Family-owned California trucking company ceasing operations after 95 years

Want to see the results of Bidenomics and the Newsom socialist program?

“A third-generation family-owned trucking company and brokerage — Certified Freight Logistics, headquartered in Santa Maria, California — is ceasing operations on Saturday after 95 years.

Scott Cramer, president of Certified Freight Logistics (CFL), said he notified employees on Aug. 22 that the trucking company and freight brokerage, which employs 157 workers, including 101 linehaul and local truck drivers, would begin layoffs on Saturday with the wind down of the company concluding on or about Nov. 18. 

Gas prices and regulations are killing small business in California.  This closing adds to the cost of transportation of food around the State—adding to our inflation.

Family-owned California trucking company ceasing operations after 95 years

Certified Freight Logistics’ president cites ‘current market conditions’ for closure

Clarissa Hawes, Freightwaves,  10/19/23    https://www.freightwaves.com/news/family-owned-california-trucking-company-ceasing-operations-after-95-years

A third-generation family-owned trucking company and brokerage — Certified Freight Logistics, headquartered in Santa Maria, California — is ceasing operations on Saturday after 95 years.

Scott Cramer, president of Certified Freight Logistics (CFL), said he notified employees on Aug. 22 that the trucking company and freight brokerage, which employs 157 workers, including 101 linehaul and local truck drivers, would begin layoffs on Saturday with the wind down of the company concluding on or about Nov. 18. 

CFL, which hauled refrigerated food and fresh produce for major retailers throughout the western U.S., also filed a Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act notification in August with the California Employment Development Department of the company’s impending closure.

Cramer told FreightWaves he is working with truck dealers about early lease terminations, adding that the “current freight conditions have been pretty difficult.”

“Management has been attempting to maintain profitable operations but current market conditions have made it difficult to operate without a loss,” said Cramer in a statement to FreightWaves. “Pandemic volume demand, equipment availability issues, increased costs followed by falling freight rates and reduced volume put us in a place to have to make this difficult decision.” 

Cramer said the company has arranged transition services for its employees, including many who have been with the company for more than 20 years.

Besides closing its headquarters in Santa Maria, CFL will close its yards in Stockton, California, and Sumner, Washington.

“The company delayed any decision for some time while trying to resolve the fundamental operating issues and is no longer able to viably operate,” Cramer said. 

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4 thoughts on “Family-owned California trucking company ceasing operations after 95 years

  1. Wow! This is a trucking company that I have seem on the California highway system (CFL) for most of my 80 plus years. Another victim of poor government .

  2. Congratulations, libtards, for your voting in leftists to dismantle a working system, aka, the free market, and turn it into central run gov’t economy…fail, fail, fail. Your job will vanish also, you can’t even add 2+2=4 logically in how your vote destroys freedom of risk to run a business and employ people.

  3. Such loss of companies affects all levels of society in California. It is reaching the point where most people who want to leave California will pay dearly for that move if it requires hiring trucking services. It is also increasing apparent that those who vote for liberal candidates will be among those who are most affected by the increase in inflation – and more dependency on government who has pretty much reached the public’s attitude against the crazy spending.

  4. How sad. Maybe they could scale down and change their business model to serve business and people moving out of Commiefornia.

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