U.S. House passes ocean shipping bill to allay export backlogs
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[June 14, 2022] WASHINGTON
(Reuters) -The U.S. House of Representatives approved legislation Monday
to improve oversight of ocean shipping, which supporters say will help
curb inflation and ease export backlogs.
The bill was approved 369-42 and will head to the White House for
President Joe Biden's signature. Biden said in a statement he looked
forward to signing it into law.
The bill would boost the investigatory authority of the Federal Maritime
Commission (FMC), the U.S. agency that oversees ocean shipping, and
increase industry transparency.
It would allow FMC to launch probes of ocean common carriers' business
practices and to apply enforcement measures, require ocean common
carriers to report to the FMC "total import/export tonnage" each
calendar quarter and would bar ocean carriers from unreasonably
declining opportunities for U.S. exports under new rules to be
determined by the FMC.
Senator Maria Cantwell said the bill gives the FMC "the tools it needs
to cut down on extraneous shipping costs and stop shipping carriers from
leaving American products like apples, hay, milk and potatoes behind."
The Ocean Shipping Reform Act passed unanimously in the Senate in March.
Similar legislation passed the House in December.
"Inflation is the greatest frustration America has right now, and
backlogs at our ports are one of the biggest drivers of price hikes that
we will address through this bill," Senate Democratic Leader Chuck
Schumer said Monday.
Congress has few tools to combat inflation, which hit 8.6% in the 12
months through May, according to the U.S. consumer price index. Beyond
the shipping bill, Democrats are pushing measures to lower prescription
drug prices.
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Stacked containers are shown as ships unload their cargo at the Port
of Los Angeles in Los Angeles, California, U.S. November 22, 2021.
REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
Imports in the nation's major retail container ports are expected to reach
near-record volume in June as retailers seek to meet consumer demand and protect
themselves from disruptions in West Coast ports, the National Retail Federation
said.
American Trucking Asssociations President Chris Spear said the "bill provides
important tools to address unjustified and illegal fees collected from American
truckers by the ocean shipping cartel."
The World Shipping Council did not immediately comment late Monday, but said in
a statement in March
https://www.worldshipping.org/
news/ocean-carriers-respond-to-senate-markup-of-ocean-shipping-reform-act when
the Senate was considering the legislation that it did not address the root
causes of U.S. congestion.
"Americans continue to import goods at record levels - so much so that the U.S.
ports and landside logistics workforce is unable to process all the cargo. Ocean
carriers have deployed every vessel and every container available, and are
moving more goods than at any point in history, but the U.S. landside logjams
are keeping vessels stuck outside U.S. ports," the group said.
(Reporting by Makini Brice and David Shepardson; Editing by Richard Pullin and
Kenneth Maxwell)
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