Contributing Editor Toby Gooley is a writer and editor specializing in supply chain, logistics, and material handling, and a lecturer at MIT's Center for Transportation & Logistics. She previously was Senior Editor at DC VELOCITY and Editor of DCV's sister publication, CSCMP's Supply Chain Quarterly. Prior to joining AGiLE Business Media in 2007, she spent 20 years at Logistics Management magazine as Managing Editor and Senior Editor covering international trade and transportation. Prior to that she was an export traffic manager for 10 years. She holds a B.A. in Asian Studies from Cornell University.
president and CEO holds degrees in mechanical and manufacturing engineering, and previously served as Raymond’s vice president of engineering and president of operations and engineering. He holds a Professional Engineering license in New York state and has been granted 35 patents.
Field uses his deep knowledge of engineering technology to give back to education and industry. He serves his alma mater, Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT), as a member of its President’s Roundtable. He received RIT’s Kate Gleason College of Engineering Distinguished Alumnus Award for 2018–2019 and is a member of the college’s Dean’s Advisory Council. He also is chairman and director on the board of the New York Battery and Energy Storage Technology Consortium Inc. (NY-BEST), and a board member of the New York State Southern Tier Regional Economic Development Council. And he’s a member of parent company Toyota Material Handling North America’s executive team and a board member of the Industrial Truck Association (ITA).
DC Velocityrecently spoke with Field about his background and his priorities for this year’s National Forklift Safety Day.
Q: How do you view your responsibilities at The Raymond Corp.?
A: I’m fortunate that my current role as president and CEO allows me to utilize both my engineering and business background. In these unprecedented times brought on by the pandemic, we are challenged to help our customers in a rapidly growing, e-commerce–driven economy. More than ever, we are leveraging our innovation, quality, and service brand principles, as well as understanding how we as a corporation can help customers. It’s my job to lead the company in a way that encourages our employees to understand the basis of our customers’ challenges and come up with innovative solutions.
Q: How did you get into material handling in the first place?
A: I grew up on an apple farm and learned to move pallets of fruit at about the same time I learned to ride a bike. I am also a proud graduate of Rochester Institute of Technology, where I earned my Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering. Subsequently, I earned a Master of Science degree in manufacturing engineering and an MBA with a concentration in international operations from Boston University. So, you can say I’ve been interested in material handling, manufacturing, and engineering from the get go!
Q: Is there anything you find exceptionally interesting about the industrial truck industry?
A: I’m extremely interested in the technology advances being made in our industry. Over the past 10 years, e-commerce pressures to ship products faster have increased the need for companies to optimize efficiency. Many companies are looking toward automation to help them achieve that. Converting from a manual to a semi-autonomous and then to a fully automated warehouse requires many complex steps. While automation is certainly important to increasing efficiencies, it is not a substitute for defining and optimizing a process. Without continuous-improvement tools, warehouses that apply automation to existing inefficient processes only create unnecessary waste.
I believe that optimizing facilities and technologies will take warehouse productivity deeper into the 21st century, and that innovative technologies and intralogistics solutions will empower the workforce of the future to meet customer demands. At the end of the day, a forklift operator’s role and responsibilities will evolve; it will be about enabling people to do more meaningful and productive work.
Additionally, I’m passionate about exploring energy solutions and integrating them into material handling equipment to increase run time, lower costs, and improve asset life-cycle cost and longevity.
Q: How will your professional background as an engineer help you contribute to ITA’s efforts to promote forklift safety?
A: As an engineer, I’ve always been curious and inquisitive by nature, wanting to investigate and apply innovative solutions and technologies. For example, I believe we can advance forklift operators’ driving habits by enabling new training delivery approaches like e-learning, and by using digital media to get the message out and raise awareness about the importance of adhering to proper protocols.
Q: What are your personal priorities as National Forklift Safety Day chair?
A: One is helping forklift fleet managers recognize that using advanced technology solutions to connect their people and equipment can guide decisions about what process and operational improvements are best for their operation, as well as accelerate the learning curve to implement those improvements.
Another, related priority is discussing the benefits of connected technologies. Technology-enabled solutions that are able to be layered with other solutions can assist operators by providing full visibility into a facility, enabling better training, and ultimately helping manage the movement of materials and assets throughout an operation.
Q: This year marks the eighth annual National Forklift Safety Day. We’re still in the midst of the pandemic, which has greatly impacted forklift users’ operations and personnel. Will those concerns help shape this year’s agenda?
A: Yes, they will. The supply chain experienced a significant increase in demand for critical items, especially among essential businesses and e-commerce–driven businesses, as consumers have been filling their digital shopping carts with everything from groceries to medicine—while also expecting faster delivery at a lower cost.
