Georgia Public – Private Partners Launch Internet Shipping Marketplace
The next big thing in logistics (that means moving stuff from one place to another) might already have happened right here in Georgia. Georgiafreight.com is a coordinated marketplace of transportation options for moving anything from here to there or almost anywhere.
It exists entirely on the Internet, it’s easy to use (even I was able to understand it) and here’s the best news yet, it comes with a whole bunch of built-in discounts. You can get discounts for being a Georgia company and for shipping from one Georgia address to another.
Georgiafreight.com is a project of Efreightsolutions, a private company, but it was hatched with lots of assistance from the Georgia Center of Innovation for Logistics which is headquartered on the Georgia Tech campus in Savannah. It received a big boost forward from Kennesaw State University president Dan Papp who connected Efreightsolutions and the Innovations Center.
“It’s an online freight portal and there are lots of them out there, but what was lacking was a focus on Georgia,” said Page Siplon, director of the state’s Center of Innovation for Logistics. This online model provides several tiers of service and lots of options for moving product by air, rail, truck or water. Siplon said the model could soon be expanded to California and New York.
The Georgiafreight.com story will be center stage when the 2011 Georgia Logistics Summit convenes over two days next week at the Cobb Galleria Centre in Atlanta. But the company’s ability to help industries move products will be just one reason that it makes headlines.
Using its own private funds, Georgiafreight.com will make program awards to five Georgia universities that offer logistics education. Siplon said the company will also announce an inaugural Logistics and Community Leadership Award to a person (or persons) for work within the industry and dedication to foster care programs. University and personal award recipients will be honored during Monday evening’s reception at the Cobb Galleria Centre.
Next Tuesday’s daylong third annual Georgia Logistics Summit is rapidly becoming a must-attend event for private industry and public stakeholders. Siplon launched the event as a 2009 luncheon and 450 attended. “We knew we were onto something,” Siplon said. Last year it moved to the Cobb Galleria and attendance doubled. Some 1,200 are registered for Tuesday.
The entire reason the conference exists is to explain how Georgia can move products. “It’s a complicated industry so when you say logistics, a lot of things come to mind,” Siplon said. “What was lacking was a place where all those people could get together and talk.”
Tuesday scheduled keynote speakers include Jack Wells, chief economist for the U.S. Department of Transportation. Wells will meet with Georgia Ports Authority executives on Monday in Savannah before his conference address on Tuesday in Atlanta.
The Savannah River and harbor deepening project remains the biggest elephant in the room. Georgia needs to dredge the river from its current 42-foot depth to 48 feet to accommodate larger ships that will begin to navigate the new Panama Canal in three years. Project cost is estimated at $500-to-$600 million, to be shared between Georgia and the federal government.
Georgia has already committed its share of about 25 percent, but Washington has not followed suit. “Yes, that is probably the most visible project because it affects so many things,” Siplon said. “It is a project we are going to have to fund one way or another. Georgia is at the crossroads of global commerce. We shouldn’t have to beg for resources to do that.”
Here is a video about the economic impact of the Georgia ports in Savannah and Brunswick.
Tuesday’s conference will include breakout sessions on air freight, agribusiness, energy, life sciences, manufacturing and ocean freight. Other scheduled speakers include Governor Nathan Deal, Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, Georgia Ports Authority executive director Curtis Foltz, state economic development commissioner Chris Cummiskey, state transportation commissioner Vance Smith and logistics industry executives.
Click here to learn more about the Georgia Center of Innovation for Logistics.
(Mike Klein is Editor at the Georgia Public Policy Foundation)
Georgia Will Ban Illegal Immigrants From Some But Not All Universities
The University System of Georgia Board of Regents will no longer allow illegal immigrant students to attend state universities and colleges that have full enrollment. On Wednesday the Board adopted several new policies to address illegal immigrant student population, but it also said the undocumented student population is small, just a few hundred students.
Georgia made national news this past spring when a Kennesaw State University student who had been in the country since childhood was arrested and turned over to federal authorities for deportation to Mexico. Jessica Colotl was taken into custody after a routine traffic stop. KSU, friends and numerous organizations fought for and eventually gained her temporary release.
Colotl’s high-profile story raised immediate questions about how many undocumented students are enrolled in state university system schools, whether they take classroom seats away from academically qualified citizens and whether they pay in-state or out-of-state tuition.
A study committee report approved by the state Board of Regents on Wednesday identified 501 undocumented students among more than 310,000 total registered students at USG institutions. All pay out-of-state tuition which the University System said is actually higher than real costs.
A statement from the Regents noted, “The University System follows current federal and state laws, which allows for undocumented individuals to be enrolled, if academically qualified.”
New regulations that become effective next fall will reduce access illegal immigrant students have to the University of Georgia, Georgia Institute of Technology, Georgia State University, Medical College of Georgia and Georgia College and State University. Those schools have full enrollments.
State universities and colleges also will be required to verify the “lawful presence” of each applicant; legal penalties could be imposed on applicants who knowingly provide false application information; and, illegal immigrant students will be required to always pay out-of-state tuition rates.
Colotl’s Facebook profile says, “Jessica Colotl, 21, is a senior at Kennesaw State University, a political science major who is now facing deportation because she came to America illegally when she was a child.” Kennesaw State’s university relations office said it was unable to confirm that Colotl is enrolled.
Mike Klein is Editor at the Georgia Public Policy Foundation.
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