Assessment of the Jones Act Waiver Process on Freight Transportation Networks Experiencing Disruption
In October 2012, Hurricane Sandy caused massive disruption and destruction to the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States. The intensity of the storm forced the Port of New York and New Jersey to close, forcing cargo diversion to the Port of Norfolk in Virginia. Because of the Jones Act restricti...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-890692020-09-29T05:33:33Z Assessment of the Jones Act Waiver Process on Freight Transportation Networks Experiencing Disruption Fialkoff, Marc Richard Public Administration/Public Affairs Buehler, Ralph Hall, Ralph P. Gutoff, Jonathan M. Mortveit, Henning S. Hancock, Kathleen L. Freight Transportation Jones Act System of Systems Critical Infrastructure Resilience Diversion Analysis In October 2012, Hurricane Sandy caused massive disruption and destruction to the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States. The intensity of the storm forced the Port of New York and New Jersey to close, forcing cargo diversion to the Port of Norfolk in Virginia. Because of the Jones Act restriction on foreign vessels moving between U.S. ports, the restriction on short sea shipping was viewed as a barrier to recovery. Much of the critical infrastructure resilience and security literature focuses on the "hardening" of physical infrastructure, but not the relationship between law, policy, and critical infrastructure. Traditional views of transportation systems do not adequately address questions of governance and behaviors that contribute to resilience. In contrast, recent development of a System of Systems framework provides a conceptual framework to study the relationship of law and policy systems to the transportation systems they govern. Applying a System of Systems framework, this research analyzed the effect of relaxing the Jones Act on freight transportation networks experiencing a disruptive event. Using WebTRAGIS (Transportation Routing Analysis GIS), the results of the research demonstrate that relaxing the Jones Act had a marginal reduction on highway truck traffic and no change in rail traffic volume in the aftermath of a disruption. The research also analyzed the Jones Act waiver process and the barriers posed by the legal process involved in administration and review for Jones Act waivers. Recommendations on improving the waiver process include greater agency coordination and formal rulemaking to ensure certainty with the waiver process. This research is the first in studying the impact of the Jones Act on a multimodal freight transportation network. Likewise, the use of the System of Systems framework to conceptualize the law and a critical infrastructure system such as transportation provides future opportunities for studying different sets of laws and policies on infrastructure. This research externalizes law and policy systems from the transportation systems they govern. This can provide policymakers and planners with an opportunity to understand the impact of law and policy on the infrastructure systems they govern. PHD 2019-04-21T06:00:34Z 2019-04-21T06:00:34Z 2017-10-27 Dissertation vt_gsexam:12811 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/89069 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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Freight Transportation Jones Act System of Systems Critical Infrastructure Resilience Diversion Analysis |
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Freight Transportation Jones Act System of Systems Critical Infrastructure Resilience Diversion Analysis Fialkoff, Marc Richard Assessment of the Jones Act Waiver Process on Freight Transportation Networks Experiencing Disruption |
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In October 2012, Hurricane Sandy caused massive disruption and destruction to the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States. The intensity of the storm forced the Port of New York and New Jersey to close, forcing cargo diversion to the Port of Norfolk in Virginia. Because of the Jones Act restriction on foreign vessels moving between U.S. ports, the restriction on short sea shipping was viewed as a barrier to recovery.
Much of the critical infrastructure resilience and security literature focuses on the "hardening" of physical infrastructure, but not the relationship between law, policy, and critical infrastructure. Traditional views of transportation systems do not adequately address questions of governance and behaviors that contribute to resilience. In contrast, recent development of a System of Systems framework provides a conceptual framework to study the relationship of law and policy systems to the transportation systems they govern.
Applying a System of Systems framework, this research analyzed the effect of relaxing the Jones Act on freight transportation networks experiencing a disruptive event. Using WebTRAGIS (Transportation Routing Analysis GIS), the results of the research demonstrate that relaxing the Jones Act had a marginal reduction on highway truck traffic and no change in rail traffic volume in the aftermath of a disruption. The research also analyzed the Jones Act waiver process and the barriers posed by the legal process involved in administration and review for Jones Act waivers. Recommendations on improving the waiver process include greater agency coordination and formal rulemaking to ensure certainty with the waiver process.
This research is the first in studying the impact of the Jones Act on a multimodal freight transportation network. Likewise, the use of the System of Systems framework to conceptualize the law and a critical infrastructure system such as transportation provides future opportunities for studying different sets of laws and policies on infrastructure. This research externalizes law and policy systems from the transportation systems they govern. This can provide policymakers and planners with an opportunity to understand the impact of law and policy on the infrastructure systems they govern. === PHD |
author2 |
Public Administration/Public Affairs |
author_facet |
Public Administration/Public Affairs Fialkoff, Marc Richard |
author |
Fialkoff, Marc Richard |
author_sort |
Fialkoff, Marc Richard |
title |
Assessment of the Jones Act Waiver Process on Freight Transportation Networks Experiencing Disruption |
title_short |
Assessment of the Jones Act Waiver Process on Freight Transportation Networks Experiencing Disruption |
title_full |
Assessment of the Jones Act Waiver Process on Freight Transportation Networks Experiencing Disruption |
title_fullStr |
Assessment of the Jones Act Waiver Process on Freight Transportation Networks Experiencing Disruption |
title_full_unstemmed |
Assessment of the Jones Act Waiver Process on Freight Transportation Networks Experiencing Disruption |
title_sort |
assessment of the jones act waiver process on freight transportation networks experiencing disruption |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/89069 |
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AT fialkoffmarcrichard assessmentofthejonesactwaiverprocessonfreighttransportationnetworksexperiencingdisruption |
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1719343995581104128 |