Railroads running again after Missouri river flooding

Ernie Perry 

After spending most of the Summer underwater, railroads near the Missouri river are returning to more normal service levels.

But as the waters recede, Union Pacific Railroad and BNSF Railway are lifting shipping embargoes and getting back to business as usual. The process is complicated and certainly not cheap — BNSF expects to spend more than $300 million to get its lines back in shape — but both railroads say they expect to wrap up all the flood-related work this fall.
For Omaha-based Union Pacific, the biggest problems were on the line between Omaha and the Kansas City area and the line between Kansas City and Jefferson City, Mo. About 13 miles of tracks around the Leavenworth, Kan., area were underwater for 26 days, and more than 21 miles were underwater on the Missouri line for just over three weeks. Trains started moving on both of those lines in late July.

For more information, read the full article in the Omaha World-Herald.

Recommended Posts

Freight Notes Uncategorized

Fall River Woes

Low water levels on the Mississippi River are slowing barge movements. To add to the frustration of the delays, there is an industry wide work force shortage, and the tow’s cost of operation continue and multiple with the delays.  Read the article at: https://www.farmprogress.com/harvest/its-disastrous-barge-captain-explains-transportation-woes-shallow-mississippi

 
Uncategorized

Kansas Creates Multimodal Transportation and Innovation Division

Kansas DOT is responding to changes in travel and freight movement to ensure their agency supports the existing and expected changes in transportation, communications, and IT technologies. Secretary Lorenz of Kansas DOT recently announced they are establishing the Multimodal Transportation and Innovation Division at KDOT. She added, this division, led by Cory Davis, will contain the Bureau of […]