Southern California Container Terminal Closes Over Driver Costs

Since shifting its business model to use company employees as drivers 16 months ago, Hub Group Inc. Chief Executive David Yeager wrote, Hub’s costs “have been unsustainable and substantially higher than our outsourced core carriers’ costs.”

The Wall Street Journal
Hub Group Trucking has closed its Southern California terminal serving the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach just over a year after converting its local fleet from independently-contracted drivers to full-time employees.
Hub Group Trucking has closed its Southern California terminal serving the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach just over a year after converting its local fleet from independently-contracted drivers to full-time employees.

Hub Group Trucking has closed its Southern California terminal serving the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach just over a year after converting its local fleet from independently-contracted drivers to full-time employees, according to The Wall Street Journal.

In an emailed announcement to customers last week, Hub Group Inc. Chief Executive David Yeager said the company will now employ “a core group of high-service outside carriers” to bring container loads from the ports to nearby warehouses and rail yards, a service known as drayage.

Since shifting its business model to use company employees as drivers 16 months ago, Mr. Yeager wrote, Hub’s costs “have been unsustainable and substantially higher than our outsourced core carriers’ costs.”

The move comes as many drayage providers at the region’s ports are coming under pressure from groups of drivers who believe the independent contractor model that is prevalent at the port is unfair. Several drayage companies have lost million-dollar judgments before the state labor commissioner.

Still, only a handful of companies have converted to the employee model, and those companies are being closely watched by others in the trucking industry eager to see whether it can work. In the case of Hub Group, it appears to have failed.

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