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The Railwire is not your personal army.
So I don't completely understand exactly what is going on. Maybe Scott or someone could shed some light on a few questions?The way it works for us is we have a weekly "crew change" where manpower and pool levels are set based on avaliable miles. For example say the engineers pool is set at 10 guys, but there is 15 qualified engineers then 5 engineers would work as conductors this week. Next week If the pool is reduced to 9 then one engineer would be set back and work as a conductor.Now a set up engineer cannot be called as a conductor, but a engine qualified conductor can be called as an engineer to fill vacancies thruout the week.Is NS calling engineers to fill unexpected conductor vacancies? They tried that here years ago but the union was able to successfully fight it. Who sets the pool numbers? Up here is is the union that sets them based of potential miles to be made.Is there a mechanism to reduce engineers if there is an excess of crews? Or once you are set up is that it?Also an unrelated question but still on the subject of work rules. I was listening to an American engineer speak on YouTube and he was talking about working off his rest and implied that the only rest you get is the 10 hours mandy at home. Is this true? We can book upto 24 hours after each trip, and have the option of staying at the bottom of the pool until our rest is up. We also get 48 hours off after different milage thresholds... ...and we are fighting for more time off yet.
Your cost of living must be very low! I couldn't afford that much time off...
These work rules are going to vary by railroad and even location based on local agreements. For example, the BNSF is still really several different entities as far as the unions are concerned. There is former Santa Fe, former Q, former northern lines....all under different agreements. Even among each former line, agreements can vary by terminal. Our pool numbers are also set weekly every Monday by the unions, but retroactively based on miles run the previous week. The company can also override the union based on perceived needs. The company alone sets the extra board numbers.
As far as rest cycles, this also varies by location. Some pools have the ability to book rest, others do not; other locations have programmed rest cycles. The pool I'm in, the only options are to take 14 hours off, or 24 after my 4th or 5th consecutive start, and only at the home terminal. This is to avoid falling under the provisions of the federal RSIA law, which dictates I HAVE to take 48 hours off after the 6th start. If you leave town on your sixth start and come home on a 7th, you will get 36 hours off. Any 24+ hours off period, or a straight deadhead, resets your start count. Any time worked over 12 hours including van transport is added to your mandatory 10 hours undisturbed rest minute-by-minute.
The workforce is forever divided about whether we're getting too much time off, or not enough. Some people would work every single day if they were allowed to; some would work once a month. 24-30 hours off at home between trips feels about right to me, but I have a 300 mile district. It's not uncommon for me to get out "on my rest" at the home terminal, either. I don't necessarily like that, but you can really rack up the miles doing it. If I'm not feeling it, I can just lay off and go to the bottom of the board when I mark back up.
There is absolutely no provision or precedent on BNSF for an engineer taking a call to work as a conductor. There would have to be some penalty claim agreed to for that to ever happen. The opposite does happen occasionally, with a set-back engineer currently working as a conductor taking a call to step up as an engineer for the day. Because it is considered a "promotion," there is no penalty.
So if one is asked to perform another role other than their primary role are they paid at a lessor rate? I would assume these hours worked would reduce their available hours for the preferred role??
Pedro,I'm surprised that your company has a provision for you to layoff to avoid federal rest, I thought that was forbidden by the FRA.Scott