A private container terminal at Washington’s Port of Tacoma has started charging an extended dwell time fee for containers lingering in the terminal.
The fee was announced by Husky Terminal & Stevedoring Inc. which operates the Husky Terminal at the Port of Tacoma, one of the port’s largest and most advanced terminals whose customers include Hapag-Lloyd, HMM, Ocean Network Express (ONE), Yang Ming Line and ZIM. Under the new policy, which began November 1, import containers lingering at the terminal for more than 15 calendar days on the terminal will be charged a one-time $315 “Long Stay Rehandling Charge” prior to their release.
The new fee comes as the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, the two busiest containers terminals in the country, are set to begin imposing a similar but far steeper penalty for lingering containers at marine terminals.
Under a new policy unanimously approved by the ports’ harbor commissions, ocean carriers will be charged a daily compounding fee for all import containers starting at $100 and increasing in $100 increments for containers staying at marine terminals longer 6 days or more for rail-bound containers and 9 days or more for containers moving by truck. The policy was approved to begin November 1, but the fee will not be assessed until November 15.











