TDMST Weekly Round-Up 2023.01.21 is the trucking commentary on news affecting professional truck drivers for the week ending January 21, 2023, written by Vicki Simons.
We welcome your comments, thoughts and feedback on the items of your choice below.
1. Regarding economy, employment, pay, theft, gig, and consumers:
Economy
The following are some of the most recent articles regarding the economy from the trucking industry’s perspective:
- 159,000 Class 8 trucks ordered September to December
- 361,500 trailer orders recorded in 2022: ACT Research
- ACT Research: December used truck retail volumes exceed typical growth
- ACT Research: Class 8 orders hit 30,600 units in December
- Analysts’ freight forecasts pessimistic on 2023 trucking gains
- China losing ground to Mexico as manufacturing oasis
- December Classes 4-7 Retail Sales Stumble
- December Trailer Orders Hit All-Time Second-Highest Level
- Driver Poll: Do you think we’re in a recession?
- Heavy-duty aftermarket continues to grow as economy slows
- November trucking conditions ‘less negative’ than October
- Producer Price Index Sees Biggest Decline Since April 2020
- Retail Sales Fall 1.1% in December as Inflation Takes a Toll
- Trailer orders in December 2nd highest on record
- Trucking conditions, while improved, remained negative in November
- Trucking industry may turn favorable in 2023, data suggests
- US trailer orders end 2022 with near-record levels
- Electrifying Transport Refrigeration: Overcoming the Challenges [Podcast]
- Knight-Swift Takes Delivery of its First Kenworth T680E
- Knight-Swift to use Kenworth T680E BEV at Southern California port
- More testing needed with all-electric trucks and vans
- Schneider receives fleet of battery-electric rigs in Southern California
- With Electric on the Way, Truck Makers Continue to Update Diesel Models
Employment
Pay
- Driver compensation ‘huge factor’ in safety, FMCSA leader says
- Driver compensation meeting open to public
- Driver compensation panel hears pay by mile is a ‘killer’
From the first article in the section just above, we read:
Most truck drivers are paid by the mile instead of by the hour. In addition, the Fair Labor Standards Act exempts motor carriers from having to pay its drivers overtime. So there’s often no pay for when drivers are getting fuel, inspecting the load, or waiting hours to be loaded or unloaded.
Another easy way to explain it is that drivers generally aren’t earning if the wheels aren’t turning.
“I spent unpaid time with (Anderson) while loading and unloading, and it just became crystal clear to me that the structure of compensation for drivers is a huge factor in industry success for safety and economic strength,” [FMCSA Administrator Robin] Hutcheson said.
OK, that’s all well and good, but what is the FMCSA doing to fix this problem in the Fair Labor Standard Act?
Theft
Gig
The infographic in the article linked above states:
Majority of gig workers say they are done with traditional employment.
I think that especially since C0VID, the employment landscape — especially toward those who were pushed toward working from home — has changed a lot of people’s attitudes toward work.
I happen to know one person — who used to be a trucker and now works in the gig economy — who will never go back to standard employment.
Yes, he is totally responsible for determining which gigs he will accept — and he is very choosy about which ones he will accept — but he feels freer and more independent.
He has shared that when there is some adjustment that he needs to make in his schedule, he just makes it instead of having to ask for permission for time off.
I think that over time, we will see more and more of this kind of attitude in the trucking industry, too.
Consumers
Quoting from the article linked just above — and understanding that:
- “CPG” stands for “Consumer Packaged Goods”; and
- “Elasticities” means “negative change in sales volume in response to rising prices”;
we read:
…as consumers become increasingly stretched each month, there is growing evidence that the changes in consumer behavior, which started with big-ticket, discretionary items like televisions and furniture, are extending to everyday items. industry in the past year. Despite two consecutive years of steeply rising prices, including last year’s CPG price growth of upward of 15% or more in many categories, CPG elasticities have remained below historic norms and have been below most analysts and companies’ internal expectations so far.
However, as consumers become increasingly stretched each month, there is growing evidence that the changes in consumer behavior, which started with big-ticket, discretionary items like televisions and furniture, are extending to everyday items.
An example of rising prices is the astronomical increase in the price of raw eggs.
This week, my husband Mike and I purchased in Aiken, SC, two 18-count large white eggs for $6.99 each (almost $0.39 for each egg), when compared to the price of eggs in October 2020, when a dozen eggs cost $0.59 each (under $0.05 each).
