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New executive order aims to alleviate congestion at California’s ports

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New York (CNN Business)To alleviate cargo congestion at shipping ports in California, Governor Gavin Newson issued an executive order Wednesday tackling the shortage of truck drivers and container storage needed to move critical cargo out of the ports.

“California’s ports are critical to our local, state and national economies and the state is taking action to support goods movement in the face of global disruptions,” said Governor Newsom in a statement Wednesday. “My administration will continue to work with federal, state and industry partners on innovative solutions to tackle immediate challenges while also bringing our distribution processes into the 21st century.” The executive order directs state agencies to find state, federal and private land for short-term container storage while identifying freight routes for trucks so the state can temporarily exempt weight limits on the road.

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the US

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USShipping containers in the Port of Los Angeles are stacked high on October 13.Hide Caption 1 of 14

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USContainer ships are moored on October 9 off the Los Angeles and Long Beach ports in California.Hide Caption 2 of 14

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USA worker waits for a crane to start moving containers from ship to shore on September 30 at the Port of Savannah in Georgia.Hide Caption 3 of 14

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USA person sits on the beach in Seal Beach, California, on October 1 as container ships wait to dock at the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.Hide Caption 4 of 14

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USA cargo ship moves under the Bayonne Bridge in Bayonne, New Jersey, as it heads out to the ocean on October 6.Hide Caption 5 of 14

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USTrucks transport cargo containers on October 14 at the Port of Baltimore in Maryland.Hide Caption 6 of 14

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USCrane operator Ryan Myers moves shipping containers on September 30 from ships to trucks at the Port of Savannah in Georgia.Hide Caption 7 of 14

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USContainers are seen on October 16 at the Port of Long Beach in California.Hide Caption 8 of 14

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USCranes are seen on September 30 at the Port of Savannah in Georgia.Hide Caption 9 of 14

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USAn 18-wheeler enters one of the main shipping container corridors on October 12 at The Port of Houston in Texas.Hide Caption 10 of 14

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USA cargo ship moves under the Bayonne Bridge in Bayonne, New Jersey, as it heads into port on October 13.Hide Caption 11 of 14

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USThe sun sets on October 14 behind container cranes at the Port of Los Angeles.Hide Caption 12 of 14

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USTrailers sit idle on October 14 at a Virginia Inland Port facility in Front Royal, Virginia.Hide Caption 13 of 14

    Photos: In pictures: Supply chain problems in the USA commercial freight train carries a load of shipping containers on October 17 at the Port of Savannah in Georgia.Hide Caption 14 of 14

    Effective immediately, the executive order comes after hundreds of cargo ships have been stuck off the coast of California over recent months — with 64 cargo ships at anchor as of Wednesday in Los Angeles and Long Beach. In Los Angeles alone, 200,000 containers sit stuck at sea.

      Those two ports move roughly 35% of all containers in the United States and approximately 40% of US imports and 25% of exports, according to the governor’s office. Read MoreA key reason for the backup at the ports is what is happening on land. A nationwide worker shortage — specifically in the trucking industry — has slowed supply the supply chain. Trucks move the cargo from the ports, everything from food, electronics, to toys — to warehouses or retailers. Because of the shortage of drivers, cargo sits at the port and ships can’t unload. The executive order tackles this a few ways. First, it directs the state to identify both state-owned and “non-state sites, including private, locally owned, and federally owned parcels, that could be available to address short-term storage needs to address the supply and distribution chain crisis.”And second, the state will temporarily lift limitations on how much cargo trucks can carry. It will “identify priority freight routes to be considered for a temporary exemption to current gross vehicle weight limits,” the order reads. For example, an 18-foot tractor trailer with five axels is currently capped at 34,000 pounds. That would be temporarily lifted — allowing trucks to carry more cargo.

      Addressing the labor shortage

      The executive order also moves to address educational programs and training for port workers and others in the supply chain. The US is short 80,000 truck drivers, according to the American Trucking Association, and is projecting a shortage of 160,000 drivers by 2030 if no action is taken. The order directs California’s Labor and Workforce Development Agency to use “existing resources to identify potential high road training partnerships to increase education, career technical education, job training, and workforce development opportunities for port workers and other workers across the supply chain.”

      Everything you're waiting for is in these containers

        While California has little control over the ships and routes they take into the privately owned ports — the federal government does. President Biden asked the Port of Los Angeles and Long Beach to move to 24/7 operations. But there is little demand from importers to use the overnight hours because of the lack of trucks and drivers used to move the cargo, according to the Port of LA. “While goods movement and supply chain management challenges are largely within the purview of the federal government and industry, the state can take action to reduce the congestion in California’s ports to ensure people in California and across the country and world can access goods and supplies,” the order reads.

        Source: edition.cnn.com

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