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Jaxport offers CEO job to former Horizon Lines exec
The Jacksonville Port Authority's board of directors voted Monday morning to offer its chief executive officer position to Brian W. Taylor, a former executive vice president and chief operating officer of Horizon Lines, which is one of four carriers that offers shipping services between Jacksonville and San Juan, Puerto Rico. They also elected AT&T executive Joe York to serve as the next chairman, taking over from James Citrano on July 1. Taylor left Horizon in...
MOL ship splits in half, but both sections floating
MOL reports its containership MOL Comfort has split in half, but that as of 7 a.m. the fore and aft sections of the 7,041-TEU ship continue to float with containers onboard in the Arabian Sea near the coast of Oman. The company said the fore part of the ship is located 13’00”N 60’40”E, and the aft part is about 19 miles southwest from that point. At present, both parts of the ship are drifting in an east-northeast direction, the company said. It is arranging for tugboats to tow ...
U.S. Bank offers new fuel card for truckers
U.S. Bank has unveiled its Over the Road Plus card, an expansion of its Over the Road card offering, which enables drivers to easily purchase fuel at thousands of truck stops and other retailers. The new card enhances U.S. Bank's offerings by adding checking services to use where the card is not accepted, pre-approval per-diems, and funding for emergency repairs. Fleet managers can, through a program tied to the card, manage fuel limits and gallons per fill up. “By...
NYK starts U.S. ro-ro service to WCSA
NYK Line will launch a new roll-on/roll-off service connecting U.S. East and Gulf coast ports with the west coast of South America, starting July 24. The service, called NYK Chile Express, will have a rotation of Baltimore, Jacksonville, Houston, Vera Cruz, Manzanillo (Panama), Guyaquil, Callao, Iquique, and San Antonio.
May ore loads on Great Lakes down over a year ago
Shipments of iron ore on the Great Lakes totaled 6.4 million tons in May, an increase of 15.1 percent compared to April, the Lake Carriers’ Association said. However, the association noted the amount was a decrease of 6.6 percent compared to a year ago. Loadings also trailed the month’s long-term average by 4.8 percent. Shipments from U.S. ports totaled 5.8 million tons, a decrease of 2.9 percent compared to a year ago. The May total included 380,000 tons shipped t...
Cargolux adds Columbus-Hong Kong route
Cargolux has added twice-weekly, direct service from Hong Kong to Columbus, Ohio, using Boeing 747-8 freighters. The flights began Sunday, the same day the carrier unveiled new service into Brazil. Officials expect goods on the route to include cargo associated with the fashion industry. “We are pleased that we are expanding our North American network by adding Rickenbacker International Airport to our global portfolio of destinations,” Cargolux’s chie...
Old Dominion relocates Fort Wayne service center
Old Dominion Freight Line has relocated its Fort Wayne Service Center in Indiana to an expanded, 71-door, newly constructed facility. The center, which officials call state-of-the-art, will employ 44 people. “The improved facility allows OD to maintain its strong rate of growth in Fort Wayne,” the carrier's Randy Barton said in a statement. - Jon Ross
Pilot pushes Spanish expansion
Pilot Freight Services has opened a new station in A Coruna, Spain, and plans to open additional offices in Barcelona and Madrid by the end of 2013. The company, which recently reported $500 million in revenue for 2012, opened its first European station in Amsterdam in 2011. "We've gotten a lot of positive feedback from the opening of our station in Amsterdam, as our customers have really seen the benefit of having Pilot employees on the ground in Europe. Ou...
U.S-Canada begin truck pre-inspection pilot
The United States and Canada on Monday began a limited demonstration program at the Blaine, Wash.-Surrey, British Columbia port of entry for pre-inspecting U.S.-bound trucks in Canada instead of on the U.S. side of the border, U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced. The first phase of the pilot program is designed as a "proof of concept" to determine the viability of assigning CBP officers to Canadian border facilities to pre-inspect trucks, drivers and car...
Packaging facility to open in Mumbai
The Sahil Group and Sahil Freight Express will open the 44,000-square-foot packaging and warehousing facility in Mumbai by Sept. 1. The owners are currently looking for a joint-venture partner to help operate the facility, which is located near the Mumbai and Nhava Sheva ports. In specific the partner should specialize in delivering packaging to customers in India and globally, primarily in the healthcare, automotive, telecommunications and aviation industries, an...
