The legal duty of a railroad to provide transportation services to any shipper who requests them at published or negotiated rates, without unjust discrimination. Class I railroads in the United States are common carriers under federal law. The obligation is a fundamental principle of rail regulation that balances the public interest against railroad operational discretion.
The independent U.S. federal agency responsible for the economic regulation of the nation's freight railroads, including jurisdiction over rates, mergers, acquisitions, line sales, and abandonments. The STB was created by the ICC Termination Act of 1995 as the successor to the Interstate Commerce Commission. It adjudicates shipper complaints about unreasonable rates and competitive access.
A publicly filed schedule of rates, rules, and regulations applicable to railroad transportation services. Tariffs are filed with and accessible through the STB and must be applied consistently to all shippers who qualify. Under the Staggers Act, railroads may supplement tariff rates with confidential contracts.
A proceeding before the Surface Transportation Board in which a shipper challenges a railroad rate as unreasonably high, typically under the Simplified Standards for Rail Rate Cases or the Full Stand-Alone Cost methodology. Rate cases are complex, expensive, and time-consuming, often involving detailed economic and engineering analyses. A successful rate case can result in a refund of overcharges and a maximum reasonable rate going forward.
A formal filing by a shipper with the Surface Transportation Board alleging that a railroad's rate or practice is unreasonable, discriminatory, or otherwise unlawful. Complaints can seek rate relief, damages, or changes in railroad practices. The complaint process provides shippers a regulatory remedy when commercial negotiations fail.