The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

White House taps veteran transportation official to help break log jams at the nation’s ports

John D. Porcari, a former deputy transportation secretary under President Barack Obama, will work with a supply chain task force

August 27, 2021 at 8:00 a.m. EDT
Shipping containers are unloaded at the Port of Long Beach-Port of Los Angeles complex earlier this year. (Lucy Nicholson/Reuters)
2 min

The White House said Friday it has called on a veteran transportation official to serve as a new “envoy” to the nation’s ports as the Biden administration seeks to unknot supply chains that have been disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic.

The new envoy, John D. Porcari, previously served as deputy transportation secretary in the Obama administration. He was an adviser to President Biden before his inauguration, and some labor leaders had hoped he might be chosen as transportation secretary.

In the envoy role, Porcari will work with a White House task force and the Department of Transportation to help get goods flowing freely across oceans and around the country. The pandemic has led to rolling closures of factories and ports around the world, disrupting finely calibrated supply chains, slowing shipments and contributing to rising prices in the United States.

The ports in Los Angeles and Long Beach, key links with Asia, have been especially affected with ships waiting offshore and cargo sometimes sitting for almost two weeks to be transferred to a rail car.

“I am excited to hit the ground running and get to work immediately with industry, labor, and other port stakeholders to address these challenges and to build a more resilient, future-facing supply chain that powers our economy into the future,” Porcari said in a statement.

From ports to rail yards, global supply lines struggle amid virus outbreaks in the developing world

The White House said its work on supply chains had shown that problems at ports — some of which it said have existed for years — will need the attention of a dedicated official.

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said Porcari’s record of “leadership in both the public and private infrastructure sectors make him uniquely qualified to work with stakeholders and federal agencies to address supply chain disruptions.”

Porcari previously served twice as Maryland transportation secretary, a job that also made him chairman of the Maryland Port Commission.

President Biden ordered a review of supply chains in February and formed a task force to work on them in June. The federal government is seeking to help resolve pandemic-related disruptions while also tackling what it sees as decades-long problems affecting the supply of products like semiconductors and electric vehicle batteries.

Biden signed an executive order in July aimed at increasing competition among shippers, and is hoping to secure $17 billion in spending on ports and waterways in the bipartisan infrastructure bill that passed the Senate. Still, benefits from those measures likely would not be felt in the short term.