72 DC VELOCITY JUNE 2016 www.dcvelocity.com
IMPENDING RETIREMENT CAN HAVE AN INTERESTING
effect on a person. Take Jack Holmes, a UPS Inc. lifer who retires
June 30 as head of its less-than-truckload (LTL) division. At this
year’s NASSTRAC shipper conference in Orlando, Fla., Holmes
took the stage for the first keynote in a smart blazer, sharp slacks,
spit-shined black shoes, and no socks. Was it just the Florida look,
or was Holmes symbolically breaking free from the binds of a traditionally buttoned-down corporation?
Then there was Holmes’ candor, which in years past might have
been kept under wraps. Congress’s failure to pass legislation adding
All surprising stuff. Though they may be large
and politically connected, it’s hard to conceive
of Swift and Knight literally, in Holmes’ words,
following right behind the American Trucking Associations’
(ATA) lobbyists to undermine a proposal their own trade association had just endorsed.
During the milling-around break at the conference, some said
they thought Holmes’ points were a bit exaggerated. In their
memory, rail interests cared less for the longer-truck measure
than Holmes seemed to convey. Yet the railroads decided not to
burn political capital on a battle whose outcome will have only a
marginal effect on their business. They are storing up their volleys
in case the truckers make another run at raising the federal gross
vehicle—tractor, trailer, and cargo—weight limit from 80,000
pounds, where it has remained for 34 years.
Clarence Gooden, the president of CSX Transportation who
joined Holmes on stage for the initial conference session, sat agree-
ably as his counterpart described his industry’s decision not to fight
the truck-length measure. But when asked if the
railroads would give way on raising the truck-weight
threshold, Gooden stated that they would not.
One couldn’t help thinking that Gooden was
speaking for his industry. And he may very well
have been. The railroads tend to lobby with one
voice, and this time it was Gooden’s. The trucking
industry, by contrast, has a cacophony going on,
and it is proving problematic.
For truckers, part of the issue is the nature of
the two beasts. ATA is an amalgamation of 50 state
trucking associations, a structure that by definition
makes it tough to build a unified national coalition around
policy issues. The Association
of American Railroads (AAR) is
not beholden to state railroad
groups, and its small fraternity
makes it easier to achieve consensus. The railroads may scrap
and claw for market share in the
real world, but they seem able
to subordinate their differences
when they head to the Hill.
Yet it’s hard to understate the
Ironically, the provision looked
like a slam-dunk to pass. LTL carriers and shipper groups lent their usual support. And this time
around, the measure was backed by a former chair
of the National Transportation Safety Board and
a former head of the Sierra Club, both powerful
endorsements of the proposal’s potential environmental and safety impact.
Yet the measure died. And if Holmes is to be
believed, it died at the hands of two carriers who
took a different path than the association they pay
to represent them. Stuff like this does not a harmonious legislative voice make.
Group Editorial Director
BY MITCH MAC DONALD, GROUP EDITORIAL DIRECTOR outbound
A house divided