Title: Can Trucking Prep for the Future?
1Can Trucking Prep for the Future?
- Comments by
- Todd Spencer, Exec VP, OOIDA
2Trucking in Broad Strokes
- 2.5 mil. Class 8 Trucks
- -½ are in Private Carriage
- -½ are in For Hire Carriage
3For Hire Trucking
- Less Than Truck-Load (LTL)
- -Dominated by Yellow Roadway Overnite
- -Have a operating ratio of around 95
- -Earnings per mile 4.15 to 4.20
- -Expenses per mile of around 4.00
- -Profits at 15 to 20 cents per mile
4For Hire Trucking
- Truckload (TL)
- Close to 520,000 carriers (only 45,000 are large
carriers) - 70 of carriers have less than 6 trucks
- 80 of carriers have less than 20 trucks
- Have the same 95 operating ratio but
- Earnings are 1.36 a mile and expense 1.30
- Profits are 6 cents a mile on 110,000 milers per
truck or 6,600 a year
5Owner-Operator Truckers
- Own and Drive their own truck
- 350,000 of them, average owning 1.4 trucks
- -75 of them are leased to a larger carrier
- -25 of them have their own authority
- They have sole responsibility for purchase and
maintenance of their truck - They earn around 35,000-37,000 a year
- They work approximately 100 hrs a wk for that pay
6From Dr. Francine La Fontaine, Economist, Umich,
Ann Arbor
7Owner-Operator Truckers
- They are on an average 48 yrs old
- They have 20 yrs professional driving experience
- According to the insurance industry, they are the
safest segment of truck drivers, having fewer and
less serious accidents - They chose truck driving as a career before
drivers became a commodity to be used and
discarded - (Raises the question Where will tomorrows
million-mile safe drivers come from?)
8Company Drivers
- They are on an average 44 yrs old
- They have 15 yrs professional driving experience
- Many change employers often
9Trucking Equals2 to 2.5 Regular Jobs!
- Office Workers Truck Driver
- 40 hrs per week 100 hrs per week
- 50 weeks per year 50 weeks per year
- 2000 hours per year 5000 hours per year
10Owner-Operator Truckers
- Truckers are being coerced to wait inordinate
lengths of time at docks, or load, unload, and
re-palletize their loads for free. - This free labor and its attending lost and
wasted time, represents the one single largest
challenge to the trucking industry. - This forced labor affects many issues driver
fatigue highway safety driver retention 100
driver turnover and drivers ability to earn a
reasonable wage.
11Under the Old HOS Regulations
- The annual cost to the trucking industry to move
from free waiting time, and free loading and
unloading labor, to strict compliance with the
60 hour rule, would have been an additional 3.2
to 7.5 billion
12Under the Old HOS Regulations
- If, however, the industry could have reduced the
waiting, loading and unloading times to
reasonable levels while increasing a drivers
drive time, it would have saved the industry
the same 3.2 to 7.5 billion.
13HOS Regulations
- If drivers earn 40,000 a year, the best case
scenario of wasting 3.2 billion a year in lost
productivity means we were wasting 80,000
man-years per annum, just because there are no
costs passed to the parties wasting that precious
time.
14Where are the dollars spent on freight hauling
going?
- In the past twenty years as the freight rates
have remained flat, and the truck driver has seen
his wages buying power shrink by 30, the
freight brokering and forwarding industry has
grown to become a industry of the same size, but
with none of the capitalization challenges of
carriers, i.e. owning and operating trucks.
15Truck Parking Spaces
- A Programatic challenge which cries out for
solutions.
162004 OOIDA Truck Parking Survey
- Follow up of a similar 1999 survey.
- 70 of the drivers said that since the new hours
of service regulations have been in effect, truck
parking has become harder, or much harder to
find. - Instances of police telling resting truckers to
leave rest areas has doubled in the past 5 yrs
172004 OOIDA Truck Parking Survey
- Drivers said they drove beyond their available
log driving hours either 1) every night 2) 5
times a week or 3) 3 times a week - 1999 2004
- 30.3 47.9
182004 OOIDA Truck Parking Survey
- Five years ago only 22 said they would even
consider paying for safe secure parking spaces. - Today that figure has nearly doubled to 38.
192004 OOIDA Truck Parking Survey
- The issue of truck parking spaces will require
creative solutions that do not necessarily rely
on Federal legislation (Maybe as simple as large
graveled lots). - Additional truck parking spaces are not in the
best bottom line interest of Truck Stops (due to
their being filled to optimum capacity already). - Highway safety stakeholders need to continue to
seek feasible solutions together. - Without sufficient truck parking spaces in
locales where trucks congregate, tired truckers
are forced to remain behind the wheel out on the
nations highways.
20In Conclusion . . .
- We are an industry only half way though the
shakeout envisioned by the deregulation
economists of the 1940s. - In this shakeout, profits have been so difficult
to come by, that the drivers have been squeezed
of the next to last drop of blood they have.
21In Conclusion (cont.)
- The safe and dependable small business truckers
move much of the truck freight in this country. - Right now they do it out of the love of the job,
but there are no young replacements waiting in
the wings.