Nit league approves plan to open membership

Nit league approves plan to open membership


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NIT LEAGUE APPROVES PLAN TO OPEN MEMBERSHIP    The National Industrial Transportation League approved a plan this week to open its membership to include freight transportation providers.   


The plan, Vision 2020, was announced by the NIT League’s Executive Committee at its annual meeting last November in Charlotte, N.C., and was approved by the entire board in January. Ballots


were mailed to each current member company and were given 30 days to vote. Seventy-two percent of the membership approved the Vision 2020, meeting the two-thirds requirement for the NIT


League to activate the plan.    This is a big change for the 95-year-old group, long known as the “voice of the shipper.” For the first time, freight transportation providers, such as ocean


carriers and freight forwarders, can become full, voting members of the NIT League.    '”While shippers, carriers and third parties will continue to have disagreements, it is in all of


our interests to work together,” said Van L. Hayes Jr., manager of transportation support services for Vulcan Materials Co., and chairman of the NIT League. “In the end, the freight


transportation system must serve the needs of shippers and we believe Vision 2020 will make it easier for the league to pursue that goal.”    The Vision 2020, however, was not implemented


without some strong opposition and concern from some shipper members. “Clearly some of our members opposed the change, but I am sure the entire organization will continue to pull together to


accomplish even more than it has in its rich history,” Hayes said.    Implementing Vision 2020 will also require some operational changes at the Arlington, Va.-based group.    “The league


has long been viewed as the organization which represents shippers interests in regulatory and legislative battles,” said Ed Emmett, president of the NIT League. “Where the issues require us


to do that, we still will. But in recent years there have been fewer and fewer of such issues.”    “Now we will become much more visible in a whole range of issues that affect the daily


business lives of all parts of the freight transportation industry,” Emmett added. “Our positive impact for shippers will be far greater in a wider variety of places.”