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BNSF Railway

BNSF Railway (reporting mark BNSF) is the largest freight railroad in the United States. One of six North American Class I railroads, BNSF has 36,000 employees,[1] 33,400 miles (53,800 km) of track in 28 states, and over 8,000 locomotives.[2] It has three transcontinental routes that provide rail connections between the western and eastern United States. BNSF trains traveled over 169 million miles (272 million kilometers) in 2010, more than any other North American railroad.[3]

BNSF Railway
System map (trackage rights and former Montana Rail Link tracks in purple)
BNSF 7520, a GE ES44DC, in Mojave, California
Overview
Parent companyBerkshire Hathaway
HeadquartersFort Worth, Texas
Reporting markBNSF
LocaleWestern, Midwestern and Southern United States, Western Canada
Dates of operationSeptember 22, 1995; 28 years ago (1995-09-22)–present
PredecessorAtchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway
Burlington Northern Railroad
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Length33,400 miles (53,800 km)
Other
Websitebnsf.com

The BNSF Railway Company is the principal operating subsidiary of parent company Burlington Northern Santa Fe, LLC. Headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas, the railroad's parent company is a wholly owned subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway, Inc., of Omaha, Nebraska.[4] The current CEO is Kathryn Farmer.[5]

According to corporate press releases, the BNSF Railway is among the top transporters of intermodal freight in North America. It also hauls bulk cargo, including coal.

The creation of BNSF started with the formation of a holding company on September 22, 1995. This new holding company purchased the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway (often called the "Santa Fe") and Burlington Northern Railroad, and formally merged the railways into the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway on December 31, 1996.[6] On January 24, 2005, the railroad's name was officially changed to BNSF Railway Company using the initials of its original name.[7] Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway acquired BNSF Railway in February 2010, obtaining all of its shares and taking the company private.

BNSF and its chief competitor, the Union Pacific Railroad, have a duopoly on all transcontinental freight rail lines in the Western, Midwestern and Southern United States[8] and share trackage rights over thousands of miles of track.

History edit

 
BNSF Dash 9-44CW #1041 leading a manifest freight train northwest of Shallowater, Texas, running on former ATSF railroad tracks that run parallel to U.S. Route 84 as they cross the high plains of the Llano Estacado. Immediately behind the locomotive are cars painted in the old Burlington Northern livery.

BNSF's history dates back to 1849, when the Aurora Branch Railroad in Illinois and the Pacific Railroad of Missouri were formed by a group of millers who were granted a charter to build a 12-mile railroad that connected Aurora with the Galena & Chicago Union Rail Road.[9] The Aurora Branch eventually grew into the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, (CB&Q), a major component of successor Burlington Northern.[9] A portion of the Pacific Railroad became the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway (Frisco).[citation needed]

The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway (ATSF) was chartered in 1859. It built one of the first transcontinental railroads in North America, linking Chicago and Southern California; major branches led to Texas, Denver, and San Francisco. The Interstate Commerce Commission denied a proposed merger with the Southern Pacific Transportation Company in the 1980s.[citation needed]

The Burlington Northern Railroad (BN) was created in 1970 through the consolidation of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, the Great Northern Railway, the Northern Pacific Railway and the Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway. It absorbed the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway (Frisco) in 1980. Its main lines included Chicago-Seattle with branches to Texas (ex-Burlington) and Birmingham, Alabama (ex-Frisco), and access to the low-sulfur coal of Wyoming's Powder River Basin.[citation needed]

BN-ATSF merger edit

 
GE Dash 9-44CW 4464 leads a container train through Winslow, Arizona, in the rain on the BNSF Southern Transcon in Northern Arizona.

On June 30, 1994, BN and ATSF announced plans to merge.[10][page needed] They were the largest and smallest (by track mileage) of the "Super Seven", the seven largest of the then-twelve U.S. Class I railroads. The long-rumored announcement was delayed by a disagreement over the disposition of Santa Fe Pacific Gold Corporation, a gold mining subsidiary that ATSF agreed to sell to stockholders.[11] This announcement began the next wave of mergers, as the "Super Seven" were merged down to four in the next five years. The Illinois Central Railroad and Kansas City Southern Railway (KCS), two of the five "small" Class Is, announced on July 19 that the former would buy the latter,[12] but this plan was called off on October 25. The Union Pacific Railroad (UP), another major Western system, started a bidding war with BN for control of the SF on October 5.[13] The UP gave up on January 31, 1995, paving the way for the BN-ATSF merger.[14] Subsequently, the UP acquired the Southern Pacific Transportation Company (SP) in 1996, and Eastern U.S. systems CSX Transportation and Norfolk Southern Railway split Conrail in 1999.[citation needed]

 
Ex. Burlington Northern BNSF SD40-2, sitting in Galveston, Texas, alongside many other locomotives.

On February 7, 1995, BN and ATSF heads Gerald Grinstein and Robert D. Krebs both announced that shareholders had approved the plan, which would save overhead costs and combine BN's coal and ATSF's intermodal strengths. Although the two systems complemented each other with little overlap,[15] in contrast to the Santa Fe-Southern Pacific merger, which failed because it would have eliminated competition in many areas of the Southwest, BN and ATSF came to agreements with most other Class I's to keep them from opposing the merger. UP was satisfied with a single segment of trackage rights from Abilene, Kansas, to Superior, Nebraska, which BN and ATSF had both served. KCS gained haulage rights to several Midwest locations, including Omaha, East St. Louis, and Memphis, in exchange for BNSF getting similar access to New Orleans. SP, initially requesting far-reaching trackage rights throughout the West,[16] soon agreed on a reduced plan, whereby SP acquired trackage rights on ATSF for intermodal and automotive traffic to Chicago, and other trackage rights on ATSF in Kansas, south to Texas, and between Colorado and Texas. In exchange, SP assigned BNSF trackage rights over the former Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad between El Paso and Topeka and haulage rights to the Mexican border at Eagle Pass, Texas.[17] Regional Toledo, Peoria and Western Railway also obtained trackage rights over BN from Peoria to Galesburg, Illinois, a BN hub where it could interchange with SP[18] (which had rights on BN dating from 1990[19]). The Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) approved the BNSF merger on July 20, 1995 (with final approval on August 23), less than a month before UP announced on August 3 that it would acquire SP.[20] Parents Burlington Northern Inc. and Santa Fe Pacific Corporation were acquired on September 22, 1995, by the new Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation. The merger of the operating companies was held up by issues with unions;[21] ATSF merged on December 31, 1996, into BN, which was renamed the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway Company.[22]

Effect of UP-SP merger edit

Union Pacific's merger with Southern Pacific further enlarged the combined BNSF network. Unlike BN and ATSF, UP and SP had significant overlap, where the end of competition between the two risked creating a monopoly for freight carriage in much of the West. UP and BNSF announced in late September 1995 that, in exchange for BNSF not opposing the merger, it would obtain ownership of 335 miles (539 km) of line and about 3,500 miles (5,600 km) of trackage rights to reach these "two-to-one" shippers. Significant additions included rights over SP's Central Corridor from Denver via the Moffat Tunnel and Salt Lake City, and over Donner Pass, to the San Francisco Bay Area, with an alternate route through the Feather River Canyon along UP. The ATSF trackage in California's Central Valley was linked to BN's line into Oregon, through trackage rights over UP between Stockton and Keddie and acquisition of UP's section of the "Inside Gateway" to the beginning of BN trackage at Bieber. In Texas, BNSF received rights in several directions from the Houston area: west over UP to San Antonio, with a branch to Waco, and continuing over SP to Eagle Pass (replacing the haulage rights they had just obtained); south over UP to Brownsville; east over SP to New Orleans (including the purchase of this line east of Lake Charles); and northeast over SP to Memphis with a branch on UP to Little Rock. Ownership of a short connection between Waxahachie and Dallas also went from UP to BNSF. UP, in return, got a few short sections of trackage rights over BNSF, mainly connecting the SP at Chemult to the UP at Bend, Oregon, and connecting the SP at Mojave, California with existing UP rights on ATSF at Barstow, California.[23][24] On April 18, 1996, UP, BNSF, and the Chemical Manufacturers Association entered into an agreement giving BNSF rights over the UP line between Houston and East St. Louis, paralleling the Houston-Memphis SP line, and allowing BNSF to participate in the UP's plan for directional running, in which each line would serve through trains in only one direction.[25][26] The Surface Transportation Board, successor to the ICC, approved the UP-SP merger on July 3,[27] and UP control of SP took effect on September 11, 1996.[28] BNSF trackage rights operations began on the Central Corridor on October 10, and soon thereafter on other lines.[29]

BNSF continued projects started by its predecessors, most notably BN's work on reopening Stampede Pass. BN had closed Stampede Pass, the Northern Pacific Railway's main line across Washington, in 1984, in favor of the ex-Great Northern Railway's Stevens Pass. BN never abandoned the line and began rehabilitating it in early 1996, and the route reopened in early December, relieving the crowded Stevens Pass.[30] The ex-ATSF main line, now known as the Southern Transcon, has also seen steady work to add tracks, giving BNSF more capacity on this major intermodal route.[31]

Attempted merger with CN edit

On December 20, 1999, BNSF and the recently privatized Canadian National Railway announced plans (STB Finance Docket No. 33842 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine) to combine as subsidiaries of a new holding company, North American Railways, which would control about 50,000 miles (80,000 km) of railroad. With CN's lines located primarily in Canada and, through subsidiary Illinois Central Railroad, on a north–south corridor near BNSF's eastern edge, the two systems had little overlap. The combination would have benefited both companies by expanding available cash for capacity improvements, and allowing for longer single-system movements. Shippers and the Surface Transportation Board expressed concern and surprise about the timing, since the merger that produced BNSF had been the only one in the 1990s that did not cause severe deterioration in service.[32] The STB imposed on March 17, 2000, a 15-month moratorium (STB Ex Parte No. 582 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine) on mergers involving any two Class I railroads, citing widespread opposition not only to the merger but its effects, likely starting the final round of mergers into two big systems. BNSF and CN immediately turned to the U.S. Court of Appeals,[33] which on July 14 ruled that the STB's right to regulate mergers allowed a moratorium, and the two railroads called off the merger.[34] The STB released its final rules (STB Ex Parte No. 582 (Sub-No. 1) 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine) on June 11, 2001, requiring any new application to merge two Class I railroads, with the exception of smaller Kansas City Southern Railway, to demonstrate that competition would be preserved and address effects of defensive moves by other carriers.[35] No further Class I mergers would take place until the merger between Kansas City Southern and Canadian Pacific in April 2023, creating the Canadian Pacific Kansas City Railway.[36][37][38]

Acquisition by Berkshire Hathaway edit

The Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation was incorporated in 1993 to facilitate the merger of Burlington Northern, Incorporated, parent of the Burlington Northern Railroad, and Santa Fe Pacific Corporation, which owned the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway (Santa Fe).[39] The corporate merger was consummated on September 22, 1995, at which point shareholders of the previous companies became shareholders of BNSF and the two companies became wholly owned subsidiaries of BNSF.[39] In December 1996, the two holding companies and two railroads were formally merged, and in January 1998 the remaining intermediate holding company was folded into the railroad.

