US says Norfolk Southern must focus on safety despite investor activism

Reuters

Published Feb 21, 2024 05:47PM ET

Updated Feb 21, 2024 09:01PM ET

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The head of the Federal Railroad Administration on Wednesday urged Norfolk Southern (NYSE:NSC) to focus on safety after a group of activist investors proposed replacing the company's top management.

FRA Administrator Amit Bose wrote CEO Alan Shaw to "reiterate the only avenue to ensure NS’s immediate and long-term success is through a relentless focus on safety ... Any backsliding, as a result of a change in leadership or otherwise, on the safety-oriented path you have laid out and communicated to us will likely attract renewed oversight attention from my office."

A Norfolk Southern spokesperson said the letter "speaks for itself."

A group of investors led by Ancora Holdings on Tuesday said it had proposed replacing Shaw and nominated eight directors to the railroad operator's board.

Ancora did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the letter.

The investor group, which holds a "large equity stake" in the company, aims to replace CEO Alan Shaw with former United Parcel Service (NYSE:UPS) executive Jim Barber and COO Paul Duncan with Jamie Boychuk, a former CSX Corp (NASDAQ:CSX) executive.

Shares of Norfolk had lost nearly 5% in 2023 amid operating challenges and the fallout from a costly February 2023 derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, which invited scrutiny from the FRA. Shares were up 1.5% Wednesday.

The FRA said in August Norfolk Southern needed "significant improvements" in its safety culture after the Ohio derailment.

Bose on Wednesday praised Shaw's "commitment to investing in safety" and said "those investments are imperative for continuing the unique progress your railroad has made."