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Friends of the Flange
https://www.rypn.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=37141
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Author:  artchase [ Tue Sep 23, 2014 9:03 pm ]
Post subject:  Friends of the Flange

Hi crew,

Just wanted to share a friends blog about railroading. Hayley Enoch is the creator of Friends of the Flange ( http://www.friendsoftheflange.com ) and she has some interesting comments and ideas from some one who is fairly new to the railway preservation scene. And she is not just interested, she also crews on the Grapevine Vintage Railway.

I know she is a little reluctant to share with "seasoned" preservation folks, but she has a few refreshing insights that I think we take for granted. She seriously wants to help preservation and steam operation by sharing ideas and comments with the public at large. It's nice to see younger folks interested in railway preservation and she is worth a read.

So be kind, she is new, but very interested in what RYPN is trying to accomplish.

Art

Author:  Brian [ Tue Sep 23, 2014 11:05 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Friends of the Flange

Her blog is witty, intelligent, and well-written. I recommend it. I had visited previously but did not realize it until reading the blog on railfan etiquette.

She is a welcome addition to the community.

Author:  artchase [ Wed Oct 01, 2014 9:07 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Friends of the Flange

New article...

http://www.friendsoftheflange.com/2014/ ... about.html

Author:  J3a-614 [ Wed Oct 08, 2014 8:53 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Friends of the Flange

Another piece, this time an interview with Steve Lee and the planning and logistics that went into a steam excursion.

http://www.friendsoftheflange.com/2014/ ... e-lee.html

In my opinion, the most significant paragraphs in the article:

Quote:
I was a road foreman in Cheyenne when they chose me. I got the job mostly because no one else wanted it. It was thrust upon me. It wasn’t politically popular to do the steam program at the time when I started--the management didn’t realize its PR value at that point, and managers thought it was a dead-end job. Management didn’t realize how much skill went into coordinating the excursions, and didn’t think that anything the workers did while they were in the Heritage Program applied to the modern railroad.

At first, I was managing the Heritage Program on top of my normal foreman duties. That went on for four or five years before it dawned on the managers in Omaha that it was a full time job and they relieved me of the road foreman’s duties. That took care of that!

The managers’ attitudes towards the program became more friendly by the end of my career, though not as much as it should have. The problem is that you can’t put a number on how much good PR the Heritage Program brings in. Management can’t understand that without the steam engines and their excursions being in the news, the only press the Union Pacific got would be about tying up level crossing or blowing stuff up and evacuating towns. Or collisions, and too much noise from the train horns.

As the program grew, though, and as the managers above me moved up in the the hierarchy, a lot of them became more broad-thinking and viewed the Heritage Program in a different light. They get high enough up to see the benefit coming in PR from counties, states, national, We’ve had congressmen and presidents on the train. As long as we didn’t do anything stupid, they started to support us.--Steve Lee

Author:  Steve DeGaetano [ Wed Oct 08, 2014 9:41 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Friends of the Flange

It's a fantastic interview! No need to warn us to "be kind." Whatever praise she gets, she deserves.

Author:  artchase [ Fri Oct 31, 2014 5:15 pm ]
Post subject:  Friends of the Flange The Red-Eyed Guard: A History of Grad

Hayley's at it again.....

The Red-Eyed Guard: A History of Grade Crossing Signs and Signals


http://www.friendsoftheflange.com/2014/ ... teral.html

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