Can we get a moment of silence for the railroader who sacrificed his career to become a whistleblower
@davidhorner56559 ай бұрын
He was already a whistle blower 🚂
@mikew31949 ай бұрын
@@davidhorner5655 Hmmmmm. I love the pun but the train autist in me... must inform you... track inspectors are not on board.
@derrickjac9 ай бұрын
@@mikew3194 They wouldn't be caught dead on board tee hee.
@brianburns72119 ай бұрын
This guy will get a whistleblower settlement in the end, and possibly get his job back.
@LuckyBaldwin7779 ай бұрын
@brianburns7211 If I was upper management at UP, I'd make sure UP offered him a job.
@matthewholmes52859 ай бұрын
I've always found that the better you are at your job, the higher the chance of getting fired over some BS!
@MrEricmopar9 ай бұрын
Yeah, it's disgusting but true. The better a person is at their job, the more likely they are to spot criminal behavior or not be a "Team Player" and cover stuff up. I've learned that if a job listing says "Must be a Team Player" they are crooks and doing illegal crap and will also endanger and/or exploit the employees.
@jonasbaine35389 ай бұрын
You both are fired! 😂
@matthewholmes52859 ай бұрын
@@jonasbaine3538 Can't fire me. I work for myself not anyone else!🤪😁😀
@jonasbaine35389 ай бұрын
@@matthewholmes5285 u work for who your money goes to! Family government utilities!😉
@matthewholmes52859 ай бұрын
@@jonasbaine3538 If you say so 😄😃😀😆😁
@jackiechan5119 ай бұрын
This track inspector who did the right thing is a true American hero.
@rustyshackleford66379 ай бұрын
Good journalism too
@albundy76238 ай бұрын
If the track isn’t safe you don’t sign off on it. If the boss wants to sign off it’s his issue
@raillashupaviation51082 ай бұрын
@@jackiechan511 Here Here!
@jeffjackson99479 ай бұрын
Safety is number 1 until it costs money or interferes with profits. The first rule in railroading.
@WowOafus9 ай бұрын
The first rule in any business.
@Ridinfixinman9 ай бұрын
Except that in Hunter Harrison's book (the father of the PSR blight that is infecting railroads), it is literally #4
@MrLandslide849 ай бұрын
Every industry.
@joef.29089 ай бұрын
That is exactly it.
@RadDadisRad9 ай бұрын
Safety 3rd
@kellymcclendon66019 ай бұрын
Typical company "We encourage our employees to submit any complaint " Translation: We don't want to hear any complaints and will fire anyone's ass that does complain.
@johnhopkins62609 ай бұрын
This appears that this was not a "complaint" per se; It was HIS JOB to report safety issues. (hence: "Track inspector"... but never report to the Feds)
@beckyhenkel79179 ай бұрын
There should be a bureau where we can file complaints
@prodigalpriest9 ай бұрын
There IS a department that takes complaints. It's called a garbage 🗑️.
@dylanschultz95739 ай бұрын
Happened to me
@saab92519 ай бұрын
They support submitting internal complaints so they can bury it. No major company is okay with calling any regulatory body to ask about safety, testing, or regulation questions.
@anb74089 ай бұрын
All in the name of “Precision Scheduled Railroading.” Look it up. In short, management cuts every corner possible to make the stock price go up, by running 300+ car trains with remote control locomotives throughout the consist to cut down on crews. Sell off locomotives, defer maintenance, and much more. And again, all to make the stock price look better.
@jerryrollins5129 ай бұрын
Agreed, all in the interest of maximizing profits, benefits to investors and Sr. Exec. compensation. This is what happens when Wall Street fund managers started running railroads vs experienced career railroaders.
@jamesthomas48689 ай бұрын
Correct Warren Buffet.
@jerryrollins5129 ай бұрын
@@jamesthomas4868 Please don't forget the late E. Hunter Harrison who first implemented PSR on the CN then moved to CSX.
@thestarlightalchemist73339 ай бұрын
@@jerryrollins512technically he first implemented it on CP (now CPKC), but whatever he did there was actually good, unlike at CN and CSX...