The past year in particular presented challenges to businesses around the globe, and each of these challenges impacted every one of us. These challenges also provided an opportunity to enhance training and security protocols, including introducing PPE, implementing enhanced cleaning regimens, and continuously evaluating operator protocols with our employees’ health and well-being in mind.
Q: What’s the main message you would like **{DC Velocity’}s readers to take away from National Forklift Safety Day?
A: In the most successful operations, supporting the well-being of a company’s employees means keeping attention on training year-round. Robust operator training should go beyond National Forklift Safety Day, continuously improving operational efficiency and profitability in manufacturing plants and warehouses by training—and retraining.
Creating a culture of safety is an ongoing process. It takes commitment to continuous improvement and a willingness to train and retrain forklift operators and pedestrians alike.
“The past year has been unprecedented, with extreme weather events, heightened geopolitical tension and cybercrime destabilizing supply chains throughout the world. Navigating this year’s looming risks to build a secure supply network has never been more critical,” Corey Rhodes, CEO of Everstream Analytics, said in the firm’s “2025 Annual Risk Report.”
“While some risks are unavoidable, early notice and swift action through a combination of planning, deep monitoring, and mitigation can save inventory and lives in 2025,” Rhodes said.
In its report, Everstream ranked the five categories by a “risk score metric” to help global supply chain leaders prioritize planning and mitigation efforts for coping with them. They include:
Drowning in Climate Change – 90% Risk Score. Driven by shifting climate patterns and record-high temperatures, extreme weather events are a dominant risk to the supply chain due to concerns such as flooding and elevated ocean temperatures.
Geopolitical Instability with Increased Tariff Risk – 80% Risk Score. These threats could disrupt trade networks and impact economies worldwide, including logistics, transportation, and manufacturing industries. The following major geopolitical events are likely to impact global trade: Red Sea disruptions, Russia-Ukraine conflict, Taiwan trade risks, Middle East tensions, South China Sea disputes, and proposed tariff increases.
More Backdoors for Cybercrime – 75% Risk Score. Supply chain leaders face escalating cybersecurity risks in 2025, driven by the growing reliance on AI and cloud computing within supply chains, the proliferation of IoT-connected devices, vulnerabilities in sub-tier supply chains, and a disproportionate impact on third-party logistics providers (3PLs) and the electronics industry.
Rare Metals and Minerals on Lockdown – 65% Risk Score. Between rising regulations, new tariffs, and long-term or exclusive contracts, rare minerals and metals will be harder than ever, and more expensive, to obtain.
Crackdown on Forced Labor – 60% Risk Score. A growing crackdown on forced labor across industries will increase pressure on companies who are facing scrutiny to manage and eliminate suppliers violating human rights. Anticipated risks in 2025 include a push for alternative suppliers, a cascade of legislation to address lax forced labor issues, challenges for agri-food products such as palm oil and vanilla.
That number is low compared to widespread unemployment in the transportation sector which reached its highest level during the COVID-19 pandemic at 15.7% in both May 2020 and July 2020. But it is slightly above the most recent pre-pandemic rate for the sector, which was 2.8% in December 2019, the BTS said.
For broader context, the nation’s overall unemployment rate for all sectors rose slightly in December, increasing 0.3 percentage points from December 2023 to 3.8%.
On a seasonally adjusted basis, employment in the transportation and warehousing sector rose to 6,630,200 people in December 2024 — up 0.1% from the previous month and up 1.7% from December 2023. Employment in transportation and warehousing grew 15.1% in December 2024 from the pre-pandemic December 2019 level of 5,760,300 people.
The largest portion of those workers was in warehousing and storage, followed by truck transportation, according to a breakout of the total figures into separate modes (seasonally adjusted):
Warehousing and storage rose to 1,770,300 in December 2024 — up 0.1% from the previous month and up 0.2% from December 2023.
Truck transportation fell to 1,545,900 in December 2024 — down 0.1% from the previous month and down 0.4% from December 2023.
Air transportation rose to 578,000 in December 2024 — up 0.4% from the previous month and up 1.4% from December 2023.
Transit and ground passenger transportation rose to 456,000 in December 2024 — up 0.3% from the previous month and up 5.7% from December 2023.
Rail transportation remained virtually unchanged in December 2024 at 150,300 from the previous month but down 1.8% from December 2023.
Water transportation rose to 74,300 in December 2024 — up 0.1% from the previous month and up 4.8% from December 2023.
Pipeline transportation rose to 55,000 in December 2024 — up 0.5% from the previous month and up 6.2% from December 2023.
Parcel carrier and logistics provider UPS Inc. has acquired the German company Frigo-Trans and its sister company BPL, which provide complex healthcare logistics solutions across Europe, the Atlanta-based firm said this week.