Robert D. Krebs of Santa Fe Pacific was president of BNSF from the merger until 1999, chief executive from the merger until 2000, and chairman from 1997 until 2002. He was succeeded in all three positions by Matthew K. Rose.

On November 3, 2009, Berkshire Hathaway made a $26 billion offer to buy the remaining 77.4% of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation it did not already own, valuing the purchase at $34 billion. The deal, which including Berkshire's previous investment and the assumption of $10 billion in Burlington Northern debt brings the total value to $44 billion.[40] Consummated February 12, 2010, it is the largest acquisition in Berkshire Hathaway's history.[41]

The deal was structured so that the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation would merge with and into R Acquisition Company, LLC, an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway. The deal closed on February 12, 2010, and at the same time, the now merged company changed its name to Burlington Northern Santa Fe, LLC that remains an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway.[42]

Acquisition of Montana Rail Link edit

In January 2022, BNSF agreed to purchase Montana Rail Link, a private company, for $2 billion, through an "early lease termination".[43][44][45] The return to BNSF control required the approval of the Surface Transportation Board,[46][47] which was approved on March 8, 2023.[48] The railroad had over 900 miles (1,400 km) of track,[49] and served 100 stations. The main classification yard was in Laurel, Montana, with smaller yards in Missoula, Billings, Bozeman and Helena.[50]

BNSF took over MRL operations on January 1, 2024.[51] This absorbed the MRL into BNSF, integrating MRL operations, technology and personnel. All 1,200 employees were offered employment with BNSF.[52]

Operations edit

Markets and services edit

 
The BNSF 'heritage' logo found on an EMD SD70MAC. The colors of the logo represented the railroads that are part of BNSF

With BNSF's large system, it hauls many different commodities, most notably coal and grain, as well as intermodal freight.

Predecessor Burlington Northern Railroad (BN) entered Wyoming's low-sulfur coal-rich Powder River Basin in the 1970s through construction of the Powder River Basin Joint Line with Union Pacific Railroad predecessor Chicago and North Western Transportation Company. Coal goes north in unit trains on the three-to-four-track Joint Line to Gillette or south to Orin, where older BN lines and other railroads take it in all directions to coal-burning power plants.[53]

BNSF serves over 1,500 grain elevators, located mostly in the Midwest on former BN lines.[54] Depending on where the markets are, this grain may move in any direction in unit trains or wait in silos for demand to rise. Most commonly, grain may move west on the Northern Transcon to the Pacific Northwest and its export terminals, or south to ports in Texas and the Gulf of Mexico.[53]

The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway's main contribution to BNSF was the Southern Transcon, a fast intermodal corridor connecting Southern California and Chicago. Most traffic is either trailers of trucking companies such as intermodal partner J. B. Hunt, or containers from the Ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles. The latter begins its trip on the triple-track Alameda Corridor, shared with the Union Pacific Railroad, and then follows BNSF rails from downtown Los Angeles.[53] Its route, the Southern Transcon, has been almost completely double-tracked, and triple-tracking has begun in areas such as Cajon Pass.

BNSF transports Boeing 737 fuselages from the Wichita, Kansas plant to Renton, Washington.[55]

Finances edit

BNSF Railway Company
 
FoundedDecember 31, 1996 as Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway
Key people
Kathryn Farmer (president and CEO)
Revenue US$25.888 billion (2022)[56]
 US8.6 billion (2022)[56]
 US$5.496 billion (2022)[56]
Total assets US$92.611 billion (2022)[56]
Total equity US$47.236 billion (2022)[56]
Number of employees
  36,250 (Dec 2022)[56]
ParentBerkshire Hathaway

Trackage edit

 
BNSF ES44DC 7402 leads a train of Boeing 737 fuselages at Greenwood, Nebraska in October 2014.
 
An eastbound BNSF Railway train passes some maintenance of way equipment in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, August 8, 2004. The lead unit is painted in the Heritage II scheme.

The BNSF Railway directly owns and operates track in 28 U.S. states: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. The railway also operates a small amount of track in Canada, including an approximate 30-mile (48 km) section that runs from the U.S.–Canada border to Vancouver, British Columbia, some tracks and a yard in Winnipeg, Manitoba, approximately 70 miles (110 km) of joint track with the Canadian National Railway, which runs south to the U.S. border at Emerson, Manitoba, and less than a kilometer of trackage at the border in Northgate, Saskatchewan.

For administrative purposes, BNSF is divided into two regions and ten operating divisions. The North Region includes the Montana, Northwest, Twin Cities, Heartland and Powder River divisions. The South Region includes the Red River, California, Chicago, Kansas and Southwest divisions. Each division is further divided into subdivisions, which represent segments of track ranging from 300-mile (480 km) mainlines to 10-mile (16 km) branch-lines. The former Texas and Gulf divisions were combined into the Red River Division, and the former Springfield and Nebraska divisions were combined into the Heartland Division, in the spring of 2016.

Not including second, third and fourth main-line trackage, yard trackage, and siding trackage, BNSF directly owns and operates over 24,000 miles (39,000 km) of track. When these additional tracks are counted, the length of track which the railway directly controls rises to more than 50,000 miles (80,000 km).

Additionally, BNSF Railway has gained trackage rights on more than 8,000 miles (13,000 km) of track throughout the United States and Canada. These rights allow the BNSF to operate its own trains with its own crews on competing railroads' main tracks. BNSF locomotives also occasionally show up on competitors' tracks throughout the United States and Canada by way of leases, mileage equalizations, and other contractual arrangements.

Yards and facilities edit

 
BNSF 880362, a DOT-111 tank car passing Glen Haven, Wisconsin, shows the new corporate logo on June 3, 2006.

BNSF operates various facilities all over the United States, plus a yard in Winnipeg, to support its transportation system. Facilities operated by the railway include yards and terminals throughout its rail network, system locomotive shops to perform locomotive service and maintenance, a centralized operations center for train dispatching and network operations monitoring in Fort Worth, and regional dispatching centers.

BNSF Railway also operates numerous transfer facilities throughout the western United States to facilitate the transfer of intermodal containers, trailers, and other freight traffic. BNSF Railway has direct control over a total of 33 intermodal hubs and 23 automotive distribution facilities.

The BNSF mechanical division operates 13 locomotive maintenance facilities that perform preventive maintenance, repairs and servicing of equipment. The largest of these facilities are located in Alliance, Nebraska and Argentine Yard in Kansas City, Kansas. The mechanical division also controls 46 additional facilities responsible for car maintenance and daily running repairs.

The BNSF system mechanical division, a subset of the mechanical division, operates two maintenance-of-way work equipment shops, responsible for performing repairs and preventive maintenance to BNSF's track and equipment, in Brainerd, Minnesota and Galesburg, Illinois. The system mechanical division also operates the Western Fruit Express Company's refrigerated car repair shop in Spokane, Washington.

On October 1, 2022, BNSF Railway announced plans to construct a $1.5 billion state of the art master planned rail facility in Southern California, the first such facility developed by a Class I railroad. The Barstow International Gateway, encompassing approximately 4,500 acres (1,800 ha, 7.0 sq mi), an integrated rail facility, will be located on the west side of Barstow, California. This new facility, when built, will enable more efficient rail operations from the Port of Los Angeles and Port of Long Beach to trains for transport through the Alameda Corridor onto the BNSF mainline to the new facility, and then move across the nation on the eastbound BNSF route network.[57][58]

 
Pasco Yard

Large freight car hump yards are located throughout the BNSF system.[59]

Location of some intermodal yards:

 
A second-generation Electro-Motive Diesel (EMD) yard-switching engine at Hobson Yard in Lincoln, Nebraska. This is EMD GP28-2 (GP28M) low emissions BNSF H4 1524.

Routes edit

  • The Northern Transcon runs between Seattle and Chicago. The route is a combination of parts of the old Great Northern, the Northern Pacific, and the Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway.
  • The Southern Transcon runs between Los Angeles and Chicago. The 2006 BNSF Annual Report states: "We also added about 33 miles of second main track on our main line between Chicago and Los Angeles. All but 51 miles (82 km) of this high-volume 2,200-mile (3,500 km) route were double track, as of the end of 2006. Last year, we ran 100 trains per day on this expanded main line, compared with 60 per day in 2000." Technically, it is not double tracked in mid-Kansas where two routes are used: Mulvane to Wichita to Newton to Emporia for primarily eastbound traffic; Emporia to El Dorado to Augusta to Mulvane for primarily westbound traffic. In 2008, BNSF completed nearly sixteen miles (26 km) of a third main track through Cajon Pass in Southern California, increasing capacity on the transcontinental main route between Chicago and Los Angeles from 100 to 150 trains per day. BNSF started adding a second main track in Abo Canyon (east of Belen, New Mexico) the largest bottleneck on the Transcon with grading in 2008–2009, bridges in 2010 and signal work in late 2010 or early 2011. Approximately 1.7 million cubic yards (1.3 million cubic metres) of rock need to be excavated, mostly by blasting. The 2008 BNSF Annual Report states: "Following completion of the Abo Canyon project scheduled in 2011, our 2,200‑mile [3,540 km] Transcontinental Corridor between Southern California and Chicago will have only about 30 miles [48 km] of single track."[citation needed]
  • The Powder River Basin supplies forty percent of the coal in the United States. The 2008 BNSF Annual Report states that the quadruple track project was completed.

Operating divisions edit

The BNSF system is divided into 13 divisions grouped into three regions. Each division includes numerous subdivisions, normally comprising a single main line and branches.[63] A fourteenth division, Colorado, has been consolidated with the Powder River Division, except for the Casper and Cody Subdivisions, which were transferred to the Montana Division.

