I, too, don't like to respond to a thread without any experience, unless I disclaim any experience, and I'm doing it to learn more.
So, right now, I admit that I have no experience, that I didn't really understand a lot of the jargon (what's an o'o?), that I thought I was pretty good at math but trucker's log books have always thrown me for a loop, and that my comments are for the purpose of learning.
Here are my perceptions. I understand the disdain that experienced drivers have for 90 day wonders, but exactly where are new drivers going to get the experience they need to get a better job if JB Hunt, Schneiders and others didin't employ them right out of school? My understanding is that the drivers accept the low wages, etc., in order to get that experience, then they move out from those companies. I always considered it a sort of apprenticeship. Of course, no experienced driver worth his salt would work for them.
Bird mentioned the Schneiders trucks moving at or below the speed limits; my understanding is that because they hire inexperienced drivers, not only are the trucks governed, but they already make extensive use of GPS locators to know where there trucks are, how fast they're moving, and whether the driver is cheating on his log book.
It would seem to me that any driver that "graduated" from that system will have learned good habits. I also suspect that the GPS locators are the wave of the future and will solve many, if not most, of these problems. Many truckers already use Nextel; most of the new Nextel phones (and many others) are GPS enabled; and there are dozens of management programs out there that will keep track of the trucks. It will be harder and harder to cheat the log book, and that seems to be a Good Thing.
As far as the new regulations, while I don't have any knowledge of the industry, it would seem logical to me that rather than putting 40,000 more trucks on the road, with the 40,000 new drivers that requires, it would make more sense to put the same investment into even more new drivers and use more driver teams. If the truck keeps moving, it might even result in fewer trucks. It seems a terrible waste to me that when a driver has downtime, the truck does, too. I've had freight take two weeks to reach me, when it should have taken 5 days, because the trucker ran into log book problems and the truck sat still.
That concept would seem to me to also improve the quality of drivers, because the team could take on the concept of pilot-copilot, with less experienced drivers paired with a master driver until they are ready to be a chief driver, themselves.
I realize this would probably be more difficult for independents (aren't there an awful lot of husband/wife teams out there already, though?).
So, right now, I admit that I have no experience, that I didn't really understand a lot of the jargon (what's an o'o?), that I thought I was pretty good at math but trucker's log books have always thrown me for a loop, and that my comments are for the purpose of learning.
Here are my perceptions. I understand the disdain that experienced drivers have for 90 day wonders, but exactly where are new drivers going to get the experience they need to get a better job if JB Hunt, Schneiders and others didin't employ them right out of school? My understanding is that the drivers accept the low wages, etc., in order to get that experience, then they move out from those companies. I always considered it a sort of apprenticeship. Of course, no experienced driver worth his salt would work for them.
Bird mentioned the Schneiders trucks moving at or below the speed limits; my understanding is that because they hire inexperienced drivers, not only are the trucks governed, but they already make extensive use of GPS locators to know where there trucks are, how fast they're moving, and whether the driver is cheating on his log book.
It would seem to me that any driver that "graduated" from that system will have learned good habits. I also suspect that the GPS locators are the wave of the future and will solve many, if not most, of these problems. Many truckers already use Nextel; most of the new Nextel phones (and many others) are GPS enabled; and there are dozens of management programs out there that will keep track of the trucks. It will be harder and harder to cheat the log book, and that seems to be a Good Thing.
As far as the new regulations, while I don't have any knowledge of the industry, it would seem logical to me that rather than putting 40,000 more trucks on the road, with the 40,000 new drivers that requires, it would make more sense to put the same investment into even more new drivers and use more driver teams. If the truck keeps moving, it might even result in fewer trucks. It seems a terrible waste to me that when a driver has downtime, the truck does, too. I've had freight take two weeks to reach me, when it should have taken 5 days, because the trucker ran into log book problems and the truck sat still.
That concept would seem to me to also improve the quality of drivers, because the team could take on the concept of pilot-copilot, with less experienced drivers paired with a master driver until they are ready to be a chief driver, themselves.
I realize this would probably be more difficult for independents (aren't there an awful lot of husband/wife teams out there already, though?).