72 DC VELOCITY JANUARY 2016 www.dcvelocity.com
A FIVE-YEAR FEDERAL TRANSPORTATION FUNDING LAW
hit the books Dec. 4, and freight interests celebrated a fine
pre-holiday gift. The $305 billion measure allocated to freight an
unprecedented $10.8 billion in funding. It directed the establishment of a multimodal freight policy and required the Department
of Transportation to establish a multimodal freight network that
identifies the most critical parts of the national freight-moving
system. Almost as important—though in a less-tangible way—the
process raised freight’s profile among lawmakers.
For big trucking, however, the outcome was more muddled. The
industry didn’t get the proverbial “lump of coal.” It scored a big
win when Congress ordered the administration
to scrub its hated carrier-grading system of
scores and analysis for more than two years,
though the raw data used to compile the scores
remains in public view. Lawmakers killed language that would have allowed tolls on existing
interstate highways. Trucking will also benefit
from the funding dedicated to freight transport
and intermodal connectivity; a law that bestows
goodies on freight would seem to positively
impact the sector that moves two-thirds of it.
Yet the industry whiffed on some of the big
stuff that would have directly affected its operations. Attempts to raise the maximum permit-ted weight of vehicles operating on the national
highway system never made it. (To add insult
to injury, a provision to lengthen twin-trailers
to 33 feet each from 28 feet was dropped from the $1.1 trillion
omnibus appropriations budget for FY 2016.) A highly conditional plan to allow commercial drivers under the age of 21 to operate
in interstate commerce fell by the wayside, a victim of mainstream
media hysteria mostly fed by misinformation. Congress killed
an amendment saying that states couldn’t regulate truckers who
fall under federal driver hours-of-service regulations, this in the
wake of a 2014 federal appeals court ruling that a California law
mandating meal and rest breaks for trucking workers superseded a
1995 federal law pre-empting intrastate transport regulations. And
Congress again refused to raise federal motor fuels taxes, marking
22 (which will become 27) years with no increases, despite trucking’s continued support of tax hikes on diesel fuel.
The irony is that the pro-trucking agenda seemed to be gathering
legislative momentum over the summer. So much so, in fact, that
it sent the typically volatile highway safety crowd
into apoplectic spasms, warning that Congress
would have blood on its hands by passing legisla-
tion that would put American motoring families
at risk. In the end, though, safety advocates, which
teamed with U.S. railroads to present truckers with
formidable opposition, carried much of the day. As
the tide goes out, it seems clear the Association of
American Railroads continues to outmaneuver big
truck interests. It is well financed and well connect-
ed, and it speaks with a unified voice. It has the influ-
ential megabillionaire Warren E.
Buffett, whose holding company,
Berkshire Hathaway Inc., owns
BNSF Railway, as its ace in the
hole.
By contrast, the American
Trucking Associations (ATA),
which represents large for-hire
fleets, is a conglomeration of
50 state trucking groups that
find themselves at odds with
each other and with the mother
ship. During the process, ATA
couldn’t get on the same page
with its key members. For exam-
ple, the organization supported
the provision calling for longer
twin-trailers. Yet a large number of big truckload
carriers, the core of its constituency, opposed it.
One D.C. insider criticized ATA for failing to build
bridges with other transport trade associations. Even
finding common ground with the railroads would be
helpful—as difficult as that may be, the insider said.
In a city where, like it or not, the phrase “go along
to get along” still resonates, the group may need to
rethink how it tackles legislative issues, especially
when it comes to the 800-pound gorilla known as
the “Highway Bill.” It has five years to work on it.
Group Editorial Director
BY MITCH MAC DONALD, GROUP EDITORIAL DIRECTOR outbound
Rolled down the highway