Region Division States and provinces Headquarters Subdivisions[64] Notes
South California California, Nevada, Utah San Bernardino, CA Bakersfield, Cajon, Lucerne Valley, Mojave, Needles, San Bernardino, San Diego, Stockton
South Chicago Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Wisconsin Chicago, IL Aurora, Barstow, Brookfield, Chicago, Chillicothe, Marceline, Mendota, Ottumwa, Peoria, St. Croix, Thomas Hill
Central Gulf (Now the Red River Division) Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas Spring, TX Bay City, Conroe, Galveston, Houston, Lafayette, Lampasas, Longview, Mykawa, Silsbee
South Kansas Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas Kansas City, KS Arkansas City, Douglass, Emporia, Hereford, La Junta, Panhandle, Plainview, Slaton, Strong City, Topeka, Fort Scott
South Los Angeles California Los Angeles, CA Alameda Corridor, Harbor, San Bernardino
North Montana Montana, North Dakota, Wyoming Billings, MT Big Sandy, Broadview, Casper, Choteau, Circle, Cody, Colstrip, Crosby, Dickinson, Fairfield, Forsyth, Ft. Benton, Glasgow, Great Falls, Grenora, Helena, Hettinger, Hi Line, Kootenai River, Laurel, Lewistown, Milk River, Mobridge, MRL,[65] Niobe, Sarpy Line, Sweet Grass, Valier
Central Nebraska (Now Heartland Division) Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska Lincoln, NE Bayard, Beatrice, Bellwood, Council Bluffs, Creston, Des Moines, Giltner, Hastings, Lester, Napier, Neb City, Omaha, Ottumwa, Ravenna, Sioux City, St. Joseph, Wymore
North Northwest British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington Seattle, WA Bellingham, Burbank, Cherry Point, Coeur d'Alene, Columbia River, Fallbridge, Gateway, Kettle Falls, Lakeside, Newport, New Westminster, Oregon Trunk, Scenic, Seattle, Spokane, Stampede, Sumas, Yakima Valley
Central Powder River Colorado, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Wyoming Gillette, WY Akron, Angora, Big Horn, Black Hills, Boise City, Brush, Butte, Campbell, Canyon, Dalhart, Dutch, Front Range, Golden, Orin, Pikes Peak, Pueblo, Reno, Sand Hills, Spanish Peaks, Twin Peaks, Valley
South Southwest Arizona, California, Colorado, New Mexico, Texas Belen, NM Clovis, Coronado, Defiance, El Paso, Ennis, Gallup, Glorieta, Lee Ranch, Phoenix, Raton, Seligman, Springerville
Central Springfield (Now Heartland Division) Alabama, Florida, Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee Springfield, MO Afton, Amory, Avard, Beardstown, Pensacola, Birmingham, Cherokee, Cuba, Fort Scott, Hannibal, Lead Line, River, Thayer North, Thayer South, Yates City Includes most of the former St. Louis-San Francisco Railway
Central Texas (Now Red River Division). Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas Fort Worth, Texas BBRX, Chickasha, Creek, DFW, Ft. Worth, Madill, Red River Valley, Red Rock, Sooner, Venus, Wichita Falls
North Twin Cities Iowa, Manitoba, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin Minneapolis, MN Aberdeen, Allouez, Appleton, Brainerd, Browns Valley, Canton, Casco, Clifford Line, Corson, Devils Lake, Drayton, Glasston, Grand Forks, Hanley Falls, Hannah, Hib Tac, Hillsboro, Hinckley, Hunter, Jamestown, KO, Lakes, Madison, Marshall, Mayville, Midway, Mitchell, Monticello, Moorhead, Morris, Noyes, P Line, Prosper, Rolla, Staples, St. Paul, Warwick, Watertown, Wayzata, Westhope, Zap Line

Passenger train service edit

 
BNSF 5696 pulling a Metrolink train in the aftermath of the 2015 Oxnard train derailment

BNSF directly operates the BNSF Railway Line for Metra in Chicago and the Sounder in the Puget Sound Region — using BNSF-supplied crews in addition to running over its rails.[citation needed] The company's network additionally hosts other commuter trains, including: Metrolink in Southern California, and the Northstar Line in Minneapolis.

The line used by New Mexico Rail Runner Express was sold to the state of New Mexico, but BNSF retained all freight rights on the line and operates freight trains as needed.

Metra's cars that were originally purchased by BNSF predecessor Chicago Burlington & Quincy have letterboards above the doors. In about 2011, about 15 of the remaining cars had the original "BURLINGTON" lettering restored, while the rest now read "BNSF RAILWAY". Other Metra cars assigned to BNSF have the current BNSF "swoosh" logo next to the door.

Many Amtrak routes use BNSF rails: the Amtrak Cascades, California Zephyr, Carl Sandburg, Coast Starlight, Empire Builder, Heartland Flyer, Illinois Zephyr, Lincoln Service, Pacific Surfliner, San Joaquin, Southwest Chief, Sunset Limited, and Texas Eagle.

After the 2015 Oxnard train derailment, BNSF loaned 40 of their AC4400CWs to Metrolink while their Rotem cab cars received upgrades. These 40 units were converted to PTC. The locomotives have since been returned after the cab cars went back into service.[citation needed]

Although it does not have a steam program like the Union Pacific, the BNSF has allowed for the Southern Pacific 4449, St. Louis–San Francisco 1522, Santa Fe 3751, Santa Fe 2926, Spokane, Portland and Seattle 700 and Milwaukee Road 261 steam locomotives to operate excursions over their rails.

Safety edit

BNSF has received E.H. Harriman Award for safety multiple times. But a number of accidents and incidents have occurred on the railway since its inception.[citation needed]

As one of the leading supporters of the Operation Lifesaver program to promote safety at railway crossings and rights-of-way, the BNSF Railway, in 2000, established a grade-crossing closure program. This program, in which BNSF works with communities and landowners to identify unnecessary or redundant crossings, has helped close more than 2,900 of BNSF's railway crossings throughout the United States. Due to the program, BNSF has been the industry leader in lowering the number of grade-crossing collisions.

BNSF contracts with News Link, a small business in Lincoln, Nebraska, to publish employee newsletters focused on safety for some of the railroad's divisions and shops. These newsletters vary in length from four to 28 pages, published ranging from monthly to quarterly.

In 2014, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration ordered BNSF to pay over $526,000 to workers who had been terminated in 2010 and 2011 after revealing workplace injuries at the terminal in Havre, Montana, which is in contravention of provisions of the Federal Railroad Safety Act protecting whistleblowers.[66]

In August 2016, a "huge number" of used hypodermic drug needles were found along a BNSF railroad bridge in between the University Park and St. Johns neighborhoods of Portland, Oregon that has become an encampment for homeless individuals. According to a conductor quoted by The Oregonian "Pretty much see people down there at all hours of the night. We report them but nobody does anything."[67]

In March 2024 the company furloughed 360 mechanical workers, a small percentage of the railroad’s 37,000 employees, but enough to encourage a condemning letter from the Transportation Trades Department labor coalition calling on the Federal Railroad Administrator to increase inspections. The unions maintain that these cuts will make it difficult for BNSF to finish needed repairs and inspections of its rolling stock.[68] In a letter dated March 2024 sent to the FRA, the Shop Craft Unions at BNSF urged the Administration look at “…safety and maintenance issues” in the railroad industry, presenting evidence of a 41% decrease in repair and maintenance departments since 2015. BNSF shippers complain that shipments to the US Northwest have seen delays, most citing lack of enough crew as the reason. They also complained of high rates for secondary shuttle freight.[69]

Equipment edit

According to the 2007 BNSF Annual Report, at the end of 2007 the railway had more than 40,000 employees; 6,400 locomotives (8,359 as of 2018); and 85,338 freight cars (72,369 as of 2018).

At the end of 2007, the average age (from date of manufacture) was 15 years for the BNSF's locomotive fleet and 14 years for the freight car fleet.

On January 24, 2006, BNSF announced a US$2.4 billion program of infrastructure upgrades for 2006. The upgrade program includes: double- and triple-tracking 40 miles (64 km) of track and a second mainline track through New Mexico's Abo Canyon on the former ATSF transcontinental line; expanding the Lincoln, Nebraska, classification yard and double- and triple-tracking 50 miles (80 km) of track in Wyoming's Powder River Basin region; expansions at eight of the railroad's larger intermodal facilities, and extending many sidings and expanding and improving refueling facilities. In making the announcement, BNSF chairman Matthew K. Rose cited improvements in the company's return on invested capital and expressed hope for continued improvement.[70] In March 2008, the railroad was completing the triple-tracking of Cajon Pass in California, creating four tracks through the pass—three BNSF (former Santa Fe and newly installed) and one Union Pacific (former Southern Pacific).

Paint schemes edit

Most of BNSF's high-horsepower road locomotives are painted in "Heritage" schemes – primarily based on BN predecessor Great Northern Railway's colors of Omaha Orange and Pullman Green, with yellow striping and silver underframes. Since 2005, BNSF's locomotives feature black instead of dark green paint.

Many locomotives retain their original paint schemes, but this is gradually changing, as these units are now either being retired, or rebuilt and repainted in the Heritage III and Heritage IV schemes, respectively.

The first locomotive to bear BNSF lettering was BN SD70MAC No. 9647, introduced in late August 1995, just as the Interstate Commerce Commission was approving the merger. VMV Enterprises in Paducah, Kentucky painted it in a one-of-a-kind commemorative scheme, combining Santa Fe's "Warbonnet" with BN's "Executive" colors of dark "Grinstein green" and cream. It was nicknamed the "vomit bonnet" by railfans. "BNSF" replaced "SANTA FE" on the front of the unit, and "Burlington Northern Santa Fe" was painted on the side.[71] The locomotive has since been repainted into the standard Heritage III livery.

 
BNSF logo adopted in 1996

By January 1996, BNSF had begun painting locomotives originally ordered for BN and ATSF patched with “BNSF” on the front and sides.[72] Then, in late May, the company introduced a new design on BN SD60M 9297, painted mainly in BN predecessor Great Northern Railway's pre-1967 colors of orange and dark "Pullman green," but also incorporating red and silver, and said to represent all major BN predecessors and Santa Fe. On the front was a new logo, placing "Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway" in the Santa Fe cross. Some of the striping details were different on each side,[73] and employees voted for the simpler right-side design, which, with some minor changes, became the new scheme,[74] replacing the BN colors. However, president and CEO Robert Krebs said the railroad was big enough for two designs, and Santa Fe's "Warbonnet" (with "BNSF" instead of "Santa Fe" on the front[75]) remained alongside the new Heritage I scheme.[76]

On January 24, 2005, as part of its tenth-anniversary celebration, the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway was renamed BNSF Railway and adopted a new logo.[77] By March, the logo had been applied to the sides and fronts of six ES44DCs,[78] and on April 11, BNSF officially chose the design it had applied to No. 7701.[79] The New Image scheme is also referred to as Heritage III.[80]

Since 2006, BNSF's locomotives designated for yard work or local trains have been painted in the Heritage IV scheme. Somewhat of a simplified form of the Heritage III scheme, Heritage IV is virtually identical to the original Heritage I scheme, with black instead of dark green, and the current BNSF logo.

