|
This is the decision of the Railroad Retirement Board on reconsideration of the
status of American Orient Express Railway LLC and American Orient Express
Railway Company, Inc., as covered employers under the Railroad Retirement Act (RRA)
(45 U.S.C. § 231 et seq.) and the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act (RUIA) (45
U.S.C. § 351 et seq.) hereinafter sometimes referred to as “the Acts”. This is
also the initial determination of the Railroad Retirement Board concerning the
status of AOE Equipment Company and AOE Rail Services as covered employers under
the Acts.
Course of proceedings
In Board Coverage Decision No. 01-20, dated February 9, 2001, the members of
the Railroad Retirement Board determined that American Orient Express Railway
LLC (AOE Railway) was a covered sleeping car company employer under the Railroad
Retirement and Railroad Unemployment Insurance Acts effective January 1, 1995,
and was consequently required to file returns of compensation and service of its
employees under both Acts, and to pay to the Board contributions assessed under
the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act.
AOE Railway filed a timely request for reconsideration of the initial
coverage decision on July 13, 2001, and requested a hearing on its appeal. On
February 6, 2002, the Secretary to the Board notified the appellant that the
Board had appointed a Hearings Examiner pursuant to agency regulations at 20 CFR
258.1, to take evidence and testimony in the appeal, and to prepare a report to
the Board recommending a decision. Notice of hearing was published in the
Federal Register on May 13, 2002. See 67 Fed. Reg. 32071. A hearing was held on
May 21, 2002, in the headquarters building of the Railroad Retirement Board in
Chicago. Mr. Robert Bergen appeared on behalf of appellant, and Ms. Elizabeth A.
Schellberg appeared as witness for appellant. Prior to commencing the hearing,
the Hearings Examiner and Mr. Bergen executed a previously negotiated Joint
Statement of Facts Not In Issue, which was admitted as Exhibit 46. During the
course of the hearing, appellant submitted Exhibits 47 through 59. The Board
presented no witnesses and introduced no additional documents. On June 12, 2002,
the Hearing Examiner furnished appellant a copy of the transcript of the
hearing, and closed the administrative record.
On May 16, 2003, the Hearing Examiner filed a report to the Board on the
record compiled in the matter of reconsideration of B.C.D. Number 01-20. The
report contained the Hearing Examiner’s findings of fact, conclusions of law,
and his recommendations as to the decision to be made by the Board based on the
record compiled. The Hearing Examiner’s report also included an analysis of the
evidence of record and the statutory and case law in support of his
recommendations. The report recommended that the Board find on reconsideration
that AOE Railway is a covered employer under the Acts, but as a rail carrier
employer rather than as a sleeping car company.
On July 21, 2003, AOE Railway submitted a series of exceptions to the Hearing
Examiner’s Report. While the question of adopting the Examiner’s report was
pending before the Board, on December 19, 2003, AOE Railway requested that the
Board stay reconsideration of B.C.D. 01-20 while AOE Railway filed a request for
a declaratory order with the Surface Transportation Board on the question of the
company’s status as a rail carrier subject to the jurisdiction of that agency.
As the basis for the Hearing Examiner’s recommendation was his interpretation of
the Interstate Commerce Act as applied to AOE Railway, the Board by letter dated
January 14, 2004, agreed to stay further consideration until July 1, 2004.
AOE Railway filed its petition to the STB on April 30, 2004, and the STB
instituted a proceeding on June 23, 2004. See: American Orient Express Railway
Company LLC—Petition for Declaratory Order, STB Finance Docket No. 34502, 69
Fed. Reg. 35130 (June 23, 2004). At AOE Railway’s request, the Board granted an
extension of the stay of its decision on reconsideration by letter of July 1,
2004, and another extension of the stay by letter of August 30, 2005. The STB
rendered its decision on December 27, 2005, holding AOE Railway to be a rail
common carrier subject to 49 U.S.C. 10501(a).
