Precision Scheduled Railroading (PSR) was created by the late CSX President and CEO E. Hunter Harrison, who passed away in December.
PSR requires cargo to be ready when rail cars arrive for loading or risk being left behind, a practice that served both CP (Canadian Pacific) and CN (Canadian National Railway Company) well under his leadership, with both companies seeing multiple positive results in the form of lower operating ratios, improved service, record amounts of reinvestment into networks, as well as creating significant shareholder value.
But over the course of 2017 since Harrison took the helm at CSX, things have not been quite as smooth in terms of the PSR implementation.
There were various issues stemming from CSX’s PSR implementation that were clogging the tracks, so to speak, in various ways in the form of things like informal complaints from both CSX customers and railroad industry stakeholders in regards to various service issues, including:
CSX CEO James Foote’s letter to the United States Surface Transportation Board (STB) was in response to a December 14 letter from the STB, which centered on the company’s continued progress in implementing PSR.
He explained that PSR is comprised of two phases, with the first phase at CSX focused on what he called “top-to-bottom changes” into the way in which the railroad operated.
“Mr. Harrison introduced the company to a new way of thinking about CSX’ network, which led to major operational enhancements, including the conversion of certain hump yards to flat switching and strategic adjustments to other facilities,” he wrote.
“It also led to replacing CSX’ traditional methods with a new, balanced, scheduled train plan comprised of significantly more mixed-freight trains. Most importantly, Hunter instilled a new railroad culture that has everyone focused on the five tenets of PSR: service, asset utilization, controlling costs, safety and people.”
Addressing the second phase of PSR implementation, Foote cited “the pure, daily execution of those five PSR tenets,” which is well underway.
What’s more, he said that the results of PSR implementation are apparent, pointing to the company’s performance metrics showing a remarkable rate of positive change, with four straight months of improvement, coupled with recent trends far exceeding the prior full-year average and car handling and terminal fluidity ahead of 2016 levels. He also stated that major strides have been made in train velocity.
“Higher velocity serves as a catalyst for multi-faceted improvement,” he wrote. “As trains speed up on the network and reach their destinations sooner, there are fewer total trains running at any given time. This improved line-of-road fluidity, in concert with terminals processing cars more efficiently, leads to a higher level of on-time originations. When trains are operating in their scheduled windows and executing in timely coordination on meets and passes, movements further accelerate freight across the network. As a result, fewer locomotives and crews are needed to handle the same amount of freight, and our cars are able to cycle more quickly, such that total cars online decline. The end of this virtuous cycle is faster transit, better service, markedly improved asset utilization, and greater efficiency at lower cost.”
In concluding his letter, Foote said that he believes PSR is in place at CSX and does not foresee any significant operating changes at this time, adding that through this successful implementation, the company has seen enhanced freight flows across the CSX network and major progress toward its goal of providing a superior product for its customers.
Shortly before Harrison passed away in mid-December, CSX issued a statement noting that Harrison would be on medical leave and replaced by Foote on an interim basis.
At that time, Stifel analyst John Larkin wrote in a research note that the company’s strategy would be unchanged but the cultural conversion and rebuilding of customer confidence was required.
“After this summer’s service meltdown occurred at CSX the company moved rapidly and decisively to adopt Hunter Harrison’s precision railroading plan, service rapidly deteriorated,” Larkin wrote.
“Customers were irate and openly complained to the Surface Transportation Board. In the ensuing months, Hunter made numerous management changes as precision railroading requires complete ‘buy-in’ by everyone up and down the organization. Service improved and customer complaints subsided. But, scars from this service meltdown remain.”
“Mr. Foote may be better suited to repairing customer relationships and to further reinforce the need for everyone on the CSX team to simultaneously row in the direction of precision railroading execution. At its best, precision railroading improves service (transit times and transit time variability), lowers cost, and attracts more traffic to the adopting railroad. CSX is within striking distance of the Holy Grail here, and Mr. Foote may be just the right person to carry the ball over the finish line, given his extensive sales and marketing background, while at Canadian National.”
Related Article: CSX Corporation Announces New Chief Operating Officer & Executive Management Changes
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