@kentuckyrailfan19 ай бұрын
Just to be clear trains don’t have 300+ cars
@zakweitkamp19 ай бұрын
I worked at Bnsf in Seattle for 10 years, the railroad is evil and this is absolutely the mentality of management.
@franklinwerren76849 ай бұрын
Thanks for your reporting… when safety is compromised by any employer, no matter the industry, it should be reported!!!
@GeorgeJansen9 ай бұрын
Some trucking companies try to bully new truck drivers into violating Department of Transportation FMCA rules also.
@thatairplaneguy9 ай бұрын
Most
@slappy89419 ай бұрын
@@thatairplaneguyAll.
@1320pass9 ай бұрын
Right. Commercial aviation as well.
@shanemay37979 ай бұрын
The same happens in Australian road transport companies too.
@dickburt699 ай бұрын
Get out of reefers, containers and dry vans if you want to be treated better. You’re competing against the 3rd world if you don’t. Doesn’t apply to to LTL or private fleets.
@CJinsoo9 ай бұрын
BNSF ex-employee is courageous. some actual investigative reporting..
@timheersma47089 ай бұрын
The courts should award a portion of the award IMMEDIATELY...period !
@everettthepetractionguy42229 ай бұрын
Sanders should get the full 9 million dollars he was initially awarded!
@iVETAnsolini9 ай бұрын
Yeah there should be no wait period. The railroad should have had to cut that man a check before they left the courtroom
@ABIGD0NK3Y9 ай бұрын
not if they are appealing....if ANY monies are paid out.... and the railroad wins the appeal.... it must be paid back and at 10% he probably doesn't have 200000 dollars laying around
@gregculverwell9 ай бұрын
This reminds me of Boeing saying that safety is their number 1 priority when it is obvious that their only priority is money. It won't change until the law changes and holds company executives criminality liable for avoidable accidents.
@tomrogers94679 ай бұрын
Bolts? We don’ need no stinking bolts!
@LockheedMartinF22Raptor79 ай бұрын
You can say that safety has gone out the door.
@marcodarko69419 ай бұрын
Another deathcut by d.e.i.
@JohnH-mo5mb9 ай бұрын
Amen.
@evanfinch49879 ай бұрын
lol any businesses priority is to make money that is literally why they exist
@davidshaffer46499 ай бұрын
This is what happens when companies buy politicians who run the regulatory body that that oversees safety standing in the path of shareholder value.thank you for your courage and commitment sir.
@commodoresixfour74789 ай бұрын
Like on a curve at the bottom of a large hill.
@MustangsTrainsMowers9 ай бұрын
If you are being bullied, threatened, harassed or even being framed, the sooner you fight back the better. I went through something 2001 to 2006 that would have been all over the Twin Cities news had I gone public with what was happening. I should have filed my complaint as soon as the threats started.
@Ericc8049 ай бұрын
Sanders did the right thing and likely saved lives on the rails. His kids should be proud of him.
@noahdobson84709 ай бұрын
He did the right thing. Recorded evidence and got a lawyer. Despite their retaliation policy, HR wouldn’t have done a damn thing.
@johnmourer57479 ай бұрын
Hr represents the company. Their sole purpose is to protect the interest of that company.
@noahdobson84709 ай бұрын
@@johnmourer5747 unfortunately I learned this the hard way. I thought HR would have my back when I presented evidence that my manager defamed me and prevented me from getting the job I wanted. I’m not sure I would have gotten a lawyer if things were different. Looking back I should’ve noticed the signs of a toxic manager and switched jobs.
@johnbrown69448 ай бұрын
H r never does anything that hurts management personnel
@barbarakauppi99159 ай бұрын
That paid mouthpiece at the end needs to be required to live right next to the very railroads she covers for. Just like all those vulnerable and voiceless who have been so seriously affected by the lies she's projecting.
@billriordan14899 ай бұрын
Anyone who worked for the Railroad knows this is the truth
@anthonyangelici29639 ай бұрын
Not sure why BeaNSifF is fighting it vs accepting the facts.