($6.99 / 18) * 12 = $4.66 per dozen
This Percent Increase Calculator shows that the increase from $0.59 to $4.66 is 689.83%.
Many people have started to raise their own chickens for both eggs and meat (which is a subject for another time).
2. Regarding training, videos, accidents, and fatalities:
Training
- New York Extends Length of Commercial Driver Learner’s Permits
- Ohio inmates get a chance to earn a CDL-A with prison training program
- Walmart expands Associate-to-Driver program
- Walmart expands in-house driver hiring, training program
- Walmart expands program that helps store workers to earn CDLs and become Private Fleet truck drivers
- Yellow meets its goal of graduating 1,000 new CDL holders during 2022
Please be on the lookout for any training program where the entity doing the training is the same one who pays you.
Don’t allow yourself to be exploited.
Videos
- Truck Tips: How to adjust 5th wheels and trailer bogeys (video)
- Truck Tips: How to back up a tractor-trailer (video)
- Truck Tips: How to check tractor-trailer brakes (video)
- Truck Tips: How to couple and uncouple a trailer (video)
- Truck Tips: How to mark and measure brake adjustment (video)
- Truck Tips: How to set and adjust truck mirrors (video)
- VIDEO: Guardrail saves the day after car crash causes trucker to lose control
- WATCH: Motorist nearly collides head-on with sheriff cruiser while speeding past big rig
Accidents
Please scan through the articles listed below to understand how some accidents involving large trucks occurred — and seek to prevent being involved in a similar accident yourself.
- 9 tractor-trailers involved in crash on I-70 in eastern Colorado
- Bobtail truck crashes into Pennsylvania grocery store as driver takes food break nearby
- High winds overturn big rig on Golden Gate Bridge in latest round of wild California weather
- Livestock trailer ‘cut in half’ in Kansas collision involving two loaded cattle haulers near rest area
- Load shift during delivery flattens man under bale of hay
- Officials work to reopen I-70 on Thursday morning following 9 semi truck pileup
- OSL calls for Ontario coroner’s review following spate of highway crashes
- Semi truck briefly takes flight on icy roadway
- Truck driver involved in Tennessee train derailment charged
- VIDEO: Semis skid off a snowy roadway in Colorado
- VIDEO: Trucker trying to maneuver around crash takes a tumble down a snowy hill
Fatalities
We extend our deepest sympathy and condolences to the families of those who died.
- 1 dead after tractor-trailer crashes into construction convoy
- Driver & passenger dead after truck barrels down embankment and bursts into flames
- Five people dead after car fails to yield to semi truck at intersection
- Michigan trucker dies on I-280 when cab struck by loose dual tires
- Motorist fatally struck by passing semi in string of wrecks that stretched a quarter mile
- Motorist killed in head-on collision with semi truck in Louisville
- Ohio police seek trucker after loose set of dual tires strike big rig cab, killing tanker truck driver
- Truck driver charged with negligent homicide in death of three university students changing a tire
- Truck driver reported dead after careening off ramp onto I-287, striking van
Another article about the tire separation article linked above is:
Police: Truck driver killed after another semi’s tires fall off, strike vehicle
I posted this article on a trucking group on Facebook and one trucker disagreed with the law enforcement officer’s assessment that a thorough pre-trip inspection would have caught the problem.
He said that “China bearings could of failed causing The Whole hub to come off.”
I asked for — and received — a description and image showing how such a situation could have happened.
On the other hand, I commented on this article on my Facebook profile as follows (before that other trucker provided the detail I requested):
Unless this was a true mechanical failure that the trucker couldn’t detect ahead of time, conducting a thorough pre-trip inspection would have found the problem.
Once the problem was found, the trucker should have put the truck out of service until the problem was completely fixed.
Had that happened, there would be one less dead trucker, one less truck demolished, and a lot less grief.
Another issue to consider is that somewhere down the road, there’s a truck without a set of tires.
Chances may be that when the trucker whose truck is missing tires is found, he/she may yet be held responsible for the accident and all involved.