 
A BNSF train crosses Lake Ashtabula on the Sheyenne River west of Luverne, North Dakota. The 2,736 ft (834 m) Sheyenne River Bridge was erected in 1912 by the Great Northern Railway.[81] The North Country Trail, a 4,600 mi (7,400 km) recreational trail, passes beneath the bridge.[82]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "LLC 12.31.20 10K" (PDF). BNSF Railway 2020 10-K.
  2. ^ "BNSF – Fact Sheet" (PDF).
  3. ^ "TABLE 2-9 OPERATIONAL DATA, BY RAILROAD, 2010". Railroad Safety Statistics: 2010 Annual Report. U.S. Dept. of Transport. April 4, 2012.
  4. ^ "Financial Information". BNSF website.
  5. ^ . BNSF Railway and Burlington Northern Santa Fe, LLC, Officers. Archived from the original on June 27, 2021. Retrieved June 20, 2021.
  6. ^ EuDaly, Kevin; Jessup, Steve; Schafer, Mike; Boyd, Jim; McBride, Andrew; Glischinski, Steve (2016). The Complete Book of North American Railroading. New York, NY: Crestline. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-7858-3389-5.
  7. ^ BNSF Railway (January 24, 2005). . Archived from the original on November 29, 2005. Retrieved April 19, 2006.
  8. ^ Tully, Shawn (June 4, 2014). "The railroad with better profit margins than Google". Fortune. Retrieved August 10, 2021.
  9. ^ a b Middleton, William D.; MORGAN, RICK; Diehl, Roberta L. (2007). Encyclopedia of North American Railroads. Bloomington, Idiana: Indiana University Press. p. 220. ISBN 978-0-253-02799-3.
  10. ^ Bryant, Keith; Frailey, Fred W. (2020). History of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-1-4962-2271-8.
  11. ^ "Railroad News". Trains. September 1994. pp. 14–16.
  12. ^ Michael W. Blaszak, Illinois Central, KCS seek a potent union, Trains, October 1994, pp. 14–16
  13. ^ Don Phillips, UP vies for Santa Fe; IC+KCS called off, Trains, January 1995, pp. 20–24
  14. ^ Arrivals & Departures, Trains, April 1995, p. 18
  15. ^ Kevin P. Keefe, Will Rob Krebs win the West?, Trains, May 1995, pp. 14–15
  16. ^ Scanner, Trains, June 1995, p. 21
  17. ^ J. David Ingles, BN-Santa Fe widens its lanes, Trains, July 1995, pp. 22–23
  18. ^ News Photos, Trains, July 1996, p. 30
  19. ^ Interstate Commerce Commission, Finance Docket No. 31730 (Sub-No. 1)[permanent dead link], August 25, 1995
  20. ^ Arrivals & Departures, Trains, October 1995, p. 18
  21. ^ Scanner, Trains, June 1996, p. 23
  22. ^ Securities and Exchange Commission, Form 10-K: Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation for the year ended December 31, 2007
  23. ^ Keefe, Kevin P. (December 1995). "Carving up the West". Trains. pp. 16–18.
  24. ^ Surface Transportation Board, Finance Docket No. 32760, August 6, 1996
  25. ^ Stephens, Bill (July 1996). "Is Conrail a UP spoiler?". Trains. pp. 19–22.
  26. ^ Surface Transportation Board, Finance Docket No. 32760 (Sub-No. 19)[permanent dead link], September 9, 1996
  27. ^ "Arrivals & Departures". Trains. September 1996. p. 20.
  28. ^ Arrivals & Departures, Trains, December 1996, p. 22
  29. ^ Ingles, J. David (January 1997). "BNSF begins service on UP merger routes". Trains. pp. 20–21.
  30. ^ Kelly, Bruce (November 1997). "The thunder returns to Stampede Pass". Trains. pp. 40–51.
  31. ^ Lustig, David (February 1995). "Merger or no, Santa Fe has work to do". Trains. pp. 20–22.
  32. ^ Michael W. Blaszak, CN, BNSF seek to combine; timing curious, Trains, March 2000, pp. 16–18
  33. ^ Michael W. Blaszak, STB slams on the brakes on mergers, Trains, June 2000, pp. 16–17
  34. ^ Michael W. Blaszak, Stymied: BNSF, CN won't fight on, Trains, October 2000, pp. 18–19
  35. ^ Michael W. Blaszak, Lawyers, start your engines!, Trains, September 2001, pp. 16–17
  36. ^ "CP-KCS Merger Proceeding Moves Forward". February 19, 2022.
  37. ^ Franz, Justin (March 15, 2023). "LIVE UPDATES: Regulators Approve CP-KCS Merger". Railfan & Railroad Magazine. Retrieved March 15, 2023.
  38. ^ "Regulators approve Canadian Pacific-Kansas City Southern merger (updated)". Trains. Retrieved March 15, 2023.
  39. ^ a b "About BNSF – Contact Us – BNSF". BNSF Railway. from the original on December 31, 2009.
  40. ^ "Berkshire Bets on U.S. With a Railroad Purchase". November 3, 2009. from the original on July 5, 2017.
  41. ^ Frye, Andrew (November 3, 2009). "Berkshire Buys Burlington in Buffett's Biggest Deal (Update5)". Bloomberg. from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved December 20, 2012.
  42. ^ BNSF Railway Company (March 1, 2013). "FORM 10-K" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on September 13, 2017. Retrieved September 13, 2017.
  43. ^ "Montana Rail Link to bow out". Trains. April 2022. p. 4.
  44. ^ "MRL employees advised rail sold to BNSF". NBC Montana. January 10, 2022. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  45. ^ Stephens, Bill. "BNSF had to undo Montana Rail Link Lease." Trains, May 2022, p. 11.
  46. ^ Franz, Justin (January 11, 2022). "Washington Companies to terminate Montana Rail Link lease". Montana Free Press. Retrieved January 12, 2022.
  47. ^ "BNSF to take over Montana Rail Link after leasing agreement terminated". Missoula Current. January 14, 2022. Retrieved January 17, 2022.
  48. ^ UPDATE: STB Approves MRL Lease Termination, BNSF to Takeover by Year's End Railfan & Railroad March 8, 2023
  49. ^ "Freight train derails into Clark Fork River". Coeur d'Alene Press. April 3, 2023. Retrieved April 3, 2023.
  50. ^ For a general guide to the railroad, see Del Grosso, "Montana Rail Link Trackside Guide and Locomotive Directory" (1992, Great Northern Pacific Publications).
  51. ^ Stephens, Bill (June 16, 2023). "BNSF Railway sets date for taking control of Montana Rail Link". Trains. Retrieved September 27, 2023.
  52. ^ "Montana Rail Link to meld into BNSF come 2024 - RailPrime | ProgressiveRailroading". RailPrime. Retrieved January 1, 2024.
  53. ^ a b c Fred W. Frailey, The Empire of BNSF, , June 2001, pp. 30–41
  54. ^ . Archived from the original on May 9, 2009. Retrieved May 1, 2009.
  55. ^ Steve Wilhelm, BNSF adding rail cars to meet Boeing 737 transport demand, Puget Sound Business Journal, Updated: Feb 11, 2013
  56. ^ a b c d e f "BNSF Railway Company 2022 10-K" (PDF).
  57. ^ "BNSF Railway to build new state-of-the-art-rail facility in Barstow, California". bnsf.com. Retrieved October 5, 2022.
  58. ^ "BNSF Railway to build integrated rail facility in Barstow, California". railway-news.com. October 3, 2022. Retrieved October 22, 2022.
  59. ^ BNSF Railway (October 4, 2021). "BNSF Hump Yards".
  60. ^ "BNSF Chicago (Cicero)".
  61. ^ Rob Roberts (October 17, 2013). "BNSF CEO: 'Warren Bucks' build freight mode of future". Retrieved September 6, 2020.
  62. ^ "BNSF Logistics Park, Chicago". January 2020.
  63. ^ "BNSF Subdivision Map" (PDF). BNSF Railway. Retrieved August 3, 2018.
  64. ^ BNSF employee timetables, 2006–2008
  65. ^ BNSF Railway Twin Cities Division, Northern Light 2012-03-01 at the Wayback Machine (employee newsletter), March 2009: "The Mobridge Subdivision from Aberdeen to Hettinger ceded from Twin Cities Division to the Montana Division Jan. 20 to break down territory in the region, allowing for better coverage."
  66. ^ "Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway ordered by US Department of Labor's OSHA to pay more than $526,000 to terminated workers". Occupational Health & Safety Administration, US Department of Labour. April 23, 2014.
  67. ^ Acker, Lizzy (August 17, 2016). "Numerous used hypodermic needles found in University Park". The Oregonian. Retrieved December 29, 2019.
  68. ^ "Latest freight railroad layoffs and Wall Street pressure renew concerns about safety and service". AP News. March 1, 2024. Retrieved March 13, 2024.
  69. ^ Kenn, Mary (April 2, 2024). "Are Railroad Layoffs Compromising Safety and Service?". DTN Progressive Farmer.
  70. ^ (Press release). January 24, 2006. Archived from the original on February 5, 2010. Retrieved January 30, 2006.
  71. ^ Kevin P. Keefe and Steve Glischinski, Meanwhile, back in Fort Worth..., Trains, November 1995, pp. 18-18A
  72. ^ Burlington Northern Santa Fe: A gradual change of image, Trains, April 1996, p. 17
  73. ^ Steve Glischinski, It's 'all in the family' with the latest BNSF locomotive paint scheme, Trains, August 1996, pp. 16–17
  74. ^ News Photos, Trains, October 1996, p. 28
  75. ^ Railroad News, Trains, October 1997, pp. 30–31
  76. ^ Michael W. Blaszak, BNSF strives for an effective blend, Trains, April 1997, p. 43
  77. ^ BNSF Adopts New Corporate and Subsidiary Logos and Changes Name of Railway Subsidiary as Part of Tenth Anniversary Celebration November 29, 2005, at the Wayback Machine, January 24, 2005
  78. ^ Front-runner for new BNSF image, Trains, June 2005, p. 20
  79. ^ BNSF selects new livery; is it "Heritage III"?, Trains, July 2005, p. 25
  80. ^ Another BNSF "one of a kind?", Trains, August 2005, p. 25
  81. ^ "BNSF – Sheyenne River Bridge". Bridgehunter.com. July 22, 2013.
  82. ^ . North County Trail Association – Sheyenne River Valley Chapter. Archived from the original on August 11, 2015. Retrieved August 1, 2015.

