Legislative Hurdles To National Security In The Civil Maritime Domain
Ie. A *Starting Point* for Maritime Deregulation
Part 3.
5. Inefficient Cargo Preference Requirements
Turning again to the regulations in question and their relevance in twenty first century operations, it is important to examine the specific national security concerns they addressed at the time of their introduction.
- While the Military Cargo Preference Act of 1904 (10 USC 2631) specifies that all cargoes purchased by the armed forces must be carried on a US flagged vessel – excepting where unavailable due to resources and/or costs are unreasonable – it does not require a great deal of effort to justify the use of a foreign-flagged vessel in the case of an emergency. In a situation not dissimilar to the previous contradiction noted with the crewing differences between military and civilian operators, 31 of the 46 Ready Reserve Force ships maintained by the military for emergency transport of materiel in case of war, were constructed outside the United States and are therefore ineligible for any use domestically were they to be sold to a US-flagged operator in the future.
In an amendment to the Merchant Marine Act of 1936, passed in 1954, at least 50% of all general US government cargo must also be carried by US-flagged vessels. The type of cargo specified in this legislation has generally focused on high volume products like food aid to be delivered overseas – and this amendment was further modified to 75% specifically in relation to food aid deliveries in 1985. While it is not hard to fault the original intent of the legislation at the time it was developed, it appears to have very little utility in everyday operation – and in fact is more harmful than beneficial. In the case of a real emergency or wartime situation, the military already has large amounts of munitions and materiel pre-staged. During routine operations, there are far fewer routine shipments needed for military support than earlier in the 20th century – which makes sense given the smaller numbers of vessels involved as well. Naval resupply for instance is predominantly conducted underway between Naval vessels and Maritime Sealift Command (MSC) auxiliaries – commercial vessels never enter the equation. An exception to this from recent years has been the drawdown of military materiel following the formal end of hostilities in Iraq and to a lesser extent, Afghanistan.
In general, Cargo Preference to date is limited to emergency food aid and similar emergency aid programs. The utility of this program has deteriorated greatly due to the increasing variability of international harvesting results. Even Federal Aid Agencies are becoming less likely to utilize these programs – even when still required to by law – it can be far more efficient both in time and money to purchase the necessary aid or in the vicinity of the emergency and have it transported locally – rather than paying to have it acquired and shipped internationally on a ship that may not immediately be available when needed.
- These acts and the issues they embody are further reflected by MARAD’s Maritime Security Program. Out of 110 US-flagged vessels participating in international commerce, a full 60 are enrolled in the Maritime Security Program. By participating in this program, the operators acknowledge that the ships will be made available to the US government at the earliest possible convenience in the event of an emergency or wartime situation. In exchange for this availability, these operators receive a cash allotment of about $3.1 million per vessel per year or about $8500 per day. While initially appearing to be a significant amount, as the PwC MARAD report demonstrates, that amount only covers about 2/3 of the daily differential in operating costs between US and foreign-flagged vessels. [But it’s still your taxpayer dollars being shelled out]
6. Security Issues Specific to the Jones Act
- Returning to the Jones Act as a commercial speed bump, it is possible to force exceptions through, but the process is cumbersome and time intensive and requires action at the congressional level. This includes a considerable number of cases where vessels have been repaired or refurbished overseas but have been certified by the Coast Guard that their refurbishments did not exceed reasonable limits as established by the Second Proviso of the Jones Act – currently listed in 46 CFR 67.177. This issue is complicated enough on the surface – attempting to calculate the mass differentials from multiple pieces of equipment out of a very large vessel – but it often becomes far more politicized as commercial competitors will attempt to challenge each other on the legality of any foreign repairs. Leaving aside that the repairs have already activated the Ad Valorem duty by default, if a corporation can prove that more than, say 7.5% of a competitor’s vessel’s steelweight has been repaired or worked on, that would potentially void the Jones Act eligibility that vessel for future operations. Bearing in mind that the National Vessel Documentation Center is the only fully civilian staffed command under the Coast Guard – and possesses neither the resources nor qualified manpower to inspect the ships during refits to verify the claims made by the companies – which by and large have proven accurate under penalty of law. This is also a sort of situation open to abuse in that in a number of cases, decisions by the Coast Guard have been retroactively reversed or thrown out by courts based on these corporate complaints, although the Coast Guard assessments have been conducted in good faith in accordance with their established legal precedents. It is difficult in many cases to determine whether any US jobs are currently being lost by work conducted overseas due to the timing involved and the limited number of active shipyards – estimates and guesses are freely distributed by both sides of the argument, but there are no solid numbers available.
