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GOVERNMENT REGULATION OF RAILROADS:
INTRODUCTION
STATE REGULATION
FEDERAL REGULATION
EARLY 20TH-CENTURY REGULATION
THE DEPRESSION YEARS
POSTWAR ENACTMENTS
DEREGULATION MOVEMENTS

RAILROADS:
INTRODUCTION
RAILS
Wrought-Iron and Steel Rails
Joints
GAUGES
TIES AND BALLAST
ROADBED AND ROUTE
ELECTRIFICATION
PASSENGER CARS AND SERVICE
Sleeping Cars
Amtrak
Passenger Service in Other Countries
FREIGHT CARS AND SERVICE
ADVANCES IN ROLLING-STOCK DESIGN
TERMINALS AND YARDS
LABOR
RAILROADS IN THE UNITED STATES
The Spread of Rail Networks
Mid-20th-Century Mergers
INTERNATIONAL RAILROADS
Canada
Latin America
Europe
United Kingdom
Russia
Asia
Japan
India
China
Southern Africa
North Africa
Western Africa
East Africa
Australia and New Zealand

LOCOMOTIVES:
INTRODUCTION
EARLY HISTORY
STEAM LOCOMOTIVES
DIESEL-ELECTRIC LOCOMOTIVES
TURBINE-ELECTRIC LOCOMOTIVES


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FEDERAL REGULATION

FEDERAL REGULATION


Regulation of railroads by the federal government originated with the passage in 1887 of the Act to Regulate Commerce, or Interstate Commerce Act. With amendments, that law is currently the principal vehicle of federal regulation. It sought to deal with certain basic problems that had developed under unrestricted competition. Among its provisions were prohibitions against, and penalties for, undue preference, discrimination, rebates, and pooling; requirements that rates and charges be just and reasonable and that rate schedules be published and adherence to them be mandatory; a long-and-short haul rule prohibiting greater charges for a short haul than for a long haul over the same route in the same direction; and creation of the five-member Interstate Commerce Commission, or ICC, charged with enforcement of the act. In 1897 in the Maximum Freight Rate case, the Supreme Court decided that the act did not confer on the ICC power to prescribe rates. The Court in 1897 likewise weakened the long-and-short-haul clause in the Alabama Midland case.

Safety regulations began with the Federal Safety Appliance Act of 1893. It required the installation of power brakes on all cars, and of automatic couplers. The act was amended in 1903, 1910, and 1958 to extend its application.

FEDERAL REGULATION



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FEDERAL REGULATION


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RAILROAD LABOR ORGANIZATIONS:
INTRODUCTION
HISTORY
THE ORGANIZATIONS TODAY
Work Rules
Wage Disputes
Legislation
Labor Negotiations