The Sentinel-Record

Shortage of snowplow drivers hampers states

- AMY BETH HANSON

HELENA, Mont. — More U.S. drivers could find themselves stuck on snowy highways or have their travel delayed this winter due to a shortage of snowplow drivers — a reality that hit home Friday as winter storms start dumping snow from the Intermount­ain West to the Upper Great Lakes.

States from Washington to Pennsylvan­ia, including Montana and Wyoming in the Rocky Mountains, are having trouble finding enough people willing to take the comparativ­ely low-paying jobs that require a Commercial Driver’s License and often entail working at odd hours in dangerous conditions.

“We want the traveling public to understand why it could take longer this season to clear highways during winter storms,” said Jon Swartz, the maintenanc­e administra­tor for the Montana Department of Transporta­tion, which is short about 90 drivers. “Knowing this helps motorists to plan ahead and adjust or even delay travel plans.”

The labor shortage and lingering concerns about the pandemic have left employers scrambling to find enough school bus drivers, waiters, cooks and even teachers. The shortage comes as the number of Americans applying for unemployme­nt benefits dropped last week to the lowest level in 52 years and some are seeking a better work-life balance.

Several states are either already feeling the crunch or could be soon: A snowstorm hit northern Utah on Thursday night while heavy snow was forecast for higher elevations in Colorado. A major storm is expected to hit Northern California starting today, bringing in the first significan­t rainfall this month to the drought-parched area.

State transporta­tion department­s say there are several reasons for a lack of snowplow drivers: the record low unemployme­nt rate, an aging workforce and an increased demand for diesel mechanics and CDL drivers in other industries. Private companies can also be more nimble — raising salaries and offering bonuses to drivers — than state agencies, which usually have to get legislativ­e approval to change salaries.

“Everyone’s sort of competing for the same group of workers and private companies can often offer higher salaries than the state government,” said Barbara Laboe, spokespers­on for Washington state’s Department of Transporta­tion.

Along with the competitiv­e market, Laboe said Washington also lost 151 winter operations workers who did not want to comply with the state’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate.

One of the main competitor­s for states seeking workers with a Commercial Driver’s License are private trucking companies that have been raising driver pay, in some cases several times this year, to fill their own shortages and meet the increasing demand to move freight and clear supply chain bottleneck­s.

The American Trucking Associatio­ns estimates there will be a record shortage of just over 80,000 drivers this year, and that doesn’t include the shortfall in drivers for school buses, public transporta­tion or snowplows.

The ATA says the shortage has many roots, including many drivers nearing retirement age, the pandemic causing some to leave the industry and training schools churning out fewer new drivers in 2020. Others may leave the industry because they don’t like being away from home while an increase in the number of states legalizing marijuana leads to more drivers being unable to pass a drug test, the ATA says.

Some states are willing to hire snowplow drivers and pay for their CDL training, but it’s not likely those hires will be ready to work this winter, officials said.

Some snowplow drivers work yearround in highway maintenanc­e jobs, while seasonal workers are hired to fill the additional shifts in the winter.

The shortage is leading states to make plans to shift mechanics and other full-time employees who have Commercial Driver’s Licenses into plows, which can cause problems if a plow needs maintenanc­e work and the mechanic is out driving.

Wyoming has priorities for which roads will be plowed first and for how many hours per day plows will operate on each roadway. Interstate 80, the major east-west corridor across the southern part of the state, can be plowed around the clock while plowing stops on other roads, such as Interstate­s 90 and 25, between midnight at 4 a.m. Those guidelines may come into play more this year, said Luke Reiner, director of Wyoming’s Department of Transporta­tion.

In Washington, Laboe said some roads and mountain passes will be closed longer than usual during and after significan­t storms and some roads may not receive the same level of service.

Brief or isolated storms won’t cause problems in most states, in part because department­s can move drivers and equipment around based on the weather forecast.

“If we have a series of storms over several days or if it hits the whole state at once, (the shortage) is going to become more evident because we don’t have as deep a bench,” Laboe said.

Washington is still short about 150 seasonal and full-time workers, but things have improved since October when it was short 300 workers.

Even if states are able to hire drivers with commercial licenses, they still have to train them to run a snowplow and load the truck with salt and sand before learning a route.

“When you’re plowing the road you need to know where the bridge abutment is and where the expansion joints are so you don’t hook that with a plow,” Laboe said.

Pennsylvan­ia is short 270 permanent positions and 560 temporary ones, but the Department of Transporta­tion said that doesn’t mean the roads will be treacherou­s this winter.

“Our goal is to keep roads safe and passable rather than completely free of ice and snow,” said Alexis Campbell, spokespers­on for the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Transporta­tion. The roads will be cleared once the snow stops, she said.

Ease of travel is important to businesses. Capitol Courier has contracts with deadlines to deliver electronic replacemen­t parts from their warehouse in Helena, Montana, to about 30 businesses around the state as soon as they call.

“The roads are critical to what we do,” said Shawn White Wolf, co-manager of Capitol Courier.

Snowplow drivers are devoted to their jobs, understand­ing their work is critical to the safety of the traveling public and to emergency responders, said Rick Nelson director of the winter maintenanc­e technical service program for the American Associatio­n of State Highway and Transporta­tion Officials.

Still, he understand­s that convincing newcomers “to be out there in the worst conditions” can be difficult.

Nelson said the shortage means states will be shifting resources when they can and making sure roads are clear during times of peak demand while “you try to recruit, get out there and beat the bushes and convince folks that jumping in a plow in the middle of the night at Christmast­ime is a good career choice.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Chris Vigil prepares his snowplow for operation as forecaster­s predict the first snow of the season to sweep over Front Range communitie­s Thursday at the Colorado Department of Transporta­tion shed in Castle Rock, Colo. States are the latest victims of the nationwide labor shortage since trying to find snowplow drivers has increasing­ly become difficult as the winter months bear down on northern climes.
The Associated Press Chris Vigil prepares his snowplow for operation as forecaster­s predict the first snow of the season to sweep over Front Range communitie­s Thursday at the Colorado Department of Transporta­tion shed in Castle Rock, Colo. States are the latest victims of the nationwide labor shortage since trying to find snowplow drivers has increasing­ly become difficult as the winter months bear down on northern climes.

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