- The legislative limitations of the Jones Act are also such that those situations in which the casual observer would expect common sense to address swiftly, become political footballs. US Coast Guard icebreakers for instance are an extremely valuable asset, but as there are only three currently active (between six and ten would be required to adequately meet all current operational goals), a waiver was required from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in order to resupply Nome, Alaska, after a Russian ice-class tanker was forced to take on fuel from Dutch Harbor to deliver to Nome as weather prevented the intended pickup in a Japanese port. This situation among others, verges on the legal absurdity of applying a near-century old law in a blanket format with no available consideration for logic.
In another situation, an oil drilling company which had previously been granted a Jones Act Waiver by DHS (under National Security auspices) to transport an oil rig from Texas to Alaska using a foreign built, foreign owned vessel was told that the waiver had been revoked and would require a new application. Although the company halted the transit in Vancouver and used a US towing company to take the rig the remainder of the way, they were still fined $15 million – the equivalent value of the rig itself – for breaking the coastwise trades portion of the Jones Act. This was in spite of a lack of available Jones Act eligible vessels needed for a timely transit and the fact that DHS refused to review their appeal in regardless of Congressional support, although – for example – 56 Jones Act Waivers were granted in the period of July-August 2011 (utilizing the identical national security rationales to allow private companies to transport oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve). As the largest fine of its type to date, it’s also something of a precedent in that the company was charged the full value of the vessel being transported even though as an actual vessel it was argued that it should not be treated like ordinary cargo or merchandise being transported from one port to another port. [Because FYTW]
This scenario does bring up a related question that has yet to be addressed, but which also further exposes the limitations of the Jones Act. Recently, vast reserves of natural gas have been located offshore of Alaska. These reserves are easily exploitable, and would benefit the state and country immensely – but for one issue. Even if there are new Liquid Natural Gas terminals constructed on the west coast, it will be impossible for any LNG tanker to qualify for the Jones Act – in part due to the limitations discussed previously, the US simply does not possess the shipbuilding capability to construct one. Given the legal precedents already established, it is unlikely that any corporation or vessel would receive a blanket waiver for the life of one or more foreign-built vessels to engage in Alaska to West Coast deliveries. That basically means that under current legal rulings, Alaska will be required to transport and export all their natural gas internationally, with no net gain to national energy security.
7. Potential Corrective Legislative Actions
So, returning to legislative actions that would provide a net gain to national security utilizing Mahan’s rationale, each previously discussed act will be reviewed.
- The Military Cargo Preference Act of 1904 and all the follow-on associated legislation should be scrapped in full. The US military already maintains its own Ready Reserve Force in addition to the federally operated Maritime Sealift Command ships. Any needs beyond that in time of emergency should be addressed as needed – utilizing appropriate contingency planning and the best vessel available at the time of the requirement – without excessive micromanagement or favoritism. Security concerns would obviously be observed and dealt with accordingly as necessary. In the case of non-military cargoes, the respective federal agencies and departments should again be free to negotiate for the best available carrier to transport their cargo. In this time of skyrocketing deficits – it is important to provide the best possible deal for the taxpayer.
