March 2010
Businesses Hit Hard by Costly Jones Act Regulations
Part 2 in a series

Big Island
small business owner Jim O'Keefe found out the hard way that his American
dream, owning his own business, was too difficult to maintain in Hawaii. He
closed down his 13-year-old extensive bakery wholesale and retail operation,
O’Keefe & Sons Bread Bakers, in 2008 because it was too costly to maintain.
The closure
left 50 people out of work, retail customers searching for other restaurants to
buy deli and baked goods from, and several area businesses, grocery stores and
resorts scrambling for other local places to buy wholesale baked foods.
Hawaii
already is ranked one of the most expensive places to operate a business, but a
large part of the bakery’s costs were for shipping flour and other food ingredients
to the island of Hawaii, O’Keefe says: “I would buy a 50 pound bag of flower
for $6 or $7 in the mainland, and by the time it landed in Hilo, it cost me
$12.50 a bag.”
O’Keefe is
one of many business owners who blame the Jones Act, a federal law that says
all products shipped between American ports must be shipped in American made
vessels by a crew that is 75 percent American, for their exorbitant costs. He
says the law limits competition from world shippers, and raises the cost of
doing business here, in his case, by six figures over the life of his business.
The shipping
rates in Hong Kong for an equivalent shipping distance are a third of the
price, O’Keefe says: “The six figures I spent on paying Mattson, labor unions
and shipping owners could have been spent on local salaries, growth for my
business, and during the economic downturn, could have meant the survival of my
business.”
Jones Act
Has Its Defenders
The Jones
Act has its defenders. Matson, in a letter to employees, calls the Jones Act
“The single most important piece of legislation to Matson.”
All of
Hawaii’s congressional delegation members say the Jones Act ensures jobs for
Americans and is a matter of protecting national security from foreign vessels.
Hawaii’s Senior U.S. Senator Daniel Inouye, says he
supports the Jones Act because Hawaii enjoys high quality, regularly scheduled
service. The Jones Act “helps to balance against foreign subsidies,
maintains national security and makes certain that companies comply with U.S. tax,
labor, health and safety requirements,” he says.
He adds national security concerns: “With our nation
at war in two theaters, we are reminded that a strong merchant marine fleet is
vital to the security of this nation and a critical supply link for our troops
fighting overseas. The U.S. merchant marine fleet has supplied more than
90 percent of the needed equipment for troops fighting in Iraq and
Afghanistan. At anytime, Jones Act vessels are called up to provide this
transport. This would not be possible if it were a foreign-owned fleet. “
U.S. Rep. Neil Abercrombie, D-Hawaii, who stepped down
February 28 to run for Hawaii governor, says the Jones Act is good for America,
because it “guarantees that cargo between U.S. ports is carried aboard vessels
subject to U.S. labor, security, tax, environmental and safety laws and U.S.
flag ships are crewed by U.S. citizens (or legal residents) who undergo
extensive background checks and rigorous professional training.”
He adds: “Overall estimates are that cargo shipping
companies subject to the Jones Act provide nearly 125,000 American jobs; 80,000
merchant seamen and officers and 44,000 jobs in longshore, terminals, shipyards
and other supply and support facilities. In Hawaii most of the imported goods,
upon which our survival depends, arrive from the U.S. mainland as ocean
freight. The Jones Act is the lifeline that ties us to the rest of the nation,
and I continue to support it."
U.S. Rep.
Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii, and U.S. Senator Daniel Akaka, D-Hawaii, also expressed
strong advocacy for the law.
Despite
strong congressional support, not everyone in government agrees that the Jones
Act is helpful.
Malia Blom
Hill, a Washington DC attorney, says although originally envisioned as
protectionist member to ensure the survival of America’s merchant marine fleet
for reasons related to national security, the Jones Act has objectively failed
in both these goals.
During the
first Gulf War, a partial suspension of the Jones Act was needed in order to
ensure adequate fuel supply for national defense needs. Nicholas E.
Piggott & Barry K. Goodwin, Economic Impact of a Repeal of the Jones Act
for Regional Soybean Markets (Jan. 2002), available at http://www.ag-econ.ncsu.edu/faculty/piggott/jones_brief.PDF
And, following the devastation of Hurricane Katrina,
she says the Jones Act was suspended for the shipping of petroleum by the
Secretary of Homeland Security, who deemed it, “necessary in the interest of
national defense.”
