Business News: Driver Shortage The Real Reason

Discussion in 'Truckers News' started by Judge, Apr 5, 2015.

  1. Judge

    Judge Road Train Member

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    [h=1]Seen this in business news and wanted to get it out there for more people to see and press concerns.

    Low Pay And A Horrible Lifestyle:Here's The Real Reason The Trucking Industry Is Running Out Of Drivers[/h]Higher driving costs and falling pay have created a truck-driver shortage that is likely to worsen in the coming years.The American Trucking Associations (ATA) now estimates that the U.S. is short 30,000 truck drivers, and is expected to surge to 239,000 by 2022.
    In July 2013, new federal hours of service rules went into effect.
    The key provision was a limit to the use of a 34-hour "restart." Drivers have a 70-hour a week cap on how much time they can be on the road. Previously they'd been able to artificially reset that cap to zero if they took 34 consecutive hours off. Now many are unable to do so.
    As a result, according to a survey from the American Transportation Research Institute, more than 80% of motor carriers have experienced a productivity loss, with nearly half stating that they require more drivers to haul the same amount of freight.
    "Smaller 'owner/operator' firms are increasingly dropping by the wayside as the cost of operations and maintenance are simply becoming too expensive to stay in business," Paul Pittman, a logistics planner at North Carolina-based Odyssey Logistics and Technology, told Business Insider by email.
    So drivers are suddenly faced with the choice of leaving the profession entirely or moving to a larger company where wages are likely to be lower.
    "As controls continue to tighten, many of the existing drivers currently employed are turning to other areas of employment simply to get off the road and escape some of the regulations implemented to govern their operations," Pittman said.
    To hang on, small operators are forced to cut corners. For Jeff, a driver who asked to be identified by just his first name, the pay isn't the biggest issue - it's the compromises some firms are making on driver compliance.
    "With how my lifestyle is, [the pay] pretty decent. I don't go out and blow money on speed boats, or the best electronics, or hookers and blow," Jeff said. "I'm married I have four children. We prioritize our finances. Two years ago we finally bought an HDTV. My main issue is the safety aspect."
    [h=2]Violating rules[/h]His primary issue with trucking companies is the pressure they put on drivers to violate federal rules. Jeff worked for a small outfit in the midwest. The owner of that company, he says, wanted him to take a dry van load from Hubbard, Ohio to Syracuse, New York, which is approximately 327 miles.
    Jeff explained that this trip takes longer for trucks than it does for cars, because trucks carry heavier loads, and it takes longer for them to speed up and slow down. It would take a truck approximately 5 hours and 15 minutes from Hubbard to Syracuse.
    The owner, whom Jeff didn't want named, asked him to drive back to Hubbard empty, do a drop-and-hook (drop one trailer, unhook another) and take another trailer up to Binghamton New York the same day. And the trip from Hubbard to Binghamton is approximately five and half hours, meaning a round trip would only leave him about 30 minutes of driving for the day and legally Jeff couldn't.

    "When you're non-compliant as a driver you run the risk of fatigue and the risk of hurting other people," he said. "...And as a driver it's my license on the line." Jeff said he was asked by multiple trucking companies to falsify his logs but he refused to.
    "I consider myself a safety oriented driver, and I have found that is a bad thing," Jeff said. "Because since I got my CDL [Commercial Drivers License] in 2008, I have worked for about 10 different trucking companies. That doesn't look good because it looks like it is job hopping... I'm sticking to my guns."
    [h=2]Time away from home[/h]Another problem is lack of time spent at home. Feucht says drivers can expect to spend as little as 52 days at home a year. Feucht, who hauls oversize loads, averages about three to five weeks. Last year he was home 54 days, including his vacation days. "Back in the days you were treated like a knight, but now you're treated like a peon," Feucht says.
    All of this helps explain why the turnover rate at large truckload carrierswas 92% annualized in Q1, according to the ATA. Turnover refers to the rate at which drivers leave the industry and are replaced.
    "One-hundred percent turnover doesn't mean that every driver left," ATA chief economist Bob Costello says. "If you keep a driver for 90 days, the rate generally drops in half. However, there are a group of drivers that churn, and they generally stay at a carrier for a short length of time (just weeks or a couple of months). Many drivers stay with a carrier for years."
    [h=2]Getting Squeezed[/h]Meanwhile drivers with less experience or bargaining power get squeezed. Todd Feucht of Wisconsin has been driving trucks for 20 years and thinks trucking companies need to be more honest when recruiting.
    The new drivers are "greener than grass," he said. Those who attempt to lease trucks quickly discover the significant cost of maintenance and overhead. Young drivers that go this route end up having very little to show for it.
    "I meet these guys at truckstops and they can barely afford to eat ramen during the week," Feucht told Business Insider. "...They're dropping $850 on a truck a week."
    Truck drivers typically get paid hourly or by the mile. Some get a percentage of the load. If you're getting less that 33 cents a mile, "you're getting ripped off," Jeff a 36-year old truck driver from Ohio told Business Insider.
    The truck drivers suggest if these companies want to see this turnover decrease they need to focus on improving pay, improving training for new entrants, and they need to not push them to violate federal regulations.
    There may finally be some movement on this front. Last month Swift, one of the largest haulers in the country, announced they'd refocus expenditures on better labor conditions for their employees, including higher wages.
    "After assessing the current and expected environment, we believe the best investment we can make at this time, for all of our stakeholders, is in our drivers," the firm said in its earnings release. "Our goal is to clear the path for our drivers by helping them overcome challenges, eliminate wait times and take home more money."
     
