UP Minnesota branch loses major customer NEWSWIRE

UP Minnesota branch loses major customer NEWSWIRE

By Steve Glischinski | December 13, 2019

| Last updated on November 3, 2020


Get a weekly roundup of the industry news you need.

UP1380
UP’s local arrives at the old M&StL depot in New Prague on Sept. 4, 2012.
Steve Glischinski
NEW PRAGUE, Minn. – Employees at Miller Milling in New Prague got coal in their Christmas stocking this month when the company announced it was shutting down its mill in New Prague served by Union Pacific. The flour mill, which will be shuttered Dec. 31, is the largest shipper on the railroad’s 24-mile former Minneapolis & St. Louis Montgomery Subdivision. For years UP and predecessor Chicago & North Western had a dedicated switch job to serve the mill.
The closing of the New Prague mill comes on the heels of Ardent Mills closing its flour mill in Rush City, Minn., a major shipper for the St. Croix Valley Railroad.

The New Prague mill was first established in 1896. Miller Milling took over the mill in the 1980s. In 2012, Miller became a part of the Nisshin Seifun Group of Japan. The company says the age and location of the mill are primary factors in the decision to shut it down. The mill is served by a weekday UP local that connects with the former Omaha Road main line at Merriam, Minn.

When the mill shuts down there will be two customers remaining on the branch: Seneca Foods in Montgomery and Chart Industries in New Prague, which designs and manufactures cryogenic equipment for liquid gas.

The branch was once part of M&StL’s main line from Minneapolis to Marshalltown and Oskaloosa, Iowa, and east to Peoria, Ill. The other remaining portion of this route in Minnesota is a short stretch in Minneapolis and Canadian Pacific’s 19-mile Hartland Spur from Waseca to Hartland, which has not been used for several years. Other remaining Minneapolis & St. Louis trackage in Minnesota is operated by Minnesota Prairie Line and BNSF between Norwood and Madison 129 miles.

Share this article