Status of American Orient Express Railway
LLC
Our stay of reconsideration of B.C.D. 01-20 ends with the issuance of the
decision by the STB in Finance Docket 34502. But for that STB decision, the
matter before us would be whether to adopt any or all of the findings of fact
and conclusions of law by our Hearings Examiner in his May 2003 report upon the
administrative record compiled in this case, in light of the exceptions thereto
filed by AOE Railway in July 2003. See regulations of the Board at 20 CFR
258.6(c). However, our initial decision in B.C.D. 01-20, the Hearings Examiner
report, and the exceptions to the report filed by AOE Railway, are all
predicated upon whether AOE Railway would be a rail common carrier subject to
the jurisdiction of the STB in the absence of a ruling by that agency on the
question. A threshold issue is the effect to be given the declaratory decision
by the STB on the question of the status of AOE Railway under the Acts
administered by the Board.
Section 1(a)(1) of the RRA (45 U.S.C. § 231(a)(1)), insofar as relevant here,
defines a covered rail carrier employer as:
(i) any carrier by railroad subject to the
jurisdiction of the Surface Transportation Board under Part A of subtitle IV
of title 49, United States Code;
Section 1 of the RUIA contains essentially the same definition, as does
section 3231(a) of the Railroad Retirement Tax Act (RRTA) (26 U.S.C. § 3231(a)).
When deciding whether employment is performed for an employer covered by
these provisions of the RRA and RUIA, the Board routinely relies on the
determination by the STB that a company is a rail carrier subject to subpart IV
of Title 49, U.S.C. The Board has on occasion relied on a decision to the
contrary when making its determination that employment is not to be credited
under the RRA and RUIA as well. See, e.g. B.C.D. 96-59 Port of Palm Beach
District Railroad, (finding a port authority not a rail carrier on the basis of
a decision by the former ICC); and B.C.D. 04-22, H & M International, Inc.
Decision on Reconsideration (finding an intermodal switching operation is not a
rail carrier based on a decision by the STB).
The H & M International, Inc. case directly addressed the effect of a
declaratory STB order upon the Board’s determination of rail carrier employer
status. The switching operation in H&M International, which the Board held
initially to be a covered employer, had obtained a ruling by the STB that it was
not a rail carrier subject to Title 49 U.S.C., and then asked the Board to
reconsider its initial determination in view of the STB decision. The Board’s
reconsideration decision noted that the RRA and RUIA place solely with the
Railroad Retirement Board the authority for determining the status of a company
as an employer covered for purposes of establishing benefit entitlement for
employees of that company, and for purposes of collection of contributions due
under the RUIA from that company with respect to its employees. The Board also
recognized, however, that to reach another conclusion based on the same facts
would create an undesirable image of conflict within the Government. The Board
therefore concluded that it should carefully weigh a decision by the STB
regarding the status of a company as a rail carrier when considering whether
that company is a rail carrier employer under the Acts we administer. In this
case, the Board will review the STB decision with respect to AOE Railway, and
accept the STB conclusion for purposes of coverage under the RRA and RUIA if it
accords with the evidence before us as well.
The STB decision in Finance Docket No. 34502 summarized the evidence before
that agency regarding AOE Railway as showing that the company sells tickets to
customers who purchase four, seven, and ten day vacation excursions on restored
vintage railroad coaches. The excursions are offered seasonally, are one-way
trips, are not made over set routes, and may be cancelled if a minimum number of
customers is not reached. At the end of each trip, the customer must find his or
her own transportation home.
AOE Railway contracts with the National Railroad Passenger Corporation
(Amtrak) to provide locomotive power, train and engine crew, and to obtain
trackage use rights. AOE Railway proposes itineraries in advance to Amtrak,
which then determines whether that specific itinerary may be obtained based upon
Amtrak’s own passenger schedule and the schedule for freight traffic of the rail
carrier which owns or operates the track. Amtrak must approve the itinerary
before AOE Railway may offer it, and Amtrak has the right under the contract to
cancel or change routes, stops or entire trips. AOE Railway must provide the car
consist in good condition and in time to meet the schedules of Amtrak and the
freight rail carrier over the track. Amtrak inspects the passenger car consist,
and may refuse to pull cars that fail inspection.
The STB concluded that by engaging in the above-described activity, AOE
Railway provides “transportation by rail carrier” on the interstate rail
network, and as such is subject to STB jurisdiction under 49 U.S.C. 10501(a).
