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Canadian Pacific Railway plans to cut 1,000 jobs this year

Click to play video: 'CP lays off 1,000 workers'
CP lays off 1,000 workers
WATCH: Canadian Pacific Railway is slashing 1,000 jobs because of declining volumes of freight thanks to the sluggish economy. As Reid Fiest reports, the company was already under orders from Transport Canada to deal with fatigue among existing staff – Jan 21, 2016

MONTREAL – Canadian Pacific Railway, which posted record profits and revenue last year, plans to cut almost 1,000 more jobs this year as it adjusts to lower shipment volumes amid a collapse in commodity prices and a weak Canadian economy.

The Calgary-based company says most of the cuts to unionized and management positions will result from attrition and kick in by mid-year.

Since 2012, the railway has cut 6,000 to 7,000 jobs in a move to boost its bottom line. In the process, it has dramatically improved its operating ratio, or operating expenses as a percentage of revenue, to below 60 per cent.

“There is still more to accomplish,” CEO Hunter Harrison said during a conference call Thursday about the company’s fourth-quarter and year-end results.

“What we’re focusing on is what we can control: which is execution, which is running an efficient railroad.”

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The railway had $6.71 billion in revenue and adjusted earnings of $1.62 billion in 2015 – up from $6.6 billion and $1.48 billion respectively in 2014 – although both fell below analyst expectations. Meanwhile, the company forecasts a double-digit increase in adjusted profits in 2016.

WATCH: CP Rail workers union head says employees were not given any knowledge of the planned job cuts.
Click to play video: 'CP Rail workers union blindsided by plan to cut 1,000 jobs'
CP Rail workers union blindsided by plan to cut 1,000 jobs

The company said it had reduced its workforce by 12 per cent, eliminating nearly 1,800 jobs last year, as shipments dropped three per cent. It says attrition accounts for some 2,000 people leaving the company each year.

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In addition to labour savings, the railway is cutting capital spending by $400 million.

The plan to further cut jobs takes into account changes to labour agreements in the United States that alter scheduling rules, allowing for fewer workers. Fewer workers are also needed as the railway operates longer, faster but fewer trains.

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WATCH: More job cuts are coming down the tracks for Canadian Pacific Rail. Another 1,000 people will lose their jobs this year. That follows 1,200 layoffs last year and as Sarah Offin reports, the union is now blowing the whistle on safety concerns on the rails.

Click to play video: '1,000 job cuts coming for CP Rail workers by mid-year'
1,000 job cuts coming for CP Rail workers by mid-year

However, as market conditions improve over the longer term, CP would look to bring back employees to meet demand, said spokesman Martin Cej, who declined to say how many of the job losses will be in Canada versus the U.S.

Doug Finnson, president of the Canadian Rail Conference, which represents 3,400 CP train conductors and engineers, said he’s not aware of any planned jobs cuts beyond the 115 locomotive positions the union is fighting in arbitration.

“I’m always worried when they say they’re going to cut jobs, particularly when they don’t tell us anything,” he said in an interview. “I think this is just one more part of (Harrison’s) cut-to-the-bone philosophy.”

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CP (TSX:CP) expects to build off its strong results, despite concerns about the economy that could affect some types of freight that it carries through its North American rail network, the company said.

WATCH: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau thinks innovation and investment are part of the answer to Canada’s struggling economy. That’s the message he’s pushing at the World Economic Forum in Davos. But as Vassy Kapelos reports, not everyone is buying it.
Click to play video: 'Not everyone is buying what PM Trudeau is selling'
Not everyone is buying what PM Trudeau is selling

“We’re going to be able to convert what the economy does provide us and poise ourselves for a strong bounce-back when the economy comes back,” said president and chief operating officer Keith Creel.

Meanwhile, CP Rail said it is reviewing its strategy to acquire Norfolk Southern Railway after saying it failed to anticipate that politics would overtake the regulatory review process.

Harrison criticized interventions by elected congressional leaders and challenged those who claim CP’s proposed use of a trust is unethical and illegal even though it has been used many times in the past.

“If the deck is stacked and if somebody’s got an ace up their sleeve and are not playing by the rules, then we understand that and we have to adjust accordingly,” he told analysts.

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While he believes railway mergers will eventually be required to accommodate economic and population growth, Harrison said CP will also assess whether to abandon its bid and instead recommend that its board focus on repurchasing its shares, which have fallen 35 per cent in the last year.

“If nothing happens, we’ve got a wonderful franchise here in Canada. We have not fallen in love with any deal.”

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