Transpacific volumes break records at west coast ports as US confidence soars
With the US economy showing no signs of ending its bull run, California’s San Pedro Bay ...
EXPD: CASHING INCHRW: INSIDER SALEFWRD: TRADING UPDATETSLA: POWERING THE UKUPS: DRIVER DEAL EXTENSIONMAERSK: BEARS UPPING TARGETSCHRW: NEW HIGHS AND PAYOUT CONFIRMEDBA: GREEN LIGHTMAERSK: ONE UPGRADE AFTER ANOTHER FDX: STEADY YIELDCAT: DOWNSIDE RISKMAERSK: SOARINGMAERSK: CONGESTION RISK MAERSK: 'ACCELERATION OF GLOBALISATION' MAERSK: GEMINI NETWORK FLEXIBILITY
EXPD: CASHING INCHRW: INSIDER SALEFWRD: TRADING UPDATETSLA: POWERING THE UKUPS: DRIVER DEAL EXTENSIONMAERSK: BEARS UPPING TARGETSCHRW: NEW HIGHS AND PAYOUT CONFIRMEDBA: GREEN LIGHTMAERSK: ONE UPGRADE AFTER ANOTHER FDX: STEADY YIELDCAT: DOWNSIDE RISKMAERSK: SOARINGMAERSK: CONGESTION RISK MAERSK: 'ACCELERATION OF GLOBALISATION' MAERSK: GEMINI NETWORK FLEXIBILITY
After 65 years of service it looked like the Waterfront Commission of New York Harbour was facing its final bow. At the end of his tenure, former New Jersey governor Chris Christie had signed an order – pushed by the state legislature – that would break the two-state agreement. But last week, federal judge Susan Wigenton ordered a stay on the execution order. She decided the commission’s efforts to keep organised crime off the docks were still required. Although, as The New York Times reports, the injunction is temporary and lawyers working on behalf of the New Jersey senate are exploring the options for overturning it.
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