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Con-way Freight Cuts 40 Locations From Service Network

Con-way Freight announced a major re-engineering of its operating network that will cut the size of the network by 40 locations

by Staff
November 6, 2008
3 min to read


Con-way Freight announced a major re-engineering of its operating network that will cut the size of the network by 40 locations.


Con-way says the move will help reduce service exceptions, improve on-time delivery and bring faster transit times to thousands of communities.

The freight from closing locations will be redistributed and balanced among more than 100 nearby service centers, with the company continuing to provide service to all markets. Consolidating volumes more strategically among fewer locations increases network density and enables improvements in both service performance and operational efficiency, according to the company.

"The prime objective of this effort was to create improvement opportunities in all three service performance factors, and to identify areas where we could reduce costs and gain efficiencies through better process design and asset deployment," said John G. Labrie, president of Con-way Freight.

Changes are also being made to the nightly inter-city line-haul operation, where new load planning, routing and scheduling programs will enable the company to eliminate more than 124,000 miles per day from the system and increase the amount of freight that is direct-loaded from origin to destination. Reducing miles and eliminating re-handling through increased direct-loading are key factors in safety, on-time performance, faster transit times and exception-free delivery.

When the network changes are complete and fully operational in early December, Con-way Freight will operate 303 "brick and mortar" service centers in the United States and Canada, supported by 70 Freight Assembly Centers (FACs), or strategic re-ship points. In Con-way Freight's day-definite service model, FACs operate at night and use the same physical facility as daytime pick-up and delivery operations.

The plan, expected to reduce the company's cost base by $30 million to $40 million annually, calls for a number of generally smaller locations to be consolidated into larger nearby facilities. As a result, more than 75 percent of affected employees at closing locations will have the opportunity to follow work to a new operating location. Affected employees will also have the opportunity to consider a transfer to any other Con-way Freight location where a position is available. If an employee moves to a facility that is more than 50 miles from their current location, the company will pay relocation expenses.

Severance packages and career counseling assistance will be provided to those employees who are unable to remain with the company as a result of the changes. Depending on the choices employees make, the company expects a net workforce reduction nationwide of about 1 percent.

"These types of changes are never easy, but they are necessary for us to advance our mission to provide the best LTL service in the market," Labrie said. "This is the right decision at the right time for Con-way Freight. It is one that ultimately will help ensure that we continue to provide stable careers for our employees, enhance shareholder value and improve industry- leading service for our customers as one of the most reliable, financially secure and efficient LTL carriers in the business.

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