A private railway is a railroad run by a private business entity (usually a corporation but not need be), as opposed to a railroad run by a public sector .
22-604: The Nagano Electric Railway ( 長野電鉄 , Nagano Dentetsu ) is a private railway based in Nagano , Japan. The company and its line are commonly referred to as Nagaden ( 長電 ) . It originally operated three lines, but only the Nagano Line between Nagano — Suzaka — Shinshū-Nakano — Yudanaka remains in service. Nagaden owns a 1.1% stake in Shinano Railway . The Nagano Line has frequent local and express services. It
44-523: A public transit railway owned and operated by private sector, almost always organized as a joint-stock company , or in Japanese: kabushiki gaisha (lit. stock company), but may be any type of private business entity. Although the Japan Railways Group (JR Group) companies are also kabushiki gaishas, they are not classified as private railways because of their unique status as the primary successors of
66-461: A beer train on the same route is available. In addition, a wine-tasting train from Nagano to Yudanaka or Yudanaka to Nagano is available on select Saturdays throughout the year. ● Means all trains stops at this station. |Means all trains passes at this station. The original Nagano Electric Railway was built in 1926, connecting Gondō in Nagano with Suzaka, and electrified at 1,500 V DC. Later that year,
88-511: A strike is severely limited by government legislation; there is very little tolerance for railway work stoppage. Employees of private railways may legally strike but its unheard of in Japan. There have only been two notable railroad strikes in Japanese history, both by employees of government run entities (government employees are legally barred from striking): One in 1973, and a major strike protesting
110-694: A variety of other businesses that depend on the traffic generated through their transit systems: hotels, department stores, supermarkets, resorts, and real estate development and leasing. Japanese railways, whether government run, semi-public, or private business, are subject to the regulations enforced by the Railway Bureau [ ja ] of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism . They may join unions such as National Railway Workers' Union and General Federation of Private Railway and Bus Workers' Unions of Japan , but their abilities to call
132-478: A “Strike for the Right to Strike” ( sutoken suto ) in 1975, but the strike ended in failure and shattered the power of Kokurō, leading to a decline in membership and ending its days as an effective organizing force for labor militancy. By the 1980s, Kokurō was a shadow of its former self. When the privatization of JNR was proposed in the mid-1980s, Kokurō was strongly opposed and campaigned against it, but to no avail. JNR
154-465: Is a Japanese trade union , which is usually referred to as Kokurō ( 国労 ) in Japanese. Historically, Kokurō represented many of the workers who worked for Japanese National Railways (JNR), from which the union derived its name. For several decades in the postwar period, Kokurō was one of the most powerful unions in Japan, with a membership in the hundreds of thousands, before falling into decline. As of 2016, Kokurō had just 9,000 members. Kokurō
176-538: Is a major route for commuter traffic in Nagano, and also serves as a link for tourists going to the town of Obuse , the hot springs at Yudanaka, and the ski resorts at Shiga Kōgen. At limited times throughout the year, there are special reserve round-trip trains between Nagano and Obuse several nights a week in which customers are served a local, specially-made bento and drink local alcohol. For example, on select evenings in March and April, local nihonshu . At other seasons,
198-878: The JNR Settlement Corporation , where they could be assigned for up to three years. Around 7,600 workers were transferred in this way, and around 2,000 of them were hired by JR firms, and 3,000 found work elsewhere. Mitomu Yamaguchi, a former JNR employee from Tosu in Saga prefecture who had been transferred to the JNR Settlement Corporation, later stated that their help in finding work consisted of giving him photocopies of recruitment ads from newspapers. This period ended in April 1990, and 1,047 were dismissed. This included 64 Zendoro members and 966 Kokurō members. Many lawsuits and labor commission cases were filed over
220-697: The Japan Railway Trade Unions Confederation and the Japan Confederation of Railway Workers' Unions . Kokurō and the National Railway Locomotive Engineers' Union (Zendoro), both prominent Japanese railway unions, represented a number of the JNR workers. There was a government pledge that no one would be "Thrown out onto the street", so unhired workers were classified as "needing to be employed" and were transferred to
242-804: The Japanese National Railways (JNR). Voluntary sector railways (semi-public) are additionally not classified as shitetsu due to their origins as rural, money-losing JNR lines that have since been transferred to local possession, in spite of their organizational structures being corporatized. Among private railways in Japan, the Japan Private Railway Association [ ja ] categorizes 16 companies as "major" operators. They are often profitable and tend to be less expensive per passenger-kilometer than JR trains that also run less dense regional routes. Private railways corporations in Japan also run and generate profits from