@donaldt77649 ай бұрын
Truth
@KB-hn3tx3 ай бұрын
It has always been my dream to work for the railroad, Eh, never mind.
@NIGHTSTALKER00699 ай бұрын
Anytime a bonus is tied to safety inspections it will turn out bad.
@stevendorris57139 ай бұрын
And remember, kids.... "Rail" spelled backwards is "L-I‐A-R."
@anthonyangelici29639 ай бұрын
Hahaha Good One!
@scoot43489 ай бұрын
😂😂
@alliekat859 ай бұрын
Nice!
@kenneycooper61999 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@rainman79929 ай бұрын
BNSF - train safety - coming to a derailment in a town near you
@lukesplanet9 ай бұрын
So many corporations are like this
@mmurphy23179 ай бұрын
Most.....
@jackiechan_wtf40419 ай бұрын
If not all.....
@brucemoore4639 ай бұрын
Everything that happened to him is the way the class 1 railroads do business! They don’t have enough people to do the maintenance and the bottom line is how much money they can make! I think BNSF has had 2 mainline derailments in the past 10 -12 days ! I’m retired with 42 years of service in maintenance of Way!
@jerryrollins5129 ай бұрын
Yes, the "new management" style of railroads, and other businesses has created a toxic work place condition for the older craft employees and through the ranks low and mid level management folks that were very good at their jobs and knew much more than their recent hire supervisors about the industry. This led to adversarial conditions. This paved the way for a wave of retirements of experienced employees. The railroads are worse off for it and it shows with all the list of problems created way to lengthy to be listed via this medium..
@TomYouAreDoingItWrong9 ай бұрын
BNSF is their own worst enemy. I am retired off Union Pacific, but I operated on BNSF between Tacoma, Washington, and Portland, Oregon. I was a local, state, and regional union officer for the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers & Trainmen. We used to submit a lot of safety concerns to BNSF, and when there was little to no response, we would elevate those issues through our state safety director who would submit them to FRA if there was no reasonable response. That state director was a BNSF employee, who found himself in a whole heap of trouble, to include trumped up allegations of criminal assault; and he was fired as a result. I represented him at his on-property discipline hearings, which served as a basis for a whistleblower complaint with OSHA, and subsequent civil action in Federal District Court. He came away with a jury verdict of $1.25 million. Railroads believe they are above the law, but the Railway Safety Improvement Act of 2008 gave us something to fight back with.
@anthonyangelici29639 ай бұрын
As a kid growing up in the late 90’s and early 00’s. Santa Fe was always my favorite railroad. I’m a longtime Warbonnet Fan. Never cared for Black/Orange.
@bradleyhannah87139 ай бұрын
I worked for BNSF in the mechanical dept ,track dept then operating dept as a Brakeman I see the trains every day I hear all sorts of defects wheels and brakes mostly nothing gets fixed I was injured by another crew they came back on the adjacent track smearing me off the switch and thrown 30 fy down the tracl the crew didnt report the accident they went home with out saying any thing I got a small settelment told not to come back!
@charlesk76879 ай бұрын
the railroad should be actively recruiting this guy, quality employee.
@Joesolo139 ай бұрын
A honest railroad would love to have him. You'd hope Amtrak would have a role for him at least.
@charlesk76879 ай бұрын
@@Joesolo13 I wouldn't work for any of these railways if they doubled my salary, it's about principal these days, and they all suck
@wkjeeping90539 ай бұрын
I worked for a steel place for 20 years. They had incentives setup were you would get a bonus for no accidents. That's basically saying don't report any accidents and will pay to keep your mouth shut.