Washington Notebook: U.S.-EU trade talks to start next month
U.S-EU free trade negotiations. The United States and European Union announced during the G-8 Summit in Ireland that they would begin formal trade negotiations the week of July 8 in Washington. U.S. and European Commission officials have been making preliminary plans for talks since the beginning of the year and the announcement follows final approval in recent days from the European Parliament. Completion of a Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership is expe...
INTTRA releases ocean document mapping tool
The portal-based ocean shipping e-commerce network INTTRA on Tuesday unveiled a new application designed to reduce the millions of manual transactions ocean carriers process annually. The product, called INTTRA Change, will allow shippers to submit electronic documents to carriers in the output format from their enterprise resource planning (ERP) system or transportation management system (TMS) while allowing carriers to receive it in an electronic-data-interchange (EDI) format...
TP Pulse: Shippers expect no big rate, capacity swings
Shippers reported no major swings in rates and capacity on the eastbound transpacific lane, according to the results of the latest American Shipper Transpacific Pulse survey. Nearly 60 shippers were polled in the survey, conducted May 31-June 7. More than 70 percent of respondents said their rates had either remained the same or increased or decreased moderately in the last month. Only 8.5 percent said their rates had increased or decreased significantly. Another 13 percent said...
Analyst sees potential for FedEx
Early aircraft retirement, a $1.7-billion profit improvement program and improvement in its express segment are reasons why Cowen and Co. is anticipating slightly better performance from FedEx stocks when the company releases its fiscal fourth-quarter numbers Wednesday morning. Cowen predicts a lower earnings-per-share number than most analysts, but sees the steps FedEx is taking in the market as hallmarks of an improving company. Modal shift is affecting FedEx, but Cowen still ...
Maersk, MSC and CMA CGM announce new alliance
The three largest container shipping carriers in the world, Maersk Line, Mediterranean Shipping Co. and CMA CGM, said this morning they have agreed in principle to establish a long-term operational alliance on East–West trades, which they're calling the “P3 Network.” The carriers said the P3 Network would initially operate 255 ships in 29 strings with 2.6 million TEUs of capacity on three trade lanes: Asia – Europe, transpacific and transatlantic. While the P3 Netwo...
Liebherr expands in Miami
Austrian crane manufacturer Liebherr has opened a new $20 million sales and service center in Miami off Okeechobee and the Florida Turnpike. It will serve as a major hub for Liebherr’s maritime cranes division and further strengthen its business relations to Central and South America and the Caribbean regions, said Gernot Schranz, president of Liebherr Nenzing Crane Co. Liebherr called the 430,000-square-foot property ideal, stating the port of Miami and Miami Inter...
Executive moves
Tay Yoshitani , chief executive officer of the Port of Seattle, and Phil Washington , general manager of the Regional Transportation District (RTD) in Denver, were appointed to the Washington-based Eno Center for Transportation’s board. Eno’s board also held elections for officers. Lillian Borrone , chairman; Mort Downey , secretary; and David Plavin , treasurer, were all re-elected to their positions for a one-year term. DSV Road Ltd. has appointed Jesper Hansen as...
Jaxport names Taylor CEO
The Jacksonville Port Authority board this morning voted unanimously to extend the contract for its chief executive officer position to Brian W. Taylor. Based in Charlotte, Taylor has worked both in the public and private sector. He was most recently executive vice president and chief operating officer of Horizon Lines. He left the company in November 2012. Most recently, Taylor was senior vice president of sales and operations for New Breed Logistics in High Point, N.C. He...
Drewry Air Freight Index - April gains erased in May
April's $0.06 uptick in east-west air freight rates evaporated in May, as the average rate per kilogram finished the month at $3.15, the same price as in March, according to Drewry's East-West Air Freight Price Index. Year-over-year, May's result represented a $0.10 drop in the price of air cargo. The price index takes 21 trade lanes and averages them together, coming up with a weighted index and an average price for a kilogram of cargo. The high point for freight i...