The STB noted that its jurisdiction includes as transportation “a car * * *
related to movement of passengers by rail” and services related to that
movement. 49 U.S.C. 10102(9). By providing the passenger rail cars and services
to the passengers on those cars which are related to their movement, the STB
found AOE Railway met the definition of “transportation”. The STB also noted
that the term “railroad” embraces not only road owned and operated directly, but
also road operated under agreement. See 49 U.S.C. 10102(6)(B). The STB found AOE
Railway’s contract with Amtrak to be an agreement to operate a railroad within
the meaning of that section. Finally, the STB found that AOE Railway operates as
a common carrier by rail. Though serving a niche market, AOE holds itself out to
a subset of the public as a common carrier. The STB compared the movement of AOE
Railway’s food and lodging services to cruise ships or tour bus operators, which
have been determined to operate as common carriers. In reaching these
conclusions, the STB rejected arguments by AOE Railway that is exempt from STB
jurisdiction because it operates as a sleeping car company, a car service or
rail car leasing company, or a private carrier.
A majority of the Board finds that the conclusion reached by the STB in its
December 27, 2005, decision in Finance Docket No. 34502 is clearly supported on
each issue by the evidence before the Board itself as well. Moreover, we note
that our Hearings Examiner recommended the same conclusions in his May 2003
report, and discussed the evidence of record, including the transcript of
testimony at the May 2002 hearing, which supports those conclusions.
Accordingly, a majority of the Board finds on reconsideration that AOE Railway
is a rail carrier employer under the RRA and RUIA. Management Member Kever
dissents from this finding.
In its reconsideration request, AOE Railway also argued to the Board that it
fell within an exception to coverage established by the Board for “tourist
excursion railways”. The Board established this exception to avoid coverage of
small scale passenger operations in the nature of museums or historic
attractions. To be exempt from coverage as a rail carrier employer under the
Acts, a tourist excursion railroad must carry only passengers, and must
establish that it is operated as an amusement and not as part of the national
system of rail transportation. Evidence
supporting a conclusion that a tourist excursion line is not part of the
national system of rail transportation includes lack of a physical track
connection to the interstate rail network, operation entirely intrastate,
operation for only short distances covered in relatively short time periods, and
return to point of departure.
In comparison, the scale of AOE Railway operations (e.g., 52 scheduled
interstate trips in 2002, excluding the entirely Canadian itinerary) differs
significantly from any of the cited “tourist excursion line” Board decisions.
Most AOE Railway trips begin in one state and terminate in another and require
the passenger to find his or her own way back to the point of departure, or
homeward. Moreover, in all cases, the trip runs for several days through several
states over hundreds of miles. AOE Railway just does not fit the fact profile of
any of the Board’s decisions applying the tourist excursion line exception. A
majority of the Board finds AOE Railway is not the sort of limited tourist
excursion operation which prior Railroad Retirement Board decisions have
excepted from coverage under the Acts.
Board Coverage Decision No. 01-20 determined that a single entity, American
Orient Express Railway Company LLC, was a covered employer under the Acts
effective January 1, 1995. The more complete evidence obtained in this appeal
establishes that the effective date was incorrect because American Orient
Express Railway operated as two successive entities. The limited liability
company which was the subject of B.C.D. 01-20 and the STB decision in Finance
Docket No. 34502 (American Orient Express Railway Company LLC), was preceded by
an incorporated business identified as American Orient Express Railway Company,
Incorporated. That corporation incorporated in Oregon on October 24, 1997, and
first acquired the passenger rail cars used for its operation through a sales
agreement with the prior owners of the passenger
cars which closed on November 14, 1997. Later, American Orient Express Railway
Company LLC assumed operations from the corporation on April 1, 1999. There is
no significant distinction between operations conducted by AOE Railway LLC and
by its corporate predecessor, AOE Railway Incorporated.
