“AMERICAN TRUCKERS ARE EXPECTING THE AMOUNT OF
freight moving across U.S. highways to grow quickly in the next few
years. Will they have the ability to carry it? Standing in their way are a
number of issues, including a growing driver shortage.” If that sounds
to you like a quote from the Council of Supply Chain Management
Professionals’ latest “State of Logistics Report” or a recent American
Trucking Associations press release, that’s understandable. But it’s
not. Those words actually appeared in a 1989 article in Purchasing
magazine.
Today, some 28 years later, the problem persists. In a report released
in October, the American Trucking Associations
(ATA) warned that the industry would be short
about 50,000 drivers by the end of 2017—the high-
est level on record. If current trends hold and freight
volumes continue to rise, the shortfall could widen
to 174,000 by 2026, according to the report, “Truck
Driver Shortage Analysis 2017.”
As for the reasons for the shortage, some of it
has to do with demographics: an aging work force,
the 21 minimum age requirement for interstate
drivers (which effectively eliminates candidates in
the 18–21 age group who are often in the process
of choosing careers), and a lack of interest among
women in driving as a career.
But that’s just part of the story. As we all know, lifestyle issues play
into it as well. Few U.S. workers want a job that keeps them away from
home for extended periods and forces them to subsist on a truck-stop
diet of chicken-fried steak and macaroni and cheese. Further complicating matters, a rapidly strengthening economy means more job
alternatives are available to current and would-be drivers, the ATA
report notes. These include construction jobs, which tend to be local
and don’t require the extensive travel truck driving does—attributes
that are liable to appeal to job candidates, the report points out.
Solving the problem will likely require efforts on multiple fronts.
For instance, at the ATA’s Management Conference & Exhibition
in October, U.S. Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta announced the
formation of a task force to promote apprenticeship programs for
workers in industries like trucking—a move that could lead to more
opportunities for paid on-the-job training. This has been suggested by
the ATA in the past and could expand the driver candidate pool, with
the government providing subsidies to those who qualify. The administration has expressed support for the program, and hopefully, there
BY CLIFFORD F. LYNCH fastlane
The continuing saga of
driver shortages
will be a quick follow-through. Omaha, Neb.-based truckload and logistics giant Werner
Enterprises has had such a program in place for
some time, enrolling over 38,000 drivers, many
of whom have received government benefits in
addition to their salaries.
Another part of the solution may be ensuring
better treatment of drivers. For as long as we’ve
heard about driver shortages, we’ve also heard
about the mistreatment of drivers at shipping
and receiving facilities—
including complaints about
lack of access to restrooms
and having to endure lengthy
delays. There is no question
that the shipper community could do better in this
regard. While some companies have adopted policies
aimed at improving the driver experience, a surprising
number have not or have
become lax. They would do
well to remember that this
problem will not be solved by the carriers alone.
What about those self-driving trucks that
are all over the news? To those who say autonomous vehicles will solve the problem, I say
“maybe.” I believe we are several years away
from widespread utilization, but down the
road, as use expands, the technology could very
well appeal to a broader base of younger workers. As jobs go, being the on-board supervisor
of a driverless truck would be far less stressful
than operating one of today’s big rigs—and in
all probability, far more fun.
Clifford F. Lynch is principal of C.F. Lynch & Associates, a provider
of logistics management advisory services, and author of Logistics
Outsourcing – A Management Guide and co-author of The Role of
Transportation in the Supply Chain. He can be reached at cliff@
cflynch.com.