[Mishmash] Economic Slavery on the Highways

Ingrid & Eric Holzman ieholzman at verizon.net
Thu Jun 15 10:30:27 CDT 2006


I never got this message that Fred wrote.  Nothing in my spam mail either...hmmm..  Anyway, I wanted to share my thoughts.  As with any group, there are always a select few who do things that give the whole group a bad name, but I've always had the utmost respect for truckers.  I've driven many highway miles from Minnesota to California (back and forth to college) and have done many a road trip with my family in this country and never had an experience that warranted the negative opinions that it seems your friend had, Fred.  I have had several buy me a cup of coffee when they recognized it was me that they had "traveled with" over several hundred miles.  I give them my lights (or flash them)  when they need to pass me and can't see me and learned quick that they were knowledgable of where the police were sitting when I wasn't always following the speed limit. :-)  

Like teachers, truckers aren't given enough credit - particularly financially - for the job they do.  As you so eloquently noted, our shelves would be bare if we didn't have a person willing to drive one of those big rigs for a living.  BTW, my dream job has always been to be a trucker. :-)

Ingrid
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Carole 
  To: Mishmash 
  Sent: Thursday, June 15, 2006 9:25 AM
  Subject: Re: [Mishmash] Economic Slavery on the Highways



         i like it fred!  my son-in-law is a truck driver so i could relate.  course, that still doesn't stop me from cursing them on the highways.  lol.
        cb
        -------Original Message-------

        From: Fred Atkinson
        Date: 06/14/06 19:57:12
        To: Mishmash
        Subject: [Mishmash] Economic Slavery on the Highways

            I'd like to share some ideas about some of the people who make this
        country great.  They are often the most unappreciated people in the world.

            We take them so much for granted despite all that they do.  Everyone
        seems to think that the goods on the shelf at your store just appear there
        magically.  The materials to build your home, school, or workplace were not
        always there.  The fuel that makes your car run does not just appear at the
        pump.  And there are many other material goods we rely on to maintain our
        standard of living.

            There are thousands of good Americans that transport these materials to
        us.  They aren't heralded and they get no fanfare.  Man live a lifestyle of
        separation from their families and work an incredible number of hours.  It
        is their plight I wish to discuss.

            When the economy went sour at the end of 2001, I spoke with a recruiter
        for a national trucking company, she arranged for me to travel to Memphis,
        Tennessee and attend a three week school that would help me get a Class A
        commercial driver's license with all the required endorsements and the
        training required for the company to hire me as an over the road truck
        driver.  The cost of attending the truck school was over five thousand
        dollars and I was expected to be responsible for the cost myself.  I was not
        compensated in any way for the time I spent in school.

            I went to truck driving school with a lot of people from different parts
        of the country and different backgrounds.  After we completed our first week
        in school, we passed our written exams to get our learner's permits and our
        medical certificates, which were required to operate the big eighteen
        wheelers.

            The next week was range training.  We learned all manner of backing.
        Backing was not like backing a car.  It required a whole different twist.
        To back a truck to the right one must turn the wheel to the left until the
        truck jacks to the right.  Then you turn the wheel to the right to follow
        the trailer and keep it on the right path.  Even backing in a straight line
        was difficult.  But we learned our required backing skills during the second
        week and went on for the road training.

            We drove all over western Tennessee, eastern Arkansas, and northern
        Mississippi.  To the end of the third week we completed our training and
        passed our road tests.  When we returned to school the following week, we
        were taken to the DMV to get our Class A commercial driver's licenses and
        late we were assigned to a driver who would train us while we were actually
        transporting goods all over the country.  We were paid only fifty dollars
        per day while we trained regardless of the miles driven.  Since a driver
        often drives between four and five hundred miles per shift, that amounts to
        as little as ten cents per mile or less.

            These three weeks of driver training was done with no compensation and a
        legal requirement that you repay the company for the training.  Of course,
        they pro-rated the cost over two years and made the payments for your as
        long as you worked for them.  But if you found it necessary to leave, you
        were on the hook for the pro-rated part of the money you owe.  This makes it
        difficult to leave if you are unhappy with the working situation.

            After I completed the training with my instructor, I began to learn
        things I never knew.  I knew that truck drivers were typically away from
        home for months at a time.  I never knew that they are not covered by the
        wage and hour laws (overtime?  What is that?).  Truck drivers don't get
        overtime even though they constantly work in excess of sixty hours per week.
        They get paid for the miles they drive and (on occasion) for loading or
        unloading a truck, not for the time they work.

            Many responsibilities that truck drivers perform are without any
        compensation.  The Department of Transportation requires that they perform a
        complete and thorough pre-trip safety inspection each day, which takes
        fifteen minutes of their time.  They receive no compensation for their time
        to perform this.  When they weigh and balance a truck to make sure the load
        is legal on the highway, they receive no compensation for that, either.