In view of the evidence provided in this appeal, a majority of the Board,
Management Member Kever dissenting, therefore finds on reconsideration that
American Orient Express Railway Inc. was a rail carrier employer under the Acts
effective with the date it acquired the passenger cars from prior owners,
November 14, 1997, and ending March 31, 1999. A majority of the Board further
finds that American Orient Express Railway LLC became a rail carrier employer
under the Acts effective April 1, 1999, the date it assumed operations from the
corporation.
Status of AOE Equipment Company and AOE
Rail Services
In the course of the request for reconsideration of the initial decision
regarding coverage of AOE Railway, the appellant submitted information regarding
the ownership and operations of a network of companies affiliated with AOE
Railway itself. The Hearing Examiner’s report recommends that the Board find two
of these affiliated companies, AOE Equipment Company and AOE Rail Services, are
covered employers by reason of being under common control (through ownership by
a common parent company) with AOE Railway, a common carrier by rail, and because
they each provide services in connection with railroad transportation.
Examiner’s Report, pp. 2-3. Given the majority’s finding above that AOE Railway
is rail carrier employer covered by the Acts, the majority of the Board agrees
with the Examiner’s conclusion that these two companies are also covered
employers. The Board, Management Member Kever dissenting, adopts the findings of
the Hearing Examiner with respect to AOE Equipment Company and AOE Rail
Services.
As stated by the Hearing Examiner (Examiner’s Report, Findings 6, 15-20, and
Discussion and Analysis, pp. 70-75), the evidence is that at the time the
passenger cars were acquired from prior owners, business was conducted through a
group of related corporations. Oregon Rail Corporation (ORC) was formed as a
Oregon corporation April 25, 1997, with Henry Hillman as President, Chief
Executive Officer, and majority shareholder. ORC in turn formed AOE Railway,
Inc., as a wholly owned subsidiary October 24, 1997. ORC also formed AOE
Equipment Company, which on November 14, 1997, received title to the passenger
rail cars used by AOE Railway Company Inc.
On April 1, 1999, a series of transactions created limited liability
companies which assumed some of these functions. Oregon Rail Holdings, LLC,
(Rail Holdings) was created as a multi-member limited liability company, with
ORC as a company member and Mr. Hillman as manager. Rail Holdings in turn was
sole member of newly created AOE Railway LLC, which assumed passenger operations
from AOE Railway Inc. as noted earlier. Sometime between April and August 1999
Rail Holdings also created wholly-owned subsidiary AOE Rail Services LLC.
AOE Equipment Company functions only to hold title to the passenger cars used
in AOE Railway operations. As of 2002, the company owned at least 16 cars and
leased others from Amtrak or other companies. The total included 4 dining cars,
12 sleeping cars, 13 coach cars, 4 lounge or club cars, and various other
baggage and crew accommodation cars. Cars leased from Amtrak and refitted by
Equipment Company are used exclusively by AOE Railway.
AOE Rail Services LLC (Rail Services) began operations in August 1999 in
Englewood, Colorado (a suburb of Denver), on property leased from General
Ironworks. In September 2001, Rail Services moved to a facility in Tenio,
Washington, leased from “CECO” (possibly an acronym for Cascade Engine Company).
The history of both facilities prior to lease by Rail Services is unknown, but
the General Ironworks location included an overhead crane used to pick up rail
cars to remove the body from wheel trucks. Rail Services works only on passenger
cars, providing most interior car maintenance of electrical, plumbing and HVAC
systems. Although Rail Services has done some repair work for unrelated
entities, the witness at the May 2002 hearing testified this has been “pretty
minimal.” When repair work is underway during the AOE Railway off-season, Rail
Services employs about 35 people.
Coverage of companies affiliated with a rail carrier employer is provided by
section 1(a)(1)(ii) of the RRA (45 U.S.C. § 231(a)(1)(ii)), which insofar as
relevant here defines a covered employer as:
* * *
(ii) any company which is directly or indirectly
owned or controlled by, or under common control with, one or more [rail
carrier] employers as defined in paragraph (i) of this subdivision and which
operates any equipment or facility or performs any service (except trucking
service, casual service, and the casual operation of equipment or facilities)
in connection with the transportation of passengers or property by railroad *
* *.
