Kennewick anchors the Tri-Cities — Kennewick, Richland, and Pasco — at the I-82 / I-182 / US-12 freight pivot where the Columbia, Snake, and Yakima rivers converge. The metro is the region's primary freight gateway between Seattle, Spokane, and Boise, and it supports an outsized freight calendar built on three independent customer types: the Hanford Site nuclear cleanup operation (one of the country's largest active environmental-remediation projects), one of the densest tree-fruit and wine-grape agricultural belts in the United States, and the Snake River barge system that ships grain and refined products through the Ice Harbor and Lower Granite locks. Each profile demands different equipment, different protocols, and freight-window discipline through summer 105°F heat and winter ice-fog inversions.
Kennewick is a city in Benton County, Washington, United States. It is located along the southwest bank of the Columbia River, just southeast of the confluence of the Columbia and Yakima rivers and across from the confluence of the Columbia and Snake rivers. It is the most populous of the three cities collectively referred to as the Tri-Cities. The population was 83,921 at the 2020 census, and was estimated at 86,728 in 2024.
Kennewick's freight economy runs on the Hanford Site nuclear-remediation program, the Columbia Basin tree-fruit and wine-grape harvest, and the I-82 / I-182 / US-12 corridor that ties the Tri-Cities to Seattle, Spokane, Portland, and Boise. When a Class 8 truck carrying a Lamb Weston potato load breaks down on I-82 at the Yakima River bridge during August harvest, every minute it sits is a freight schedule slipping at a Pacific Northwest distribution center. Road Rescue Network's Tri-Cities vendors are on-call 24/7, with average dispatch-to-arrival times we publish because we measure every call.
The mechanics in Kennewick who handle heavy-duty calls are built for what eastern Washington throws at them: summer afternoons that top 105°F for weeks and expose weak cooling systems on heavy-loaded rigs; winter ice-fog inversions that close I-82 and US-12 across the Horse Heaven Hills with regularity; tree-fruit harvest call surges that triple the dispatch board for six straight weeks; and a Hanford Site freight protocol that requires DOE-cleared techs and gate-cleared dispatch. We don't subcontract Hanford work — our cleared techs are part of the Tri-Cities core team.
Anyone who's dispatched a truck through the Columbia Basin in late January knows the call you don't want — an ice-fog inversion locks onto the Horse Heaven Hills, WSDOT closes I-82 from Prosser to Plymouth for hours, and trucks pile up at the Pilot in Kennewick waiting for visibility to lift. Whether you're a fleet manager dispatching from Seattle with a load stranded at the TA in Pasco, or an owner-operator on US-12 outside Burbank, the closest verified, insurance-current vendor in our network is reached through a single phone call. Coordination, dispatch, and ETA confirmation are handled by Road Rescue Network's 24/7 operations team.