Michigan Railroad Commission

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Michigan Railroad Commission
Agency overview
Formed1873
Dissolved1919
Superseding agency

The Michigan Railroad Commission was an agency in the

railroads within the state. It was established by the Michigan Legislature in 1873; in 1919 it was abolished and its functions transferred to a new body, the Michigan Public Utilities Commission
.

History

The office was established in 1873 as part of a general reform of the state's railroad laws. One requirement was that every

interurbans
.

In 1907 a revision of the law expanded the office; the single commissioner was replaced a group of three. This was prompted by the urging of then-Commissioner Chase Osborn, who believed the system of a single commissioner was antiquated that a "modern type" of commission with greater powers of intervention was necessary. To provide greater continuity in policy, the three commissioners would serve six-year terms at staggered intervals. The commission also received the power to enforce the state's rate regulations and to arbitrate disputes between companies concerning the application of those rates. The commission remained so structured until its replacement in 1919 by the Michigan Public Utilities Commission, which did not retain the title, nor did any of the sitting railroad commissioners serve on the new body.[1]: 262–263 [2]: 450–458 

Duties

The general railroad law of 1873 specified a number of rights and responsibilities for the "Commissioner of Railroads", including but not limited to:

  • Reporting: Every railroad company was required by law to furnish a report of its operations to the commissioner including disposition of
    liabilities, company officers, debt, the value and disposition of its physical plant (including roadbed, bridges, stations, rolling stock and track), the number of miles operated by its trains during the preceding year, earnings and expenses broken down by month and source, expenditures on improvements and investments, rates charged for passenger and freight traffic, accidents on its lines and operating agreements with other companies. In turn, the commissioner was required to publish these reports.[nb 1]
  • Investigation: the commissioner was empowered by the act to inquire into the affairs of railroad companies independent of the annual reports, and permitted to use subpoenas to compel testimony from company officials.[3]: 269–270 
  • Inspection: the commissioner was empowered to inspect a company's physical plant, and to restrict the operation of passenger trains over sections of a line deemed unsafe. In 1886 and again in 1893, the commission closed the
    St. Joseph Valley Railway to passenger traffic because of the deterioration of the roadbed.[3]: 269 [4]
    : 26, 29–30 

Railroad commissioners

From 1873 until 1907 a single commissioner was appointed by the Governor of Michigan. From 1907 until 1919 the governor appointed a body of three.[5]

Notes

  1. ^ The full list is enumerated in the law itself.[3]: 267–269 

References

  1. OCLC 54650
    .
  2. ^ Kilborn, Russell D. (July 1919). "The Michigan Railroad Commission". Michigan History magazine. 3 (3): 445–472.
  3. ^ a b c Michigan Railroad Commission (1873). Annual Report.
  4. ^ Myers, Robert (January–February 1988). "The St. Joseph Valley Railroad Company". Michigan History. 72 (1): 24–30.
  5. ^ "Memorandum to Mr. McBearty, Chairman" (PDF). Michigan Public Service Commission. September 26, 1945. Retrieved 2008-02-10. [dead link]

External links