Received this article via an email rail newsletter. Possibly not an exact quoting of NS. ***** Oct 20, 2015: Norfolk Southern PTC Cessation of Service Notification Notice of Cessation of Service Effective Dec. 1, 2015, for All Shipments of Poisonous-Inhalation-Hazard (“PIH”) Commodities Oct. 20, 2015 Norfolk Southern Railway Company and its rail operating subsidiaries (“NSR”) will no longer accept shipments of Poisonous-Inhalation-Hazard (“PIH”) commodities, effective Dec. 1, 2015. PIH commodities in transit on Dec. 1, 2015 will be delivered to destination by Dec. 31, 2015. Starting on December 1, 2015, NS will not pull PIH loads or residual cars from a facility on NS and will not accept such cars at interchange. As to traffic requiring interchange with a connecting railroad, the effective date of this cessation of service shall be accelerated as necessary to comply with any earlier cessation of service date imposed by such connecting railroad. Private car shippers required to have OT-5 authority, which includes storage plans, should make sure that their storage plans are updated. PIH commodities are those defined in 49 CFR §§ 236.1003, 171.8, 173.115, and 173.132, and include the STCCs and commodities listed in the attachment. These service changes – effective across the entire NS rail network -- are required to comply with federal safety laws that become effective after Dec. 31, 2015, the government’s deadline for installation of PTC. Despite investment of more than $1 billion to date, NS will not meet the deadline. NSR is ceasing service related to PIH commodities to prevent it from violating federal safety laws that become effective after Dec 31, 2015. The Dec 1, 2015 effective date is designed to allow for all such commodities tendered prior to Dec 1, 2015 to clear the NSR system before Jan 1, 2016. In addition, NSR has notified in writing Amtrak, Virginia Railway Express and Metra that passenger trains will not be permitted to operate on NSR track after December 31, 2015. NSR sincerely regrets the inconvenience that customers, passengers, and commuters will experience and hopes that Congress will act quickly and decisively to allow us to restore full access to our rail network.
A lot can change in a day. http://thehill.com/policy/transportation/257566-agreement-reached-on-automated-train-extension Jason
Well, they've agreed. Sounds like it's a "rider" attached to something else. Now we'll see if it gets passed and signed.
And here is the article I had bookmarked on not signing any extension: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...-extending-deadline-for-rail-safety-equipment
Nothing in that article says he wouldn't sign an extension. Only that he won't unilaterally not enforce the standing law. No me too of what he'd do if presented a bill.
Can you say "giant game of chicken"? That bit about not allowing VRE, Metra and Amtrak to run sounds like real trouble... possibly getting more politicians' attention than the hazmat stuff. Politicians don't like having angry constituents who can't get to work...