The Belt Railway Company of Chicago v. International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, and Transportation Workers - Transportation Division

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 26, 2024
Docket1:24-cv-01395
StatusUnknown

This text of The Belt Railway Company of Chicago v. International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, and Transportation Workers - Transportation Division (The Belt Railway Company of Chicago v. International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, and Transportation Workers - Transportation Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Belt Railway Company of Chicago v. International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, and Transportation Workers - Transportation Division, (N.D. Ill. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

The Belt Railway Company of Chicago,

Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant, Case No. 24 C 1395 v. Hon. LaShonda A. Hunt International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, and Transportation Workers, Transportation Division,

Defendant/Counter-Plaintiff. MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant The Belt Railway Company of Chicago (“Belt Railway”) and Defendant/Counter-Plaintiff International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, and Transportation Workers, Transportation Division (“SMART-TD”) each filed actions challenging Belt Railway’s recent change to “hump operations” that involved assigning each of the two helpers on a “hump crew” to their own locomotive instead of the same locomotive, and SMART-TD’s right to strike in response to the change. Currently pending before the Court are the parties’ cross- motions for preliminary injunction. Resolution of this matter turns on whether Belt Railway’s new operational policy constitutes a “minor” or “major” dispute for purposes of the Railway Labor Act. Following expedited briefing and an evidentiary hearing, the Court concludes that, for the reasons stated below, this is a minor dispute and, as such, SMART-TD may not strike or engage in other self-help measures pending arbitration of the matter. Accordingly, Belt Railway’s motion [13] is granted and SMART-TD’s motion [29] is denied. BACKGROUND The Court presumes familiarity with the procedural history of this case as set forth in the March 7, 2024 order extending the initial status quo temporary restraining order. (Dkt. 39). The parties presented evidence pertaining to their fully briefed motions for preliminary injunction on

March 19, 2024. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Court took the motions under advisement and extended the TRO pending their adjudication. (Dkt. 41). The following facts are gleaned from the relevant filings, evidence, and witness testimony. Belt Railway is a rail carrier headquartered in Illinois that operates the largest intermediate switching terminal railroad in the United States. SMART-TD is a national labor union that represents train service employees, including approximately 120-130 workers employed by Belt Railway, by negotiating and policing collective bargaining agreements. Belt Railway and SMART-TD are parties to several collective bargaining agreements that date back decades. Belt Railway primarily relies on two agreements in this case: the Memorandum of Agreement dated February 14, 1961, and the Crew-Consist Agreement dated April 13, 1990. (JX6; JX1).1 The 1961 Agreement sets forth rules for when management is or is not required to

recognize certain “normal routines of work,” along with the notice requirements for any changes to normal routines of work. (JX6 §§ 2, 3, 7). The 1990 Crew-Consist Agreement governs the staffing of train service employees on various types of crews, including the hump crews at issue in this case. (JX1).

1 Unless otherwise noted, all “JX” references are to the Joint Exhibits submitted by the parties. Typically, the Court requires parties to formally move for admission of exhibits into evidence at the end of a hearing or trial. Although the Court forgot to raise that issue here (and the parties presumably assumed it was unnecessary for joint exhibits), every unopposed exhibit presented to a witness during the hearing would have been accepted into evidence. Therefore, all such exhibits are deemed part of the record. Under the 1990 Crew-Consist Agreement, there are three types of hump crews: the East Hump Crew, the West Hump Crew, and the Extra Hump Crew. In pertinent part, the agreement provides as follows: The East Hump Crew will consist of a hump conductor and two helpers. The West Hump Crew will also consist of a hump conductor and two helpers. When an “Extra Hump Crew” is required to assist humping operations on either side of the hump, the crew will consist of two helper positions. *** Under no circumstances will employees be required to operate with less than the required crew consist specified in this Agreement, nor will they be censured or disciplined in any manner for refusal to do so. (JX1 art. 3(d) & 5(a)). Belt Railway operates a “hump yard” where incoming trains are broken down and assembled into new outgoing trains. Carrier locomotives (train cars with engines) bring incoming trains to Belt Railway and leave them in a receiving yard. A Belt Railway locomotive attaches to an incoming train and moves it along the tracks up a small hill called the “hump.” At the top of the hump, pins connecting the train cars are pulled manually and the separated train cars roll down different tracks using gravity and then stop using an automated braking system in a classification yard. New outgoing trains are assembled there and then moved to a departure yard to await pick up by a carrier locomotive. Trains arrive and depart the hump yard from the East and the West, so there are receiving, classification, and departure yards on both the East and West side of the hump. The hump yard operates 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. Groups of employees that work in the hump yard are referred to as “hump crews.” There are three shifts each day. Hump crews—consisting of a conductor and two helpers—work on each side of the hump and are designated as East and West Hump Crews. The East and West hump conductors work in a command center, changing switches remotely to direct train cars onto different tracks, while the East and West helpers work in the hump yard. When an Extra Hump Crew is required on either the East or West side of the hump, it also has two helpers. Thus, at minimum staffing, there would be a total of six employees, made up of one conductor and two

helpers on the East Hump Crew and the same on the West Hump Crew. At maximum staffing, when Extra Hump Crews are required on both sides of the hump, there would be a total of ten employees, made up of the original six on the East and West Hump Crews, and an additional four helpers, two on each side of the hump. The two helpers on each hump crew have always been assigned to a single locomotive. One helper would work at the hump, controlling the locomotive with a remote control operation (“RCO”) box and pulling the pins that connect the cars so that they roll down the tracks to the classification yard. The second helper would work in the cab of the locomotive, essentially on standby to take control of the locomotive with an RCO box as needed. During hump operations, trains sometimes need to be stopped and reversed. When that

happens, the helper at the hump would “pitch” (i.e., give) control of the locomotive to the helper in the cab of the locomotive. According to Stel Paras, the general chairperson of SMART-TD’s local committee, the reason control would be pitched from one helper to the other in those situations is that the person in control of the locomotive must be able to see directly in front of the train in the direction that it is traveling to make sure no one is in the way. This practice is referred to in the trade as “protecting the point.” Both sides agree that federal regulations require some sort of visual confirmation that there is no one in front of a locomotive before it is moved in that direction. Belt Railway’s president and general manager, Percy Fields, explained that both the conductor and the helper at the hump have access to live video from over 200 cameras positioned around the yard so that they can remotely check to see if there is anyone in front of the train before moving it. In the event that no helper is in the cab and no camera covers the area in front of the train, the conductor, the helper at the hump, or another worker could be sent to check in person. According to Mr. Fields, this procedure would comply with applicable federal regulations.

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The Belt Railway Company of Chicago v. International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, and Transportation Workers - Transportation Division, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-belt-railway-company-of-chicago-v-international-association-of-sheet-ilnd-2024.