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View Full Version : That truck driver you flipped off? Let me tell you his story.



Sasha
5th August 2011, 12:18
That truck driver you flipped off? Let me tell you his story.


Article by: DAN HANSON
Updated: August 3, 2011 - 9:53 AM



Let me tell you a little about the truck driver you just flipped off because he was passing another truck, and you had to cancel the cruise control and slow down until he completed the pass and moved back over.
His truck is governed to 68 miles an hour, because the company he leases it from believes it keeps him and the public and the equipment safer.
The truck he passed was probably running under 65 mph to conserve fuel. You see, the best these trucks do for fuel economy is about 8 miles per gallon. With fuel at almost $4 per gallon -- well, you do the math. And, yes, that driver pays for his own fuel.
He needs to be 1,014 miles from where he loaded in two days. And he can't fudge his federally mandated driver log, because he no longer does it on paper; he is logged electronically.
He can drive 11 hours in a 14-hour period; then he must take a 10-hour break. And considering that the shipper where he loaded held him up for five hours because it is understaffed, he now needs to run without stopping for lunch and dinner breaks.
If he misses his delivery appointment, he will be rescheduled for the next day, because the receiver has booked its docks solid (and has cut staff to a minimum). That means the driver sits, losing 500-plus miles for the week.
Which means his profit will be cut, and he will take less money home to his family. Most of these guys are gone 10 days, and home for a day and a half, and take home an average of $500 a week if everything goes well.
You can't tell by looking at him, but two hours ago he took a call informing him that his only sister was involved in a car accident, and though everything possible was done to save her, she died. They had flown her to a trauma hospital in Detroit, but it was too late.
He hadn't seen her since last Christmas, but they talked on the phone every week. The load he is pulling is going to Atlanta, and he will probably not be able to get to the funeral.
His dispatcher will do everything possible to get him there, but the chances are slim. So he has hardly noticed your displeasure at having to slow down for him. It's not that he doesn't care; he's just numb.
Everything you buy at the store and everything you order online moves by truck. Planes and trains can't get it to your house or grocery store. We are dependent on trucks to move product from the airport and the rail yards to the stores and our homes.
Every day, experienced and qualified drivers give it up because the government, the traffic and the greedy companies involved in trucking have drained their enthusiasm for this life.
They take a job at a factory if they can find it, and are replaced by an inexperienced youngster dreaming of the open road. This inexperience leads to late deliveries, causing shortages and higher prices at the store, and crashes that lead to unnecessary deaths.
It is even possible that is what led to the death of this driver's sister.
This is a true story; it happened last week. The driver's name is Harold, and I am his dispatcher.
Dan Hanson, of Belle Plaine, Minn., is a fleet manager.




source: http://www.startribune.com/opinion/otherviews/126619568.html

Revolutionair
5th August 2011, 12:38
Wow. :(

noble brown
7th August 2011, 20:22
That was some real shit. Thx

Jimmie Higgins
8th August 2011, 11:40
I feel like there used to be a lot more general solidarity between most workers and truck drivers. Another casualty of the low level of struggle I guess. I don't know if this is true, but I think I read somewhere that shipping is the single largest employing position in the US and Canada.

At any rate, any drive on a California highway will show you that truck driving is a potentially powerful position in class struggle. They could shut down the economy pretty quick which is probably why they are kept so atomized these days.

Manic Impressive
8th August 2011, 14:49
I've recently become addicted to the show Ice Road truckers gotta be one of the toughest jobs around. I'd imagine that $500 a week is fairly good money but considering the amount of hours they put in I bet the hourly rate doesn't look so good.
_cThdbEEwh0
but lol @ US petrol prices £5.905 per Gallon in the UK

svenne
8th August 2011, 18:31
For example, Beverly Silver in her brilliant little piece Forces of Labor, placed the transport sector as a possible place where the structural power of the working class is incredibly strong, and may be even stronger in the future. It's a good and somewhat short book anyway, which is a good read if you want to have a book about todays situation. Here's a short introduction to the book, from the german group Wildcat: http://libcom.org/library/wildcat-preface-beverly-silver-forces-of-labor
Anyway, the book has had a somehwat surprisingly big impact on the swedish (broad) autonomist movement, with at least one bigger two day seminar, where it was discussed. I'm pretty much seeing it as a must read if you're gonna call yourself a revolutionary in the 21st century. Also: Jimmie Higgins was right, and that's why i recommended the book.

¿Que?
8th August 2011, 18:36
Sorry I don't buy that 68mph thing. I generally drive the speed limit on the highway, about 70mph and these guys pass me all the time. Scary too, because I know they're being overworked, and driving one of those things can't be easy or fun, especially sleep deprived.

Psy
8th August 2011, 22:12
I feel like there used to be a lot more general solidarity between most workers and truck drivers. Another casualty of the low level of struggle I guess. I don't know if this is true, but I think I read somewhere that shipping is the single largest employing position in the US and Canada.

At any rate, any drive on a California highway will show you that truck driving is a potentially powerful position in class struggle. They could shut down the economy pretty quick which is probably why they are kept so atomized these days.
Long distance trucking has been heavily subsidized to get around the unionization in railways and history of militancy world wide.

ds4cHgzN-S8

What is need is for truckers to unionize and learn from struggles of railway workers.

Commissar Rykov
8th August 2011, 22:16
Sorry I don't buy that 68mph thing. I generally drive the speed limit on the highway, about 70mph and these guys pass me all the time. Scary too, because I know they're being overworked, and driving one of those things can't be easy or fun, especially sleep deprived.
I was about to say the same I saw one guy driving 90+ in the rain.

Jimmie Higgins
9th August 2011, 09:54
Sorry I don't buy that 68mph thing. I generally drive the speed limit on the highway, about 70mph and these guys pass me all the time. Scary too, because I know they're being overworked, and driving one of those things can't be easy or fun, especially sleep deprived.

In Cali they play it by the rules the vast majority of the time. It's rare to see a trucker doing anything all that crazy or going super-fast - most people here complain that they are too slow. Cops seem to target them though - I don't know if they are pulling them over for traffic violations or if they just randomly check for contraband or whatnot.

I used to drive the 5 from LA to SF at least once a month and I'd drive overnight, probably be stoned out of my mind for most of the drive (it passes the time really nicely) and followed trucks while on cruise control. Slow but pleasant with some good music and frequent stops for gas station junk food and pep pills. Drivers are usually happy to talk to you too when you stop somewhere at night.

Come to think of it, I might not mind being a trucker if it weren't for the rough hours and everything in the OP.