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by Charles Walker
Feds Lengthen Truck-Driving Time, Bosses Cheer
Trucking bosses--with the active connivance of the federal
government--are set to squeeze even more sweat and profit from the
labor of their freight workers, both union and non-union. Come
January, all freight drivers may be compelled legally to stay behind
the wheel for up to 11 hours, instead of the present 10 hours, a limit
put in place in 1939. If that sounds outrageous because of the vast
increase in freight industry productivity in the past 60 years due to
modern highways and speedier and larger vehicles and trailers, think
about this: real wages for freight drivers are lower today than they
were in 1980. Teamsters' Union truckers earn nearly 20 percent less,
and non-union drivers earn more than 28 percent less than they did
almost 25 years ago, according to industry analysts.
The onset of the loss of real wages (what the dollar actually buys )
for freight workers, as well as American workers in general, coincides
with the strengthening of European and Japanese capitalist
competition, once their war-torn industries were rebuilt.
Even before the projected lengthening of driving hours, the largely
deregulated US trucking industry had rightly been compared to a
sweatshop on 18 wheels. Most often paid by the mile, drivers cram
100,000 miles or many more into a work-year. Federal statistics show
that truck drivers lead the nation in the number of occupational
illnesses and injuries requiring lost work time. While the number of
truck crashes per million miles may not be increasing, the number of
miles driven is going up, increasing the likelihood of still more
truck related injuries and deaths.
Allowing a ten percent longer driving time is just the same as
compelling it, given the dog-eat-dog competition in the industry. This
is sure to increase driver fatigue and that means greater danger on
the highways, says the Teamsters Union. The rank and file caucus,
Teamsters for a Democratic Union, agrees, noting that the change in
permitted driving hours "benefits industry profits, not highway
safety." The New York Times reported on April 25 that, "In 1990, a
National Transportation Safety Board study found that 33 percent of
crashes in which truck drivers died involved fatigue. A study done in
New York in 1997 found that 47 percent of truck drivers reported
falling asleep at the wheel some time in their driving career and that
25 percent reported dozing off at least once in the previous year." A
spokesperson for a highway safety group told the Washington Post
(April 24), "We are talking about a profession where fatigue is a
major safety problem. If airline pilots were falling asleep on the
job, I doubt we would add more time in the cockpit."
Many drivers fight the inevitable over-the-road fatigue with harmful
drugs, at the same time that they try to counter falling real wages by
driving even longer than present regulations permit. The federal
government says it relies on drivers' logbooks to monitor drivers'
hours, but it is common knowledge that drivers, even union drivers,
falsify their logbooks, and that their bosses know it. For the fast
growing number of so-called "owner-operators", who are their own
nominal bosses and who must earn a living as well as keep up their
truck payments, the last thing on their mind is to pull over for some
shut-eye when they are facing losing their investment in their truck.
With the free market regulating competition, the downward pressures on
earnings are also forcing workers to quit, a loss of over 100,000
jobs, according to some analysts.
While trucking bosses generally hailed the longer driving time, it is
clear that the bosses want still more leeway to change working
conditions. An Oklahoma trucking executive told the Times, "It's not
everything we wanted, but it is much better than we had."
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