Ag fee 'galling' to Canadian truckers
The Canadian Trucking Alliance has voiced concerns over the cross-border trucking fees collected by the U.S. Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) and is worried they may soon increase. Truckers pay a fee of $5.25 to the U.S. agency every time they cross the border, according to the alliance, and a recent study that shows the fees aren't generating enough revenue could lead to a larger fee. The fees are assessed whether or not the carrier is carrying ...
EU gives green light to U.S. trade discussions
The European Parliament has officially given the green light to begin formal talks between European and American officials toward the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership. Official talks will now begin as soon as U.S. officials start negotiations, which means discussions will likely start next month or so, according to the European Union. EU member states also sent out a list of objectives the European Commission should follow when negotiating. ...
USDA takes steps to further balance sugar surplus
The U.S. Department of Agriculture today announced actions to manage the domestic sugar surplus, as required by law, while operating the sugar program at the least cost to the government. “Record-breaking yields of sugar crops and a global surplus have driven down U.S. sugar prices and USDA is required to act to stabilize the domestic market. Today’s actions are designed to manage the sugar program while minimizing federal sugar program expenditures,” the department said.  ...
MOL crew safe after containership cracks
MOL reports its containership MOL Comfort suffered a crack amidship and was ingressing water in the hold. The company said the ship sustained the crack in the Arabian Sea (12'30"N 60'E) at around 7 a.m. local time on Monday morning while in transit from Singapore to Jeddah. MOL said it was not possible for the ship to continue under its own power and, because damage was extensive, the 26 members of the crew took to lifeboats and were rescued by other vessels. ...
Nicaragua canal targets big ships
Developers proposing to build a new canal across Nicaragua are targeting operators of large ships that will not pass even through the new set of locks being build at the Panama Canal. "It has become imperative to develop and construct a wider and deeper interoceanic canal to support bigger load weight and generate greater efficiency," said Wang Jing, the chairman and chief executive officer of HKND Group, in a statement posted on his company's Website . Last w...
Menzies workers vote to strike
Close to 90 percent of the union workers who voted have decided to strike at Menzies World Cargo. The Heathrow-based workers are upset their pay has been frozen for the last two years. “Our door is always open, but time is running out," Oliver Richardson of Unite, Britain's largest trade union, said in a statement. "Unless we get some movement in the next few days we will have no choice but to announce a strike date. It is completely unreasonable for a successful co...
LA box volumes continue slide in May
The Port of Los Angeles saw container volumes drop 12.9 percent in May, continuing the trend at the nation’s busiest container port this year. Volume fell to 636,851 TEUs during the month, including a 12 percent drop in loaded import cargo (to 326,114 TEUs), and a 16.3 percent drop in loaded export cargo (to 154,904 TEUs). For the year, total volume has dropped 7.5 percent to less than 3.1 million TEUs. May statistics at the neighboring Port of Long Beach have not ...
Asia/Middle East driving global contract logistics growth
The U.K. consulting and research firm Transport Intelligence (Ti) said the global contract logistics market grew 3.4 percent by value in 2012, but warned that growth hides “increasing divergence in the performance of regional markets.” Ti’s latest report Global Contract Logistics 2013 , found growth in emerging markets is much higher than those in Europe or North America. The Middle East market grew at 5.7 percent, while the Asian contract logistics market grew at 6 percen...
Drewry says Med-North America trade soft
The shipping consultants Drewry are predicting that the westbound cargo growth in the Mediterranean-North America trade "is likely to remain poor, so more schedules between the Mediterranean and ECNA (East Coast North America) will need to be rationalized soon. Operating services in isolation, such Hapag-Lloyd’s MGX schedule, and MSC’s loops A and B, appears to be a luxury that is no longer affordable." The London-based company said in its Container Insight Weekly publication t...
Cargolux launches first Brazilian freighter
Cargolux launched Boeing 747-8 service from Luxembourg to Sao Paulo, Brazil, June 16, marking the first ever freighter flight of this size plane into the country. Viracopos International Airport is the only airport in Brazil certified for 747-8 service. Officials expect auto parts, pharmaceutical products and fruit to serve as the main exports from Brazil. "We are extremely pleased to see our new flagship freighter eventually operating to a ...
