Posts Tagged “Allen Lund Company”

Part I – Allen Lund Co.: Reasons for Flat CA Produce Trucking Rates

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DSCN4660Many folks involved in fresh produce transportation are wondering what is going on in California.  Despite the state growing and shipping about one-half of the nation’s fruit and vegetables, rates have remained relatively flat during the heaviest volume period of the year.

In search of answers, we turned to Kenny Lund, vice president of operations for the Allen Lund Company of La Canada, CA, a transportation brokerage and logistics company that has been in business nearly 40 years.

“I think we’re in a historic…incredible shift in produce,” Lund states, “where product is being grown where it hasn’t been grown before.  It’s hard to get the numbers, but it’s looking like there’s a 20 percent increase in produce from Mexico.”

He also cites production and shipping increases from Canada, as well as boat arrivals with imported produce from around the globe.

“But there is not an increase from the most fertile land in the world (California); there’s a decrease,” Lund contends.  “I think the decrease is more significant than people will say.”

While acknowledging the drought has a lot to do with it, Lund sees an attack by environmentalists on the California agricultural industry as being a factor.  He points to cuts in water allocations to agriculture and water going elsewhere due to environmental reasons.

He says there has been somewhere between 400,000 and 800,000 acres of California farm land being placed out of production.

“It is political more than anything,” Lund states.  “They build pipelines for everything, but for some reason we can’t do it for water.  You keep seeing a reduction of water in California and an increase in people (living here). The drought is more political than the actual drought.  There is  a lack of water going to the farms.  The Columbia River going into the ocean is enough in itself to handle California farming needs.  But the environmentalists will not let that happen.”

Similar to a statement Lund has made many times about the over regulation of trucking, he says the excessive regulation of farms is “amazing.”  For example he recently talked to someone in charge of compliance with a California farming operation and was told she had to answer to 42 different government agencies.

Lund believes this a contributing factor to Allen Lund Company having more produce loads than ever crossing the border from Mexico into California, Arizona and Texas.

“It’s a contradiction.  50 percent of the nation’s produce is grown in California.  That is under attack by a lack of water due to over regulation of farming, as well as trucking,” Lund says.  “Government is over regulating diesel engines, farming equipment, pumps; all these things are under severe attack.”

Each of these factors are contributing to what he calls a “historic” shift in produce shipments from California.  Lund talks of the Autopista Durango-Mazatlan, a 143-mile highway spanning from the growing regions of west Mexico to Texas ports of entry that opened last year.   As a result business in McAllen, Tx is booming.

While California produce trucking rates are remaining rather flat, Lund says rates are up significantly in Texas, New Mexico and Arizona.  At the same time, Florida is “mixed” because it has a very similar growing and shipping season to Mexico with which it competes.  Still, he notes Florida does not have nearly as many regulations, plus that state has plenty of water.

(This is Part I of a two-part series.  The Allen Lund Company was formed in 1976 by its namesake.  I have known Mr. Lund almost since the founding of the company.  His son Kenny Lund joined the company 26 years ago this month.  At that time the operation had 32 employees.  Today Allen Lund Company has 500 employees, arranges about 250,000 loads a year, of which about 40 percent is with fresh produce.  The company has 30 offices nationwide and will soon break the $500 million mark in annual sales. — Bill Martin)

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Rules and Regulations on Trucking Continue to Increase with the Railroads Benefitting

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RailPix100 years ago the railroads ruled when it came to long haul freight transportation.  The advent of the interstate highway system in the 1950s changed all of that and led to a thriving trucking industry.  Then in the 1970s there was a renewed interest in rail service, and this involved fresh produce.  It was primarily refrigerated intermodal trailers and refrigerated box cars.  However, as the trailers and rail cars aged, the companies invested in those ventures too often had problems coming up with the capital to replace the equipment.  Additionally, in those days the rails had difficulty understanding perishable produce had to be treated differently than coal or auto parts.  There also were too many produce receivers filing claims at the drop of a hat.  The rails also were notorious for taking forever to pay claims.

But times have changed.  Here are some of the rail related companies that have come on the scene in recent years.

****Railex LLC, Rotterdam, NY.  This was perhaps the first one, and it partners with the Union Pacific Railroad, using 64-foot refrigerated railcars transporting produce from the West Coast to an upstate New York distribution center, where trucks take over.  It also is establishing a presence in the Southeast.

****Rail Logistics Cold Train, Overland Park, Ks.  The Cold Train used containers shipped out Washington and Oregon to the Midwest and East Coast.

****McKay TransCold, Minneapolis.  It works with the Burlington Northern Sante Fe Railroad using refrigerated boxcars  out of California to Wilmington, IL citing each boxcar is equivalent to 3.5 to 4.2 truckloads of product.

****Tiger Cool Express LLC, Overland Park, Ks.  According to its website it “Provides retailers an efficient, cost-effective, safe alternative to all-spot, all-the-time brokered transportation that relies on small, independent owner-operators who supply shippers through intermediaries.”

****C.R. England of Salt Lake City.  While it is widely known as the nation’s largest refrigerated carrier with about 4,500 trucks, it also has had an intermodal division for about eight years and uses refrigerated containers.

Ricky Stover is director of business development – intermodal, for C.R. England.  The company has 1,150 containers and plans adding 400 more this year.

“The percentage of produce we haul is small.  We do a lot of frozen food, dairy, beverages, etc.  That type of stuff is really our bread and butter,” he says.

Jason Spafford, McKay’s Vice President of Business Development credits the down turn in the nation’s economy resulting in people being “more open to new ideas.”

Spafford also points to increasing regulations on the trucking industry working in favor of the railroads.

“There’s the restrictions on driving hours that’s making it harder and is pushing it more towards a rail solution,” he states.