(http://www.npga.org/files/public/Jones_Act_Waver_9-05.pdf/).
“It can come as no surprise to the federal government
that the Jones Act creates a substantial burden on commerce—the very existence
of a waiver system, and the emergency waivers granted after the Gulf War and
Hurricane Katrina attest to the fact that the government recognizes the
problematic nature of the Act in times of national emergency,” Blom Hill adds.
Repealing
Jones Act Could Help Consumers, U.S. International Trade Commission Says
A 1999
report from the U.S. International Trade Commission suggests that repealing
Jones Act would lower the cost of shipping (both through seaborne rates as well
as through competition with other shipping methods) by approximately 22% and
result in a $1.32 billion gain for the U.S. economy. Piggott &
Goodwin, supra.
Hawaii
transportation expert Cliff Slater, who is opposed to the Jones Act, notes that
the U.S. International Trade Commission also estimates that the federal law
costs consumers annually on a national level an estimated $10 billion.
“Were
Hawai'i to have an exemption from the Jones Act, freight costs would be half of
what they are today,” Slater says. “Because the Jones Act lobbyists have
blocked any funding for studies of the issue, we have no objective evaluation
of the financial impact on Hawai'i of the Jones Act. We can only look for
indicators and make an educated guess.”
Slater
reports:
*The U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) studied the effects of the
Jones Act and reports Jones Act vessels total costs are 82 percent higher than
competitive vessels. http://www.lava.net/cslater/JonesAc2.htm - _edn3
*There would be a $2.8 billion gain for the U.S. economy if the Jones Act were
repealed, according to the U.S. International Trade Commission.
*Charles Totto, the state's former consumer advocate, said "in the Hawaii
trade, the additional costs due to the Jones Act are as high as $600 million
annually.” http://www.lava.net/cslater/JonesAc2.htm - _edn7
*The total of Jones Act shipping charges for Hawaii is
about $750 million annually, Slater says, noting that “if this were reduced by
only a third, it would save Hawai'i consumers $250 million, or $870 for a
family of four.”
Hawaii Carriers Long Accused of Monopoly Pricing
For decades, groups like Hawaii’s Cattlemans’
Association, have fought for a Jones Act exemption for Hawaii or the
abolishment of the 9-decade-old law altogether.
In a 2009 report by economist Daniel Brackins, he
notes that many Hawaii cattle ranchers use airplanes to ship cattle
because it is cheaper and more efficient than shipping them on U.S. flagged
ships. “These cattle fly on 747s in livestock containers at 30 cents a
pound (Little, 2001). They have no other choice since foreign flagged
vessels are not allowed to ship cargo from one U.S. port to another,” Brackins
writes.
John Carroll, a former Hawaii state Representative who
is an opponent of Cabotage laws including the Jones Act, has done his own
informal study of the cost of the legislation on the 50th state.
In comparisons between grocery products such as eggs,
bread and milk on the mainland, Hawaii prices are 50 percent higher. “The
reason that a gallon of milk costs $9 in Hawaii and half that on the mainland
is in large part because of the Jones Act, which prevents competition and
raises the cost of all goods imported by ship here,” Carroll says.
He sued the federal government this year to get Hawaii
an exemption from the law, claiming the law results in inflated prices and has
caused some businesses to fold or suffer financially because an unlawful
restraint on interstate commerce. But Carroll’s case was dismissed in December
2009 by Chief District Judge David Ezra of the District of Hawaii, after Ezra
ruled Carroll’s plaintiffs do not have standing.
Federal
Government Looks Into Shippers’ Pricing in U.S. Justice Department Anti-Trust
Probe
While the
Jones Act challenge didn’t pass muster in Hawaii’s federal court, there are
some in the justice department looking into the nation’s shipping monopolies.
There still
has been no public announcement from the Anti-trust division of the U.S.
Justice Department about the 2008 investigation into 5 shipping companies,
according to Elliot Enoki of the US Attorney’s office, who would not comment
further.
In April
2008, Hawaii-based Alexander & Baldwin (NASDAQ:ALEX) Inc. issued a
statement saying documents related to its subsidiary Matson Navigation were
being subpoenaed by the U.S. Justice Department as part of a larger federal
probe.