References edit

  • BNSF Railway (January 24, 2005), . Retrieved January 25, 2005.
  • BNSF Railway (February 9, 2005), . Retrieved February 10, 2005.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • BNSF Railway SEC Filings

bnsf, railway, this, article, about, freight, railroad, company, metra, line, operated, railroad, under, contract, bnsf, line, reporting, mark, bnsf, largest, freight, railroad, united, states, north, american, class, railroads, bnsf, employees, miles, track, . This article is about the freight railroad company For the Metra line operated by the railroad under contract see BNSF Line BNSF Railway reporting mark BNSF is the largest freight railroad in the United States One of six North American Class I railroads BNSF has 36 000 employees 1 33 400 miles 53 800 km of track in 28 states and over 8 000 locomotives 2 It has three transcontinental routes that provide rail connections between the western and eastern United States BNSF trains traveled over 169 million miles 272 million kilometers in 2010 more than any other North American railroad 3 BNSF RailwaySystem map trackage rights and former Montana Rail Link tracks in purple BNSF 7520 a GE ES44DC in Mojave CaliforniaOverviewParent companyBerkshire HathawayHeadquartersFort Worth TexasReporting markBNSFLocaleWestern Midwestern and Southern United States Western CanadaDates of operationSeptember 22 1995 28 years ago 1995 09 22 presentPredecessorAtchison Topeka and Santa Fe RailwayBurlington Northern RailroadTechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeLength33 400 miles 53 800 km OtherWebsitebnsf wbr com The BNSF Railway Company is the principal operating subsidiary of parent company Burlington Northern Santa Fe LLC Headquartered in Fort Worth Texas the railroad s parent company is a wholly owned subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway Inc of Omaha Nebraska 4 The current CEO is Kathryn Farmer 5 According to corporate press releases the BNSF Railway is among the top transporters of intermodal freight in North America It also hauls bulk cargo including coal The creation of BNSF started with the formation of a holding company on September 22 1995 This new holding company purchased the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway often called the Santa Fe and Burlington Northern Railroad and formally merged the railways into the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway on December 31 1996 6 On January 24 2005 the railroad s name was officially changed to BNSF Railway Company using the initials of its original name 7 Warren Buffett s Berkshire Hathaway acquired BNSF Railway in February 2010 obtaining all of its shares and taking the company private BNSF and its chief competitor the Union Pacific Railroad have a duopoly on all transcontinental freight rail lines in the Western Midwestern and Southern United States 8 and share trackage rights over thousands of miles of track Contents 1 History 1 1 BN ATSF merger 1 2 Effect of UP SP merger 1 3 Attempted merger with CN 1 4 Acquisition by Berkshire Hathaway 1 5 Acquisition of Montana Rail Link 2 Operations 2 1 Markets and services 2 2 Finances 2 3 Trackage 2 4 Yards and facilities 2 5 Routes 2 6 Operating divisions 2 7 Passenger train service 2 8 Safety 2 9 Equipment 3 Paint schemes 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory editMain articles Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway and Burlington Northern Railroad nbsp BNSF Dash 9 44CW 1041 leading a manifest freight train northwest of Shallowater Texas running on former ATSF railroad tracks that run parallel to U S Route 84 as they cross the high plains of the Llano Estacado Immediately behind the locomotive are cars painted in the old Burlington Northern livery BNSF s history dates back to 1849 when the Aurora Branch Railroad in Illinois and the Pacific Railroad of Missouri were formed by a group of millers who were granted a charter to build a 12 mile railroad that connected Aurora with the Galena amp Chicago Union Rail Road 9 The Aurora Branch eventually grew into the Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad CB amp Q a major component of successor Burlington Northern 9 A portion of the Pacific Railroad became the St Louis San Francisco Railway Frisco citation needed The Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway ATSF was chartered in 1859 It built one of the first transcontinental railroads in North America linking Chicago and Southern California major branches led to Texas Denver and San Francisco The Interstate Commerce Commission denied a proposed merger with the Southern Pacific Transportation Company in the 1980s citation needed The Burlington Northern Railroad BN was created in 1970 through the consolidation of the Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad the Great Northern Railway the Northern Pacific Railway and the Spokane Portland and Seattle Railway It absorbed the St Louis San Francisco Railway Frisco in 1980 Its main lines included Chicago Seattle with branches to Texas ex Burlington and Birmingham Alabama ex Frisco and access to the low sulfur coal of Wyoming s Powder River Basin citation needed BN ATSF merger edit nbsp GE Dash 9 44CW 4464 leads a container train through Winslow Arizona in the rain on the BNSF Southern Transcon in Northern Arizona On June 30 1994 BN and ATSF announced plans to merge 10 page needed They were the largest and smallest by track mileage of the Super Seven the seven largest of the then twelve U S Class I railroads The long rumored announcement was delayed by a disagreement over the disposition of Santa Fe Pacific Gold Corporation a gold mining subsidiary that ATSF agreed to sell to stockholders 11 This announcement began the next wave of mergers as the Super Seven were merged down to four in the next five years The Illinois Central Railroad and Kansas City Southern Railway KCS two of the five small Class Is announced on July 19 that the former would buy the latter 12 but this plan was called off on October 25 The Union Pacific Railroad UP another major Western system started a bidding war with BN for control of the SF on October 5 13 The UP gave up on January 31 1995 paving the way for the BN ATSF merger 14 Subsequently the UP acquired the Southern Pacific Transportation Company SP in 1996 and Eastern U S systems CSX Transportation and Norfolk Southern Railway split Conrail in 1999 citation needed nbsp Ex Burlington Northern BNSF SD40 2 sitting in Galveston Texas alongside many other locomotives On February 7 1995 BN and ATSF heads Gerald Grinstein and Robert D Krebs both announced that shareholders had approved the plan which would save overhead costs and combine BN s coal and ATSF s intermodal strengths Although the two systems complemented each other with little overlap 15 in contrast to the Santa Fe Southern Pacific merger which failed because it would have eliminated competition in many areas of the Southwest BN and ATSF came to agreements with most other Class I s to keep them from opposing the merger UP was satisfied with a single segment of trackage rights from Abilene Kansas to Superior Nebraska which BN and ATSF had both served KCS gained haulage rights to several Midwest locations including Omaha East St Louis and Memphis in exchange for BNSF getting similar access to New Orleans SP initially requesting far reaching trackage rights throughout the West 16 soon agreed on a reduced plan whereby SP acquired trackage rights on ATSF for intermodal and automotive traffic to Chicago and other trackage rights on ATSF in Kansas south to Texas and between Colorado and Texas In exchange SP assigned BNSF trackage rights over the former Chicago Rock Island and Pacific Railroad between El Paso and Topeka and haulage rights to the Mexican border at Eagle Pass Texas 17 Regional Toledo Peoria and Western Railway also obtained trackage rights over BN from Peoria to Galesburg Illinois a BN hub where it could interchange with SP 18 which had rights on BN dating from 1990 19 The Interstate Commerce Commission ICC approved the BNSF merger on July 20 1995 with final approval on August 23 less than a month before UP announced on August 3 that it would acquire SP 20 Parents Burlington Northern Inc and Santa Fe Pacific Corporation were acquired on September 22 1995 by the new Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation The merger of the operating companies was held up by issues with unions 21 ATSF merged on December 31 1996 into BN which was renamed the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway Company 22 Effect of UP SP merger edit Union Pacific s merger with Southern Pacific further enlarged the combined BNSF network Unlike BN and ATSF UP and SP had significant overlap where the end of competition between the two risked creating a monopoly for freight carriage in much of the West UP and BNSF announced in late September 1995 that in exchange for BNSF not opposing the merger it would obtain ownership of 335 miles 539 km of line and about 3 500 miles 5 600 km of trackage rights to reach these two to one shippers Significant additions included rights over SP s Central Corridor from Denver via the Moffat Tunnel and Salt Lake City and over Donner Pass to the San Francisco Bay Area with an alternate route through the Feather River Canyon along UP The ATSF trackage in California s Central Valley was linked to BN s line into Oregon through trackage rights over UP between Stockton and Keddie and acquisition of UP s section of the Inside Gateway to the beginning of BN trackage at Bieber In Texas BNSF received rights in several directions from the Houston area west over UP to San Antonio with a branch to Waco and continuing over SP to Eagle Pass replacing the haulage rights they had just obtained south over UP to Brownsville east over SP to New Orleans including the purchase of this line east of Lake Charles and northeast over SP to Memphis with a branch on UP to Little Rock Ownership of a short connection between Waxahachie and Dallas also went from UP to BNSF UP in return got a few short sections of trackage rights over BNSF mainly connecting the SP at Chemult to the UP at Bend Oregon and connecting the SP at Mojave California with existing UP rights on ATSF at Barstow California 23 24 On April 18 1996 UP BNSF and the Chemical Manufacturers Association entered into an agreement giving BNSF rights over the UP line between Houston and East St Louis paralleling the Houston Memphis SP line and allowing BNSF to participate in the UP s plan for directional running in which each line would serve through trains in only one direction 25 26 The Surface Transportation Board successor to the ICC approved the UP SP merger on July 3 27 and UP control of SP took effect on September 11 1996 28 BNSF trackage rights operations began on the Central Corridor on October 10 and soon thereafter on other lines 29 BNSF continued projects started by its predecessors most notably BN s work on reopening Stampede Pass BN had closed Stampede Pass the Northern Pacific Railway s main line across Washington in 1984 in favor of the ex Great Northern Railway s Stevens Pass BN never abandoned the line and began rehabilitating it in early 1996 and the route reopened in early December relieving the crowded Stevens Pass 30 The ex ATSF main line now known as the Southern Transcon has also seen steady work to add tracks giving BNSF more capacity on this major intermodal route 31 Attempted merger with CN edit On December 20 1999 BNSF and the recently privatized Canadian National Railway announced plans STB Finance Docket No 33842 Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine to combine as subsidiaries of a new holding company North American Railways which would control about 50 000 miles 80 000 km of