Additionally, Spafford says McKay TransCold believes they have to offer rail rates that are eight to 15 percent less than truck rates, depending upon the commodity and specific traffic lane.

“Traditionally rail has had difficulty with box car and intermodal concerns with damage claims.  We’ve developed a racking system that creates a rock solid load.  It can actually have less shifting than in truck load,” Spafford says.

McKay TransCold took a different approach in that it initially developed westbound rail shipments  from the Midwest with commodities like eggs and ice cream.  It then developed its eastbound freight, which is the opposite approach from most companies.

While a lot of attention is being paid to rail hauling fresh produce, Kenny Lund, Vice President of Allen Lund Company of LaCanada, CA states, “Owner operators move probably 95 percent of the produce cross country.  Owner operators dominate cross country transportation of produce.  The carriers that haul for us have 25 trucks at the most.  We work with over 9,000 refrigerated carriers and they are mostly guys with 25 trucks or less.”

Continuing, Lund points out it is the rules and regulations that are hurting the owner operators.  He adds there is no driver shortage, it is an owner operator shortage.  The truck broker has been one of CARB’s (California Air Resources Board) biggest critics, citing such requirements on equipment such as refrigerated units for trailers cannot be over seven years old. Lund also is critical of the new diesel engines calling them a “nightmare.  They shut down and you can’at fix them out in the field. You have to tow them in.  They are so complicated and these regulations are going to make it worse.”

Paul Kazan, president of Target Interstate Systems Inc., Bronx, NY, is equally critical of excessive regulations on 18 wheelers.

“You don’t see  it (increasing regulations) with trains, but at every turn you see it with the trucking industry.  There is a very concerted affect out there by the rail industry to restrict trucks and I’m surprised there is not a more concerted effort by the trucking industry to push back against this effect.  We’ve never had the power or the clout of the rail industry,” Kazan states.

At the same time, Kazan adds he is having conversations with rail entities and says, “we need a rail component.”

Target is headquartered on the Hunts Point Terminal Wholesale Market. Still, Kazan sees the rails “shying away” from wholesale terminal markets because these facilities hold on to the trailers (TOFC) too long using them as storage.

Kazan concedes, “Rails are here to stay.  You have the green (environmental) technology, the carbon footprint.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Allen Lund Company, Locus Traxx are Finalists in New Product Competition

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GAtks0314 066Two transportation related companies are among several organizations that have been named as New Product Award finalists by the United Fresh Production Association.  The winner will be honored at the association’s annul convention and expo in Chicago June 10-13.

Allen Lund Co.

The customizable truck load transportation management software (TMS) is designed to simplify and streamline the tendering and tracking of freight.   The ALC  software provides the option to simply and quickly award a load directly to a shipper’s carrier, create a spot bid that goes to your selected carriers, or use the custom routing guide feature to award the load to a carrier based on pre-loaded contract rates. You can maintain both historical and current routing / pricing guides for all your contract carriers.

The Allen Lund Company was established in 1976 and  is a national third-party transportation broker with nationwide offices and over 390 employees working with shippers and carriers across the nation providing transport for dry, refrigerated (specializing in produce), and flatbed freight. Additionally, the Allen Lund Company has a Logistics & Software division, ALC Logistics, as well as an International division.

Locus Traxx

Disposable by design, the SmartTraxx GO by Locus Traxx Worldwide of Jupiter, FL  is the temp-recorder done better. Pull the tab, instantly temperature and location data begin streaming in real-time to the cloud. Complete visibility at your fingertips, in transit and at the dock.

The OverSight™ system blends sophisticated SmartTraxx™ telematics with innovative, SmartTag™ wireless sensors to continuously monitor and instantly send data on shipment temperature, door security and location from shipments on the road to your computer or Smartphone.

When any issue is detected, Intelligent Alert text and email messages are automatically sent.  This gives you and your team the information you need, when you need it.

No driver involvement.  No power required.  Simply put the sytem in place and it will start notifiying you of shipment details.

 

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TMS Product Specific for Produce is Introduced by ALC Logistics

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ALCby Allen Lund Company

ALC Logistics, the software and logistics division of the Allen Lund Company, introduced a customized Transportation Management Software (TMS) specific for produce.

Built on a platform that has been in place for five years, the TMS produce specific solution is now available to the industry.  The software enables companies to have control over their transportation spending and includes customized programming to fit each customer’s needs.  Specific to produce, customer’s will have control over: load tendering, dock scheduling, spot pricing, and live load tracking.

The ALC TMS Sales team is headed by Kenny Lund, Vice President, Chetan Tandon, CIO, and providing sales and implementation, Kevin Peterson.  “We are very excited to roll out this product, at what, we believe, is the right time to help those that transport produce,” stated Lund.  He added: “38 years of experience transporting produce have gone into this software which adds visibility, creates efficiencies, controls costs and eases the challenges of produce transportation.  There is nothing like it on the market; it works with your systems and adapts to your business processes to ultimately save you time and money.”

About Allen Lund Company: Specializing as a national third-party transportation broker with nationwide offices and over 390 employees, the Allen Lund Company works with shippers and carriers across the nation to transport dry, refrigerated (specializing in produce), and flatbed freight; additionally, the Allen Lund Company has a logistics and software division, ALC Logistics, and an International Division.

Established in 1976, the Allen Lund Company received the TIA 3PL Samaritan Award for 2011 and was placed in Transport Topics’ “2013 Top 25 Freight Brokerage Firms.”  The company managed over 288,000 shipments in 2013.  The NASTC (National Association of Small Trucking Companies) named Allen Lund Company the 2010 Best Broker of the Year.  More information is available at www.allenlund.com.

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