The company
is one of at least five major American shipping companies operating in Hawaii
and Puerto Rico ordered to hand over documents to the Justice Department’s anti
trust division -- the agency that is reportedly investigating pricing practices
of ocean carriers.
Federal
agents visited and seized files from all four major container carriers between
the U.S. mainland and Puerto Rico including Horizon Lines, Crowley Maritime,
Sea Star Line and Trailer Bridge, according to American Shipper News.
In a
statement, Alexander & Baldwin said in 2008: "Matson Navigation,
A&B's ocean transportation subsidiary, does not operate vessels in the
Puerto Rico trade," but will "cooperate fully" with the
Department of Justice.”
Horizon Lines, the other major ocean carrier in
Hawaii, which operates between Hawaii, Guam, Alaska and Puerto Rico, also was
served with warrants and a grand jury subpoena. The company issued a statement
in April 2008: “Horizon Lines, Inc (NYSE:HRZ) has confirmed federal agents
today served search warrants and a grand jury subpoena relating to an
investigation of pricing practices of ocean carriers operating in the Puerto
Rico trade. Horizon Lines is cooperating fully with the government officials.
The company has not been informed of the specific subject matter of the
inquiry, being conducted by the U.S. Department of Justice’s Antitrust
Division.”
The fact that Matson was also subpoenaed -- even
though it does not participate in the Puerto Rico trade -- could either mean
investigators are comparing their books or probing the industry more widely,
the publication American Shipper speculated that year.
In one of the sentencing hearings for the Puerto Rico
case, John Terzaken, the U.S. Department of Justice prosecutor stated:
"The ongoing investigation is far broader than simply the US and Puerto
Rico. This is a nationwide investigation that involves other trade lanes
(Alaska, Hawaii and Guam). There will be charges in these other aspects of the
case as well. And those are those are to come down the road." (Transcript
of hearing, United States of America v. Gill, case no. 3:08-cr-351-J-32TEM,
United States District Court, Middle District of Florida, Jacksonville
Division.)
Economic Solutions to Controversy
While the shipping companies and shipping unions are
happy with the Jones Act law remaining in place, internationally-known
economist and author Ken Schoolland, a professor at Hawaii Pacific University,
say the Jones Act is protectionism at its worst.
“Famed economist Henry George once declared that protectionism,
in all of its forms, does to a nation in peacetime what an enemy would do to us
in wartime. The Jones Act is the perfect example. If we went to war, enemies
would try to eliminate shipping to the islands. So what does our
Congressional delegation do in peacetime? They eliminate shipping to the
islands.”
“By eliminating international competitors, our
politicians make it very difficult and costly for citizens of Hawaii
to buy products from all over the world. Of course the politicians don't
eliminate all shipping. They protect domestic shippers and unions that
contribute heartily to their political campaigns. Politicians claim that this
is for national security. This is false. It is for their own security in
office.”
“Whether it is a threat from wars or hurricanes,
the best security is to have an abundance of providers at the lowest of
costs. The whole economy benefits from this, not just privileged and
powerful insiders. Indeed, it is the corruption of politicians from
which we need the greatest of protection.”
Malia Zimmerman, editor and president of Hawaii
Reporter, has worked for ABC 20/20, FOX News and the Wall Street Journal. Hawaii
Reporter researchers Laura Brown and Pam Smith assisted with this report.
SIDEBAR
Jones Act
Legislation: “No
merchandise, including merchandise owned by the United States Government, a
State (as defined in section 2101 of the title 46), or a subdivision of a
State, shall be transported by water, or by land and water, on penalty of
forfeiture of the merchandise (or a monetary amount up to the value thereof as
determined by the Secretary of the Treasury, or the actual cost of the
transportation, whichever is greater, to be recovered from any consignor,
seller, owner, importer, consignee, agent, or other person or persons so
transporting or causing said merchandise to be transported), between points in
the United States, including Districts, Territories, and possessions thereof
embraced within the coastwise laws, either directly or via a foreign port, or
for any part of the transportation, in any other vessel than a vessel built in
and documented under the laws of the United States and owned by persons who are
citizens of the United States, or vessels to which the privilege of engaging in
the coastwise trade is extended by section 808 of this Appendix or section 22
of this Act.”
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