Sections 1(a) and 1(b) of the RUIA, (45 U.S.C.§§ 351(a) and (b)) contain
substantially similar definitions, as does section 3231 of the RRTA (26 U.S.C. §
3231). To meet the definition for coverage of rail carrier affiliates, a company
must meet both the common control and the service requirements, and the service
must be more than casual.
The “common control” element requires both control, and commonality. The
legal standard for the term “control” is set forth at section 202.4 of the
regulations of the Railroad Retirement Board as the right or power to direct,
either directly or indirectly, the policies and business of a company or person.
20 CFR 202.4. The right or power to control may be by any means, method or
circumstance, irrespective of stock ownership. Section 202.5 of the Board’s
regulations further states that a company is under common control with a rail
carrier whenever the control of such company is in the same person, persons, or
company as that by which the carrier is controlled. 20 CFR 202.5.
Under the Acts administered by the Board and regulations promulgated
thereunder, a non-carrier company is under common control with a rail carrier
where the principal shareholder of both companies is an individual, (Livingston
Rebuild Center Inc. v. Railroad Retirement Board, 970 F. 2d 295, 296 (7th Cir.,
1991)), or where the principal shareholder of both companies is a parent
corporation (Utah Copper Co. v. Railroad Retirement Board, 129 F. 2d 358, 363,
(10th Cir., 1942)). Further, if a company is a subsidiary of a parent company,
and that parent company itself is a subsidiary of another company, then the
first subsidiary is under common control with other companies controlled by the
top-level parent. See B.C.D. 04-64 American Railroads Corporation.
The evidence of record is that Rail Services and AOE Railway are wholly owned
by Rail Holdings. Accordingly, these two companies are under the common control
of Rail Holdings. In addition, Rail Holdings itself is owned by ORC, which also
owns Equipment Company, and previously owned AOE Railway Inc. Because ORC
controls Equipment Company and Rail Holdings, Equipment Company is therefore
under common control with AOE Railway LLC. A majority of the Board find that
both Rail Services and Equipment Company meet the first prong of the definition
for a carrier affiliate employer under the Acts. Because Management Member Kever
dissents from the majority’s finding that AOE Railway is a carrier, he also
dissents from the decision that these companies are under common control.
The second step in determining whether a rail carrier affiliate is a covered
employer under the Acts is a finding that the affiliate operates any equipment
or facility, or performs any service, other than casual service, in connection
with the transportation of passengers or property by rail. Regulations of the
Board at 20 CFR 202.7 define service or operation in connection with railroad
transportation in pertinent part as follows:
The service rendered or the operation of equipment or facilities * * * is
in connection with the transportation of passengers or property by railroad *
* * if such service or operation is reasonably directly related, functionally
or economically, to the performance of obligations which a company or person
or companies or persons have undertaken as a common carrier by railroad * * *.
The evidence is that Equipment Company owns or leases all passenger rail cars
used by AOE Railway. It hardly needs to be said that these cars are essential to
the rail transportation of passengers. Furnishing these rail cars must be
“reasonably directly related, functionally or economically, to the performance
of obligations” which AOE Railway has undertaken as a common carrier by railroad
within the meaning of 202.7 of the regulations. Moreover, in Carland Inc. v.
United States, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2350, (W. D. Mo., Feb. 14, 1995) the
District Court considered a company which provided maintenance of way equipment
and specialized rolling stock to an affiliated carrier. The Court found that by
arranging financing, selecting and purchasing equipment vital to the railroad’s
operations, the affiliate performed a service under the Railroad Retirement Tax
Act. See also, Southern Development Co. v. Railroad Retirement Board, 243 F. 2d
351, (8th Cir., 1957)(operator of office building is covered under the RRA); and
Adams v. Railroad Retirement Board, 214 F. 2d 534, (9th Cir., 1954)(subsidiary
furnishing accounting, purchasing, stenographic and other services to rail
carrier parent is covered under the RRA). Equipment Company performs a service
in connection with railroad transportation.
