Archive for News – Page 11

FMC Takes First Step on League’s Petition for Rulemaking

The Federal Maritime Commission (FMC) has now officially acknowledged the League’s petition to the agency aimed at combating unfair demurrage and detention charges.  As previously announced, the League is leading a coalition of two dozen associations representing importers and exporters across a full spectrum of American industries.  The coalition is challenging the common practice of shippers and truckers being charged high fees for late pickup or redelivery of containers when adverse port conditions prevent them from acting within allowable free time.

The FMC issued a “Notice of Filing and Request for Comments” on Petition No. P4-16 on December 20th and set a February 28, 2017 deadline for comments.  League members are strongly encouraged to file comments with the FMC, and the League will provide guidance and assistance for members wishing to share their views with the agency.

This important initiative will be discussed in detail at the League’s Summit in San Diego, CA January 30-February 1, 2017. If you haven’t made plans to join us there, register now to ensure your seat at the table for updates on this initiative and many others.

League Asks FMC to Address Fees Charged Due to Port Disruptions

The National Industrial Transportation League and a coalition representing retailers, manufacturers, truckers, transportation intermediaries and other business groups today asked the Federal Maritime Commission to set new policy preventing terminal operators and ocean carriers from charging unfair fees when uncontrollable incidents such as storms and strikes keep cargo from being picked up from ports on time.

“Recent events involving port congestion, labor strife, an ocean carrier bankruptcy, inclement weather and other disruption events have had crippling effects on U.S. ports and the stakeholders who rely on the efficient movement of goods,” the 25-member Coalition for Fair Port Practices said in a petition filed with the commission. During the incidents, storage and use charges have continued “even though shippers, consignees and drayage providers had no control over the events that caused the ports to be inaccessible and prevented them from retrieving their cargo or returning equipment.”

Cargo owners and trucking companies are normally given a certain number of free days to pick up containers of imported goods from ports after they have been unloaded from ships. After that, they can be charged demurrage, a fee intended to ensure that containers are removed quickly and efficiently. In addition, detention and per diem fees can be charged if the cargo containers and the trailers used to haul them, officially known as chassis, are not returned within a specified time.

That system was thrown into disarray this fall when the bankruptcy of South Korea’s Hanjin Shipping left cargo owners unable to pick up containers on time and later prevented them from returning containers and chassis. Delays have also occurred during other port disruptions cited in the petition, including the 2014-2015 labor slowdown at West Coast ports and Hurricane Sandy on the East Coast in 2012.

The coalition said millions of dollars in fees have been charged during such incidents:

  • In one example cited, a retailer was charged $80,000 because it took up to nine days to retrieve containers when only four free days were allowed.
  • A trucking company was charged $1.2 million after long lines at New York and New Jersey ports kept it from returning containers on time.
  • A transportation company was charged $1.25 million after containers it tried to return were turned away at West Coast ports; the amount was eventually reduced to $250,000 but only a year after the company was forced to pay the fees upfront.

“Shippers, consignees and drayage providers do not create and cannot avoid these events,” the group said. “They cannot control the weather. They do not choose the terminals that carriers use. They are not parties to port labor collective bargaining agreements.”
The federal Shipping Act requires that the fees and related practices be “just and reasonable.” The petition asks the FMC to adopt a policy that would require free days to be extended during times of port congestion, weather-related events, port disruptions or delays caused by government actions or requirements beyond the control of the parties picking up or returning containers. Demurrage and similar fees charged during such incidents would be declared “unreasonable.” In some cases, “compensatory” fees could be charged provided that they did not exceed actual storage or equipment use costs. The proposed policy would apply to ocean carriers and marine terminal operators.

League Welcomes Elaine Chao to New Administration

The National Industrial Transportation League welcomes the nomination of Elaine Chao to be the secretary of transportation in President-Elect Donald Trump’s administration. READ MORE

League Files Joint Comments on Competitive Switching Rule

On October 26, the League joined with several other groups in filing comments with the Surface Transportation Board on Ex Parte 711. READ MORE

Registration Opens for NIT League Transportation Summit

Registration for the 2017 NIT League Transportation Summit, to be held January 30-Febuary 1 in San Diego, opened earlier this week. READ MORE

 

 

NITL Hosts Webinar on Switching Rule Status

With the deadline approaching to submit comments to the Surface Transportation Board in response to its proposed rule on competitive switching, NITL hosted a brief Webinar on October 12 to update League members on the status of its efforts in this area. READ MORE

 

 

League Continues Active Schedule in Washington, D.C.

Congress left Washington after passing a stopgap measure to keep the government funded through, but there is still important work going on in the nation’s capital. READ MORE

NITL Urges Quick Resolution of Hanjin Bankruptcy

The League joined 100-plus other groups in asking Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker to work with the South Korean government to bring the crisis to a swift and positive end. READ MORE

 

League Joins STB Filing against Changes to Bill of Lading

The League has joined with the National Shippers Strategic Transportation Council to challenge a recent move that shifted the burden of proof of liability from carriers to shippers. READ MORE

 

League Rebuts Railroads’ STB Argument in Op-ed Piece

NITL Executive Director Jennifer Hedrick laid out the rationale for the League’s fight for competitive switching in an op-ed article in this week’s issue of Transportation Weekly. READ MORE