BUFFALO, MINN.
Folks in Buffalo are running late a lot these days. And if they say they got held up by a train, the boss tends to believe them.
Canadian Pacific (CP) freight trains, which Buffalo residents believe are longer and more numerous than ever thanks to the North Dakota oil boom, have increasingly been blocking intersections, cutting off the city's north side from its south side and sending drivers scrambling sometimes out of town to find an open crossing.
But it's not just long trains rolling slowly through town. In November, two of the city's three crossings were blocked for 16 hours overnight by a train that had stalled due to mechanical problems, then was left parked when crew members reached the end of their shift and went home.
On Feb. 27, a train was halted in Buffalo when its horn malfunctioned (in accordance with railroad regulations), and, again due to a work-hours rule, stayed for eight hours until a fresh crew could be deployed.
'Sovereign nation'
"We're trying to work with [the railroad]," Buffalo City Administrator Merton Auger said. "We understand [the shipping] business is good, and that's great. But we also need to have some accountability on solving some of the problems.
"There's not much we can do," Auger added. "The railroad is like a sovereign nation."
City officials have expressed open frustration with what they describe as indifference from the railroad. They've posted a page on the city's website — unusual in its strongly worded advocacy — asking citizens to call the railroad to complain about blockages.