To help things like this from happening, we make available through our website a Free Download of a Pre-Trip Inspection Combo PDF:
3. Regarding AB5, legal, drugs, and trafficking:
AB5
- OOIDA refiles motion for injunction against AB5
- Trucking group again seeks injunction to block AB 5
- Trucking group again seeks injunction to block AB 5
Legal
- Briefly: FMCSA border inspector pleads guilty to extortion
- Extortion admitted by former U.S. DOT investigator Crime & Courts
- Former FMCSA employee admits to extortion of trucking company
- Former FMCSA employee pleads guilty to extortion charges
- Former FMCSA investigator admits to extortion scheme
- Former FMCSA investigator pleads guilty to extortion
- Werner wage lawsuit dismissed
Drugs
Never, ever haul illegal drugs, no matter how much of an incentive you are offered.
- $7.5 million worth of marijuana seized from truck’s shipment of cotton candy
- Alcohol, cannabis primary drugs detected in impaired drivers
- Drug conviction raises questions about marijuana use for truckers
- Federal Officials Plan to Add Fentanyl to Drug Tests
- Feds find $4 million worth of cocaine disguised in semi’s shipment of decorative stone
- Indiana police find 22 pounds of cocaine in sleeper during inspection
- Indiana troopers find $400K worth of cocaine in big rig’s sleeper
- New NTSB report finds booze, pot as primary drugs detected in impaired drivers
- Trucker arrested for stashing $4.1 million in cocaine in load of stone
Trafficking
Do not engage in trafficking humans — ever!
4. Regarding fuel, autonomous vehicles, and electric vehicles:
Fuel
- AAA retail diesel average now $4.608 Fuel prices
- Amogy announces success in testing ammonia-powered big rig
- Company debuts ‘World’s First’ ammonia-powered big rig
- Daily Infographic: EIA expects U.S. gasoline and diesel retail prices to decline in 2023 and 2024
- Diesel Drops 2.5¢ to $4.524 a Gallon
- Diesel prices continue January slide
- DOE/EIA price drops; diesel futures up ahead of EU ban on Russian imports
- How engine modification can help fleets replace diesel with cleaner-burning biofuels
- Nikola develops first mobile fueler for hydrogen fuel cell trucks
- Nikola Develops Hydrogen Mobile Fueler to Use in 2023
- Nikola Launches Mobile Fueler for Hydrogen Fuel Cell Trucks
- Using Ammonia in an FCEV Truck
- Weekly Fuel Report: January 17, 2023
Autonomous vehicles
I totally oppose the operation of self-driving, autonomous, or driverless commercial motor vehicles on the same roads as the motoring public, but share these articles to help you stay current on the topic:
- DriveOhio to deploy self-driving vehicles, including big rigs, on state’s rural roadways
- Volvo-backed investment group helps fund tech company focusing on autonomous trucking
Electric vehicles
5. Regarding batteries, emissions, and environment:
Batteries
I believe that the title of this article is misleading because (if I read the article correctly) this article is about detecting when a battery is about to die, not about preventing a battery from dying.
Hmm…
Emissions
Environment
6. Regarding emergency, HOS, traffic, and speed:
Emergency
In my opinion, the Hours of Service regulation has become a gigantic joke if it can be suspended every time there is a declared “emergency”!
How many emergencies have we had in the last 3 years?
Frankly, I’ve lost count.
Every time there is severe weather, the FMCSA suspends the HOS in order to allow certain kinds of commodities to keep rolling to consumers.
So, why go through the charade of pretending that the Hours of Service — and the use of Electronic Logging Devices — are so important?
Please share your feedback through the form below.
Thanks.
HOS
- Alabama, Georgia suspend regulations after severe weather
- Another trucker’s HOS exemption request denied
- FMCSA declares regional emergency due to weather, refinery shutdown
- FMCSA got nearly 600 comments in support of exemption request
- FMCSA provides Hours of Service relief for fuel haulers in eight states due to refinery shutdown, storms
- FMCSA says no to trucker’s request for personal exemption from ELD and HOS rules
- Fuel haulers in eight states get hours of service relief
- Refinery shutdown, winter weather prompt FMCSA emergency declaration
Traffic
Unlike some lists, the top one in the article linked just above takes into account international locations.
Speed
- Bills seek to raise “very annoying” lowered truck speed limit “for safety sake”
- Michigan local speed limits revision pursued in House bill
- Speed limit revisions proposed in multiple statehouses State
- Speeding, unlicensed teenager killed after crashing into semi truck
In the first article in the section just above, there’s a term used to describe split speed limits for big trucks and the general motoring public:
“Bifurcated” means “divided into two branches or parts.”
If you live in a state where there are split speed limits — and you feel that it is dangerous for the speed limit to be divided — please contact your state legislators to let them know.
