USA TODAY US Edition

Bills aim to stop exploitati­on of port truckers

Federal action in response to USA TODAY Network investigat­ion

- Brett Murphy

House Democrats will introduce two federal bills Thursday aimed at cracking down on port trucking companies that have for years exploited their workforce with lease-to-own contracts that forced drivers to work around the clock for pay that sometimes dipped to pennies on the hour.

The measures come in response to a USA TODAY Network investigat­ion that revealed truckers were working as modern-day indentured servants while hauling goods for America’s retail giants.

The Port Drivers’ Bill of Rights Act of 2017 lays out basic work standards for port truckers, including fair pay, protection under labor laws, and freedom from “exploitati­ve truck lease or rental arrangemen­ts,” according to a draft obtained by USA TODAY Network.

“For truck drivers to be treated fairly and paid fairly,” said Grace Napolitano, D-Calif., one of the eight bill sponsors, “that’s a no-brainer.”

“We thought [the companies] would do it without legislatio­n, but that hasn’t happened,” she said. “So we had to put it in writing.”

The proposed bill would also require federal regulators to deploy a task force to ports to investigat­e companies, analyze lease contracts and weed out employers taking advantage of their workers.

The bill marks the first federal attempt to protect port truckers and reign in their employers since California’s clean air initiative took hold five years ago. That law banned aging big rigs from the nation’s two largest ports, both in the Los Angeles area. Companies that move nearly half of America’s imports off the docks faced the prospect of buying 16,000 new trucks.

As the Network first reported in June, dozens of trucking companies in southern California avoided paying for new trucks by forcing their independen­t drivers into company-sponsored leaseto-own programs.

Drivers found themselves working as much as 20 hours a day for wages that sometimes dropped to pennies per hour after expenses. Some drivers worked a full week only to owe their boss money on payday.

Over the past year, the federal government has been rolling back regulation of the trucking industry. Lawmakers repealed safety rules aimed at keeping tired truckers off the highway in December. And last month Trump’s administra­tion withdrew a proposed requiremen­t to screen truck drivers for sleep disorders.

But Democrats hope to present these new initiative­s as workerfrie­ndly reforms that will garner bipartisan support.

The Clean Ports Act of 2017, a second bill announced Thursday, aims to loosen federal restrictio­ns preventing cities from regulating port trucking companies. Retail companies and their trade groups have spent millions successful­ly lobbying to stop similar reforms in the past.

The trucking industry has long opposed local regulation that could invite changes to the independen­t contractor business.

Weston LaBar, president of the Harbor Trucking Associatio­n, warned against requiring companies to use employees instead of independen­t truckers, which he said could prevent hiring and stunt job growth. The American Trucking Associatio­n successful­ly sued the city of Los Angeles to prevent such a mandate in 2013.

“For truck drivers to be treated fairly and paid fairly, that’s a no-brainer.” Grace Napolitano, D-Calif.

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