railroad With CN s lines located primarily in Canada and through subsidiary Illinois Central Railroad on a north south corridor near BNSF s eastern edge the two systems had little overlap The combination would have benefited both companies by expanding available cash for capacity improvements and allowing for longer single system movements Shippers and the Surface Transportation Board expressed concern and surprise about the timing since the merger that produced BNSF had been the only one in the 1990s that did not cause severe deterioration in service 32 The STB imposed on March 17 2000 a 15 month moratorium STB Ex Parte No 582 Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine on mergers involving any two Class I railroads citing widespread opposition not only to the merger but its effects likely starting the final round of mergers into two big systems BNSF and CN immediately turned to the U S Court of Appeals 33 which on July 14 ruled that the STB s right to regulate mergers allowed a moratorium and the two railroads called off the merger 34 The STB released its final rules STB Ex Parte No 582 Sub No 1 Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine on June 11 2001 requiring any new application to merge two Class I railroads with the exception of smaller Kansas City Southern Railway to demonstrate that competition would be preserved and address effects of defensive moves by other carriers 35 No further Class I mergers would take place until the merger between Kansas City Southern and Canadian Pacific in April 2023 creating the Canadian Pacific Kansas City Railway 36 37 38 Acquisition by Berkshire Hathaway edit The Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation was incorporated in 1993 to facilitate the merger of Burlington Northern Incorporated parent of the Burlington Northern Railroad and Santa Fe Pacific Corporation which owned the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Santa Fe 39 The corporate merger was consummated on September 22 1995 at which point shareholders of the previous companies became shareholders of BNSF and the two companies became wholly owned subsidiaries of BNSF 39 In December 1996 the two holding companies and two railroads were formally merged and in January 1998 the remaining intermediate holding company was folded into the railroad Robert D Krebs of Santa Fe Pacific was president of BNSF from the merger until 1999 chief executive from the merger until 2000 and chairman from 1997 until 2002 He was succeeded in all three positions by Matthew K Rose On November 3 2009 Berkshire Hathaway made a 26 billion offer to buy the remaining 77 4 of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation it did not already own valuing the purchase at 34 billion The deal which including Berkshire s previous investment and the assumption of 10 billion in Burlington Northern debt brings the total value to 44 billion 40 Consummated February 12 2010 it is the largest acquisition in Berkshire Hathaway s history 41 The deal was structured so that the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation would merge with and into R Acquisition Company LLC an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway The deal closed on February 12 2010 and at the same time the now merged company changed its name to Burlington Northern Santa Fe LLC that remains an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway 42 Acquisition of Montana Rail Link edit In January 2022 BNSF agreed to purchase Montana Rail Link a private company for 2 billion through an early lease termination 43 44 45 The return to BNSF control required the approval of the Surface Transportation Board 46 47 which was approved on March 8 2023 48 The railroad had over 900 miles 1 400 km of track 49 and served 100 stations The main classification yard was in Laurel Montana with smaller yards in Missoula Billings Bozeman and Helena 50 BNSF took over MRL operations on January 1 2024 51 This absorbed the MRL into BNSF integrating MRL operations technology and personnel All 1 200 employees were offered employment with BNSF 52 Operations editMarkets and services edit nbsp The BNSF heritage logo found on an EMD SD70MAC The colors of the logo represented the railroads that are part of BNSF With BNSF s large system it hauls many different commodities most notably coal and grain as well as intermodal freight Predecessor Burlington Northern Railroad BN entered Wyoming s low sulfur coal rich Powder River Basin in the 1970s through construction of the Powder River Basin Joint Line with Union Pacific Railroad predecessor Chicago and North Western Transportation Company Coal goes north in unit trains on the three to four track Joint Line to Gillette or south to Orin where older BN lines and other railroads take it in all directions to coal burning power plants 53 BNSF serves over 1 500 grain elevators located mostly in the Midwest on former BN lines 54 Depending on where the markets are this grain may move in any direction in unit trains or wait in silos for demand to rise Most commonly grain may move west on the Northern Transcon to the Pacific Northwest and its export terminals or south to ports in Texas and the Gulf of Mexico 53 The Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway s main contribution to BNSF was the Southern Transcon a fast intermodal corridor connecting Southern California and Chicago Most traffic is either trailers of trucking companies such as intermodal partner J B Hunt or containers from the Ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles The latter begins its trip on the triple track Alameda Corridor shared with the Union Pacific Railroad and then follows BNSF rails from downtown Los Angeles 53 Its route the Southern Transcon has been almost completely double tracked and triple tracking has begun in areas such as Cajon Pass BNSF transports Boeing 737 fuselages from the Wichita Kansas plant to Renton Washington 55 Finances edit BNSF Railway Company nbsp FoundedDecember 31 1996 as Burlington Northern and Santa Fe RailwayKey peopleKathryn Farmer president and CEO Revenue nbsp US 25 888 billion 2022 56 Operating income nbsp US8 6 billion 2022 56 Net income nbsp US 5 496 billion 2022 56 Total assets nbsp US 92 611 billion 2022 56 Total equity nbsp US 47 236 billion 2022 56 Number of employees nbsp 36 250 Dec 2022 56 ParentBerkshire Hathaway Trackage edit nbsp BNSF ES44DC 7402 leads a train of Boeing 737 fuselages at Greenwood Nebraska in October 2014 nbsp An eastbound BNSF Railway train passes some maintenance of way equipment in Prairie du Chien Wisconsin August 8 2004 The lead unit is painted in the Heritage II scheme The BNSF Railway directly owns and operates track in 28 U S states Alabama Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Idaho Illinois Iowa Kansas Louisiana Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Mexico North Dakota Oklahoma Oregon South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Washington Wisconsin and Wyoming The railway also operates a small amount of track in Canada including an approximate 30 mile 48 km section that runs from the U S Canada border to Vancouver British Columbia some tracks and a yard in Winnipeg Manitoba approximately 70 miles 110 km of joint track with the Canadian National Railway which runs south to the U S border at Emerson Manitoba and less than a kilometer of trackage at the border in Northgate Saskatchewan For administrative purposes BNSF is divided into two regions and ten operating divisions The North Region includes the Montana Northwest Twin Cities Heartland and Powder River divisions The South Region includes the Red River California Chicago Kansas and Southwest divisions Each division is further divided into subdivisions which represent segments of track ranging from 300 mile 480 km mainlines to 10 mile 16 km branch lines The former Texas and Gulf divisions were combined into the Red River Division and the former Springfield and Nebraska divisions were combined into the Heartland Division in the spring of 2016 Not including second third and fourth main line trackage yard trackage and siding trackage BNSF directly owns and operates over 24 000 miles 39 000 km of track When these additional tracks are counted the length of track which the railway directly controls rises to more than 50 000 miles 80 000 km Additionally BNSF Railway has gained trackage rights on more than 8 000 miles 13 000 km of track throughout the United States and Canada These rights allow the BNSF to operate its own trains with its own crews on competing railroads main tracks BNSF locomotives also occasionally show up on competitors tracks throughout the United States and Canada by way of leases mileage equalizations and other contractual arrangements Yards and facilities edit nbsp BNSF 880362 a DOT 111 tank car passing Glen Haven Wisconsin shows the new corporate logo on June 3 2006 BNSF operates various facilities all over the United States plus a yard in Winnipeg to support its transportation system Facilities operated by the railway include yards and terminals throughout its rail network system locomotive shops to perform locomotive service and maintenance a centralized operations center for train dispatching and network operations monitoring in Fort Worth and regional dispatching centers BNSF Railway also operates numerous transfer facilities throughout the western United States to facilitate the transfer of intermodal containers trailers and other freight traffic BNSF Railway has direct control over a total of 33 intermodal hubs and 23 automotive distribution facilities The BNSF mechanical division operates 13 locomotive maintenance facilities that perform preventive maintenance repairs and servicing of equipment The largest of these facilities are located in Alliance Nebraska and Argentine Yard in Kansas City Kansas The mechanical division also controls 46 additional facilities responsible for car maintenance and daily running repairs The BNSF system mechanical division a subset of the mechanical division operates two maintenance of way work equipment shops responsible for performing repairs and preventive maintenance to BNSF s track and equipment in Brainerd Minnesota and Galesburg Illinois The system mechanical division also operates the Western Fruit Express Company s refrigerated car repair shop in Spokane Washington On October 1 2022 BNSF Railway announced plans to construct a 1 5 billion state of the art master planned rail facility in Southern California the first such facility developed by a Class I railroad The Barstow International Gateway encompassing approximately 4 500 acres 1 800 ha 7 0 sq mi an integrated rail facility will be located on the west side of Barstow California This new facility when built will enable more efficient rail operations from the Port of Los Angeles and Port of Long Beach to trains for transport through the Alameda Corridor onto the BNSF mainline to the new facility and then move across the nation on the eastbound BNSF route network 57 58 nbsp Pasco Yard Large freight car hump yards are located throughout the BNSF system 59 Barstow California Barstow Yard Galesburg Illinois Galesburg Yard Kansas City Kansas Argentine Yard Lincoln Nebraska Hobson Yard Memphis Tennessee Tennessee Yard Minneapolis Minnesota Northtown Yard Pasco Washington Pasco Yard Tulsa Oklahoma Cherokee Yard Location of some intermodal yards Cicero Illinois Chicago Cicero 60 Chicago Illinois Corwith Intermodal Facility Commerce California Edgerton Kansas Logistics Park Kansas City 61 nbsp A second generation Electro Motive Diesel EMD yard switching engine at Hobson Yard in Lincoln Nebraska This is EMD GP28 2 GP28M low emissions BNSF H4 1524 Elwood Illinois Logistics Park Chicago 62 Hodgkins Illinois Willow Springs