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Freight cars wait to be hauled out of the Norfolk Southern Conway Terminal, in Conway, Pa., on Sept. 15.Gene J. Puskar/The Associated Press

More than 400 groups on Monday called on the U.S. Congress to intervene in a continuing railway labour standoff that threatens to idle shipments of food and fuel and leave rail travellers stranded while inflicting billions of dollars of economic damage.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, National Association of Manufacturers, National Retail Federation, American Petroleum Institute, National Restaurant Association, American Trucking Associations, American Farm Bureau Federation and other groups warned effects of a potential strike could be felt as soon as Dec. 5.

Workers in four unions have rejected a tentative contract deal announced in September, while eight approved it.

“The risks to our nation’s economy and communities simply make a national rail strike unacceptable,” says the letter to congressional leaders seen by Reuters. “Therefore, absent a voluntary agreement, we call on you to take immediate steps to prevent a national rail strike and the certain economic destruction that would follow.”

A rail traffic stoppage could freeze almost 30 per cent of U.S. cargo shipments by weight, stoke inflation and cost the American economy as much as US$2-billion a day by unleashing a cascade of transport woes affecting the U.S. energy, agriculture, manufacturing, health care and retail sectors.

The letter said a potential strike could result in “interruptions in the delivery of fertilizers, chlorine, and other products essential to clean water, our food supply, and electricity generation.” It warned a strike could halt passenger railway Amtrak and commuter rail services that “would disrupt up to 7 million travelers a day.”

Last week, the U.S. Chamber implored lawmakers to step in one day after members of the country’s biggest railway union rejected a tentative agreement.

The White House has called a rail shutdown “unacceptable.” President Joe Biden’s Presidential Emergency Board in August released the framework for the tentative deal forged in September between major carriers such as Union Pacific Corp. and a dozen unions representing 115,000 workers.

Unions and railways have until Dec. 9 to resolve differences. If they do not, workers could strike or railways could lock out employees – unless Congress intervenes. But railways would halt hazardous materials shipments at least four days ahead of a strike deadline.

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