Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,573,952 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

ATA and Intermodal Trucking Firms Issue Position Paper on Port Trucking and Safety Issues.


ALEXANDRIA, Va. -- --The American Trucking Associations (ATA (1) (AT Attachment) The specification for IDE drives. See IDE.

(2) See analog telephone adapter.

ATA - Advanced Technology Attachment
) and its intermodal in·ter·mod·al  
adj.
Relating to transportation by more than one means of conveyance, as by truck and rail: intermodal transport.
 motor carrier members today issued the following position paper on serious issues facing intermodal freight carriers. While the threat of a port shutdown shut·down  
n.
A cessation of operations or activity, as at a factory.


shutdown
Noun

the closing of a factory, shop, or other business

Verb

shut down
 by independent truck drivers looms, ATA offers its insights into what intermodal trucking firms consider to be their key issues. Without resolution to the issues, which hit independent drivers and intermodal trucking companies equally, the group says the future of intermodal freight capacity is at stake.

Intermodal Motor Carrier Operations at America's Ports: A Background Document on Issues of Concern

The American Trucking Associations (ATA) is calling on the myriad of American businesses operating in and around U.S. ports to help bring relief to millions of Americans who move our nation's intermodal freight. For decades, foreign-owned Steamship steamship, watercraft propelled by a steam engine or a steam turbine. Early Steam-powered Ships


Marquis Claude de Jouffroy d'Abbans is generally credited with the first experimentally successful application of steam power to navigation; in 1783 his
 Lines (SSLs) have engaged in harsh business practices and received special antitrust Antitrust

The antitrust laws apply to virtually all industries and to every level of business, including manufacturing, transportation, distribution, and marketing. They prohibit a variety of practices that restrain trade.
 exemptions that have combined to establish an increasingly difficult business environment for motor carriers engaged in moving intermodal freight at our nation's ports. ATA is aware of recent flyers circulating cir·cu·late  
v. cir·cu·lat·ed, cir·cu·lat·ing, cir·cu·lates

v.intr.
1. To move in or flow through a circle or circuit: blood circulating through the body.

2.
 among independent drivers calling on them to park their rigs from June 28 through July 4th, in order to force a "Nationwide Shutdown" of America's ports.

While problems at ports adversely affect drivers and motor-carrier companies alike, ATA is not a party to any potential "shutdown" action. ATA sympathizes with the frustration of the motor freight community operating at maritime port facilities. The following paragraphs outline the serious concerns that American-owned motor carriers, their employees, and their independent contractors A person who contracts to do work for another person according to his or her own processes and methods; the contractor is not subject to another's control except for what is specified in a mutually binding agreement for a specific job.  have identified as jeopardizing the future success of intermodal freight transportation:

Roadability: Unsafe intermodal chassis Pronounced "chah-see," it is a physical structure that holds everything or that everything is attached to. A computer's cabinet is often called the chassis.  on America's Highways

--For years, ATA has negotiated in good faith with the foreign SSLs, urging them to provide safe, compliant trailers (called chassis) to haul containerized con·tain·er·ize  
v.tr. con·tain·er·ized, con·tain·er·iz·ing, con·tain·er·iz·es
1. To package (cargo) in large standardized containers for efficient shipping and handling.

2.
 freight over the nation's streets and highways.

--The SSLs own or lease more than 750,000 chassis, and interchange them to trucking companies to deliver intermodal containers to the SSLs' customers. If motor carriers refuse to take unsafe or non-compliant chassis, eventually the carriers are punished pun·ish  
v. pun·ished, pun·ish·ing, pun·ish·es

v.tr.
1. To subject to a penalty for an offense, sin, or fault.

2. To inflict a penalty for (an offense).

3.
 by being offered no further work.

--Many foreign-owned SSLs do not spend sufficient money to maintain and repair their own chassis to meet existing federal safety regulations.

--ATA has worked for several years with the US Department of Transportation (DOT) to address this safety gap, but this issue remains unsolved. For more on the issue visit www.truckline.com click on "Roadability" and read the article titled "Study Debunks Costs to Maintain Chassis."

Business practices by foreign-owned SSLs and maritime port facilities

--SSLs or their brokers order truck deliveries for their containerized freight at agreed-upon rates. All too often, and many months after the freight is delivered, the motor carrier gets paid less than the previously agreed rate. If the motor carrier insists on the agreed rate, SSLs simply refuse to pay it. Truckers then face overwhelming potential court costs court costs n. fees for expenses that the courts pass on to attorneys, who then pass them on to their clients or, in some kinds of cases, to the losing party. , and/or a high probability of being shut out of the market.

