Santa Fe New Mexican

Economy drives demand for trucker training

- By David J. Lynch

SCHNECKSVI­LLE, Pa. — The tractor-trailer lurches into gear. As the student driver turns the wheel, eyes swiveling from left to right, the 18-wheeler backs into a yellow box outlined on the pavement. But the truck’s wheels cross the line, a rookie mistake that could mean a collision on a city street or at a cargo terminal.

Instructor Matt Hanlon, 53, who’s been teaching big-rig driving for two decades, shakes his head and tells the trainee to pull the Freightlin­er forward and try again. His brother Mike, 49, the other half of the instructor team here at SAGE Truck Driving School, yells encouragem­ent.

Much of the nation’s $23 trillion economy rides on the back of trucks such as this one. But as the pandemic upends consumer spending habits, there has never been a bigger mismatch between the mountain of freight that needs to be hauled around the country and the number of truckers willing to do the hauling.

Schools such as SAGE are essential to satisfying the economy’s appetite for drivers. Each year, transport companies replace nine out of every 10 long-haul truckers, after they sour on an exhausting job that keeps them away from home for weeks at a time.

Trucker turnover is drawing attention from the White House. Administra­tion officials Thursday announced steps aimed at bolstering the ranks of the nation’s roughly 444,000 long-distance truck drivers, down about 25,000 since early 2019, including an expansion of paid apprentice­ships and efforts to tap military veterans.

The industry’s urgent need for reinforcem­ents helps explain why the Hanlons today are holding forth on a sloping asphalt lot behind a local community college. Their pupils include an 18-year-old who still has braces on his teeth; a husband-and-wife team hoping to pay off $60,000 in student loans; and an aspiring entreprene­ur who sees trucking as a way to make his fortune.

Turning such untrained talent into drivers who can safely command a 40-ton load at highway speeds takes four to six weeks of classroom instructio­n, observatio­n and practice behind the wheel.

In February, the federal government for the first time will begin requiring all new commercial driver license applicants be trained in a registered facility using a standard curriculum.

That requiremen­t will be good for business at SAGE — which charges about $5,000 in tuition — but it could aggravate the driver shortage. Small carriers, which often do their own training, and those in rural areas where there may be few approved instructor­s, fear the regulation will make hiring more cumbersome.

“This is going to further negatively impact an already crippled supply chain,” said Kelly Krapu, director of safety for TrueNorth Compliance Services in West Fargo, N.D.

The Department of Transporta­tion disputes that view and promises regulators will work with industry representa­tives to ensure a smooth process.

The government edict comes as driving schools scramble to make up for pandemic closures. SAGE last year fell 20 percent short of its typical output of 4,000 new drivers, said Chris Thropp, the company’s president.

“We’re very busy right now at the vast majority of our schools,” said Thropp, 61, a former corporate attorney who joined SAGE nearly a quarter century ago. “We’ve definitely seen an uptick in interest.”

The American Trucking Associatio­ns, which represents the industry’s largest carriers, says the United States has a shortage of 80,000 truck drivers. Bob Costello, ATA’s chief economist, blames a number of factors, including an aging workforce and a new federal database that bars truckers with drug and alcohol violations.

“There is no one reason for the driver shortage, which means there is no one solution,” he said.

An independen­t group, the Owner-Operator Independen­t Drivers Associatio­n, says the real problems are long-distance trucking’s unappealin­g lifestyle and inadequate compensati­on. Drivers spend weeks away from their families, often struggle to find a place to stop for the night or use the bathroom, and waste several hours each day idling in lines.

“If that time was cut in half, all of those drivers would be that [much] more productive, and you might not need more trucks on the road,” said Todd Spencer, the associatio­n’s president.

Adjusted for inflation, longhaul drivers’ wages are virtually unchanged since 1990, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Trucking also faces stiff competitio­n for workers from warehouses and distributi­on centers.

“It’s never been more difficult than it is today to find and attract and retain qualified drivers,” John Roberts III, chief executive of J.B. Hunt Transport Services, one of the nation’s largest freight companies, told investors this fall.

The $1 trillion infrastruc­ture legislatio­n President Joe Biden signed last month includes a pilot apprentice­ship program that would, for the first time, allow drivers as young as 18 to drive tractor trailers across state lines.

Despite the wage plateau, trucking enjoys a reputation as a good-paying blue-collar occupation. Billboards along the nearby Lehigh Valley Thruway advertise truck driving jobs for $31 per hour, plus signing bonus.

Trucking companies hiked inflation-adjusted pay by about 10 percent during the pandemic, as consumers splurged and demand to move goods jumped, according to the BLS. Long-distance truckers earn an average of nearly $60,000.

Through the first half of this year, states issued a monthly average of roughly 50,000 new licenses, 14 percent higher than the pre-pandemic rate.

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