            When they hitch or unhitch a trailer, they receive no compensation for
        that task.  When a shipper or receiver makes them stand around and wait for
        their load to be loaded or unloaded from a trailer, the driver receives no
        compensation for the time he is there idle while the shipper or receiver
        focuses on other things (unless he is paid for loading or unloading, which
        isn't often).

            And the driver is never guaranteed to get a shipment to move.  There
        were a number of times where I sat at a truck stop in a strange city with no
        load.  Our company compensated us forty dollars per day if they had no load
        for us.  Imagine that, only forty dollars for a single day of your life (and
        not all drivers even get that) away from your family, community, and
        friends.  And the per mile rates for new drivers are very low.  One I was
        asked to pick up a trailer, weigh it to make sure it was legally balanced,
        and transport it to the nearest company terminal for
        reassignment to another driver.  For my several hours of work, I received
        approximately twelve dollars for my efforts.  It amounted to less than
        minimum wage.

            Truck drivers get no respect.  Once when I was at a truckstop near the
        Canadian border in Maine, a driver told me that his CB handle was 'Caucasian
        scumbag'.  He said that he chose that handle because of what his father
        (also a truck driver) told him.  Truck driving is an honorable profession,
        but you will never get any respect.  Sadly, I found myself agreeing with
        him.  A few examples follow.

            Once I made a delivery at a warehouse.  After 'bumping the dock' (an
        expression used that means you have parked the trailer at the loading dock
        so it can be loaded or unloaded), I found a door marked 'driver's entrance'.
        When I stepped inside the door, I found myself standing inside of a cage
        (subhuman treatment).

            I once made a pickup at a major customer.  As my hours were almost used
        up when I made the pickup, I parked the truck outside the front gate in an
        area where truckers were allowed to park and get the required time in the
        sleeper before they were allowed to drive again.  When I walked back to the
        gate requesting to use the restroom, they refused saying that driver's
        weren't allowed to use the restrooms in the facility.  I had to go and
        relieve myself in the middle of an open field because there was no other
        place provided for the drivers.

            People often feel anger towards truck drivers because of the manner in
        which they drive on the open highways.  I did not engage in such driving and
        I did not approve of those who did.  But think of what it cost me.  Slowing
        down reduced the amount of money I made.  Remember that many of the lesser
        experienced drivers are not all that well paid (contrary to the stories
        about how well truck drivers are paid).  When you are paid by the mile at
        such a rate as twenty-seven cents a mile and only allowed to drive for a
        limited number of hours, making more money requires that you floor it.  When
        a driver is caught in a traffic jam, he is sitting there burning his driving
        hours and getting no compensation for it.  He cannot drive extra hours to
        make up for it or the Department of Transportation will fine him when they
        audit his driving logbook.  To that end, some drivers falsify their logbook
        to drive more miles.  This means that they are driving over the number of
        hours it is safe for a person's body to be alert enough to handle an
        eighty-thousand pound multi-vehicle truck and creates an additional hazard.

            Truck drivers would like to see that changed, but it's difficult.  'Over
        the road' drivers are away from home for months at a time.  Because of that
        they don't get to vote.  Politicians look at those statistics and they
        realize that spending time helping truck drivers does not yield them
        additional votes.  This does not motivate the politicians to make things any
        easier for them.  Once, a driver told me that he had tried to get an
        absentee ballot.  He was asked where he'd be on election day.  He told them
        he had no way of knowing because he was sent to different places often on
        only a few hours notice.  Because he couldn't tell them where he'd be on
        election day, they denied him an absentee ballot.

            As long as we continue to pay our over the road drivers 'by the mile'
        instead of by the hour and pay them for the things truck drivers do for no
        compensation every day, the way many truck drivers operate their vehicles is
        not going to change.  There is significant legislative reform needed but no
        political incentive to perform it.  And many of these good people continue
        to suffer while making a living to support their families (with whom they
        are able to spend very little time with).  The next time you enjoy your
        breakfast, buy nice new clothes at the store, fill up your tank with
        gasoline, or partake of any number of other countless things, you should
        remember that truck drivers brought those materials to you.

            Imagine if the trucks stopped rolling for a week.  We'd experience gas
        shortages, food shortages, and have to learn to do without many things.

            When a driver is involved in a traffic accident, it isn't whether or not
        he is at fault that matters.  You may have run into him but the question is
        could he have done something to prevent it from happening?  Even if he was
        not at fault in the accident, it often is still reported on his driving
        record as 'preventable' (which stacks against him when his driving record is
        reviewed for insurance or for possible employment with a different trucking
        company).  Imagine that, you caused the accident but they hold it against
        the truck driver anyway.  He is responsible for managing *your* driving
        safety habits.

            These dramatically under appreciated people live a lifestyle that I
        don't understand how they continue to live day in and day out year after
        year.  Essentially they are slaves to our system and we continue to take
        advantage of them paying many of them low wages and working them at a
        schedule that would cause most of us to experience complete exhaustion.

            My hat is off to them and I think about them from time to time.  God
        bless our truck drivers.


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