All The Supply Chain News You Need To Know 11.5-11.9
Trucking capacity in 2019 is about speed not rates according to industry analysts . ELDs have changed the way that carriers score their partners and shippers with long detention times are losing capacity in the form of time, rejected loads, and partnerships. “Instead of having conversations about what the detention rates are going to be, I’d rather focus on not having detention at all,” Rob Roberson, director of logistics at steelmaker Nucor, said at the JOC Inland Distribution Conference. “We’ve used our transportation management system to make load times a critical metric for us.”
Hospitals overpaying by $25 billion on their supply chains according to report . In a study conducted by Navigant, it was found that hospitals could reduce their supply chain costs by an average of 17.7%. This equates to $11 million in annual cost-savings per hospital. “Even with ongoing efforts to improve supply chain processes and product utilization, it’s clear that significant savings opportunities remain for many hospitals and health systems,” said Rob Austin, Navigant’s director of health systems, in the report. The most efficient hospitals in the study were data driven and shared supply chain info cross departmentally.
J.B. Hunt and BNSF Railway in dispute over $100+ million in revenue . The trucking and railroad titans have been locked in arbitration since January 2017 over revenue J.B. Hunt believes its owed. September saw intermodal records shattered in the last two weeks of the month. J.B. Hunt CFO David Mee declined to confirm whether the relationship was in trouble. "[You] have to ask us both that question at the same time. And I'm not about to answer that question without them," he said.
Amazon’s safety record scrutinized after Baltimore warehouse tragedy . Two Amazon contractors died last Saturday after a tornado collapsed a 50-foot concrete wall. The tornado came without warning and surprised meteorologists. Amazon has suffered seven workplace fatalities since 2013, according to the National Council for Occupational Safety and Health (COSH). COSH had already listed Amazon at the top of its “Dirty Dozen” companies that put employees at risk. Amazon’s senior vice president of operations posted the following update to twitter:
This week in, "Where's my freight?"
The driver was a 59-year-old Ontario man who was cited for an overheight and overwidth vehicle, according to police, the Boston Heraldreports.
“I think the most important thing to remember here is that nobody got hurt,” Governor Charlie Baker said. “Clearly that truck did not belong in the tunnel and the accident that it created could have injured people, maybe even severely, no one was hurt.”
This week's podcast
Consulting Logistics welcomes Brian Glick , CEO of Chain.io to the show where we discuss practical uses for tech in the supply chain, developments with blockchain + AI, and one of Eric Johnson from the JOC.com 's passion projects, the Logistics Technology Conference that just went down in Las Vegas!
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