- The Ad Valorem duty portion of the Tariff Act should be fully rescinded. It functions simply as a punitive tax on companies that have very few options to begin with, while not providing any actual incentive to have repair work conducted in a US shipyard. A better alternative might be to provide tax breaks for operators – US-flagged and otherwise – who do conduct their maintenance availabilities and repairs in US shipyards. Additionally it is far too arbitrary in its enforcement – between the precedent-based measurements conducted by the Coast Guard, and the irregular legal reversals in the courts.
- Regarding the Jones Act itself, depending on the legislative process it might be easier to address the various issues in individual amendments, as opposed to replacing the entire piece carte blanche. For instance, the citizen crew requirement should be removed immediately – at least for the seamen – although it would be worth reviewing in further detail whether that citizenship requirement should be left fully in place for ship officers. Similarly, it should be examined further whether there is any inherent harm in removing the right to sue from a seaman injured onboard a vessel. If insurance provided by the operator is adequate, in accordance with the routine union protections, there ought not to be any loss suffered by the seaman. Again, there are precedents set for this that can be reviewed – both as a matter of routine policy for all US service members, but also for the seamen employed by non-US-flagged operators.
-
Finally, regarding the Coastwise Trade requirements of the Jones Act – it is reasonable to maintain the existing regulations for trade on the inland waterways of the United States – to include the Great Lakes – the precedents and general operating procedures established there are not in dispute. However, at this time, given the existing restrictions and limitations on US shipyards, it makes no sense to maintain the US-flagged requirements for all trade between mainland ports, with particular emphasis on trade between the mainland and Alaska, Hawaii, Guam and Puerto Rico. Like the Ad Valorem Duty issues, it is a regulation that has outgrown its utility in the last century and causes more considerably more economic hardship than benefit for both the operators and customers. [A number of estimates place the cost of shipping a container from San Diego to Hawaii at 10 times the cost of shipping the same container from San Diego to Shanghai. Numbers have fluctuated a little over the years.]
8. Conclusion
Reducing or eliminating these regulations should not be carried out in a vacuum, but in conjunction with providing more incentives to operators and service providers. As with other industries, it should be the goal of the government to make normal business operations easier, not more difficult – whether in developing or maintaining a shipyard, transporting cargo and passengers, or anything else. These are all capital-intensive industries that provide a very large number of secondary and tertiary jobs and business opportunities across the country – which in turn provide far more tax revenue in net gains. It is possible to restore and revitalize our nation’s maritime tradition, but the way forward involves far less government interference and legislation, not more.
I did it!
Fully on board with this, but I don’t expect government to get the memo.
Aye Aye, we concur.
The plank is that way >>>>>
Punning is a mainstay of our community
So’s keel-hauling, buggery, and long pork.
Perhaps i will take a different tack in the future
I’m not getting within a yard arm of you.
I want to pun but I’m a bit groggy on nautical nomaclature.
I think you’re going overboard with the criticism
If we keep it up, is the thread going to capsize?
A small blow will do it.
Enough with the sailor talk. Run out the jenny and heave to and for GODS SAKE LET”S SPLICE THE DAMN MAINBRACE!
AD28 BITCHES!
Yeah, when I hear the word ‘deregulation’ my first thought is ‘not happening’.
I don’t understand how pictures of girls in bikinis is not pertinent to this topic?
What about mermaids with boobs, how is that not relevant?
Better than mermaids without boobs.
(I hope that link works cause my work blocks imgur)
Choose wisely.
Fish are usually pretty quiet
and can’t survive for long out of water. You’re onto something here.
+ Best floatation device
Merman, dad. Merman!
If there is one thing dems hate, it is money that they are not spending.
http://nbc4i.com/2017/05/17/ohio-dems-use-rainy-day-fund-to-fight-drug-crisis/
Well, they’re afraid that the next weed ballot will pass. One winning formula that politicians have been successful at since day one is:
1. Invent crisis.
2. Have media sound the alarm and get public’s panties all up in a bunch.
3. Throw money at fake crisis.
“USS George H.W. Bush”
I bet that ship doesn’t have a drop of rum aboard.
