That might work, to a point. How many more hours?
That might work, to a point. How many more hours? Get rid of all the regulations that hamper the truckers and rail until this gets resolved, let the truckers and engineers decide. Treat them as grownups. Weight limits, hours, reporting requirements, etc. Until this is treated as the emergency it is, it won't be solved. There is going to be shortages of more than Christmas trees in a matter of weeks. It's going to seize our economy sooner rather than later if not addressed. You think a few SWA pilots calling in sick caused havoc this weekend, wait until every factory and every supplier starts laying off staff due to not having inventory and parts. I got a little out ahead of my competition, so I should be able to limp along, but if something doesn't change soon, I will have to adjust my operation that will definitely affect my employees and customers in a detrimental way
I don't think that is entirely the problem- I've been reading that the ports are full, waiting on people to get their stuff. See your items 1 and 2.
EDIT: Wasn't Ningbo port closed for a few weeks the end of August? That can't have helped getting stuff from China. Vietnamese ports were closed, too, about the same time. Again, not much our government can do about that. You are right, and it should have actually cleared some of the congestion here but it didn't Vietnam is still basically shut down, I have two containers supposed to leave the 15th of October and just got bumped to Nov 1. Ningbo Port cleared the backlog within a week of returning to work, had a container ship out of there last thursday.
EDIT 2: I did a virtual demo in Singapore 2 weeks ago because they were shut down, too. Again, not much that can be done by the USA. Singapore is basically a transit point for other ports in SE Asia, they have moved a lot of the trans loading to other ports, because Asians find efficiencies, while we sit around and say "Its always been done that way"
Which are those? I could look up chapter and verse, but basically there are regulations that outline how and when the steamship lines can alter contracts. They have not followed those rules. They are also changing the rules daily and implementing fees and demurrage charges that are outside of their contracts. If you don't pay, you don't get service. It is literal highway robbery. We basically let the steamship lines go unregulated and then force all these regulations downstream on truckers and rail. If we are going to be the wild west, then let the whole system do what they want.
Aren't some, or most, of those steamship lines run from other countries? They are all owned outside of US. But they trade here on our stock exchanges and they come to our ports.
As for BNSF, a quick search hasn't revealed layoffs recently (this year). As they are a large employer in the Nebraska, I was a little surprised I hadn't heard of it. The consolidation on rail lines has been an issue for some time. It's not a recent issue, it goes back years of them consolidating and downsizing the workforce. See today's WSJ article posted above about some examples of it.
Thanks for sharing your perspective.