--Increasingly, motor carriers are being directed to reposition intermodal equipment without prior notice by the SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) The leading security protocol on the Internet. Developed by Netscape, SSL is widely used to do two things: to validate the identity of a Web site and to create an encrypted connection for sending credit card and other personal data. , and without additional compensation for these secondary moves.

--In addition, maritime ports have no standard on the amount of time it should take for a trucker to enter, pickup the container-on-chassis, and exit their port facility. The lack of a standard "turn time" induces logistical lo·gis·tic   also lo·gis·ti·cal
adj.
1. Of or relating to symbolic logic.

2. Of or relating to logistics.



[Medieval Latin logisticus, of calculation
 inefficiencies into motor carriers' planning and productivity.

The UIIA UIIA Uniform Intermodal Interchange and Facilities Access Agreement  is a One-Sided Contract

--Motor carries are generally required to sign onto a common contract called the Uniform Intermodal Interchange And Facilities Access Agreement (called "UIIA").

--By signing this contract, motor carriers agree to be responsible for the chassis which they do not control, do not own, and cannot maintain.

--Furthermore, the UIIA states that the SSLs make no warranty as to the condition of the chassis, but requires truckers to use the SSLs-owned chassis on US highways. Therefore:

--If a chassis breaks down on the highway, the motor carrier must fix it, and then attempt to seek reimbursement Reimbursement

Payment made to someone for out-of-pocket expenses has incurred.
 from the foreign SSL. Motor carriers lose thousands of dollars annually in unreimbursed repair expenses to fix the SSLs' chassis.

--If the brakes on the SSL's chassis fail, and that results in death, injury and/or property damage, the motor carrier and driver may be liable under the UIIA for the consequences, even when the cause of the incident was the failure of the foreign SSLs to maintain their chassis for highway use.

--The UIIA also allows foreign-owned SSLs to charge truckers for the late return of equipment that is delayed because of conditions controlled by the SSLs.

Port Congestion The condition of a network when there is not enough bandwidth to support the current traffic load.

congestion - When the offered load of a data communication path exceeds the capacity.
 

The foreign-owned SSLs generally own the businesses that manage the terminals and chassis at ports. Therefore they are the primary cause of congestion at our maritime ports, because:

--They often fail to hire sufficient help at the entrances to process trucks and drivers into the ports.

--They often refuse to keep gates open on evenings and weekends when traffic is lower.

--Once drivers arrive at the port they can spend hours searching for a chassis with the fewest safety defects, waiting to get it repaired, and again wait in line to exit the facility.

--Time spent in ports by drivers can range from 30 minutes to 4 hours or more (2-3 hour delays are becoming common). These delays reduce significantly the number of deliveries a driver can perform. Given that truckers are often paid a flat rate for delivering a container, it is easy to see how delays cause enormous economic harm to both drivers and the motor-carrier companies who hire them.

Conclusions

ATA is seriously concerned with the present business model for hauling intermodal freight in and out of ports, and believes the business conditions need drastic improvements. With port freight expected to at least double by 2020 or sooner, business conditions must improve to sustain the economic viability and efficiency of the intermodal motor carrier segment of trucking. Increasingly, drivers and independent contractors are leaving this industry as a result of such business conditions. We must all recognize that no port freight moves without trucks and truck drivers. The future of intermodal trucking capacity is at stake, and ATA is calling on the SSLs, the port operators, intermodal marketing companies and the Federal Maritime Commission The Federal Maritime Commission (FMC) regulates the waterborne foreign and domestic offshore commerce of the United States; ensures that U.S. international trade is open to all nations on fair and equitable terms; and protects against unauthorized activity in the waterborne commerce of  to work cooperatively with the American intermodal motor carrier industry to address these very real and troubling business conditions.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Publication:Business Wire
Date:Jun 25, 2004
Words:1057
Previous Article:Thousands Expected to Gather in Fort Worth to Light the Night for Sight.
Next Article:E.T. Horn Company Selected By Cargill Foods as Exclusive Distributor of Lecithin Products in Western States.



Related Articles
Truck, rail industries end long-standing lobbying feud.
Intermodal hub solution to border tie-ups.
Shipping firm sets sights on 3 sites.
Mexico offers logistics alternative: becoming integral part of U.S. supply chain.
White line fever: for shippers of scrap, the transportation market is a mad, mad, mad, mad world.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles