The ATA, many of whom CHOSE to run elogs, along with the ELD manufacturers and suppliers are also pushing for the mandate because it benefits them at the expense of everybody else. Makes you no better than they are, advocating the mandate of a device with a proven track record of decreasing safety on the roads just because YOU will benefit. Safety be ######! Just for that, I hope you get plowed into by a driver too caught up in racing his ticking clock to slow down for that work zone and stopped traffic. Those types of incidents are increasing in regularity the closer it gets to the enforcement date of the mandate you so desperately desire and more drivers are burdened with the devices.
New Bill in Congress to Deley ELD Mandate
Discussion in 'ELD Forum | Questions, Answers and Reviews' started by kemosabi49, Jul 19, 2017.
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barnmonkey, BoostedTeg, poppapump1332 and 1 other person Thank this.
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A handful of carriers ("white volvo crowd" types) are why. There are more than a few ticking time bombs out there who are running 15-17 hours/day 7 days a week and monitored by the same "safety department" who assigns loads and signs paychecks and provides paper log books by the case to drivers. Many of these drivers are literally indentured servants who are expected to run near-team miles on solo terms.
Yes, there are other reasons, I suppose. But we all talk about "we have to get texting and web-surfing drivers off the road" ... we also need to get [at least many of] the dead-tired, delirious drivers off the road who have not had decent sleep in 2 weeks. If eLogs goes a long way towards this goal, I'm all for it.
And yes, it will have unwanted side-effects that can potentially hurt many other drivers. Carriers may find they need to put more wore out trucks and drivers on the road to act as "re-power" options to meet appointment times. Same revenue miles, but spread out over more drivers (smaller driver paychecks)
If a carrier or owner-op "can't make money" on eLogs [but can on paper], he needs to find another line of work. -
I don't see the 80%, maybe if you factor in the aobrd devices, which includes computerized.
The ELD itself isn't really there yet. Hence seeking the delay in implementing that standard.
The regulatory and other governmental agencies don't have a great track record in knowing effects ahead of time, and the only thing special about the FMCSA in this regard is that they are perceived as below average by many, and not just truck drivers.
This leads to the dread some of us feel, throw computers into the mix,and like everywhere else it has happened, stand back and try to figure out what happened. It might work great, but historically, the hiccups have been troublesome, and sometimes devastating. Great for some means not so great for others, too.tinytim Thanks this. -
The problem I see is that the companies you mentioned won't change their ways. They are already deliberately violating the law. What will stop them from hacking the elog system? I think it will possible to adjust your logs just like paper with out leaving a trace. -
Why can't it be a choice? Why am I being forced onto something that is not needed.
whoopNride and Pedigreed Bulldog Thank this. -
Those in power do not give two flying ####s what a truck driver thinks. Follow the money.
OLDSKOOLERnWV and 25(2)+2 Thank this. -
In other words, if you believe that the ELD mandate "levels the playing field," you are part of the problem.
whoopNride, OLDSKOOLERnWV, Grumppy and 2 others Thank this. -
Grumppy and BoostedTeg Thank this.
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I'm sure he only drove like that because of elogs and he was governed and had to make up time, LOL
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