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  3. WitchingHour

    WitchingHour Road Train Member

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    Yeah... it's almost as if that were done by design...

    And it's almost as if that were the intended end result of that design..

    And, you know, not wanting to live a life under the thumb of the ATA and the bottom feeders they represent and lobby for might come into play here, as well.

    As if it came to be by design? Let's face it... in a nation where the trucking industry pretty much moves just about everything, the last thing they'd want is to empower the drivers in any way. You'll never see the trucking industry do what air traffic controllers did in the 80s, because the ability to do that has been effectively removed. They identified a threat, they dealt with it, and they did it by bumping the drivers down several pegs. The megas have been a part of that process, and if they end up biting off more than they can chew for it, I welcome it.

    You mean there's a reason we call it "fleece purchase"? Well, I never...

    And maybe take the federal $$$ out of the equation. These big carriers push people through "training" like cattle at a slaughterhouse, collect their federal funds for "providing job training", then leave these halfassedly trained prospects to be left to the wolves.

    Case in point...

     
  4. loose_leafs

    loose_leafs Road Train Member

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    I'm sure the brain washed "new breed" will chime in here soon enough, saying:

    1. that 2100 miles a week on elogs at .35 per mile is a "good week"

    2. that the old hands are unsafe and brought it all on themselves, meanwhile every time it snows more than 2" or we get a heavy rainstorm, we see more bottom feeder trucks in the median and ditch than we do 4 wheelers.

    3. That its ok to do 65MPH in the middle lane in a 70 MPH zone for 200 miles and screw up traffic

    If they're not saying it, I know they're still thinking it and doing it.
     
  5. TJeff

    TJeff Bobtail Member

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    These "Driver Shortage" articles need only be one sentence long:
    The driver shortage is caused by LOW PAY.
     
  6. bzinger

    bzinger Road Train Member

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    article says " anything under 33 cpm is a ripoff " ..nooooooo anything under 50 cpm is a ripoff .
     
  7. STexan

    STexan Road Train Member

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    EVERY industry has "low pay" for new entrants. Trucking is no different. Thing is a large portion of those in today's trucking industry are "new entrants" relatively speaking, and this is a self-perpetuating cycle that the job creates. Long hours, days/weeks away from home living in a tin can and trying to live on bologna sandwiches, while trying to support a family and/or child support payment.

    Truck drivers are no different then any other group of workers, once you start giving them pay increases because some pitch a fit, they'll always come back for more, yet their output production value remains the same. The unions of the 70/80's taught today's corporate America very valuable lessons and they won't get caught in that trap again. Every thing is relative. There are millions of people who think the potential to earn more then $900 week is like winning the lottery. This only gives the "immigration reform" (amnesty) advocates more ammunition, which will only exacerbate the pay problems noted in the article.

    Again, perpetual cycle that can only guarantee the absolute minimum required will be paid to the huge numbers who comprise the "minimally experienced" segment that probably make up more then 35% of all truck drivers across the nation. And this 35% can be cycled out/in in very short time so, no worries for the carriers.
     
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  8. scottied67

    scottied67 Road Train Member

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    It is absolutely by design. Check it out, everyone including stakeholders is saying 'driver shortage because of low pay'. The next obvious solution is to raise pay but make the trailers longer and add another axle so the driver is paid exactly the same as before because he is moving more freight per trip.

    Plus they have the whole southern western hemisphere of people to recruit from to come up and drive trucks in the United States under Nafta and Safta.
     
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  9. Hardlyevr

    Hardlyevr Road Train Member

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    Last month's labor report said the trucking industry LOST 6800 employees. So, did rates jump up because of this? Of course not. Because there is NO SHORTAGE!

    If and when freight sits because there are no trucks to haul it, then rates will go up. When freight rates jump 30%, then there will truly be a shortage. What exists now are many companies that wish they had more drivers, so they could cut their rates to steal business from other companies, as they fight their way to the bottom.
     
  10. Frghter Century 12.7 Detr

    Frghter Century 12.7 Detr Light Load Member

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    The real elephant in the room is that these MEGA CARRIERS control the politicians that change hours of service and approve electronic log computers, they control the Insurance companies that want to raise the minimum so no OP can survive a 4 million insurance policy! get a ticket for speeding, no ins. hike, dropped by all ins companies! This fraud is just like today that people are expecting their Government tax refunds and because they dint have it, the gov. is keeping their refunds and the Health Insurance Industry is making billions just like they exploit the Owner Operator! The same Politicians that say they work for us bust they work for the people that invested in they campaign funds!!!
     
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  11. bzinger

    bzinger Road Train Member

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    very well put sir !
     
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