CONSIDER THE EXTENT TO WHICH YOUR WORLD HAS
changed in the past 35 years. In 1980, you still did most of your
banking with a teller, not an automated teller machine, and you
certainly didn’t do it online. In fact, you didn’t even know what
“online” meant—to say nothing of terms like “Internet” and
“World Wide Web.” Your desk didn’t have a computer. Your
phone was attached to the wall by a cord. If you came across a
person with a cell phone, that person was no doubt quite wealthy
and had the oversized biceps required to lug around one of those
brick-sized “handhelds.” Forget e-mail; facsimile machines were all the rage.
In the logistics world, pen and paper ruled.
The emerging game-changing technology was
the bar code. And it was a wonder indeed: Just
point a beam of light at a package’s shipping
label and, boom, you knew everything about its
contents, origin, and destination.
Logistics operations, though, were about
to change and in a very big way, especially
with respect to freight transportation. In 1980,
Congress largely deregulated the trucking business with the Motor Carrier Act. That same
year, the rail industry was deregulated via the
Staggers Rail Act.
The debate over the merits of deregulation
went on for years. In the early days, opponents
were both numerous and vocal. They decried the adverse effects
on their companies and the economy at large, while bemoaning the loss of the price protection they had enjoyed under the
Interstate Commerce Commission. They weren’t entirely off base:
Freeing motor carriers to compete on price and service resulted in
an astounding number of casualties. Consider that of the top 200
motor carriers in the U.S. in 1980 (based on revenue), just five
were still in business 15 years later.
Yet as time passed, the opposition voices grew fainter. Today,
most acknowledge that deregulation was a very good thing. More
motor carriers succeeded than failed. The rail industry consolidated and got itself back on a solid financial footing. Shippers saw
rates stabilize and service improve.
Still, even all these years later, there is more that can be done.
Both the trucking and rail industries remain hobbled by regulations that, while profoundly less onerous than their pre-1980
counterparts, still keep carriers from operating at peak efficiency.
Two initiatives aimed at remedying the problem
have been in the news lately. First, on June 10, the
House of Representatives passed a $55.3 billion
appropriations bill that includes language allowing
twin 33-foot trailers to operate nationwide on the
Interstate Highway System. Although the measure
must still be reconciled with a Senate version of the
bill, the momentum favors advocates of wider use of
the twins, often referred to as “pups.”
On the same day the House
passed its version of the appro-
priations bill, the Transportation
While neither of these initiatives will unleash
the gale force-level winds of change brought on by
deregulation in the 1980s, they nonetheless bear
watching. They are, at minimum, a pleasant and
refreshing breeze to savor in this summer of 2015.
Group Editorial Director
BY MITCH MAC DONALD, GROUP EDITORIAL DIRECTOR outbound
A breeze of change