Thats nice, kind of wind down right at the end of her career. Railroading is tough and she’s been doing it for 37 years! Walking on ballast, breathing in the dust, dirt, and fumes. Riding in filthy locomotives, working thru pink eye outbreaks, spending 12+ hours smelling toilets that havent been drained in several months. Working in yards and terminals avoiding trespassers who are high on narcotics that keep demanding you give them some money, stepping over / on their fe--s, watching them ur----e on the door handles signal uses to enter the cabins. Brushing aside used needles, broken crack / me-h pipes so you can work. Not to mention the grueling schedule, mandatory overtime, working w/ no days off, working when sick, working on holidays, working outside when its hot and cold, and the not having a sleep schedule. She gets to ease out of all that at the end w/ being an advisor. Wait a minute? She never worked in any of those conditions? Well Im sure she will spend her time as an advisor strongly and publicly advocating for EQUALITY that all railroad employees should be treated at work like how she has been treated.