On 31 December 1996, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad Company (BSNF) was established with Atchison, Topeka, Santa Fe railroad and Burlington Northern Railroad merged. It is the second largest rail system in the United States, following the United States Pacific. It owns and operates trucks in 27 states, mainly mainly in western and midwest states, as well as Canada's few orbits. Due to the complexity of the company, the Santa Fe railroad in northern Burlington is divided into 14 different departments.
In 1896, 1901, 1927, 1955, the Great Northern Railway and the North Pacific tried four mergers. The final attempt was made from 1955 until the Supreme Court was approved and merged in March 1970 until the Burlington Northern Railway was established. In 1995, Burlington Northern merged with Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe railroads and became the northern railway of Burlington Northern and Santa Fe. By the beginning of 1916, he personally fought a variety of increasingly painful diseases, began paying more attention to charity organizations, and donated thousands of dollars to various agencies. His condition deteriorated rapidly in the middle of May, but with the help of many respected doctors he could not be saved. After falling into a coma, he died on 29 May 1916 at his house in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Mary Hill died in 1922 and was buried in her husband at the Pleasant Lake of the North Oaks Farm.
In the case of Burlington Northern Railway, the early examples of employers and employees using genetic information in the workplace were such as this. Gary Avary is a railroad man who has been using railroad for years. Although Abarri feels pain in her arms and hands, he thinks it is a carpal tunnel syndrome caused by repetitive work over many years. Avary made a request for compensation for workers and the company sent him to consult a doctor for examination. He later learned that he did a genetic test before he knew it. Since the role of genetics in carpal tunnel syndrome is unknown, this trial itself is controversial; although this trial was aimed at finding genetic susceptibility to carpal tunnel syndrome, in fact it is rare I studied the condition. One of them is similar to carpal tunnel syndrome, a related genetic marker. Employers are accused of trying to conduct genetic testing to prove that workers are in existing condition as a reason for dismissing workers' claims