Rail Services operates a railcar repair shop. The status of a carrier
affiliate which operates a railroad rolling stock repair shop has previously
been answered in the affirmative by three Courts of Appeals. See: Despatch Shops
v. Railroad Retirement Board, 153 F. 2d 644, (D.C., Cir., 1946)(freight car shop
covered employer under the RUIA); Despatch Shops v. Railroad Retirement Board,
154 F. 2d 417, (2nd Cir., 1946)(freight car shop covered employer under the RRA):
and Livingston Rebuild Center v. Railroad Retirement Board, 970 F. 2d 295, (7th
Cir., 1992)(rebuilder of locomotives and other rolling stock a covered employer
under RRA and RUIA). The passenger rail car repair and rebuilding performed by
Rail Services is indistinguishable from that performed by Despatch Shops and
Livingston Rebuild Center. Even if these cases had not been decided, Rail
Services by repairing and reconditioning the passenger cars used by AOE Railway,
clearly performs a service which is reasonably directly related, functionally or
economically, to the performance of obligations which AOE Railway has undertaken
as a common carrier by railroad as defined by regulations of the Board at 20 CFR
202.7. Rail Services performs a service in connection with railroad
transportation.
The evidence is that both of these companies perform their functions
essentially only for AOE Railway. The service each performs for AOE Railway is
not so irregular or infrequent as to afford no basis for inferring the service
will not be repeated, and thus is not “casual service”. See regulations of the
Board at 20 CFR 202.6.
A majority of the Board, Management Member Kever dissenting, therefore finds
that AOE Equipment Company and AOE Rail Services LLC have been employers under
the Acts. Equipment Company performed its service immediately upon receiving
title to the equipment on November 14, 1997, and thus its status as a covered
employer begins on that date. Rail Services did not commence performing its
services until operations began in August 1999, and thus coverage of Rail
Services as an employer under the Acts is effective on August 1, 1999.
Conclusion
American Orient Express Railway Company, Incorporated; American Orient
Express Railway Company LLC; AOE Equipment Company; and AOE Rail Services are
determined to be employers covered by the Railroad Retirement and Railroad
Unemployment Insurance Acts, and are ordered to submit returns of compensation
and payment of contributions in accordance with this decision, as they may be
directed by agency staff.
| |
Original signed by: |
| |
|
| |
Michael S. Schwartz |
| |
|
| |
V.M. Speakman, Jr. |
| |
|
| |
Jerome F. Kever (Dissenting
opinion attached) |
AMERICAN ORIENT EXPRESS
RAILWAY LLC DISSENT
Jerome F. Kever,
Management Member
Docket Number 03-CO-0038
April 4, 2006
I cannot agree with the Surface Transportation Board’s (STB) ruling that
American Orient Express Railway LLC (AOE Railway) is subject to their
jurisdiction as a rail carrier under Part A, Subtitle IV of Title 49, United
States Code. Therefore, I must respectfully dissent from the majority’s opinion.
In making a coverage determination, the majority opinion notes that the Board
should carefully weigh a decision by the STB regarding the status of a carrier
when considering whether that same entity is a rail carrier under the Railroad
Retirement and Railroad Unemployment Insurance Acts (Acts). The lengthy
procedural history of this matter before the STB and the Board reflects the
complex legal issues presented. After reviewing, at length, the STB’s decision
and the Board’s Hearing Examiner’s Report, I find that AOE Railway is not a
covered employer.
Primarily, the STB ruled AOE Railway to be a railroad under the Acts because
it “operates road under agreement”. This makes reference to AOE Railway’s
agreement with Amtrak to pull its cars. I cannot agree that AOE Railway’s
agreement with Amtrak amounts to “the road used by a rail carrier and owned by
it or operated under an agreement”. Section 49 U.S.C. 10106(6)(B). The STB’s
analysis is not consistent with the common understanding of operating a railroad
nor consistent with typical determi-nations of being a carrier railroad by the
STB or the Board. My reasons for this conclusion are as follows.