As long as they still have sodomy and the lash.
They let women serve on board so not as much need for the sodomy
Speak for yourself!
An op-ed for Fox points out some obvious facts which (shocker!) other news media has politely skipped past for the sake of the narrative –
If there had been any actual perceived attempt at obstruction of justice by Trump in his meeting w/ Comey (which is the claim made by someone interpreting Comey’s notes) it would have been Comey’s responsibility as an officer of the law to IMMEDIATELY document and report it to other law enforcement officials. Failure to do so would be a crime. (18 U.S. Code § 4 – Misprision of felony)
IOW, an interpretation of the notes as a genuine perception of obstruction is prima facie impossible; if that is what it reflected/intended, then Comey broke the law by failing to immediately bring it to the attention of the DoJ. Assuming the FBI director knew the law, you can only conclude that the notes reflected nothing remotely like ‘obstruction’. The evidence says the opposite of what the media has tried to argue.
Did they also mention the fact that the FBI had formally cleared Flynn twenty-one days prior to the memo purportedly being written, and Flynn had resigned the day before? The timing doesn’t sound right for a ‘stop the investigation’ request.
no, the op-ed was just a lawyer focusing narrowly on the legal paradox of using the ‘memo-as-evidence’
e.g.
as for ‘formally clearing flynn’, i don’t know about that. there were additional disclosures in late March about how Flynn had potential financial dealings with foreign govts in 2015-2016 which had not been mentioned before. I don’t think they amount to smoking guns either, but i think the point is that he was still the subject of scrutiny.
I’m a bit fuzzy on all the details due to lack of interest. But it does strain credulity that there would be a “back off” warning about a few lingering disclosures after the guy’s already gone from the administration.
Highest probability at this point – if it were discussed the topic did not raise to the level of obstruction, so neither Trump nor Comey are in violation of the law, but because Comey was in bitter ‘ex-employee’ mode, he leaked an easily misconstrued excerpt to a credulous media outlet begging to believe.
I could be proven wrong, but I get the feeling this was Trump being Trump and saying, “Flynn was a good guy and hope he can put this behind him” off the cuff type of remark you say about someone. To a Trump supporter, it’s a big nothing, to a detractor, it’s obstruction.
I’d give anything to have a recording of the tarmac meeting between Bill Clinton and Loretta Lynch.
I do have a question about the “leaked Comey memo”. Has Comey actually authenticated that he wrote the memo and the leaked portion is accurate? Has anyone even asked him?
At this point it’s all “blood in the water.”
No one in the Beltway cares about careful factual analysis, it’s just speculation and, for the media/deep state/left and Never Trumpers, a whole lot of wishful thinking.
What are you even talking about? They just talked about grandchildren!
One of the truly remarkable things about this saga is that no news stories reporting hearsay about the memo seem to have asked Comey if it’s real.
Seriously, next time you read a story, search for the boilerplate that suggests Comey was asked for comment. You will not find it. I wonder why.
I mentioned this late in a thread last night but isn’t the president, as head of the Justice Department, ultimately responsible for who and what the JD and FBI investigate? Which is why there is/was an Independent Council which is outside of executive control, for investigating things the Prez doesn’t want investigated?
Just like the President determines what is or isn’t secret, he determines what is or isn’t investigated, so obstruction of justice isn’t technically possible.
Both may still be impeachable if it really pisses off congress, but that is an entirely different matter.
I don’t think the president has any authority whatsoever over the DoJ. He only has the pardon-power, which is pretty extensive.
The reason for independent council would be to remove the perception of political influence; if a Trump appointee were responsible for investigating Trump it leave the investigation open to charges of conflict-of-interest.
I don’t think that’s exactly right either. there are multiple classification authorities, and items can be classified which pre-dated a president; a president can’t simply de-classify anything at will by simply saying so. but i don’t know all the ins and outs of how executive authority and the classification process intermix.
I don’t think the president has any authority whatsoever over the DoJ.
