Covenant shuts down SRT’s Texarkana terminal and operations, relocates to Chattanooga headquarters

Image: Jim Allen/FreightWaves

Citing economic challenges tied to the coronavirus pandemic, as well as the need to focus resources toward targeted business units, Southern Refrigerated Transport (SRT), a solo-driven reefer subsidiary of  the Covenant Transportation Group (NASDAQ: CVTI), said it will shut down its terminal and headquarters in Texarkana, Arkansas, according to an internal memo obtained by FreightWaves.

The move, to take place by May 1, 2020, is an operational consolidation and not a closure. SRT will relocate its fleet and support functions between its Chattanooga, Tennessee, and Greeneville, Tennessee locations, and it will continue to operate its solo-driven fleet.

In the memo, SRT president and COO Joey Hogan said none of the company’s drivers will lose their jobs. SRT will lay off 150 “non-driving employees,” who will be offered severance and benefit opportunities, according to Hogan.

A full-truckload refrigerated carrier, SRT had 740 drivers and 840 power units, according to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s SAFER database.

“During these unprecedented times, we have been working hard to strengthen the financial stability and future of the enterprise, while also meeting the challenge to be compassionate and fair to our team members,” Hogan wrote.

Over the past year, the SRT leadership and team in Texarkana has been “working tirelessly to improve our solo over-the-road operations,” he said.


“Unfortunately, the obviously unforeseen current COVID-induced economic situation has resulted in market circumstances like no other time in our history, requiring a stronger response and quicker shift in strategic direction.”


Founded in 1986, SRT,  which had operated out of a 100,000-square-foot complex adjacent to Interstate 30 in Texarkana, sold to Covenant in 1998. 

Even before the pandemic, Covenant was facing a difficult operating environment. In its fourth quarter earnings release, the company  reported a 14% year-over-year decline in consolidated revenue to $233 million. 

Refrigerated truckload has been a performance stand-out during the COVID shutdown, as shippers have paid a premium for cold-chain transportation services, but with the significant downturn in the broader freight industry related to economic contraction, companies are looking for areas of potential efficiencies in their operations.


Consolidating the solo-driven refrigerated fleet operations across the three other locations allows Covenant the opportunity to gain operational synergies and efficiencies.

This article has been updated to include information from a Covenant press statement released on April 20.

Exit mobile version