WASHINGTON — The Surface Transportation Board fined Canadian National Railway Company $250,000 for “knowingly violating Board orders” regarding the reporting of street-crossing blockages in the Chicago area.
The Board also extended its oversight regarding the CN-EJ&E merger for an additional year. The fine is the first ordered by the Board since its inception in 1996.
The Board requires Canadian National to report every street-crossing blockage of 10 minutes or more as a condition of
the Board’s approval of its 2008 acquisition of the Elgin, Joliet and Eastern Railway Company. In its November and December 2009 monthly reports, the railroad reported a total of 14 blockages caused by stopped trains. But an independent audit conducted on behalf of the Board by its third-party consultant, HDR Inc., found 1,457 instances during that same period of crossings blocked for 10 minutes or more by stopped or slowly moving trains.
The Board held a hearing on April 28 to hear from both CN and the consultant.
In its decision, the Board found that the record “supports the conclusion that CN has knowingly violated the Board’s orders that CN report, on monthly and quarterly bases, the date and descriptive information for each crossing blockage exceeding 10 minutes in duration. CN’s alleged ‘good faith’ interpretation that the reporting requirements regarded only stopped trains is contradicted by both the CN staff admissions and the plain text of the Approval Decision.”