He has the ability to hire/fire the AG, the head of the FBI and other top members that are considered political positions.
Obviously, his hires have to be approved by the Senate.
But policy decisions for the DOJ are clearly within the presidents perview. Whether are not to burn down the Branch Davidians or deport cuban kids wasn’t entirely left up to Janet Reno, no matter how much she tried to deflect from the President (to pick two old examples).
within limits. I’m no expert; as far as i know the traditional characterization of the executive’s role vis a vis the Justice Department is that they can “set priorities”, but that doesn’t amount to being able to order them to start or stop investigatations
i have to admit i did not read this series on deregulating the maritime domain to closely, but I can draw the conclusion that you want the corporations to steal money from government and the poor. Shame.
Meanwhile, in China:
ROADZ, ROADZ EVERYWHERE!
Only by being a communist state can we pay for the new Silk Road!
Yeah, the silk road dried up when sea routes were established for good reason. Too much political instability along most of the route.
I thought the Feds shut that down?
Like the chinese care about using someone else’s intellectual property without permission.
That’s… weird. They should put Obama in charge. You didn’t build that road.
So I’m looking at a map of this new super road. Do my eyes deceive me or does this thing run right through a few middle eastern countries that have this long history of instability. Nothing could possibly go wrong, continue on course!
Yeah, if I’m one of those countries, I’m going to be real excited about the Chinese building a paved invasion and/or refugee route to me.
Not to mention the high possibility of a convoy of freight running over an IED. This is soooo going to NOT go well.
Note that all the road networks deliberately steer themselves around Afghanistan.
But it’s not like the Taliban can’t just cross the border and plant an IED on the big stretch that goes through Pakistan’s tribal autonomous zones.
The one’s I see go directly through Tehran to Istanbul. I would not want to be driving a truck through that section. Talk about a dangerous job.
I smell an exciting Learning Channel series!
Terrorist road truckers!
That was one of the primary objections of the Channel Tunnel between the UK and France (for nearly 100 years).
The Brits were worried that those perfidious Frenchmen would use it to invade, which I always thought particularly ludicrous, until I realized that British leaders were stupid enough that they’d forget to install some mechanism for flooding the tunnel while the whole French army was crossing.
Duh, I mean even Moses thought of that one.
China has been operating in Africa for decades. Africa’s instability sorta makes the middle east look stable?
will it be solar powered? green? non-gmo?
Funny enough the EU’s rejected the deal due to various concerns, including the fact that it couldn’t be guaranteed to be ‘sustainable’.
At least they’re right for the wrong reasons for once.
There’s also, as the video mentions, China’s stellar history of quality infrastructure.
you’re just jealous Canada has insufficient high speed rail. How many miles of it are in Nunavut for example?
Nunavut? None of it.
I’m not sure there’s any. Nunuvut is, one might say.
No one’s ever been round there. Well, once someone was there, but they’re still frozen.
Reminds me of The Terror – which was surprisingly good, if anyone needs a summer read.
They’re waiting for global warming before they try to chip him out of the ice.
Bah, we don’t need any roads in this country. We didn’t have any roads until the 1830s and we got along fine. Kids today have it too easy.
Hey, you try fording that river in a covered wagon and not catching dysentery or but by a snake
China’s ok to visit, just don’t
drink the waterdrive over any bridges.And for the love of god never ask what animal you just ate
https://twitter.com/VOATurkish/status/864631567972540417
Erdogen’s thugs pummel Kurdish protesters in….Washington DC? This is shameful. The US cannot stand for this kind of political violence by a foreign power. Erdogen is a real bag of dicks.
Looks like it’s going viral. What will be interesting is to see how the MSM spin their version of it. CNN will probably photoshop some Tea Party banners into the hands of the protesters and make it look like they are provoking the Turks.
Diplomatic. Immunity. /evil laugh.
Goddammit so much.
That fucker makes Joe Arpaio look like someone who follows the law.
Trump was short on authoritarians. Sessions can’t do everything by himself!