@TheSpicyLeg9 ай бұрын
That is an interpretation, though. You might just as easily say, “Follow the safety guidelines and make more money.” In my experience, both as a working industrial electrician and a business owner myself, people fall into two general camps. You first have the “ramrods” who believe they can avoid layoffs through productivity, and try to bypass safety to go faster. This is a smaller group. The far larger group is the people who generally follow safety guidelines, but if and when an incident occurs, tries to hide the safety violation or circumstances in fear of punishment. I’ll use an example. Recently, I had an apprentice call off several days in a row claiming to be sick. During the third day, my secretary reported a workman’s compensation claim was submitted by the apprentice. Come to find out that the apprentice had cut his hand attempting to strip a large conductor. He never reported the injury, to his journeyman, to his foreman, or to the safety man. The apprentice claimed it happened with the retractable box cutter provided by my company. I was immediately suspect as cutting yourself unintentionally with a box cutter that automatically retracts is difficult. Upon examination of the knife, it had no blood residue whatsoever on it. Worse still, the paper tab that prevents the blade from sticking out while in the packaging was still inside the handle, meaning the blade was never used. Turns out the apprentice was using a personal blade. I was doubly confused as I had purchased several wire stripping power tool kits from Milwaukee that remove the need for cutting a wire with a knife altogether (for 600 dollars a piece, these kits pay for themselves in weeks, both much more safe and way faster than a knife). One such kit was less than 10 feet from where the apprentice was working. An electrician’s hands are his money. I’m well within my rights to fight the claim. The point here is that the apprentice took a relatively minor injury and made it into a more severe one by hiding it from his employer. Because he just put gloves back on, didn’t clean the wound, and continued working, his cut became infected and widened. Had he received medical attention and stitches right away, he would have been better off. Safety is so difficult because many people think it’s a joke or that they are the exception, they can’t fall off a lift or have a tool dropped on their heads.
@nightwatchman58489 ай бұрын
We encourage you to report all track safety issues as long as it there is no down time on the tracks for repair. By coming forward he's opened the door for more to follow.
@jamesocker52359 ай бұрын
Pointing out safety issues will likely cause track down time especially if repair is not done in a timely fashion
@kens.37299 ай бұрын
And the Railroads want to Eliminate the Conductor making the Engineer the only person on a 3-mile long train. This is Dangerous and Plain Stupid. Shame🤪👎
@raillashupaviation51084 ай бұрын
He deserves a better job that’s absolutely cutting corners and taking this too far instead of thinking about safety
@anniegaddis52409 ай бұрын
My husband found out a RR yard in Los Angeles near Eagle Rock was dumping pools of oil into the L.A. River at night or whenever there was a storm (the helicopters who check would not be around). After each dump, they would walk the area and scatter cement on any oil that showed, to cover it up.
@victorperson24088 ай бұрын
That was Taylor Yard Locomotive Facility
@mcwilliams45469 ай бұрын
18 year carman here. I can tell you this man is preaching truth when he said they hired him to do a job, and fired him when he did his job. The rail industry is a crazy place.
@chrisstromberg65279 ай бұрын
Integrity, some people have it. Thank you sir for doing your best to try and keep us safe from the dangerous position BNSF has put so many of us in!
@anthonyangelici29639 ай бұрын
Santa Fe should be around today. Not BNSF. They don’t earn any credit for burning their own house down………
@jace38029 ай бұрын
Sounds like he got railroaded
@Modifiedtaco9 ай бұрын
I’d be very proud to call this man my friend.
@davidfuller5819 ай бұрын
This is a direct result of Jack Welch style "line must go up" leadership. Short term profits above all, even if it means basic safety gets pushed to the wayside. Even if it means crews can't take a day off. Even if it means the company actually gets worse long term. Short term line goes up.
@1320pass9 ай бұрын
Same situation in commercial trucking, same situation in commercial aviation. Drivers and pilots stand up for yourselves.
@campy97129 ай бұрын
I know a guy who was a senior engineer on the railroad. He was fired because they say he stole a pair of gloves, they said when a where he stole them, he had credit card receipts showing he was out of town at that time. They still fired him, but it was because he made too much money compared to a new hire.
@customconnections24259 ай бұрын
“Safety culture” is always the onboarding motto till you get to your district… then you see how the machine REALLY works and “HOW ITS DONE”.