Old Dominion to up rates 4.9%
Old Dominion Freight will increase its base rates by about 4.9 percent on July 1. According to officials, the new rates will offset new equipment costs, preserve competitive waves and healthcare for workers, and leave room for a "nominal increase" on lane charges. “We are sensitive to our customers’ budgets, and we are always reluctant to raise our rates,” Old Dominion’s vice president of pricing, Todd Polen, said in a statement. “This increase is in line with our ...
COSCO Pacific volumes up over 2012
COSCO Pacific reports that it handled 5.1 million TEUs in May, 7.6 percent more than in May 2012. Year to date, the company has handled 24.4 million TEUs, 10.1 more than in the first five months of 2012. - Chris Dupin
Executive moves
Global Aviation Holdings has named John Graber its new chief executive officer. During his career, Graber has been creditd with leading successful turnarounds for several major companies. He most recently served as president of CHC Helicopter Services, where he grew revenues and simplified the corporate structure. Prior to that, he was president of ABX Air. Charlie McDonald will continue to serve as president. Global Aviation Holdings is the parent comp...
Truckers celebrate C-TPAT reporting changes
Canadian and U.S. truckers have complained about punitive measures following C-TPAT (Customs-Trade Partnership Against Terrorism) security breaches, and the Department of Homeland Security has agreed to make suspension or removal from the program not immediate. The department has also published a document outlining the measures it will take when security breaches occur. Carriers had been concerned about the lack of transparency involved in security-b...
Supreme Court strikes down parts of clean truck program
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Thursday in favor of the American Trucking Associations (ATA) in the group’s effort to turn back the Port of Los Angeles' efforts to regulate the drayage trucking industry. In 2007, the port created a Clean Truck Program that required trucking companies operating at the port to enter into concession agreements. The concession agreements made a number of requirements on drayage companies including these five: that they be emplo...
U.S. exporters confused over Mexican tax regulations
U.S. exporters are focusing their ire on the Servicio de Administracion Tributaria (SAT), Mexico’s tax agency for what they see as an increasing number of costly, time-consuming NAFTA audits and re-audits by the agency. These exporters say the current Mexican government had promised to streamline the audit process. “NAFTA rules of origin in this industry are very complex and require review of multiple levels of processing, which usually occurs at different com...
Bill to end Port NY/NJ fee advances
A bill to halt shipping fees charged by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey was approved Thursday by the New Jersey Senate Transportation Committee. “Imposing a fee on ocean carriers was a step in the wrong direction," said State Sen. Bob Gordon. He added the fee placed the port at a "competitive disadvantage." In 2011, the port authority instituted a cargo facility charge (CFC) on all waterborne cargo, including empty containers. The fee is $4.95 for 20-f...
CMA CGM announces rate hike
French liner carrier CMA CGM has announced a "revenue restoration program" on its Asia-Europe trade lane . Outbound from Europe, the company said it will impose a general rate increase on July 1 of $150 per 20-foot container and $200 per 40-foot container from North Europe (defined as North Continent, Scandinavia, Baltic, and the United Kingdom) to the Far East (defined as China, Japan, Korea, and and Southeast Asia countries). Also on July 1, CMA CGM&nbs...
New airport slated for Toronto area
The Canadian government has unveiled plans for a new airport, among other developments, at the federally-owned Pickering Lands site outside of Toronto. The new airport will replace Buttonville Municipal Airport, which is to be redeveloped as a mixed-use site. “There will be land for an airport, there will be urban and industrial development and there will be considerable green space on these lands,” said Minister of Finance Jim Flaherty said in a statement. "We...
Impatex takes NetFreight to the cloud
The U.K.-based supplier of customs software Impatex said Friday that its Web-based freight management and customs processing package NetFreight is now available in the cloud, following an alliance with freight industry hardware specialist Albacore Systems. NetFreight, launched in 2005 and acquired by Impatex in 2007, was designed as a browser-based system, operating either on a user’s in-house server, or on an external, hosted server. “In practice, most NetFreight ...
Maersk holds naming ceremony for first Triple E ship
The first of Maersk's new "Triple-E" ships was officially named this morning in a ceremony at the Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering (DSME) shipyard in Okpo, South Korea. The world's largest containership bears the name of the late Mærsk Mc-Kinney Møller, who passed away in April 2012 at the age of 98. Triple-E naming ceremony His youngest daughter, Ane Mærsk Mc-Kinney Uggla, had the honor of naming the ship during the ceremony, which is the first in a ser...
