[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 164 (Wednesday, December 19, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8197-S8199]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LIMITED SERVICE EXCLUSION
Mr. PRYOR. Mr. President, I rise today to address an issue that has
arisen between companies within the moving industry. Recently, a group
of full-service moving companies has attempted to change rules
established by law, regulations, and court findings. These full-service
moving companies are aiming to undermine the clear intent of Congress
by avoiding the formal rulemaking or legislative process. The changes
sought would benefit their companies and damage their competitors
within the sector.
In recent years, full-service moving companies have faced new
competition from a growing number of companies that allow consumers a
``do it yourself'' alternative to more expensive, traditional movers.
Some general freight motor carriers have been offering ``do it
yourself'' consumers an option for moving: a non-household goods motor
carrier drops off empty containers or trailers at the consumer's
doorstep for the consumer to load, the consumer loads the trailer--
individually, with help from neighbors, or by hiring a third party.
After loading, the consumer calls the container company or freight
carrier to pick up the container or trailer, the container company then
arranges for an authorized general freight or flatbed carrier to pick
up and haul the loaded container, dropping it off on the requested
delivery date for the consumer to unload; and the carrier returns to
pick up the empty container or trailer when unloaded. The customer is
able to purchase the level of service he or she wants and manage the
process themselves from start to finish.
Mr. President, that is precisely the type of service alternative
Congress intended to encourage when it included the so-called ``Limited
Service Exclusion'' in the ``Household Goods Mover Oversight
Enforcement and Reform Act
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of 2005,'' enacted as Sec. Sec. 4201-16 of Pub. L. No. 109-59, 119
Stat. 1144 (2005), now known as ``SAFETEA-LU.'' This Limited Service
Exclusion, codified at 49 U.S.C. Sec. 13102 (12)(c), expressly states
that:
The term [household goods motor carrier] does not include a
motor carrier when the motor carrier provides transportation
of household goods in containers or trailers that are
entirely loaded and unloaded by an individual (other than an
employee or agent of the motor carrier).
I sponsored this provision and worked with others in Congress to
incorporate this Limited Service Exclusion into law and want to be
clear of the intent of the law. The ``Limited Service Exclusion'' was
intended for the non-household goods motor carrier that drops off empty
containers or trailers, which are loaded by the consumer or a third
party, and then delivered or stored by the container company or freight
carrier. The exclusion's intent was to keep portable container supply
companies and general freight carriers from the regulations required
for household good movers.
The written guidance that has been requested by the full-service
moving companies are pushing would ignore the Limited Service
Exclusion's intent by blocking portable container supply companies and
general freight carriers from relying on this statutory exclusion to
work together and with the do it yourself consumer to move the
consumer's belongings to his new home. That requested interpretation
would reverse decades of legal precedent and rule that if the container
supplier or general freight carrier refers the consumer to a third
party who provides the labor to load or unload the containers and
trailers, and the consumer elects to use those services, this third
party automatically becomes the ``agent'' of that container company or
trucking company. This attempted change of the statute with its
anticompetitive effects is exactly the opposite of what I and my
colleagues in the Senate and the House who voted for SAFETEA-LU
intended.
The traditional moving companies urge the FMCSA to adopt a definition
of ``agent''--as such term is used in the Limited Service Exclusion.
This would result in greater costs to consumers and will prevent
container and general freight carriers from using the Limited Service
Exclusion as Congress intended. The FMCSA already has embedded in its
regulations the ideal basis for arriving at a definition of ``agent''
that is consistent with our intent. The FMCSA's own regulation, 49 CFR
Sec. 375.103, requires it to apply the ``ordinary practical meaning''
to the term ``agent.'' The ``ordinary practical meaning'' of the term
agent is well settled as a matter of black letter law and there is no
cause for a federal agency to attempt to further interpret such a well-
established term. Simply put, the definition compels a finding that: as
long as the container or freight carrier does not control the third
party who the consumer engages to load and unload the container or
trailer, the carrier does not authorize the third party to act for and
on behalf of this carrier, and the third party does not agree to act on
behalf of the carrier, then the third party is not the agent of the
carrier. Facilitating the consumer to contract with a third party that
provides loading and unloading services does not create an agency
relationship as we intended that term in the Limited Service Exclusion.
Moreover, on a related issue, the Limited Service Exclusion should
remain intact even if the carrier receives compensation for
facilitating the consumer to contract with packing and loading
providers, provided that the carrier does not have an agency
relationship with the packing and loading providers.