@MrEricmopar9 ай бұрын
I've been a rail fan my whole life, I'm near 60, and we've been saying for years, they have to be breaking massive rules and criminally covering it up. As a railfan I know a lot more about the basics of how a railroad operates, than the average person on the street. It's a hobby to read all about stuff related to railroads and their equipment. All the corporations, are acting this way, not just the railroads, and it's because the vast majority of politicians on BOTH sides are guilty of repealing regulations, and/or defunding the outfits that investigate corporate criminal behavior. In other words... our politicians and the heads of these corporations, are already filthy rich, but they are willing to literally kill others, to make one extra buck. Think about that people, think about that long and hard.
@anthonyangelici29639 ай бұрын
The Ole Santa Fe was never this way!!!!
@PC-bd3uh9 ай бұрын
@@anthonyangelici2963 pretty sure they killed hundreds of thousands of native americans to lay some tracks and make some extra bucks
@everettthepetractionguy42229 ай бұрын
I'm thinking...and it makes me so angry to know that politicians and corporate heads are so corrupted and greedy! 😡
@kelsiewilson9 ай бұрын
My dad and uncles, and grandpa worked for the railroad and can tell you stories. They documented everything.
@Off-The-X9 ай бұрын
Do yourselves a favor. Turn on Google Earth. Look at Northwest North Dakota. Roll back time on the Satellite image to 10 years ago then to today. That is the Bakken Oil Field. That oil is transported every night through the Twin Cities on the worst rail system in America. All because of road salt. They never replaced the old rails and they are splitting everyday. How we havent had a major train explosion in Minneapolis.... MIRACLE!
@anthonyangelici29639 ай бұрын
That line used to be Burlington Northern Territory……
@grant89179 ай бұрын
Thank you sir for standing up to the railroad!
@pauliedweasel9 ай бұрын
After 21.5 years at the Santa Fe/BNSF and Four years at UP none of this is a surprise. It’s all about the money and it seemed to get worse after Warren Buffet bought the company.
@anthonyangelici29639 ай бұрын
Santa Fe President John Reid was against mergers. He HATED mergers and wanted to keep Santa Fe away from that and protect it’s culture………
@IanHotson9 ай бұрын
I feel sorry for this man, as a retired Railroader I've seen this shit pulled so many times, this guy has my total respect but unfortunately the railroads are hiring former fry Cooks from McDonald's to become railroaders and they wouldn't know a track Hammer from a tie plate but they know what temperature the oil should be in a deep fryer when they throw the goddamn fries in!
@brucemoore4639 ай бұрын
As an retired railroader Our saying was Barnum & Bailey circus 🤡 bought the railroad! They didn’t want the railroad, just the clowns running it ! 🤣
@IanHotson9 ай бұрын
@@HustleMuscleGhias sounds like I touched a nerve LOL I don't think you really got what I said
@heaveymelt9 ай бұрын
you saved lives bud
@thatairplaneguy9 ай бұрын
The railroads are so incredibly greedy and people will pay for their lust with their lives.
@Brian-pz3wh9 ай бұрын
One huge problem has always been fining companies for individuals decisions. So the company takes a hit, actually the shareholders do, and the idiot who made the toxic decision walks away scot free. When this happens we have broken the feed back loop and it needs to be strongly in position to stop this idiotic crap from happening. If a "manager" makes a stupid or illegal choice he should have to pay for that choice or there is no learning going on.
@davidtrindle64739 ай бұрын
Another great American hero! God bless him.
@therooster61049 ай бұрын
The truth has no agenda it’s just the truth
@captainnathan11649 ай бұрын
"Defects we are not reporting are down 70%!"
@michael0291389 ай бұрын
40 years, Penn Central, Conrail, NJ Transit, nothing new here.
@ABMP4D39 ай бұрын
You forgot Amtrak.
@michael0291389 ай бұрын
@@ABMP4D3 Amtrak was under the control of Conrail until 01/01/83. Worked trains 193/190 and 251/250 NYC to 30th street station.
@Freesavh17769 ай бұрын
This man is a brave hero! And of course BNSF will appeal it to oblivion if they can.
@hoyle77809 ай бұрын
Somewhere Stobe the Hobo is going "I told you, worst railroad ever!!!"
@PC-bd3uh9 ай бұрын
FNBS RR !