Ex-Im Bank helps small Tennessee exporters
The U.S. Export-Import Bank has signed a City/State Partnership with the Tennessee Small Business Development Center to help boost jobs in the state by promoting exports. "The partnership will bring foreign markets within reach of Tennessee businesses and support thousands of local small-business jobs,” said Ex-Im Bank Chairman and President Fred P. Hochberg in a statement. The Tennessee Small Business Development Center (TSBDC) program is headquartered a...
GAO checks in on nation's bridges
Last year, one in four of the more than 607,000 bridges that dot the United States was deemed deficient and is either racked with structural issues or is so obsolete it isn't suitable for traffic. In a recent report, the Government Accountability Office found there has been some improvement to bridge safety — the number of deficient bridges has decreased in the past decade — but there are still funding issues. And the overall funding picture is murky at best. &nb...
Food aid hearing targets U.S.-flag shipping
Rep. Ed Royce, R-Calif., chairman of the U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs, said Wednesday in a hearing the requirement that half of U.S. food aid be move on U.S.-flag vessels is an ”impediment to an effective, efficient program. ” “Decades ago, this cargo preference was seen as a way to ensure a reserve of ships and crew for the U.S. Navy in times of war. But by restricting competition to the few U.S.-flagged ships still sailing—the majority of which do not meet the ...
Cargill expands use of electronic bills of lading
The U.S. agribusiness Cargill said Thursday it has expanded its operational use of CargoDocs, an electronic bill of lading (eB/Ls) solution, to include agricultural shipments from South America. Cargill first used the solution on a shipment of grain from Houston to Veracruz, Mexico in March. Electronic Shipping Solutions (ESS), a provider of shipping and trade document and data solutions, is partnering with Cargill to include new trade routes from Argentina and Bra...
Midwest truck rates to rise
For the next few weeks, increased activity in the Southern Midwest due to the wheat harvest season will drive up rates, according to bulk freight industry watchers. Many carriers in the area will be tied up as part of harvest programs that pay double the usual truck rates. Wheat harvest season will start within the week in Northern Texas and Southern Oklahoma, according to reports. Some in the industry are predicting a larger-than-usual crop for Kansas. ...
TIGER funds dispersed for Global Terminal facility
The U.S. Department of Transportation is distributing money awarded last June in the fourth round of TIGER grants. The City of Bayonne, N.J., and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey received an $11.4 million grant on May 22 that will be used by Global Marine Terminals as part of its $350 million expansion and renovation. The TIGER funds will go to the purchase of two double-cantilever rail-mounted gantry cranes capable of loading and unloading double-stack ...
Ohio feed shipper bets on CNG
TruStar Energy will build a compressed natural gas fast-fill station for Kalmbach Feeds near the company's Ohio manufacturing plant. The station, which will allow two vehicles to fuel up simultaneously, is slated for completion in early November. Kalmbach Feeds, an animal feed distributor, is planning to transition its entire fleet to CNG in the next decade. "Regarding CNG, there has always been the discussion of whether to buy CNG trucks or wait until ...
DHL unveils new cold-chain product
DHL Global Forwarding has launched a temperature-controlled, high-visibility air freight service targeted at the life sciences and healthcare industries. DHL Thermonet uses Smartsenor RFID technology to ensure constant monitoring of temperature-sensitive shipments during transport, and customers can even ask add on the SmartSensor XP option, which will transmit temperature data from the goods surrounding the customer’s shipment. All the data is uploaded to the Internet for easy...
First supply chain students graduate from Malaysian institute
The Malaysia Institute for Supply Chain Innovation (MISI) has graduated its first class of students from its nine-month master's program, according to the MIT Center for Transportation and Logistics. The class of 2013 consists of 16 students from eight countries including India, China, Philippines, and the United States, many of whom have prior professional experience. More than 80 percent of the students secured new job offers before graduation. Employers include Accenture...
Swiss Interroll buys Colorado company
Switzerland-based Interroll has purchased Portec, a conveyor belt manufacturer based in Colorado, for an undisclosed amount. The cash purchase is expected to close on July 1. The acquisition is in line with Interroll’s strategic growth plans and gives the company a better foothold in the United States. The company, which counts Amazon and Coca-Cola as customers, also plans to open a 90,000-square-foot facility in Atlanta later this year. "The product p...
