NGFA testifies on proposed competitive switching rules at STB admin March 15, 2022

NGFA testifies on proposed competitive switching rules at STB

ARLINGTON, Va., March 15, 2022 – During a Surface Transportation Board (STB) hearing on March 15, the National Grain and Feed Association (NGFA) said finalizing competitive (or “reciprocal”) switching rules pending at the STB would increase rail-to-rail competition for the benefit of agricultural shippers and for society at large.

NGFA Chief Economist Max Fisher testified today before the STB’s proposal to revise competitive switching rules, which would allow shippers served by a single railroad to request bids from a nearby competing railroad. STB’s proposal has been pending since 2016.

“In a highly consolidated and largely captive industry, this may be the best opportunity to create some semblance of rail-to-rail competition,” he said. “Many of NGFA’s members are captive to one railroad and have little bargaining power in the absence of rail-to-rail competition.”

Since 2017, when NGFA submitted its last set of comments on the proposal, the amount of grain transported by rail has been relatively steady, and the trend of shuttering smaller train loading facilities and building larger facilities has continued, NGFA noted. Meanwhile, it remains difficult to locate facilities in places where more than one railroad can provide service.  

“Agriculture’s suitability for alternative rail service through reciprocal switching has improved and its need for rail-to-rail competition remains,” Fisher said. 

STB’s current regulations governing reciprocal switching were promulgated in 1985 by the Board’s predecessor, the Interstate Commerce Commission. The regulations provide that reciprocal switching would only be prescribed if the agency determines that a railroad is engaging in activity considered “anticompetitive.” Under the Board’s proposal, there would be no need to show anticompetitive conduct. Rather, the Board would require the establishment of a switching arrangement if it is “practicable and in the public interest” or is “necessary to provide competitive rail service.”

NGFA submitted comments on Feb. 14 as part of the formal record urging the Board to require competitive switching for shippers and receivers that are within 100 miles of another railroad. During his testimony, Fisher noted that a recent survey of NGFA membership shows that more than half of NGFA members’ rail origin and destination facilities are located on a Class I railway within 100 miles of a second Class I railway. 

“Consequently, a determination in the final rules that 100 miles is ‘within a reasonable distance’ of an interchange could potentially lead to increased rail-to-rail competition for a significant portion of grain shippers,” he said. 

View the NGFA’s full comments on competitive switching here

STB also is working to promulgate revisions to its rate reasonableness procedures for shippers and receivers that would be too far from an interchange to participate in reciprocal switching. In January, NGFA submitted comments encouraging the Board to finalize its rules for a streamlined “final offer rate review” process that would provide rail customers with a more workable approach to challenge unreasonable freight rail rates. NGFA also submitted comments recommending for STB to move forward with creating a rail rate arbitration program.

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The NGFA, established in 1896, consists of grain, feed, processing, exporting and other grain-related companies that operate more than 8,000 facilities handling U.S. grains and oilseeds. Its membership includes grain elevators; feed and feed ingredient manufacturers; biofuels companies; grain and oilseed processors and millers; exporters; livestock and poultry integrators; and associated firms that provide goods and services to the nation’s grain, feed and processing industry. The NGFA consists of 27 affiliated State and Regional Grain and Feed Associations, is co-located and has a strategic alliance with North American Export Grain Association, and a strategic alliance with Pet Food Institute.