I'm currently a locomotive engineer for CSX and my wife and I are thinking of moving to Arizona to be closer to her family. If I go to another Class 1 I'll have to start all over again as a conductor and that is just out of the question. I'm wondering what the hours are like at Amtrak and what kind of salary can I expect. I'm on an extraboard now so I'm used to the crazy hours but I can't take too much of a pay cut. Thanks for any info you guys can share. Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
Thanks Charlie:teeth: . I have checked it but it doesn't give the info I really want that can only come from someone who has experienced it. We don't have Amtrak here so it is tough to find out the info I need. I read somewhere that an Amtrak engineer can make around 80k a year. That is about where I'm at but I just wanted to make sure before I take on a major move and give up the seniority I have at CSX, not to mention my 3 weeks vacation. Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
It is amazing how many people they are hiring now!!! None are near Arizona though:sad: . The best part is that they prefer engineers from Class 1 railroads:thumbs_up: :thumbs_up: :thumbs_up: . Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
This is true! and for anyone else who may entertain ideas about being an AMTRAK engineer, the ONLY way you are going to get there is the way Steve just mentioned. Any other way is going to take by starting quite literally "from the ground up". Also Steve, I would guess the 80K to be an accurate figure. I have heard from scuttlebutt and also from AMTK people that their pay scale is somewhat less than freight scale, but that again is not a unilateral statement. In my own personal experience, I was making less money as an engineer than I had been making as a brakeman on commuter train. Since I had very little engineer's seniority, I was relegated to working the &^%$ jobs at the bottom of the list. The commuter job I held as a brakeman was the 4th or 5th highest paying job on the commuter pay scale. It would have taken me quite some time to get back up to that pay bracket as an engineer.Another reason why I retired when I did. Also for anyone considering railroad employment... I can easily understand Steve's reluctance to make a move to another railroad. In railroading, seniority is EVERYTHING and it is the ONLY thing you have of value. Even someone who has one day more seniority than you can make of world of difference in what jobs you can hold or when you get a vacation. When you are making the sort of money Steve is making- and let me tell you, he is putting in ONE WHOLE HELLUVA lot of hours to do that-your life style will adjust accordingly. Suddenly you can make those needed home improvements or buy the new furniture or car you need or want. To lose that kind of income can lead to economic fiasco! CT Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
Hey, The good thing about Amtrak is the nationwide senority. We had guys go thru Transit's LETP.Stay for about 1 year & go to Slamtrak. They worked out of NYP & then transfered to So. Cal. Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
I had systemwide seniority with the BNSF, but my engineers seniority was a different date from my conductors seniority. CT Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
Seniority is only for union jobs. Seniority may be everything in train and engine service, but only about 15 percent of railroad jobs are in train and engine service on Class I railroads. There are many thousands of non-union jobs in the industry where your ability to do the job has more to do with your advancement than when you were hired. I spent 38 years in the industry and ended up spending the last 18 in charge of traffic (sales, pricing, marketing) for a short line and never once worked in a position subject to seniority. :cat: Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
That percentage may be true, but their are very little salaried or exempted jobs on class 1s. B & B and M.O.W.is mostly "scheduled" as is Signal Maintenance,Mechanical and most Clerical and Yardmasters. I used to get a kick out of a Ticket clerk I know. He had 35 yrs seniority and was on the extra board and FINALLY got a permanent assignment about 2 years ago. I thought the extra boards in the Operating Department were bad....!!!!! lol CT Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
That is exactly how our caller-runners are!!! Right before they retire they can finally hold a 1st shift job. Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
Is that really a good thing though? We have often wondered about that at CSX. Can a guy in nowhereland West Virginia decide that he wants to move to the city, roll me, and then I'm stuck going to whatever place I can hold? CSX runs in some very remote places that remind me of the movie "Deliverance" in West Virginia and I'm sure with only 7 years seniority (3 of that as an engineer) I would end up in a place like that. Another thing I worry about is the lack of stability with Amtrak. At least with CSX I'm pretty sure I'll have a job tomorrow (even though they want to get rid of us every day:angry: ). Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
and,sadly.Steve, that is how it is on all the carriers. Spend thousands of dollars to train you,only to try to find every way possible to fire you! CT Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