Mr. RUBIO. Mr. President, as Senator Pryor points out, the clear
intent of Congress in adopting the Limited Service Exclusion section of
SAFETEA-LU was to ensure cost-conscious, budget-driven consumers will
continue to have the option to choose low-cost moving services for
their goods. Although I was not a member of Congress when SAFETEA-LU
was passed, you can plainly see that Congress made it clear in another
section of SAFETEA-LU that it was codifying and preserving decades of
law developed and perpetuated at the FMCSA, its predecessor the
Interstate Commerce Commission, and the courts that authorize general
commodity motor carriers lacking household goods authority to transport
household goods as long as they do not perform specialized household
goods related services such as loading and unloading. Here is what
Congress added to SAFETEA-LU, now codified at 49 U.S.C. Sec.
13102(12)(B):
The term [``household goods motor carrier''] includes any
person that is considered to be a household goods motor
carrier under regulations, determinations, and decisions of
the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration that are in
effect on the date of enactment of the Household Goods Mover
Oversight Enforcement and Reform Act of 2005.
The definition of ``household goods motor carrier'' that Congress
sought to preserve and perpetuate focuses on the nature of the services
performed, not on the commodity itself. If the motor carrier provides
specialized household goods related services--packing, loading,
unloading, etc.--for the consumer, the carrier must be deemed a
``household goods motor carrier'' with respect to the goods it
transports under a long line of court, FMCSA and ICC decisions and
implementing regulations. Conversely, if the carrier (or its agent)
does not perform those specialized services in conjunction with those
household goods, it may transport them without being registered and
regulated as a ``household goods carrier.'' This emphasis on the nature
of the carrier services performed and not the nature of the commodity
itself is also at the very heart of and reflected in the appropriately
named ``Limited Service Exclusion.'' The interpretation that the
traditional movers advocate would overturn, not preserve, agency
precedent and arrive at a definition of ``household goods motor
carrier'' that unlawfully contravenes the service-based exclusion
codified in 49 U.S.C. Sec. 13102(12)(c).
Mr. PRYOR. Along with the growth of general freight motor carriers
and container-supply companies catering to the needs of do-it-yourself
consumers, we have seen some of these same companies become regulated
property brokers and step forward in this capacity to assist these
consumers. For a negotiated fee, they offer to arrange with portable
container companies and general freight carriers to place the
containers and trailers for loading and to have them transported to
their destinations when loaded. To counteract this middleman-service,
the full-service traditional moving companies are now urging the FMCSA
to require do it yourself consumers desiring broker assistance to
engage only brokers registered with and regulated by the FMCSA as
``household goods brokers'' to make these arrangements on their behalf
and to require them to use only registered, full-service ``household
goods motor carriers'' to perform the underlying transportation.
Their principal argument relies upon a false negative inference they
want the FMCSA to draw from the absence of a similar ``Limited Service
Exclusion'' from the ``household goods broker'' definition for brokers
that arrange household goods moves for do-it-yourself consumers. This
effort at changing the meaning of the statute further obstructs the
intent behind the Household Goods Mover Oversight Enforcement and
Reform Act of 2005. We want the consumers to have access to low-cost
transportation services as an alternative to the traditional full-
service moving companies when motor carriers, lacking specific
household goods authority and not providing specialized household goods
related services, perform the underlying transportation in reliance
upon the Limited Service Exclusion codified at 49 U.S.C.
Sec. 13102(12)(c). No broker-specific Limited Service Exclusion is
required: if the underlying motor carrier service does not provide
packing and loading services, then the motor carrier need not hold
household goods authority from the FMCSA. In turn, the broker engaged
by the consumer to arrange the transportation (without any packing and
loading services) likewise need not hold household goods broker
authority and need not use a household goods motor carrier.
Accordingly, a motor carrier authorized to haul property (excluding
household goods) can perform the move.
Mr. RUBIO. Mr. President, as Senator Pryor has articulated, the FMCSA
should not suppress competition in the moving industry, and my fear is
that this would happen if the
[[Page S8199]]
agency eliminates an important moving option for do-it-yourself
consumers. This would economically hurt the principal users of portable
storage companies, namely the middle class, military, students and
other price conscious consumers. For these reasons and the others
mentioned by my colleague, it is my sincere hope that the FMCSA
preserves the rights of consumers, as intended by Congress, to ready
and unfettered access to lower cost options with respect to moving
their household goods.
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