IATA: Airports, airlines must work together
To meet the 5 percent yearly demand for global connectivity, airports and airlines must work together toward common goals and investments, Tony Tyler, director general of the International Air Transport Association, said recently. Tyler, in a speech during the Airports Council International's Istanbul conference, said neither airlines nor airports can "afford poorly thought out and overly expensive infrastructure development. To avoid this, we must work together in a collaborat...
DHL expands Cincinnati air hub
DHL said it has completed its four-year, $105 million expansion of its air hub for the Americas at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Airport. The enhancements include a new 180,000-square foot sorting facility specifically designed to accommodate larger express shipments; an expanded south ramp for additional wide-body aircraft; an employee and pilot building; and a facility-wide information technology upgrade. Company officials say the larger facility w...
U.S. facilitates exports to help Syrians rebuild
The U.S. State Department on Wednesday announced a new limited waiver of the Syria Accountability and Lebanese Sovereignty Restoration Act of 2003 (SAA) to allow the export and re-export, under license, of certain reconstruction-related items for the benefit of the Syrian people. Consistent with Section 5(b ) of the SAA and the May 11, 2004 Executive Order 13338, the waiver authorizes the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security to issue licenses on a case-by-case b...
FMC reviews 13 OTI license applications
The U.S. Federal Maritime Commission has received 13 ocean transportation intermediary license applications and changes for review. The FMC received a non-vessel-operating common carrier license application from Marine Bulk Freight Forwarding, Huixquilucan, Mexico (Moises S. Leon, president). The agency received NVO/ocean freight forwarder license applications from Daisy Mae Concepcion, Orange, Calif. (Daisy Mae Concepcion V. Taleon, sole proprietor); John S. Kim a...
FAA searching for unleaded jet fuel
The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration is asking fuel producers worldwide for help in transitioning the aviation industry to unleaded fuel. The administration is seeking a way to replace the current 100 octane low-lead fuel for most of the general aviation fleet by 2018. Parties have until July 1, 2014, to submit proposals. By September 2014, the FAA will choose 10 participants for phase-one laboratory testing. Two fuels from this first phase will move on t...
Delaware River deepening about 60% complete
The Philadelphia Regional Port Authority (PRPA) said a project to deepen the Delaware River shipping channel from 40 feet to 45 feet is now about 60 percent complete. PRPA said in late May work was completed on "Reach D," an 11-mile stretch of the river. “After years of discussions and hurdles, it’s wonderful to finally see steady progress on this critical project,” said PRPA Chairman Charles G. Kopp, in a statement. “A deeper shipping channel will allow us to welc...
Long Beach names interim port director
Moro The Port of Long Beach Board of Harbor Commissioners last week appointed Al Moro as the port's interim executive director. Moro, currently the chief harbor engineer, replaces Christopher Lytle, who recently was hired away to lead the Port of Oakland. Moro, who joined the port in 1997, oversees all engineering activity, including the port's $4 billion capital improvement campaign. His appointment will go into effect following a formal vote on ...
U.S. imports drop 2% in May
U.S. containerized import volume in May fell 2.2 percent year-on-year but was still the highest volume of imports so far in 2013, according to statistics from the trade intelligence firm Zepol. “For the first two months of the year imports were up 7 percent over 2012, but in the last five months imports are only up 0.04 percent overall,” said Zepol’s Chief Executive Officer Paul Rasmussen. “With holiday orders being placed soon, we’ll likely see increased imports...
Management, ILA meet in Virginia
The Website of the Virginia Pilot newspaper said that Hampton Roads terminals were shut down Wednesday morning while local longshoremen held a meeting with management . The meeting was described as a "state of the port" briefing for longshoremen, who rejected a local contract seven weeks ago, but continue to work while negotiations continue. The newspaper said the port was to reopen at noon.
TIGER requests exceed available funding
The U.S. Department of Transportation said Tuesday that the fifth round of TIGER grants is oversubscribed once again, with 568 applications from around the country seeking more than $9 billion for infrastructure projects for a program that only has $474 million in available funding. The deadline for public and private entities to submit applications was June 3. States, local governments, port authorities, metropolitan planning organizations, transit agencies and other grou...