ECONOMY
Death on a train: A tragedy that helped fuel the railroad showdown
One engineer put off a doctors visit, his family said, and died of a heart attack weeks later
By Lauren Kaori Gurley
September 17, 2022 at 12:51 p.m. EDT
Aaron Hiles, a locomotive engineer, told his wife he felt different, though he couldnt say exactly how. He made an appointment to see a doctor, his family said. But then his employer, BNSF, one of the largest freight rail carriers in the nation, unexpectedly called him into work. ... Failing to show up would invite penalties under a new attendance system BNSF had adopted just a few months earlier, a policy that unions have decried as the strictest in the nation. So Hiles, 51, delayed his doctors visit, his family said, and went into work.
A few weeks later, on June 16, Hiles suffered a heart attack and died in an engine room on a BNSF freight train somewhere between Kansas City, Mo., and Fort Madison, Iowa a tragedy that helped fuel a labor standoff that last week nearly shut down the U.S. economy.
Railroad attendance policies were at the heart of the dramatic showdown between the nations largest rail carriers and railroad workers, who did not strike after President Biden and other top administration officials brokered a last-minute agreement early Thursday. The deal includes a 24 percent pay increase by 2024 the largest for railroad workers in more than four decades and new flexibility for workers to take time off when they are hospitalized or to attend routine doctors appointments without penalty.
But discontent among rail workers is still brewing. They say few details have been made available about the agreement, which leaves the points-based attendance policy in place for other types of emergencies. And some say they doubt the deal will address their fundamental concerns about quality of life amid painful labor shortages and the continued spread of covid-19. {snip} BNSF would not discuss the details of Hiless death but pointed out that employees receive generous vacation packages and are able to take time off when needed without fear of retribution. The company said that it is committed to working with employees when extenuating circumstances arise but that the points-based policies are necessary to keep the trains running during a challenging worker crunch.
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By Lauren Kaori Gurley
Lauren Kaori Gurley is the labor reporter for The Washington Post. She previously covered labor and tech for Vice's Motherboard. Twitter
https://twitter.com/laurenkgurley