@WN_Byers9 ай бұрын
I just drove through Kansas had some Casey's pizza, and thought of Stobe RIP
@Skeletors_Closet9 ай бұрын
If I ever am in a position to choose which railroad I want to use to ship my goods, I’ll never use BNSF. This isn’t going away, especially with the derailments. Hats off to this guy for standing up to the man!
@trump11059 ай бұрын
All railroad companies do this
@Skeletors_Closet9 ай бұрын
@@trump1105 and when another one is put in the spotlight, I will not use them either.
@tmurphy09198 ай бұрын
@@Skeletors_Closet So as long as you don't know about it, it's ok? Those are some mighty strong principles you got there.
@hotflashfoto9 ай бұрын
Spoken and written company statement: "We encourage our employees to submit any safety complaint." Unspoken and unwritten company statement: "If you do, you know what will happen, because you just know, right?" It's called intimidation and bullying. Managing for profit. Greed. Avarice. When the Appeals Court finds in favor of the inspector, as it should, then it would be so nice if they would tack on another $200 mln or so just for BNSF being so roundly stupid and arrogant for thinking they can waddle into court and drag it out and sweep it under the rug. Consider those as punitive damages, regardless of what the law might stipulate as some ridiculous limit. There needs to be some kind of effect on the company so they feel the pain. If the money can't be assessed, then maybe slice up their holdings and let the inspector decide who gets what, how many slices it gets cut into, and how small they are.
@IEATUO9 ай бұрын
Yeah I hear this.. good for you brother it's about time someone showed the way things go behind closed doors..
@vikingmike81399 ай бұрын
[He] is a rare entity, a man with integrity. Cheers! 😊
@peter84889 ай бұрын
People should see the trucking industry, the carzy drivers on the road today 🙄
@bradc329 ай бұрын
same as any big corp. " we want quality....as long as it doesn't cost that much"
@ronharvey84429 ай бұрын
BNSF absolutely retaliate against employees and contractors. I have personally seen it. After reporting multiple fuel spills of at least 5000 gallons of diesel, several over 10,000 gallons, that were not reported and had been both literally and figuratively covered up. I wasn't as fortunate as this man so I'm happy to hear he prevailed. The money isn't the important element of his win. It's the public awareness of it.
@donleejr76249 ай бұрын
THANKS FOR DOING YOUR JOB TCB GETTING ALL THE RATS UNDER Control!!!!!!
@wannabtrucker96349 ай бұрын
“Defects are down” because they hired someone who chooses to “have a conversation” instead of doing what’s right by reporting defects and reporting bad behaviors!
@Richaag9 ай бұрын
She wanted to say billions so bad.
@REVNUMANEWBERN9 ай бұрын
Good luck Mr. Sanders...............Those who believe in safety SALUTE YOU !
@danielcadnum72149 ай бұрын
Warren Buffet should hire him to be an outside contractor consultant to inspect his railroad and keep its incompetent leadership in-line. Just saying! 😮
@slappy89419 ай бұрын
You think he cares about safety? 😂😂😂
@bigmoline1009 ай бұрын
You do realize that Warren Buffett is heavily invested in BNSF, don't you? The same ones that want this man to go away.
@SunWM999 ай бұрын
Proud of you, sir
@longblacktrain4119 ай бұрын
This, this is a real story. Thank you.
@Dave-eu3ib9 ай бұрын
Prayers for him
@dustinbrockus56939 ай бұрын
It needs to be brought up also, bnsf just on a whim, furloughed 400 pipefitters and boilermakers.
@CRrrr-gq1so9 ай бұрын
This would seem to show that freight rail lines have been given to much latitude. The lack of accountability means that they are violating regulations. This puts the public at risk. Amtrak has been forced to make allowances for freight traffic at a time when train travel should be getting a major push to expand. More malfeasance by corporations causing severe accidents and destruction.
@toxicgerl9 ай бұрын
It's not easy to do the right thing, that's why a lot of people don't do it.. I'm glad there are people out there at that still do the right thing.
