|   Burlington Northern CEO Says US Economy, Freight  Volume Growing
 
 By Jacob Bunge and Bob Sechler, Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES PALM BEACH, Fla. -(Dow Jones)- The head of Burlington  Northern Santa Fe said Monday that the U.S. economy is growing at a "modest"  pace and the railroad will add jobs and new rail cars and locomotives this year  to keep abreast of rising freight volume. "Clearly, the U.S. is in recovery," Chief Executive Matthew K. Rose said,  echoing recent comments from his peers at Union Pacific Corp. (UNP), CSX Corp. ( CSX) and Norfolk Southern Corp. (NSC). Rose said in an interview on the sidelines of a Commodity Markets Council  event here that Burlington Northern will hire about 4,000 people  in 2012, including train operators and maintenance personnel, and also is  expanding its rail capacity with new terminals, rail cars and locomotives. Some  of the new hires will make up for job losses from attrition, so the net gain  will be lower. Burlington Northern, which currently employs about 40,000 people, is  approaching the two-year anniversary of its buyout by Warren Buffett'sBerkshire  Hathaway Inc. (BRKA, BRKB) in February. Rose didn't disclose his railroad's specific plans for 2012 capital spending  but said he expects it to be a record year for such spending by the rail  industry overall. Earlier Monday, the Association of American Railroads--the sector's main  trade group--announced that major freight railroads are expected to spend $13  billion to enhance their rail networks this year, which it called a record for  the industry. Rose noted that Burlington Northern's recent financial results have been  broadly along the same lines as its peers, which he described as robust. From an  investor standpoint, however, fourth-quarter results from top U.S. railroads  have been something of a mixed bag. CSX reported a 6.3% increase  in earnings earlier this month that nonetheless fell short of analysts'  forecasts on relatively soft volume, while Norfolk Southern reported a 19% rise in earnings  but fell slightly short of revenue expectations. Union Pacific topped forecasts  with a 24% increase in profit, buoyed by a booming business hauling materials to  and from new shale-oil drilling sites. Meanwhile, Rose took the opportunity Monday to squelch any suggestion that  Burlington Northern or Buffett had something to do with President Obama's recent  decision to block construction of the Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canada to  the U.S. Gulf Coast. Rose acknowledged that Burlington Northern will continue to haul crude that  instead might have flowed through the pipeline. But he said the railroad likely  would have benefited from the pipeline as well by hauling much of the material  needed to build it. "We stand for more infrastructure of all kinds," Rose said. -By Jacob Bunge, Dow Jones Newswires; 312-750-4117; jacob.bunge@dowjones.com -By Bob Sechler, Dow Jones Newswires; 512-258-1690; bob.sechler@dowjones.com | 
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