Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

A trucker’s haven

Trucking industry — and the profession­s that support it — now on the precipice of change

- By Jamie Lee Taete

The Petro Travel Center on Interstate 10 in Ontario, California, is one of scores across the country. At the front of the building are the things road trippers see when they stop for gas or snacks: a convenienc­e store, restrooms and some dining options.

But for truckers, Petro is a haven.

An entrance opens to kiosks and services catering directly to those who work out of the cab of a big rig. There are showers, a driver’s lounge, a gym and a laundromat. A brightly lit game area features arcade machines and a pool table. Outside, there is a chapel in a trailer.

“For the next 34 hours, I’m going to do laundry, catch up on some reading, take a shower — basically just like what anybody else would do if they were home for the weekend,” Bryan Tyson Galbreath, 41, of Corpus Christi, Texas, said. “I’m away from my house, but that truck is technicall­y my house.”

Galbreath is one of at least 550,000 longhaul truck drivers in the United States, underpinni­ng an industry that has been hailed as indispensa­ble during the pandemic even while facing a severe shortage of drivers. That shortage has coincided with supply chain issues, adding pressure on drivers to reach their destinatio­ns on time.

The industry is also on the precipice of a huge change. The driver shortages are reshaping the workforce, as the specter of self-driving trucks increasing­ly threatens to transform how the work is done. Self-driving trucks are being tested and are viewed as the future for shipping all manner of goods across the country.

As trucking evolves, the patchwork of businesses across the United States that exist to support the industry is at risk of disappeari­ng.

There are no figures on how many people work in the various profession­s that support the trucking industry, but it takes an army of truck washers, gas station cashiers and truck stop custodial staff to help drivers and their cargoes get from Point A to B.

Restrictio­ns control how long they can drive, down to the minute, a reason Galbreath is spending 34 hours in the truck stop’s orbit.

Because of the dangers associated with having exhausted drivers at the wheel, various federal rules have taken effect since the 1930s. The current rules, enacted in 2013, are complicate­d. Depending on their companies’ operating hours, truckers are allowed to drive a maximum of 60 hours over seven days or 70 hours over eight days. So drivers on these schedules can set their time back to zero with so-called reset breaks. These 34-hour off-duty periods are often spent at truck stops.

“If you’re at a truck stop, you’re pretty much stuck there,” Galbreath said.

In the parking areas, the drivers nestle their trucks in tightly packed rows. Their cabs function as kitchens, bedrooms, living rooms and offices. At night, drivers can be seen through their windshield­s — eating dinner or reclining in their bunks, bathed in the light of a Nintendo Switch or FaceTime call home.

Small truck stops have just a few parking spots. By contrast, the Iowa 80 Truck stop, in Walcott, Iowa, bills itself as the largest truck stop in the world and has 900. Across the country, entire temporary cities form and disperse daily.

“Everybody has different stories,” Elaine Peralta said of the truckers that pass through her salon inside the TA Travel Center in Barstow, California. “There’s a lot of couples that are driving. There’s a lot of students driving. Young people are driving, and they do their school work, if they’re in college, on the truck. A lot of different ages.”

One common complaint among truckers is food quality. Except for the occasional diner, food truck or independen­t restaurant, fast food is the most readily available fare.

“I would like to see a little more variety and not just fast food,” said Angela Eudey, 42, of Bakersfiel­d, California, who tries to shun it and stocks up on groceries before she hits the road. “I have a fridge, so I buy food each week,” she said. “I try to be healthy.”

Being healthy is not easy. With long hours behind the wheel and a lack of nourishing food options, truckers face a variety of challenges. Various studies have found that truckers have higher-than-usual rates of obesity, diabetes, back problems and depression and that long-haul drivers are more likely to smoke.

Another issue presented by truck stop food is the cost. As of 2021, the mean annual pay for a truck driver was $50,340 — down significan­tly from 1980, when the average pay was $110,000 after adjusting for inflation, according to one analysis. Pay can be especially low for new drivers, or independen­t contractor­s, as they can be on the hook for costs like training fees, maintenanc­e and fuel.

“Everything is expensive,” said Anthony Johnson, 36, who is based in Miami. “And I don’t get paid that much to keep buying food out in restaurant­s at all. And Uber Eats is worse. I’m constantly spending $30 for things that cost $9.”

Truckers are not always able to make it into truck stops or rest areas when they’re not working.

The United States has a huge shortage of truck parking spaces. According to the American Trucking Associatio­ns, more than 98% of truck drivers have reported having difficulty finding safe parking. If no spots are available in designated areas, truckers have to improvise, spending their nights sleeping in potentiall­y unsafe or illegal locations such as vacant lots or highway on-ramps.

For truckers, a good night’s sleep is essential. Driving a truck is dangerous, and tired drivers exacerbate the problem. In 2020, 4,842 large trucks were involved in fatal crashes — and 107,000 in crashes that resulted in injury. According to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administra­tion, fatigue is a factor in around 13% of truck crashes.

“There’s been many a time I couldn’t find a spot,” said Galbreath, who has sometimes been forced to sleep on the side of the highway because of the lack of parking. “You have vehicles that are traveling down the highway at 65, 70 miles an hour.”

He continued, “You can feel them when they run by you, rocking the truck. You’re not going to get a good night’s rest doing that.”

Yet while truck drivers have adapted to increasing difficulti­es on the road, the problems ahead seem more transforma­tional. If driverless trucks are the future of America’s highways, the industry surroundin­g truckers is likely to head the way of other once essential, now forgotten support industries.

“This is all I really want to do,” said Kevin Ransom, 46, who has been driving for 22 years. “I’ve tried welding. I’ve done carpenter work. I’ve done a variety of manual labor jobs, working in the plants, and I don’t care for it. So I don’t know what else I could do.”

He added that he was hopeful it would be another 20 years before automation would affect his job. “By that time,” he said, “I’ll be retired.”

 ?? JAMIE LEE TAETE/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? Trucks lined up at the Petro Travel Center truck stop March 30 in Ontario, California.
JAMIE LEE TAETE/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS Trucks lined up at the Petro Travel Center truck stop March 30 in Ontario, California.
 ?? ?? Truck driver Bryan Tyson Galbreath takes a break March 30 at the Petro Travel Center in Ontario, California.
Truck driver Bryan Tyson Galbreath takes a break March 30 at the Petro Travel Center in Ontario, California.

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