According to UPS, the move extends its UPS Healthcare division’s ability to offer end-to-end capabilities for its customers, who increasingly need temperature-controlled and time-critical logistics solutions globally.
UPS Healthcare has 17 million square feet of cGMP and GDP-compliant healthcare distribution space globally, supporting services such as inventory management, cold chain packaging and shipping, storage and fulfillment of medical devices, and lab and clinical trial logistics.
More specifically, UPS Healthcare said that the acquisitions align with its broader mission to provide end-to-end logistics for temperature-sensitive healthcare products, including biologics, specialty pharmaceuticals, and personalized medicine. With 80% of pharmaceutical products in Europe requiring temperature-controlled transportation, investments like these ensure UPS Healthcare remains at the forefront of innovation in the $82 billion complex healthcare logistics market, the company said.
Additionally, Frigo-Trans' presence in Germany—the world's fourth-largest healthcare manufacturing market—strengthens UPS's foothold and enhances its support for critical intra-Germany operations. Frigo-Trans’ network includes temperature-controlled warehousing ranging from cryopreservation (-196°C) to ambient (+15° to +25°C) as well as Pan-European cold chain transportation. And BPL provides logistics solutions including time-critical freight forwarding capabilities.
Terms of the deal were not disclosed. But it fits into UPS' long term strategy to double its healthcare revenue from $10 billion in 2023 to $20 billion by 2026. To get there, it has also made previous acquisitions of companies like Bomi and MNX. And UPS recently expanded its temperature-controlled fleet in France, Italy, the Netherlands, and Hungary.
"Healthcare customers increasingly demand precision, reliability, and adaptability—qualities that are critical for the future of biologics and personalized medicine. The Frigo-Trans and BPL acquisitions allow us to offer unmatched service across Europe, making logistics a competitive advantage for our pharma partners," says John Bolla, President, UPS Healthcare.
The supply chain risk management firm Overhaul has landed $55 million in backing, saying the financing will fuel its advancements in artificial intelligence and support its strategic acquisition roadmap.
The equity funding round comes from the private equity firm Springcoast Partners, with follow-on participation from existing investors Edison Partners and Americo. As part of the investment, Springcoast’s Chris Dederick and Holger Staude will join Overhaul’s board of directors.
According to Austin, Texas-based Overhaul, the money comes as macroeconomic and global trade dynamics are driving consequential transformations in supply chains. That makes cargo visibility and proactive risk management essential tools as shippers manage new routes and suppliers.
“The supply chain technology space will see significant consolidation over the next 12 to 24 months,” Barry Conlon, CEO of Overhaul, said in a release. “Overhaul is well-positioned to establish itself as the ultimate integrated solution, delivering a comprehensive suite of tools for supply chain risk management, efficiency, and visibility under a single trusted platform.”
Shippers today are praising an 11th-hour contract agreement that has averted the threat of a strike by dockworkers at East and Gulf coast ports that could have frozen container imports and exports as soon as January 16.
The agreement came late last night between the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) representing some 45,000 workers and the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX) that includes the operators of port facilities up and down the coast.
Details of the new agreement on those issues have not yet been made public, but in the meantime, retailers and manufacturers are heaving sighs of relief that trade flows will continue.
“Providing certainty with a new contract and avoiding further disruptions is paramount to ensure retail goods arrive in a timely manner for consumers. The agreement will also pave the way for much-needed modernization efforts, which are essential for future growth at these ports and the overall resiliency of our nation’s supply chain,” Gold said.
The next step in the process is for both sides to ratify the tentative agreement, so negotiators have agreed to keep those details private in the meantime, according to identical statements released by the ILA and the USMX. In their joint statement, the groups called the six-year deal a “win-win,” saying: “This agreement protects current ILA jobs and establishes a framework for implementing technologies that will create more jobs while modernizing East and Gulf coasts ports – making them safer and more efficient, and creating the capacity they need to keep our supply chains strong. This is a win-win agreement that creates ILA jobs, supports American consumers and businesses, and keeps the American economy the key hub of the global marketplace.”
The breakthrough hints at broader supply chain trends, which will focus on the tension between operational efficiency and workforce job protection, not just at ports but across other sectors as well, according to a statement from Judah Levine, head of research at Freightos, a freight booking and payment platform. Port automation was the major sticking point leading up to this agreement, as the USMX pushed for technologies to make ports more efficient, while the ILA opposed automation or semi-automation that could threaten jobs.
"This is a six-year détente in the tech-versus-labor tug-of-war at U.S. ports," Levine said. “Automation remains a lightning rod—and likely one we’ll see in other industries—but this deal suggests a cautious path forward."
Editor's note: This story was revised on January 9 to include additional input from the ILA, USMX, and Freightos.