The Daily: February 14, 2022
The Daily aggregation of articles regarding the transportation logistics, trucking, and supply chain industries for February 14, 2022 from iLevel Logistics Inc.
“The way to get started is to quit talking and begin doing.”
Walt Disney, co-founder of The Walt Disney Company
Today’s Featured Article:
Port Tracker report eyes lower volumes but still-steady import levels for 2022 - Logistics Management (logisticsmgmt.com)
“For December, the most recent month for which data is available, import volume—at 2.09 million TEU (Twenty-Foot Equivalent Units)—was off 1.2% compared to November and was down 1% annually. May 2021 remains the all-time highest-volume month, at 2.33 million TEU). And for calendar year 2021, imports came in at 25.8 million TEU, for a 17.4% annual increase, setting a new record and breaking the previous record, of 22 million TEU, set in 2020 against the backdrop of the pandemic.”
Universal Logistics Reports Record $467M Revenue | Transport Topics (ttnews.com)
Reported increase in Clearinghouse drug violations misleading (landline.media)
Work Truck Week 2022 preview: OEM reveals, Mike Rowe, and EV education | Fleet Maintenance
Red-hot inflation gave most Americans a pay cut in January | Fox Business
The Capital Markets Can Help Heal the Supply Chain | RealClearMarkets
“Regulations” Featured Article:
US Senators Introduce Supply Chain Bill Amid Funding Negotiations | Transport Topics (ttnews.com)
“To alleviate supply chain woes around the country, two senior senators introduced legislation meant to improve the flow of freight at commercial ports.”
Why now is the right time to automate warehouse logistics | DC Velocity
How inflation and tangled supply lines are gripping economy | AP News
Super Bowl Sunday means truckloads of avocados - DAT
Small Business Loan Approval Rates Continue to Climb - Small Business Trends (smallbiztrends.com)
Super Bowl commercials cost $7 million. It's still a good deal - CNN
“Trade & Border Issues” Featured Article:
Trade impact with US escalates as Canadian protest movement spreads | AJOT.COM
“As the Canadian demonstrators blocking access to the vital Ambassador Bridge connecting Detroit and Windsor, Ontario entered a fourth day with no end in sight, the bilateral trade impact of the protest movement against COVID-19 measures is rapidly escalating. This is especially the case for the supply chain-dependent integrated automobile sector.”






The Workday Dash is an aggregation of articles regarding the transportation logistics, trucking, and supply chain industries for July 31, 2025, from iLevel Logistics Inc.