Thread regarding Union Pacific Corp. layoffs

The Wall Street Journal Coverage of UPRR's Layoffs (October 2018)

500+200...

https://www.wsj.com/articles/union-pacific-to-lay-off-nearly-500-workers-1540319983

Union Pacific to Lay Off Nearly 500 Workers

PAUL ZIOBRO OCTOBER 23, 2018

A Union Pacific employee climbs on board a locomotive in a rail yard in Council Bluffs, Iowa,

A Union Pacific employee climbs on board a locomotive in a rail yard in Council Bluffs, Iowa,

Union Pacific Corp. plans to lay off about 500 employees before the end of the year, the first of several rounds of job cuts as the railroad implements a new operating plan to turn around its performance.

The company, one of two major freight railroads in the Western U.S., has been struggling this year with congestion and service issues that have depressed its profits.

The Omaha, Neb.-based company also plans to eliminate 200 contract positions, according to an internal memo reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. The job cuts will occur across the railroad network. Union Pacific had about 6,300 nonunion employees as of June 30.

“These steps are part of reducing our general and administrative support structure by roughly 30% by 2020,” Chief Executive Lance Fritz wrote in the memo Tuesday. “We will also need to drive efficiencies in other parts of the railroad.”

The layoffs were announced as part of other restructuring ahead of the company’s earnings announcement on Thursday. Those include consolidating operating regions from three to two, creating a centralized engineering organization and selling Selma Farm, a corporate retreat near St. Louis that the company inherited as part of a 1986 merger.

Union Pacific this month started implementing elements of a railroad operating plan that uses fewer assets and runs trains on set schedules to ease congestion on its network and improve its operating performance. The playbook mimics one developed by the late Hunter Harrison, who applied the practices at two major Canadian railroads before he moved to the Jacksonville, Fla.-based railroad CSX Corp. last year.

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Post ID: @OP+VMtsXmR

3 replies (most recent on top)

Funny how the place was running we’ll before the Sept 2017 slaughter. Run off the talent and demote those who weren’t pushed out, then wonder why the place is running into the ground. Makes perfect sense to try to do it again, since it worked so well last year.

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Post ID: @1soq+VMtsXmR

The current service issues were caused by the previous rounds of layoffs.

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Post ID: @tem+VMtsXmR

Gonna be big profits until trains go on the ground and people get killed. Railroads are a steady business with steady profits over time not a fast money investment like new tech corps. It's been around 160 years dont know what it will be like in 3 years. I'm thinking not good.

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Post ID: @nxu+VMtsXmR

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