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Amtrak cancels long-distance train with freight rail strike looming

  • Amtrak's heavily used Northeast corridor will be largely unaffected from the cancelations.
  • Labor Secretary Marty Walsh met with union and rail company leaders Wednesday in Washington.
  • Two unions representing conductors and engineers remain opposed to the companies' contract proposal.

WASHINGTON — Amtrak said it has canceled all long-distance passenger trains scheduled for Thursday ahead of a potential freight rail shutdown as rail workers and freight companies remain at a stalemate in contract negotiations. 

The passenger rail service's heavily used Northeast Corridor will largely be spared of the cancelations, Amtrak said, and its high-speed Acela trips will remain on schedule. Amtrak also canceled several state-supported services for Thursday evening.

Although Amtrak is not a party in the labor dispute and doesn't carry freight, the move is more fallout from lingering disagreements between freight rail unions and railroad companies before a looming negotiating deadline Friday.

More:Pressure mounts on Biden to avert freight rail strike as union deadline looms

Railroads are poised to begin halting the shipment of crops as soon as Thursday, according to the Consumer Brands Association, while shipments of farm fertilizers have already been delayed this week.

At 12:01 a.m. ET Friday, a federally mandated "cooling off" period ends, which would open the door for about 115,000 freight rail workers in unions to walk off the job or for companies to shut out employees. Amtrak said it will only operate trains this week that have enough time to reach their final destinations by the deadline.

Amtrak said it has canceled all long-distance passenger trains scheduled for Thursday ahead of a potential freight rail shutdown as rail workers and freight companies remain at a stalemate in contract negotiations.

A coalition representing six of the largest freight rail companies have reached agreements with eight of 12 rail worker unions. The four holdouts include the two largest unions representing conductors and engineers, who have concerns about working conditions and strict attendance policies. The unions have sought 15 days of paid time off for sickness

A national strike from railroad workers could jeopardize the shipment of retail products, critical goods and raw materials while inflation is already high, a scenario the U.S. Chamber of Commerce said would be an "economic disaster."


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