Geographic Limitation
Generally, STB decisions finding an entity to be a rail carrier
under its jurisdiction specify geographic territories encompassing the rail
carrier’s limits of authority. Normally, mile post numbers or territorial
subdivisions of the track are used to define the carrier’s limits. In the
decision at hand, there is no such delineation by the STB in declaring AOE
Railway to be a rail carrier having operating authority under their
jurisdiction. In fact, it would appear that AOE Railway has been given unlimited
jurisdiction similar to Amtrak in its ability to move passengers. This certainly
could not be the intent of the STB, since only Amtrak has exclusive statutory
authority under 49 U.S.C. § 24308 to compulsory access over freight carriers
trackage for intercity passenger service. To the contrary, AOE Railway is able
to move its cars only by contracting with Amtrak and utilizing Amtrak’s
operating agreements with the freight railroads. Prior to the STB’s decision,
AOE Railway would arguably have had no rights to demand any access over any
trackage, with the authority AOE Railway may have rights that would be
inconsistent with Congress’s expressed intent of making Amtrak the primary
intercity passenger service.
Operating Agreements
Normally, parties to railroad operating agreements include railroad track
owners and operating carriers. In some cases the track owner also has STB
operating authority, and in most cases the operating entity will also seek STB
authority. The agreement between the track owner and operator includes
requirements about track maintenance, safety, and service levels. In many cases,
the track owner maintains the right to take over operations if the operating
carrier is in default of the operating agreement. Again, the operating agreement
references exact locations of track to be operated. A typical operating
agreement for passenger service would include these provisions plus those
tailored for moving passenger cars and utilizing stations or other facilities.
Operating agreements can exist in the situation where a passenger railroad
desires to operate over tracks owned by a freight railroad and visa versa. In
either instance the agreements contain some of the same elements as previously
described.
The situation in AOE Railway is different in many respects.
First, AOE Railway has never sought from Amtrak operating rights, as is
typically seen in freight or passenger operating agreements. In fact, AOE
Railway cannot operate the railroad itself since it does not own any track nor
the equipment to run the trains. AOE Railway does not have the ability to
maintain the tracks or dispatch. These are key indicia for operating a railroad.
Instead, AOE Railway must rely upon Amtrak to move its cars on Amtrak’s tracks
or on other roads for which Amtrak has operating rights. AOE Railway can only
request that Amtrak move its cars on specified routes by agreement. Even there,
AMTRAK can reroute or cancel the movements. AOE Railway simply does not have
operational control over a railroad. It must depend on Amtrak for movement,
dispatching, maintenance and trackage rights.
Rail Carrier Rights and Obligations Under
STB Jurisdiction
Since the STB exempted AOE Railway only from application for authority
pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 10502, AOE Railway is subject to the remainder of STB’s
regulatory requirements. First, AOE Railway would need permission from the STB
to completely abandon service, including permission to abandon certain areas of
service or tourist routes. For example, would a person in Washington, DC be able
to seek remedy if AOE Railway ceased operation of its usual train tour from
Washington, DC to New Orleans? Also, could AOE Railway be subject to rate claims
similarly to freight carriers? Finally, would AOE Railway, as a rail carrier
under STB’s jurisdiction, be able to seek rights under 49 U.S.C. § 11102
concerning use of terminal facilities?
These incongruities suggest that AOE Railway should never have been found to
be a rail carrier under the jurisdiction of the STB. For these very same
reasons, I cannot find AOE Railway to be a carrier covered under our Acts. If
AOE Railway is not covered, then its affiliated entities would also not be
covered.
| |
Original signed by: |
| |
|
| |
Jerome F. Kever |
| |
|
| |
Management Member |
In this regard, the tourist excursion line
exemption resembles the statutory test for exempt electric interurban passenger
lines found in both Acts. See section 1(a)(2)(ii) of the Railroad Retirement
Act(45 U.S.C 231(a)(2)(ii)), and section 1(a) of the Railroad Unemployment
Insurance Act (45 U.S.C 351(a)).
The passenger cars were operated for a short
time as a joint venture between a Seattle corporation named “Space Explorations”
and doing business as “TCS Expeditions”; and a Zurich, Switzerland travel agency
named “Reiseburo Mittelthurgau”. Given the evidently short and intermittent
operation by these entities, and the time which has elapsed since the sale of
the cars to the AOE Railway operation which is the subject of this coverage
decision, the Board will not address the status of any operation under the name
American Orient Express prior to the 1997 transfer to AOE Railway Incorporated. |