My working theory is that safety doesn’t matter at all, only thing that matters is dollars, and none of it makes any sense. Except for the few folks that are profiting at record levels with -the way things are-. I have yet to see a single piece of evidence presented any where that suggests ELDs made the roads safer. Similar for the 14 hour rule.
I think that if “they” allowed trucking wages to appreciate with inflation, that we would be in civil war. If transportation costs had doubled over the past 15 years or so, true inflation would be showing up in a much bigger way. Milk would be $20 a gallon. Eggs would be $15 a dozen. So on and so forth. I think “they” had a meeting behind closed doors and said we need to rig this part of the game or we might lose control.
What is good pay? And what’s fair now in trucking?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Chi Town Steers, Feb 19, 2025.
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snowlauncher, austinmike and hope not dumb twucker Thank this.
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D.Tibbitt, 88 Alpha, hope not dumb twucker and 2 others Thank this.
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The issue many employees face is when they’re living paycheck to paycheck and they decide they need a higher paying job. They increase their wages and their lifestyle creeps up to keep up with their friends and they’re living paycheck to paycheck again.
Trucking is diverse and so are the people who make up the industry. You can have two guys at the same company and one is comfortable, saving money and contributing to retirement, and the other can’t pay all their bills.D.Tibbitt, BoostedTeg, Oxbow and 4 others Thank this. -
THEY didn’t decide what you will or can earn. You did when you picked what job to take. There are millions of shippers, millions of receivers, and millions of drivers. The pay is determined by each player deciding what they will do, what they will pay, and how much “stuff” they will put up with. What will produce higher pay is a huge increase on the requirements to be a truck driver. The ATA, big shipper/receivers want an unlimited supply of minimally-qualified drivers because it lowers the cost and increases the flexibility they have when doing their job. I’ll guess you would like to have 200 trucking companies in a desperate bidding war to attract you to work for them. There is no King deciding what each job will pay. There are a huge number of individuals deciding what they want and how much they will pay to get it.Albertaflatbed, Chi Town Steers and hope not dumb twucker Thank this. -
bryan21384 Thanks this.
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I live way below my means personally. Currently my entire monthly expenses including health insurance and food are under $1000. I can’t get it much lower than that, I’ve tried. So I feel like I could make it work almost anywhere. But I value my time. I don’t want to be the greatest truck driver ever, I want to be the happiest and wealthiest truck driver ever. -
Albertaflatbed and hope not dumb twucker Thank this.
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If you value your time I’d look into the LTL route. Or Walmart.Chi Town Steers, tscottme and hope not dumb twucker Thank this. -
Keep a clean record for 30 months and you can get on at Walmart. You'll make over a $100k a year at Walmart without even trying. Get home weekly for solid hometime. Get treated with respect. You'll be able to max out your 401K contributions and also buy some discounted company stock to pad your savings/earnings. And retire a millionaire in 30 years (if you're that young). Don't waste your time working for multiple freight hauling companies then 10 or 20 years later realize you just wasted a lot of your career. Stick it out at Western and don't run over anything or get any tickets. Then take a real step up at your next job.
Dave_in_AZ, blairandgretchen, Chi Town Steers and 4 others Thank this.
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