It just keeps getting worse and worse, especially with our attendance policy. I have a friend who is also a CSX engineer that used to be a clerk for Amtrak. He told me that he was treated really good there. The only reason he came to CSX was to try to get back home in Atlanta. He has been stuck in Louisville ever since he hired in. Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
Those blasted "attendance policies" or "attendance guidelines"(BNSF) have got to go! It seems to me that the carriers will eventually use that "attendance policy" as a bargaining card in contract negotiations. IE agree to a 150/160/180 mile basic day OR remove the distinction between road engine/switch engine and we will make the "attendance policy" go away. The so-called "trip rates" that some unions are agreeing to are bogus as would be any increase in the basic day mileage. Nobody seems to understand that. If the operating unions agree unilaterally to trip rates you will all find that you will be switching out your own train after you yard it because you have to work out the "miles". There goes a bunch of yard jobs!!! The UTU is STILL without a contract OR any substantive negotiation since 23:59 on 12/31/04. Fortunately the courts ruled in favor of the rank & file on the F.M.L.A act. I strongly suggest to anyone who has a severe or chronic medical condition that requires routine or repetitive treatment and/or therapy to apply for F.M.L.A. with the intermittent clause. I did that myself so that I could mark off when I needed to see the doctor or had a "flare-up" of my condition. Again this applies ONLY if you or your spouse has a serious medical condition that requires ongoing treatment. I was told to apply for FMLA for myself,due to my medical problems, in order to protect my job and avoid the terms of the "attendance guidelines". Now if only we could get some serious negotiation done on a new contract. The carriers are the only ones benefitting from this delay. Their officers get millions of dollars in bonuses while the rank & file get a tiny,mandated C.O.L.A. CT Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
That was one of the big concerns of the "rank & file" over that fiasco several years back of the proposed BNSF/CN merger. A Canadian engineer or conductor could roll a U.S. guy but not the opposite. Canadian labor law prohibits a non-Canadian from taking a job in Canada if there is a qualified Canadian for the job. Believe me, there are some sweet jobs up in that northern tier for switch engines and road switchers, not to mention pool trains . I can see covetous Canadian eyes looking them over. Steve, you already know how cutthroat it is in your division when a job opens up. You have one more days seniority than your good buddy, but if he has a better job than you, hey! its friendship out the window, but your buddy can grab the less desirable job you just vacated. Now imagine the same thing happening, but with no ability to claim the vacated job. That whole merger thing was one big scam. The overall holding company would have been a Canadian company but it would have given both railroads the ability to "hide" their mistakes in the other country(inspections,maintenance,accounting etc). Thank the Lord that our gov't was able to see what was about to happen! CT Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
That sounds crazy Charlie! We just signed a single system agreement that puts us on continuous detention time after 15 hours, meals raised to $20.00 for the first 24 hours and $10.00 each additional 12, engineer certification went up, $2500.00 signing bonus, raise retroactive to the beginning of the year, and company performance bonuses among many other good things. They made it sound pretty sweet at first but we had to give up our 30 day moves to vote this in:angry: . It is all because we have a few people that like to stay displaced over the weekend once they get rolled and the company is fed up with it. Those of us that stay marked up have to pay for these few individuals' actions. Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
Dont recall much of a problem with the "30 day" hold rule on the BNSF. If a guy realized he made a mistake, chances are he would "temp" on other jobs until he burned up the 30days and then make another move. We had guys "temping" all over the boards ALL the time. It was a way of life for a lot of guys. Dunno about your boards,but our engineers extra boards in the Chicago terminals went pretty high, 15-18years to hold a decent slot. Most of the guys on it stayed for a while cuz you could make the really BIG $$$$ there. Personally, I didn't like ANY extra board. Once I was "old" enough to start owning regular jobs , I would bid on whatever I could get. Sure I got some crummy jobs, but I knew I would have regular days off and I could adjust my life to it. Some of the jobs weren't big payers but the hours were liveable and life could have some pattern. My wife & I(she was an educator)made enough money to pay tuitions,buy new cars and take nice vacations. Leave the extra boards to the guys who care more about the $$$$ than the quality of life. CT Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene
This has been very intriguing and educational.. Just a few more reasons I want nothing to do with working for the RR. Although all my coworkers and friends ask me why I don't get a RR job since I love trains so much, this just adds more reasons why it's not for me. Especially with a family. Copyright 2008 Jerry DeBene