@WilsonPendarvis-tn3wm9 ай бұрын
The best to you. Thank you
@ColAngus9 ай бұрын
YEP, Bonus pay for management...there it is. I work for a MAJOR corp too and its all about the bonus pay for Management.
@lazrustosadow58808 ай бұрын
That missing 7 million should be taken out of the judges account for allowing that to happen, 9 million for that guys reputation and career ruin is absolutely deserved
@DanMaul-ip1is9 ай бұрын
My friend works for the airline industry and it’s the same thing. Cutting cost to get massive profits. And we see every year airline accidents and problems coming more common, and how many trains have crash with horrific outcomes lately?
@ronnieam339 ай бұрын
How about double or nothing on that appeal in court!!
@GeorgeJansen9 ай бұрын
Thank you. Billion for Ukraine. Cents for USA infrastructure ❤❤❤❤
@kq27999 ай бұрын
Jobs act = 256 BILLION
@trevorgwelch74129 ай бұрын
Transit buses are another area where broken suspension components , broken and worn brake parts , worn or missing steering parts , worn tires and over worked employees , bad seats .... leaking diesel fuel . Profit over passengers well being . Investigate this !!!!!
@lefthookouchmcarm45209 ай бұрын
Could it really cost the railroads millions?! Seriously though, it looks like there is a huge infrastructure cover-up. Not just railroads!
@jeg54389 ай бұрын
Every worker should Always record interaction with management. Learned the hard way.
@stevenheckman-oz3mp9 ай бұрын
They need to suspend that train company's ability to operate until they can prove that their tracks are safe. Because apparently they're paying their employees to operate unsafe illegal tracks.
@redrock7179 ай бұрын
The owner of the company is a major player in our current presidents political party. They’ll glance over it, because it’s important not to anger campaign donors ya know.
@johns45849 ай бұрын
This guy is a hero. With all the derailments lately, (one just a mile from my home, so close that I heard it happen) and all the toxic hazardous $hit they transport, he is the guy protecting the general public from serious harm or death...........They will try to wear him down financially in court, hopefully he prevails and they are forced to pay. I live about 50 miles from the site of the East Palestine derailment, they have done their best to cover up and deflect the blame to skirt the cost of clean up and damages to the people affected.
@oldmanfunky49099 ай бұрын
This is sad, and this is going on all over America. You couldn't pay me to get on a Boeing aircraft right now.
@BluejayJb9 ай бұрын
Street justice is needed in this situation
@bigyellowjimmy9 ай бұрын
Always do what's right, even when its not the easy or popular thing to do. Good job
@joelbrown34799 ай бұрын
Unfortunately this is TYPICAL in many industries, ie: NYC Construction
@acote50209 ай бұрын
This the type of HEROS Americans needs.
@NIGHTSTALKER00699 ай бұрын
Railways are not as powerful as they were back in the old days. They still think they have lots of power.
@lisapoynter18149 ай бұрын
What a brave person he is! Perfect example of how "We the People" have to save ourselves FROM big power. We have to watch out for one another.
@chrisp13559 ай бұрын
Great report.
@rainman79929 ай бұрын
who knows the lives this man saved. We are the railroad company, safety is our No 1 Priority...except don't enforce the track safety measures we have in house.
@2crow4birds9 ай бұрын
For the bravest among us. We are all greatful.
@AxionSmurf9 ай бұрын
Shame that anyone who would report unsafe things would be retaliated against, punished. Imagine if reporting potholes got you fired.
@MarkTurner-vs7uc9 ай бұрын
Guess who owns the railroad. Look it up. And be sitting down.
@IAmWithinEverything9 ай бұрын
Corporations only have to please their stockholders.
@NancyQueinberry9 ай бұрын
Hope someone blessed him😊
@jimwatson59779 ай бұрын
Just another result of deregulation of the industry. Whether it's the airlines, trucking, railroads or electric utilities, the end result is higher prices for customers and less safety for the public AND the employees all to justify higher profits and management bonuses.
@gandydancer8238 ай бұрын
I was a track inspector for cp/soo and I had a manager tell me to put a track back to full speed when all the requirements were not met to do so.