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Hi Scott... Thanks so much for the long post! Very informative and it does make me feel better. Will cut and past it into an E-mail to my son. The info on becoming an engineer is especially helpful, because that's his ultimate goal. He does understand that it can/will be a very long road to get there. At this point, he's still gung ho to walk that road, so we'll see.My wife and I's biggest fear or concern (other than safety, which it appears the UP takes pretty seriously) is that he given enough shifts to pay his bills. He's not afraid of hard work. The job he left wasn't terrible, but management was awful and the patrons were pretty difficult. He volunteered at the local Trolley museum, often doing dirty and difficult tasks. He has no problem with getting dirty, or working long hours if it's something he loves. He's also respectful and has a very good attitude, so based on what you've said, I think he'll do OK. Talked to him last night... His training "section" (the guys in his class) was supposed to be ~15 guys. Of that, only 7 accepted the job offer. Of them, only 6 showed up. One guy was just fired for no-showing on the second day, then being late back from lunch on the third. He was shocked at how quickly the UP/trainer took action on this, it also further emphasized how important it is he tows the line. Which he's good at.Though many may not consider $100K-$120K "good money", I certainly do! My wife and I would be ecstatic if/when he's making that kind of money years down the line. That's nothing to sneeze at, no matter where you live!I'll send you a PM with his name. Thanks again Scott, your informative post made me feel better about his prospects.Take care,Jeff
I agree, it's damn good money... I'm in the Engineering field (non-degreed "Test Engineer") and 55yrs old and I don't make that with ~30yrs in that field. That said... It's relative. My wife works in the healthcare field, where non-MD specializations are paying $150K+ to start right out of school, at least in level 1 trauma centers. Again, it's relative.But $100-$120K per year is nothing to stick up your nose at, I'd take it and be very happy about it!Jeff
It's very unfortunate that this is the case... I wish I'd seen this post when it was first posted. Why?My oldest son just started training for the Union Pacific as a freight conductor. The job and training are out in Portland Oregon. We live in New England. He started training on Sept 13th. The week before, we packed up his car and he and I drove from NE out to Oregon. Four days worth of driving. It was a good experience and I can now cross "driving coast to coast" off the bucket list. But it was a really long way to go for the salary he is going to be getting. The formal job offer came in three weeks before he had to report to training. Not only that, the claimed salary for his job is "...you can expect to make about $52K per year...". "Expect to make" is a whole lot different than "this is your starting salary". On top of this, we'd read very poor reviews/horror stories about working for the UP, NS, CSX and other class one RR's, but our son decided he still wanted to give it a shot. He's absolutely nuts about trains, has been from a very early age, and having not gone to trade school, and bailed out of college, there was not much else he could do.But this is something we were afraid of... All the bad reviews mentioned frequent furloughs. All of us are concerned about having moved across country, find an apartment, etc, only to be furloughed a short time after leaving training. Not to mention the treatment that RR workers have to endure. If our son had better options, we would have talked him out of taking the job, but he doesn't and wanted to give it a shot. Luckily he has a back up plan, which is to join the Air Force Reserves once he gets out of training, starts working and gets settled. That way he at least has some income and something to fall back on if the RR job sucks as bad as we're afraid it will be.Like I said... I wish I'd read this before my son accepted the job offer. The only hope I have here, is that they're so hard up for employees, that furloughs are few and far between. Maybe the pay will get better, or maybe he'll move up the ranks to be an engineer (which is where he wants to end up). Maybe he'll do it for a few years, get some good work experience, then move on to another job (RR or not). We'll see...JB
The work takes a 'certain kind' of individual to enjoy. You need to be flexible to a degree that few expect or understand. You need to just let ***** roll off your back and not take it as a personal affront if you get called in to work on Christmas Eve and it's -20 degrees out. You need to be willing to accept that you're going to miss some things in your kids lives.
You could say this for a lot of jobs .. Military, Law Enforcement, Fire Service, Nursing, etc .. a lot of jobs are a calling that a lot of people who work in the ivory towers would never understand
For that matter - so is working in the "ivory tower". I aspired to that once (to be an academic), but after a few years in that environment (in graduate school) decided it wasn't for me.
Jeff,One of the biggest problems is the drug test. Many who try to hire on either bow out when they find out they have to pass a drug screening or are "dis-invited" when they fail the initial one. Until your son is over his "derail" (60 days or 60 starts after he marks up, I can't remember which) he can be terminated pretty much without cause. He also is prevented from having union protection until over his derail. Once he is over his derail he needs to apply for union membership ASAP, also encourage him to attend as many union meetings he can at first to learn how the system works.Scott
Jeff, most of my post was more specifically direct towards the treatment of exempts (management) versus the folks actually running/fixing trains and infrastructure (scheduled). While things have changed quite a bit for Scheduled folks over the past 20 years, it hasn't been nearly as much as it has been for Exempts. Union protection will do that for you. Their biggest concern has been furlough -- and that's, unfortunately, likely to remain the case.Big snip...
If the UP in Oregon doesn't work out, have him call Iowa Northern..Pay is about the same actually a bit more I think, 250 mile short line.. sleep in the same bed after every shift... Its still railroad life.. but only halfway across the country.... we haven't been able to hire people (locally) fast enough..
I hear you .. I am adjunct faculty at University of Maryland Global Campus .. they have more "administrators" coming up with stupid ***** for us to do -- its all about process - very little actual teaching . but hey -- they pay me enough to buy trains ..