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A couple of trips ago I was taking the Z train Portland to Hermiston at about 2:00 p..m. On the radio comes the Corridor Manager (The guy overseeing all the dispatchers for a certain area, some railroads refer to him as the "Chief Dispatcher") talking to the train behind. "A concerned citizen had called the dispatching center to report that the red blinking light on the end of the train was not working." Now I can only hear the corridor manager's side of the conversation as the train is to far behind to hear their end of the conversation. Next thing we hear from the corridor manager is "So there is a sensor on the "FRED" that turns the light off during the day?" Again we can't hear the train's response. Finally we hear the corridor manager say "Never mind then, forget I called." I immediately got on the radio and said "Forget! Dude people are going to be telling this story for the next 20 years!" He didn't answer though I'm sure he heard me. Same trip, we were going through a 25 mph temporary slow order at Hood River. About a mile past that slow order we go over a real soft spot in the track (we're 12,000' long). I call the dispatcher and tell him about the issue and that he needs to have MOW come out and take a look at it. He acknowledges, the next thing I know PTC is screaming at me about "Over Speed Warning" and puts the train in emergency! What the hell! Yep you guessed it, the dispatcher put a 10 mph slow order on the location until MOW could get out there to look at it and while we were still going over it. That slow order was instantly transmitted over the PTC system which put the train in emergency. We called the dispatcher and asked him if he had put a 10 mph slow order on that spot we had reported? When he replied that he had, we asked him if he knew we were still going over it? Silence. We said we'd be recovering the train and be back on the pull in a couple of minutes. Let me know if you'd like to hear more, I've got a great one about a non-existing grade crossing. I know we have other railroaders on this forum so feel free to regale us with your "Tale from the Road".Scott
Jeff,While he was here your son stayed in the yard so I never got the chance to work with him unfortunately. Short lines tend to be more close knit than the class 1 railroads due to their smaller size. Working a regular job with a good crew on a local is, in my opinion, the best job there is. Unfortunately, they don't pay very well unless it's a twelve and tow job every day. I wish your son every success in his new job.Scott
The non-existing crossing.While heading east toward Hermiston, we were just coming up to Castle about m.p. 155 when the dispatcher contacts us. He contacted us to give us an XG order which means there is a road crossing that is out of service and that we have to stop and protect the crossing before occupying it. "UP 7326, comply with XG order at m.p. 164.4". My conductor reads back the order and we continue on our way. Now as we continue I'm thinking of where the Xing is as to prepare to stop short of it. 164.4...164.4 humm, that's between the west and east ends of the siding at Boardman... There is no Xing at Boardman. So I call the dispatcher back up, "Yeah dispatcher did you say XG at 164.4?" "Yes that is correct 164.4" "Uhh dispatcher there is no Xing at mile post 164.4" now wait for it... "Yes I know! The three previous trains have confirmed there is no Xing at that location." "If you know there is no Xing there why put out an XH order on a Xing that doesn't exist?" "The signal department won't let me take the order down." "So you want me to pull up to but short of a Xing that doesn't exist, have my conductor get down and protect a Xing that doesn't exist, pull ahead and occupy a Xing that doesn't exist, have my conductor get back on and continue eastbound?" "Well you should do what you have to, but yeah." So that is exactly what we did. Why? Because this was so bizarre I was sure it had to be some idiot manager's idea of a test. When we were back on the move I contacted the dispatcher and asked him if he had thought of the possiblity that if the signal department had put out a Xing order but had got the mile post wrong, that there was, somewhere, a Xing that needed protection but wasn't being protected? He didn't have an answer for that.Scott