Intermodal Facility Haslet Texas Alliance Yard Los Angeles California Hobart Yard Memphis Tennessee Oakland California Oakland International Gateway Omaha Nebraska Gibson Yard Seattle Washington Seattle International Gateway SIG Intermodal Facility Routes edit The Northern Transcon runs between Seattle and Chicago The route is a combination of parts of the old Great Northern the Northern Pacific and the Spokane Portland and Seattle Railway The Southern Transcon runs between Los Angeles and Chicago The 2006 BNSF Annual Report states We also added about 33 miles of second main track on our main line between Chicago and Los Angeles All but 51 miles 82 km of this high volume 2 200 mile 3 500 km route were double track as of the end of 2006 Last year we ran 100 trains per day on this expanded main line compared with 60 per day in 2000 Technically it is not double tracked in mid Kansas where two routes are used Mulvane to Wichita to Newton to Emporia for primarily eastbound traffic Emporia to El Dorado to Augusta to Mulvane for primarily westbound traffic In 2008 BNSF completed nearly sixteen miles 26 km of a third main track through Cajon Pass in Southern California increasing capacity on the transcontinental main route between Chicago and Los Angeles from 100 to 150 trains per day BNSF started adding a second main track in Abo Canyon east of Belen New Mexico the largest bottleneck on the Transcon with grading in 2008 2009 bridges in 2010 and signal work in late 2010 or early 2011 Approximately 1 7 million cubic yards 1 3 million cubic metres of rock need to be excavated mostly by blasting The 2008 BNSF Annual Report states Following completion of the Abo Canyon project scheduled in 2011 our 2 200 mile 3 540 km Transcontinental Corridor between Southern California and Chicago will have only about 30 miles 48 km of single track citation needed The Powder River Basin supplies forty percent of the coal in the United States The 2008 BNSF Annual Report states that the quadruple track project was completed Operating divisions edit The BNSF system is divided into 13 divisions grouped into three regions Each division includes numerous subdivisions normally comprising a single main line and branches 63 A fourteenth division Colorado has been consolidated with the Powder River Division except for the Casper and Cody Subdivisions which were transferred to the Montana Division Region Division States and provinces Headquarters Subdivisions 64 Notes South California California Nevada Utah San Bernardino CA Bakersfield Cajon Lucerne Valley Mojave Needles San Bernardino San Diego Stockton South Chicago Illinois Iowa Minnesota Missouri Wisconsin Chicago IL Aurora Barstow Brookfield Chicago Chillicothe Marceline Mendota Ottumwa Peoria St Croix Thomas Hill Central Gulf Now the Red River Division Arkansas Louisiana Texas Spring TX Bay City Conroe Galveston Houston Lafayette Lampasas Longview Mykawa Silsbee South Kansas Colorado Kansas Missouri Nebraska New Mexico Oklahoma Texas Kansas City KS Arkansas City Douglass Emporia Hereford La Junta Panhandle Plainview Slaton Strong City Topeka Fort Scott South Los Angeles California Los Angeles CA Alameda Corridor Harbor San Bernardino North Montana Montana North Dakota Wyoming Billings MT Big Sandy Broadview Casper Choteau Circle Cody Colstrip Crosby Dickinson Fairfield Forsyth Ft Benton Glasgow Great Falls Grenora Helena Hettinger Hi Line Kootenai River Laurel Lewistown Milk River Mobridge MRL 65 Niobe Sarpy Line Sweet Grass Valier Central Nebraska Now Heartland Division Illinois Iowa Kansas Missouri Nebraska Lincoln NE Bayard Beatrice Bellwood Council Bluffs Creston Des Moines Giltner Hastings Lester Napier Neb City Omaha Ottumwa Ravenna Sioux City St Joseph Wymore North Northwest British Columbia California Idaho Montana Oregon Washington Seattle WA Bellingham Burbank Cherry Point Coeur d Alene Columbia River Fallbridge Gateway Kettle Falls Lakeside Newport New Westminster Oregon Trunk Scenic Seattle Spokane Stampede Sumas Yakima Valley Central Powder River Colorado Nebraska New Mexico Oklahoma South Dakota Texas Utah Wyoming Gillette WY Akron Angora Big Horn Black Hills Boise City Brush Butte Campbell Canyon Dalhart Dutch Front Range Golden Orin Pikes Peak Pueblo Reno Sand Hills Spanish Peaks Twin Peaks Valley South Southwest Arizona California Colorado New Mexico Texas Belen NM Clovis Coronado Defiance El Paso Ennis Gallup Glorieta Lee Ranch Phoenix Raton Seligman Springerville Central Springfield Now Heartland Division Alabama Florida Arkansas Illinois Iowa Kansas Kentucky Mississippi Missouri Oklahoma Tennessee Springfield MO Afton Amory Avard Beardstown Pensacola Birmingham Cherokee Cuba Fort Scott Hannibal Lead Line River Thayer North Thayer South Yates City Includes most of the former St Louis San Francisco Railway Central Texas Now Red River Division Kansas Oklahoma Texas Fort Worth Texas BBRX Chickasha Creek DFW Ft Worth Madill Red River Valley Red Rock Sooner Venus Wichita Falls North Twin Cities Iowa Manitoba Minnesota Nebraska North Dakota South Dakota Wisconsin Minneapolis MN Aberdeen Allouez Appleton Brainerd Browns Valley Canton Casco Clifford Line Corson Devils Lake Drayton Glasston Grand Forks Hanley Falls Hannah Hib Tac Hillsboro Hinckley Hunter Jamestown KO Lakes Madison Marshall Mayville Midway Mitchell Monticello Moorhead Morris Noyes P Line Prosper Rolla Staples St Paul Warwick Watertown Wayzata Westhope Zap Line Passenger train service edit nbsp BNSF 5696 pulling a Metrolink train in the aftermath of the 2015 Oxnard train derailment BNSF directly operates the BNSF Railway Line for Metra in Chicago and the Sounder in the Puget Sound Region using BNSF supplied crews in addition to running over its rails citation needed The company s network additionally hosts other commuter trains including Metrolink in Southern California and the Northstar Line in Minneapolis The line used by New Mexico Rail Runner Express was sold to the state of New Mexico but BNSF retained all freight rights on the line and operates freight trains as needed Metra s cars that were originally purchased by BNSF predecessor Chicago Burlington amp Quincy have letterboards above the doors In about 2011 about 15 of the remaining cars had the original BURLINGTON lettering restored while the rest now read BNSF RAILWAY Other Metra cars assigned to BNSF have the current BNSF swoosh logo next to the door Many Amtrak routes use BNSF rails the Amtrak Cascades California Zephyr Carl Sandburg Coast Starlight Empire Builder Heartland Flyer Illinois Zephyr Lincoln Service Pacific Surfliner San Joaquin Southwest Chief Sunset Limited and Texas Eagle After the 2015 Oxnard train derailment BNSF loaned 40 of their AC4400CWs to Metrolink while their Rotem cab cars received upgrades These 40 units were converted to PTC The locomotives have since been returned after the cab cars went back into service citation needed Although it does not have a steam program like the Union Pacific the BNSF has allowed for the Southern Pacific 4449 St Louis San Francisco 1522 Santa Fe 3751 Santa Fe 2926 Spokane Portland and Seattle 700 and Milwaukee Road 261 steam locomotives to operate excursions over their rails Safety edit BNSF has received E H Harriman Award for safety multiple times But a number of accidents and incidents have occurred on the railway since its inception citation needed As one of the leading supporters of the Operation Lifesaver program to promote safety at railway crossings and rights of way the BNSF Railway in 2000 established a grade crossing closure program This program in which BNSF works with communities and landowners to identify unnecessary or redundant crossings has helped close more than 2 900 of BNSF s railway crossings throughout the United States Due to the program BNSF has been the industry leader in lowering the number of grade crossing collisions BNSF contracts with News Link a small business in Lincoln Nebraska to publish employee newsletters focused on safety for some of the railroad s divisions and shops These newsletters vary in length from four to 28 pages published ranging from monthly to quarterly In 2014 the Occupational Safety and Health Administration ordered BNSF to pay over 526 000 to workers who had been terminated in 2010 and 2011 after revealing workplace injuries at the terminal in Havre Montana which is in contravention of provisions of the Federal Railroad Safety Act protecting whistleblowers 66 In August 2016 a huge number of used hypodermic drug needles were found along a BNSF railroad bridge in between the University Park and St Johns neighborhoods of Portland Oregon that has become an encampment for homeless individuals According to a conductor quoted by The Oregonian Pretty much see people down there at all hours of the night We report them but nobody does anything 67 In March 2024 the company furloughed 360 mechanical workers a small percentage of the railroad s 37 000 employees but enough to encourage a condemning letter from the Transportation Trades Department labor coalition calling on the Federal Railroad Administrator to increase inspections The unions maintain that these cuts will make it difficult for BNSF to finish needed repairs and inspections of its rolling stock 68 In a letter dated March 2024 sent to the FRA the Shop Craft Unions at BNSF urged the Administration look at safety and maintenance issues in the railroad industry presenting evidence of a 41 decrease in repair and maintenance departments since 2015 BNSF shippers complain that shipments to the US Northwest have seen delays most citing lack of enough crew as the reason They also complained of high rates for secondary shuttle freight 69 Equipment edit According to the 2007 BNSF Annual Report at the end of 2007 the railway had more than 40 000 employees 6 400 locomotives 8 359 as of 2018 and 85 338 freight cars 72 369 as of 2018 Broken down by specific kind of car the BNSF owned 36 439 covered hoppers 13 690 gondolas 11 428 open hoppers 10 470 flatcars 7 948 boxcars 4 196 refrigerated reefer cars 427 tank cars 416 automobile carriers 81 private business cars 324 other types of cars In addition the railroad also owned 3 253 domestic containers 11 714 domestic chassis Swap body 4 070 company service vehicles 1 200 trailers 163 commuter passenger cars At the end of 2007 the average age from date of manufacture was 15 years for the BNSF s locomotive fleet and 14 years for the freight car fleet On January 24 2006 BNSF announced a US 2 4 billion program of infrastructure upgrades for 2006 The upgrade program includes double and triple tracking 40 miles 64 km of track and a second mainline track through New Mexico s Abo Canyon on the former ATSF transcontinental line expanding the Lincoln Nebraska classification yard and double and triple tracking 50 miles 80 km of track in Wyoming s Powder River Basin region expansions at eight of the railroad s larger intermodal facilities and extending many sidings and expanding and improving refueling facilities In making the announcement BNSF chairman Matthew K Rose cited improvements in the company s return on invested capital and expressed hope for continued improvement 70 In March 2008 the railroad was completing the triple tracking of Cajon Pass in California creating four tracks through the pass three BNSF former Santa Fe and newly installed and one Union Pacific former Southern Pacific Paint schemes editThis section may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help to create a more balanced presentation Discuss and resolve this issue before removing this message April 2024 Most of BNSF s high horsepower road locomotives are painted in Heritage schemes primarily based on BN predecessor Great Northern Railway s colors of Omaha Orange and Pullman Green with yellow