Tim Allen driving his pickup truck in South Dakota.

MITCHELL, S.D. – It’s a rare sight to see Tim Allen in the wood-paneled office space just off of Mitchell’s Main Street. Sitting behind the counter on a Monday in October, he calls a customer.

“This is Tim with Tobin’s. Guys should be there probably about 3:00, 3:30 to move the stuff out of the basement. Okay. Yep. Thank you. You bet. Bye.”

Allen, one of the owners of North American moving company Tobin Transfer, is usually on the road, driving cross-country with a semitrailer full of people’s possessions.

But this year is a presidential election year and without fail (2020 doesn’t count because of the pandemic), business slows down. His cross-country shipments are down 7% so far this year.

“This is about the stupidest year I’ve seen,” Allen says.

And he’s seen a lot. Allen’s been in the business since he was 13 and started working full-time when his parents bought the company in 1978. His sister, Becky Riggs, was 14 when she started.

“Our parents didn’t let us go get into trouble and be hoodlums. They made us go to work,” says Riggs, also an owner.

Through the decades, the moving business has gone through many changes. Insurance costs climbed, labor supply dwindled and semi trucks with automatic transmissions became the norm.

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But there’s at least one constant. Every four years the moving business takes a dip. Riggs doesn’t even need to turn on the news to know there’s a presidential election.

“I don’t go to political rallies, but I know what’s going on as soon as the phone don’t ring,” she says.

The why makes sense when Allen explains it.

“Companies don’t know if the United States is going to take a different turn or if it’s going to go back or going to move forward, everything is in an uproar,” he says. So, many companies sit in a holding pattern, not relocating employees.

States people in the U.S. are moving to and away from.
States people in the U.S. are moving to and away from.

Just last month at a global conference in Washington for relocation companies, this topic was discussed.

Anthony Horton, CEO of Corporate Relocation International (CRI) was there. This year the company’s volume is down 9-10% from 2023.

“Many companies sort of adopt a wait-and-see approach regarding hiring, relocations, other investments as they prefer to assess the political and regulatory landscape under the next administration before committing to any long-term plans,” he tells News Watch.

And this presidential election was particularly uncertain. Economic policy proposals from President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris were broad.

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