7. Regarding IFTA audit, insurance data, brokers, and safety:
IFTA audit
Insurance data
Brokers
Safety
- DOT Unveils Strategic Safety Plan
- NTSB Asks Federal, State Agencies to Focus on Reducing Impaired-Driving Crashes
The second article in the section just above concerns alcohol and drug-related crashes.
8. Regarding goals, health, savings, and loans:
Goals
Were you aware that January 17 has been designated as “Ditch New Year’s Resolution Day”?
According to this resource (and others):
“January 17… is popularly thought to be the day when a large number of people abandon their New Year’s resolutions.”
We have a page on our website that may help you:
Trucker Goal Setting Instead of Making New Year’s Resolutions.
Health
Savings
Loans
9. Regarding inspections, best to drive in, parking, and ports:
Inspections
- Dates set for 2023 CVSA International Road Check
- Nine state speed crackdown happening on U.S. Highway 20 on Tuesday
- Trucker says police were wrong in NC wreck investigation
Best to drive in
Parking
- 2 West Virginia Turnpike travel plazas to have food, restrooms and parking during rebuild
- 200 (potentially temporary) truck parking spots open in Harlem neighborhood
Ports
- Borderlands: Port Laredo No. 2 gateway for international trade in November
- East Coast container imports still far above pre-pandemic levels
- Port of Halifax enjoyed banner year in 2022
- Port of Long Beach misses record as cargo flow returns to ‘normal’
- Port of Mobile Posts All-Time Container Shipping Figures in 2022
- Port of Virginia sees record volumes in 2022
- Relationship between imports and trucking is dynamic but telling
- SC Ports handled record cargo volumes last year
10. Regarding prediction, rates, recruitment, and regulations:
Predictions
Rates
- ACT Research: Spot rates see first big upswing into 2023
- Fleets Grapple With Freight Rate Pressures
- Rates end 2022 on a high note, ‘bottoming process’ underway
- Spot Rates End 2022 On an Upswing
- Spot rates remain at pre-holiday amounts
Recruitment
Quote from the article linked just above:
Good recruitment efforts should require matching the right job with the right person. This comes with honest and up-front communication from the beginning, as well as prompt follow-ups after inquiries and interviews.
Solid retention efforts also involve maintaining your employees’ level of expertise by providing the proper coaching and training regularly.
The article also addressed “Honest communication with good follow-up.”
Regulations
11. Regarding snow chains, supply chain, and technology:
Snow chains
Quote from CHP:
With slick road ways it’s important to slow down and obey chain restrictions. This crash happened last night when a truck drove through a snowy area without putting on chains and ended up going through a guard rail on US-97 at Dorris Hill. Fortunately the driver was not injured but a lot of time and resources were used to respond and handle the scene.
Supply chain
- Supply chain issues force parts distributors to overcome brand biases
- White House touts easing of supply chain pressures
Technology
- Low-clearance technologies help fleets avoid accidents
- Manufacturers losing chip that powers ABS warning lamps
- Trucker Path opens new in-app marketplace
- West Virginia Launching Digital Vehicle Titles
12. Regarding recognition, awards, and bonuses:
Recognition
- 3 finalists named for TCA’s Highway Angel of the Year Award
- Voting open for the 2022 Highway Angel of the Year
Awards
If I’m reading the list correctly, here are the categories where there was a top person and then a runner-up:
- Company Driver of the Year;
- Independent Contractor of the Year;
- Company Trainer of the Year;
- Independent Contractor Trainer of the Year;
- New Driver of the Year;
- Owner Operator of the Year;
- Team of the Year; and
- Dedicated Driver of the Year.
Congratulations to all winners and runners-up!
Bonuses
- J.B. Hunt awards full-time company drivers, other employees, almost $9M in appreciation bonuses
- J.B. Hunt pays employees $8.8 million in ‘appreciation’ bonuses
There’s no mention in the article of the average bonus per person. Hmm…
The second article just above states:
In April 2022, J.B. Hunt awarded more than $900,000 in safe driver bonuses as part of its Million Mile safety recognition program.
Nice!
My husband Mike and I wish you — and all professional truck drivers — safe travels and lots of money saving opportunities on the road.
Return from TDMST Weekly Round-Up: 2023.01.21 to our TDMST Weekly Round-Up Trucking Commentary or our Truck Drivers Money Saving Tips home page.