carrier, and not as a source road.  Coal hauling is a highly profitable part of their business.  Coal hauling underwrites the bulk of freight service on any railroad, but especially on these three roads.

Had Warner-Lieberman passed the Senate and been signed into law, the coal industry would be dead in a decade.  And with coal, the railroads would die.

And without railroads, there would be little if any affordable bulk transport ability.  No more container transshipments.  Decreased ability to transport new vehicles -- domestics and imports.  Building materials, chemicals, fuel -- everything -- would have to be transported over the road, at higher cost and higher risk.

Thank God for small failures.

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# Freelander
Thursday, June 12, 2008 10:09 PM
Don't forget that the railroad was what got most of the people in this country around up through WW2.
Afterwards, the automobile was king, much to the dismay of anyone who has the audacity to get too old to drive.

Better find assisted living once that happens, cuz here in America, you ain't going nowhere without a car!

I lived throught the 70's gas crises' and all I can say is, thank God we aren't stupid enough to demand price controls - otherwise, I'd be either waiting in line or for the right day just to save a quarter a gallon.

I think the railroads are going to have to find a new life in the passenger business before too long, or we won't be going anywhere - at least not as often.

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