striping and silver underframes Since 2005 BNSF s locomotives feature black instead of dark green paint Many locomotives retain their original paint schemes but this is gradually changing as these units are now either being retired or rebuilt and repainted in the Heritage III and Heritage IV schemes respectively Common locomotive paint schemes nbsp BNSF Warbonnet nbsp ATSF Yellowbonnet with Santa Fe lettering also lettered for BNSF nbsp BN Cascade Green scheme lettered for BNSF nbsp BN Grinstein Executive scheme lettered for BNSF nbsp Heritage I or H1 nbsp Heritage II or H2 nbsp Heritage III or H3 nbsp Heritage IV or H4 The first locomotive to bear BNSF lettering was BN SD70MAC No 9647 introduced in late August 1995 just as the Interstate Commerce Commission was approving the merger VMV Enterprises in Paducah Kentucky painted it in a one of a kind commemorative scheme combining Santa Fe s Warbonnet with BN s Executive colors of dark Grinstein green and cream It was nicknamed the vomit bonnet by railfans BNSF replaced SANTA FE on the front of the unit and Burlington Northern Santa Fe was painted on the side 71 The locomotive has since been repainted into the standard Heritage III livery nbsp BNSF logo adopted in 1996 By January 1996 BNSF had begun painting locomotives originally ordered for BN and ATSF patched with BNSF on the front and sides 72 Then in late May the company introduced a new design on BN SD60M 9297 painted mainly in BN predecessor Great Northern Railway s pre 1967 colors of orange and dark Pullman green but also incorporating red and silver and said to represent all major BN predecessors and Santa Fe On the front was a new logo placing Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway in the Santa Fe cross Some of the striping details were different on each side 73 and employees voted for the simpler right side design which with some minor changes became the new scheme 74 replacing the BN colors However president and CEO Robert Krebs said the railroad was big enough for two designs and Santa Fe s Warbonnet with BNSF instead of Santa Fe on the front 75 remained alongside the new Heritage I scheme 76 On January 24 2005 as part of its tenth anniversary celebration the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway was renamed BNSF Railway and adopted a new logo 77 By March the logo had been applied to the sides and fronts of six ES44DCs 78 and on April 11 BNSF officially chose the design it had applied to No 7701 79 The New Image scheme is also referred to as Heritage III 80 Since 2006 BNSF s locomotives designated for yard work or local trains have been painted in the Heritage IV scheme Somewhat of a simplified form of the Heritage III scheme Heritage IV is virtually identical to the original Heritage I scheme with black instead of dark green and the current BNSF logo nbsp A BNSF train crosses Lake Ashtabula on the Sheyenne River west of Luverne North Dakota The 2 736 ft 834 m Sheyenne River Bridge was erected in 1912 by the Great Northern Railway 81 The North Country Trail a 4 600 mi 7 400 km recreational trail passes beneath the bridge 82 See also edit nbsp Trains portal nbsp Companies portal BNSF Railway Police the law enforcement agency responsible for policing BNSF trackage and property Burlington Northern Santa Fe Manitoba a subsidiary of BNSF located in Winnipeg ManitobaNotes edit LLC 12 31 20 10K PDF BNSF Railway 2020 10 K BNSF Fact Sheet PDF TABLE 2 9 OPERATIONAL DATA BY RAILROAD 2010 Railroad Safety Statistics 2010 Annual Report U S Dept of Transport April 4 2012 Financial Information BNSF website Our People BNSF Railway and Burlington Northern Santa Fe LLC Officers Archived from the original on June 27 2021 Retrieved June 20 2021 EuDaly Kevin Jessup Steve Schafer Mike Boyd Jim McBride Andrew Glischinski Steve 2016 The Complete Book of North American Railroading New York NY Crestline p 74 ISBN 978 0 7858 3389 5 BNSF Railway January 24 2005 BNSF Adopts New Corporate and Subsidiary Logos and Changes Name of Railway Subsidiary as Part of Tenth Anniversary Celebration Archived from the original on November 29 2005 Retrieved April 19 2006 Tully Shawn June 4 2014 The railroad with better profit margins than Google Fortune Retrieved August 10 2021 a b Middleton William D MORGAN RICK Diehl Roberta L 2007 Encyclopedia of North American Railroads Bloomington Idiana Indiana University Press p 220 ISBN 978 0 253 02799 3 Bryant Keith Frailey Fred W 2020 History of the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 1 4962 2271 8 Railroad News Trains September 1994 pp 14 16 Michael W Blaszak Illinois Central KCS seek a potent union Trains October 1994 pp 14 16 Don Phillips UP vies for Santa Fe IC KCS called off Trains January 1995 pp 20 24 Arrivals amp Departures Trains April 1995 p 18 Kevin P Keefe Will Rob Krebs win the West Trains May 1995 pp 14 15 Scanner Trains June 1995 p 21 J David Ingles BN Santa Fe widens its lanes Trains July 1995 pp 22 23 News Photos Trains July 1996 p 30 Interstate Commerce Commission Finance Docket No 31730 Sub No 1 permanent dead link August 25 1995 Arrivals amp Departures Trains October 1995 p 18 Scanner Trains June 1996 p 23 Securities and Exchange Commission Form 10 K Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation for the year ended December 31 2007 Keefe Kevin P December 1995 Carving up the West Trains pp 16 18 Surface Transportation Board Finance Docket No 32760 August 6 1996 Stephens Bill July 1996 Is Conrail a UP spoiler Trains pp 19 22 Surface Transportation Board Finance Docket No 32760 Sub No 19 permanent dead link September 9 1996 Arrivals amp Departures Trains September 1996 p 20 Arrivals amp Departures Trains December 1996 p 22 Ingles J David January 1997 BNSF begins service on UP merger routes Trains pp 20 21 Kelly Bruce November 1997 The thunder returns to Stampede Pass Trains pp 40 51 Lustig David February 1995 Merger or no Santa Fe has work to do Trains pp 20 22 Michael W Blaszak CN BNSF seek to combine timing curious Trains March 2000 pp 16 18 Michael W Blaszak STB slams on the brakes on mergers Trains June 2000 pp 16 17 Michael W Blaszak Stymied BNSF CN won t fight on Trains October 2000 pp 18 19 Michael W Blaszak Lawyers start your engines Trains September 2001 pp 16 17 CP KCS Merger Proceeding Moves Forward February 19 2022 Franz Justin March 15 2023 LIVE UPDATES Regulators Approve CP KCS Merger Railfan amp Railroad Magazine Retrieved March 15 2023 Regulators approve Canadian Pacific Kansas City Southern merger updated Trains Retrieved March 15 2023 a b About BNSF Contact Us BNSF BNSF Railway Archived from the original on December 31 2009 Berkshire Bets on U S With a Railroad Purchase November 3 2009 Archived from the original on July 5 2017 Frye Andrew November 3 2009 Berkshire Buys Burlington in Buffett s Biggest Deal Update5 Bloomberg Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved December 20 2012 BNSF Railway Company March 1 2013 FORM 10 K PDF Archived PDF from the original on September 13 2017 Retrieved September 13 2017 Montana Rail Link to bow out Trains April 2022 p 4 MRL employees advised rail sold to BNSF NBC Montana January 10 2022 Retrieved January 11 2022 Stephens Bill BNSF had to undo Montana Rail Link Lease Trains May 2022 p 11 Franz Justin January 11 2022 Washington Companies to terminate Montana Rail Link lease Montana Free Press Retrieved January 12 2022 BNSF to take over Montana Rail Link after leasing agreement terminated Missoula Current January 14 2022 Retrieved January 17 2022 UPDATE STB Approves MRL Lease Termination BNSF to Takeover by Year s End Railfan amp Railroad March 8 2023 Freight train derails into Clark Fork River Coeur d Alene Press April 3 2023 Retrieved April 3 2023 For a general guide to the railroad see Del Grosso Montana Rail Link Trackside Guide and Locomotive Directory 1992 Great Northern Pacific Publications Stephens Bill June 16 2023 BNSF Railway sets date for taking control of Montana Rail Link Trains Retrieved September 27 2023 Montana Rail Link to meld into BNSF come 2024 RailPrime ProgressiveRailroading RailPrime Retrieved January 1 2024 a b c Fred W Frailey The Empire of BNSF June 2001 pp 30 41 BNSF Agricultural Facilities On line Grain Elevator Directory Archived from the original on May 9 2009 Retrieved May 1 2009 Steve Wilhelm BNSF adding rail cars to meet Boeing 737 transport demand Puget Sound Business Journal Updated Feb 11 2013 a b c d e f BNSF Railway Company 2022 10 K PDF BNSF Railway to build new state of the art rail facility in Barstow California bnsf com Retrieved October 5 2022 BNSF Railway to build integrated rail facility in Barstow California railway news com October 3 2022 Retrieved October 22 2022 BNSF Railway October 4 2021 BNSF Hump Yards BNSF Chicago Cicero Rob Roberts October 17 2013 BNSF CEO Warren Bucks build freight mode of future Retrieved September 6 2020 BNSF Logistics Park Chicago January 2020 BNSF Subdivision Map PDF BNSF Railway Retrieved August 3 2018 BNSF employee timetables 2006 2008 BNSF Railway Twin Cities Division Northern Light Archived 2012 03 01 at the Wayback Machine employee newsletter March 2009 The Mobridge Subdivision from Aberdeen to Hettinger ceded from Twin Cities Division to the Montana Division Jan 20 to break down territory in the region allowing for better coverage Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway ordered by US Department of Labor s OSHA to pay more than 526 000 to terminated workers Occupational Health amp Safety Administration US Department of Labour April 23 2014 Acker Lizzy August 17 2016 Numerous used hypodermic needles found in University Park The Oregonian Retrieved December 29 2019 Latest freight railroad layoffs and Wall Street pressure renew concerns about safety and service AP News March 1 2024 Retrieved March 13 2024 Kenn Mary April 2 2024 Are Railroad Layoffs Compromising Safety and Service DTN Progressive Farmer BNSF Announces 2 4 Billion Capital Commitment Program for 2006 About 400 Million Again Slated for Track Facilities Expansion Press release January 24 2006 Archived from the original on February 5 2010 Retrieved January 30 2006 Kevin P Keefe and Steve Glischinski Meanwhile back in Fort Worth Trains November 1995 pp 18 18A Burlington Northern Santa Fe A gradual change of image Trains April 1996 p 17 Steve Glischinski It s all in the family with the latest BNSF locomotive paint scheme Trains August 1996 pp 16 17 News Photos Trains October 1996 p 28 Railroad News Trains October 1997 pp 30 31 Michael W Blaszak BNSF strives for an effective blend Trains April 1997 p 43 BNSF Adopts New Corporate and Subsidiary Logos and Changes Name of Railway Subsidiary as Part of Tenth Anniversary Celebration Archived November 29 2005 at the Wayback Machine January 24 2005 Front runner for new BNSF image Trains June 2005 p 20 BNSF selects new livery is it Heritage III Trains July 2005 p 25 Another BNSF one of a kind Trains August 2005 p 25 BNSF Sheyenne River Bridge Bridgehunter com July 22 2013 Lake Ashtabula Segment North County Trail Association Sheyenne River Valley Chapter Archived from the original on August 11 2015 Retrieved August 1 2015 References editBNSF Railway January 24 2005 BNSF Adopts New Corporate and Subsidiary Logos and Changes Name of Railway Subsidiary as Part of Tenth Anniversary Celebration Retrieved January 25 2005 BNSF Railway February 9 2005 Port of Los Angeles begins discussions with BNSF Railway Company on new intermodal facility Retrieved February 10 2005 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to BNSF Railway Official website nbsp BNSF Railway SEC Filings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title BNSF Railway amp oldid 1222059985, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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