SECTION 10
#1732863325098264-650: The Tokyo Metropolitan Government (pending privatization). The Japan Private Railway Association counts Tokyo Metro as one of the 16 major private railways. In the United States , a private railroad is a railroad owned by a company and serves only that company, and does not hold itself out as a "common carrier" (i.e., it does not provide rail transport services for the general public). National Railway Workers%27 Union The National Railway Workers' Union (NRU) ( 国鉄労働組合 , Kokutetsu-rōdō-kumiai )
286-462: The breakup (and layoffs of tens of thousands of employees) of JNR in 1985. Though private railways such as industrial railways have existed in Japan they are not deemed shitetsu nor mintetsu in Japanese, as their purpose is not public transit. Tokyo Metro is a member of Japan Private Railway Association but is under special laws and its stock is owned by the Japanese Government and
308-578: The company absorbed the operations of Katō Railway, which operated a line on the east bank of the Chikuma River from Yashiro via Suzaka to Kijima, with the Gongo to Yoshida section being double-tracked. The following year, an additional line was constructed from Shinshū-Nakano to Yudanaka, and in 1928, the line was extended to Nagano Station as dual track. The Yoshida - Asahi section was double-tracked in 1956, and freight services ceased in 1979. CTC signalling
330-528: The decades from the privatization in 1987. 23 years after the original privatization, on June 28, 2010, the Supreme Court settled the dispute between the workers and the Japan Railway Construction, Transport and Technology Agency , the successor body to the JNR Settlement Corporation. The agency said it would pay 20 billion yen, approximately 22 million yen per worker, to 904 plaintiffs. However, as
352-414: The massive 1960 Anpo protests against the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty . However, an Occupation-era law prohibiting public-sector unions such as Kokurō from carrying out strikes limited Kokurō's own militancy and forced it to rely on the broader Sōhyō federation (which including many private-sector unions as well) to advance its militant agenda. Kokurō finally tried to resolve this situation by carrying out
374-516: The militarist Japanese government's demands in the prewar period. However, in the late 1940s, with advent of the global Cold War , Occupation authorities began to view the activities of the militant Sanbetsu-affiliated labor unions with increasing alarm. With the open encouragement of Occupation authorities, more conservative elements within the Sanbetsu-affiliated labor unions began to form “democracy cells” ( mindō ). The first of these mindō
396-530: The more conservative Sōdōmei federation. To this end, it began to infiltrate the upper ranks of major labor unions, including Kokurō. In August 1946, Kokurō became one of the founding member unions of the new, JCP-backed Sanbetsu labor federation. In these early phases, the American Occupation authorities even encouraged the formation of Sanbetsu, believing it to be a necessary counterweight to Sōdōmei , which they viewed as having been too compliant with
418-482: Was commissioned between Yudanaka and Asahi in 1980, and extended to Nagano in 1984. The section from Nagano to Zenkōjishita was converted to an underground railway in 1981. This article incorporates material from the corresponding article in the Japanese Misplaced Pages. Private railway In Japan , private sector railway ( 私鉄 or 民鉄 , Shitetsu or Mintetsu ) , commonly simply private railway , refers to
440-506: Was established in February 1946 in preparation for the establishment of the nationwide, state-run railway Japan National Railways (JNR), organizing more than 96% of JNR employees. Originally a confederation of local and regional unions, Kokurō was reorganized into a single organization in June 1946. In early 1946, the newly legalized Japan Communist Party sought to establish a rival labor movement to
462-564: Was formed within Kokurō, with other unions rapidly following suit and forming their own mindō thereafter. Amidst the collapse of Sanbetsu during the Red Purge of 1950, these mindō rose to the fore and merged with some elements of Sōdōmei to form the new Sōhyō labor federation, with Kokurō as a leading member. In 1959, Kokurō's dissatisfaction with Sōhyō's seeming lack of militancy was a factor in driving Sōhyō's leadership to pursue an activist role in
SECTION 20
#1732863325098484-573: Was privatized in 1987, and replaced by the Japan Railways Group (JR Group). Lists of workers to be employed by the new organizations were drawn up by JNR and given to the JR companies. There was substantial pressure on union members to leave their unions, and within a year, Kokurō's membership fell from 200,000 to 44,000. Workers who had supported the privatization, or those who left Kokurō, were hired at substantially higher rates than Kokurō members. The main trade unions representing railway workers in Japan are now
#97902