
You Only Pay When We Win
The Houston Chronicle recently ran an opinion piece calling for the repeal of the Jones Act, claiming it drives up energy costs. But for Texas maritime workers and their families, repeal would be devastating. The truth is simple: the Jones Act isn’t a burden—it’s a safeguard for workers, national security, and Texas jobs.
The Jones Act, passed in 1920, regulates shipping between U.S. ports and protects American maritime workers. It requires that goods transported between American ports be carried on ships that are U.S.-built, U.S.-owned, and U.S.-crewed. Just as importantly, it ensures that injured offshore workers have the legal right to hold their employers accountable and recover wages, medical costs, and damages when companies cut corners.
Repeal would not lower gas prices for Texas families. Oil companies set prices on global markets, not based on shipping costs. Even the Congressional Research Service has found that the impact of the Jones Act on energy prices is minimal. Any savings from repeal would flow directly into corporate profits, not into consumers’ pockets.
At VB Attorneys, our Jones Act lawyers represent injured maritime workers across Texas. We’ve stood beside workers who would have been left with nothing if not for this law. The Jones Act isn’t the problem - it’s the protection. It is the legal backbone that keeps corporations accountable, ensures a strong U.S. fleet, and sustains thousands of Texas families.
Repeal would leave workers exposed, communities weakened, and our nation less secure. Keeping the Jones Act strong keeps Texas strong.
Topics: Jones Act