In The News
ATA Releases Driver Shortage Analysis Paper
American Trucking Associations released an analysis of the shortage of
truck drivers, concluding that the current shortage is acute and limited
primarily to the truckload sector of the industry; but that long-term
trends could cause the shortage to explode in the next decade.
"Carriers and fleet executives have begun expressing concern about their
ability to identify and hire qualified professional drivers," ATA Chief
Economist Bob Costello said. "With this report, we tried to identify
where the impacts were being felt the most, why the shortage is
increasingly worrisome and why it has the potential to get worse."
In the paper, ATA said that while private fleets and less-than-truckload
carriers may have some difficulty hiring drivers, the bulk of the
shortage was confined to long-haul, over-the-road truckload carriers.
"ATA estimates the current shortage of drivers to be in the 20,000 to
25,000 range in the for-hire truckload market...on a base of roughly
750,000 trucks," the report said, adding that if current trends
continue, the shortage has the potential to grow to 239,000 over the
next decade.
In addition to industry growth, retirements and drivers voluntarily
changing careers, ATA believes certain government regulations - chiefly
the yet-to-be-implemented hours-of-service changes and the federal
government's driver and carrier oversight program: Compliance, Safety,
Accountability - will exacerbate the driver shortage, while the
industry's transition to electronic logging is unlikely to have a
significant impact.
"On average, trucking will need to recruit nearly 100,000 new drivers
every year to keep up with demand for drivers," Costello said, "with
nearly two-thirds of the need coming from industry growth and
retirements."
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