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ELD Mandate Driving Up Prices On All Consumer Goods

A safety law that truckers hate is driving up prices for consumers on everything from groceries to Amazon Prime. Here’s what you need to know about it.

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Some drivers miss the days of paper logs over today’s electronic devices. Jack Taylor/Getty Images
  • In 2018, the trucking industry went through an upheaval because of the implementation of the electronic logging device mandate.
  • The ELD mandate enforces the hours of service law, which how much truck drivers can drive and when. They cannot drive for more than 11 hours during a 14-hour period.
  • Many truck drivers have told Business Insider that they hate ELDs, which make their jobs too inflexible. Industry experts say the law helps promote safety.
  • The ELD mandate has also helped make products more expensivefor regular consumers.

At the end of 2017, Dalton Jackson’s job suddenly became unbearable.

“Everything got worse due to the ELD law enforcement in December,” Jackson, who lives in Chestertown, Maryland, told Business Insider in May 2018.

The 57-year-old has been trucking for 18 years. He’s one of many long-haul truckers who have told Business Insider that the electronic logging device mandate made their jobs hauling freight more dangerous and decreased their pay in 2018.

While America’s 1.8 million tractor-trailer truck drivers are quite aware of what ELDs are, few consumers understand how the ELD mandate has affected their own lives this year.

Here are some common questions about the safety law, and how it’s played out for drivers, industry leaders, and Americans who aren’t in trucking:

What is an electronic logging device (ELD)?

Electronic logging devices (usually called ELDs or E-logs) record driving hours by monitoring a vehicle’s engine.

Using that, companies or truckers can ensure they’re following the hours of service (HOS) law, which mandates how much a driver can work in a day. (We’ll explain that next.)

Some companies used ELDs for years.

Others only started in December 2017, when the ELD rule came into effect under a larger act passed by former President Barack Obama in 2012. Called MAP-21, the act was the first highway legislation with long-term provisions since 2005.

Previously, truckers may have logged their hours by hand with paper logs.

 

What is the hours of service (HOS) law?

The ELD by its own merely logs how much a driver has been working. What gives the ELD mandate teeth is the hours of service (HOS) law.

Under HOS, truckers may drive a maximum of 11 hours in a consecutive on-duty window of 14 hours. After that, they must take 10 consecutive hours off-duty.

They must also take a 30-minute break at some point in that 14-hour window. (The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration is considering changing that part of the law.)

These stipulations ensure drivers do not become exhausted and therefore more prone to accidents. In 2016, 4,440 large trucks and buses were involved in fatal crashes.

What is the ELD mandate?

The HOS law has existed since the federal government first started regulating trucking in 1938. But, the only way to ensure that drivers were following HOS was to review their paper logs, which are easily fabricated. As a result, many truckers could lie about their hours and work more than legally allowed.

The ELD mandate required that most trucks implement logging devices by December 2017. This enforces the HOS law in an unprecedented manner.

The law is one of many provisions in a larger act passed by former President Barack Obama in 2012.

 

How does the ELD mandate affect consumers?

How does the ELD mandate affect consumers?
Rick T. Wilking/Getty Images

The US was short some 36,500 drivers in 2016, according to a 2017 report by the American Trucking Association (ATA).

The ongoing truck driver shortage became more pronounced in 2018 following the implementation of ELDs. The law “has drastically limited the flexibility drivers can build into their activity and tightened the constraints that diminish their operating efficiency,” Andrew Lynch, the co-founder and president of Zipline Logistics, told Business Insider.

As a result, retailers have been more pressed than ever to find trucks to deliver their freightIn June 2018, there were 9.9 van loads to every available truck, compared to 5.6 in June 2017.

To bid for drivers, shippers have upped their freight rates to record highs. Trucking companies have increased wages to recruit more and take advantage of this booming time in the freight world.

For the end consumer, prices have gone up for many everyday products. Hormel Foods, which owns Skippy, Muscle Milk, and other food brands, General Mills, the owner of brands like Häagen-Dazs, and Betty Crocker, and Tyson Foods all said earlier this yearthat they raised some of their prices to offset high shipping costs.

When Amazon increased the price of a Prime membership in April, they attributed the soar of shipping costs in Q1: a 38% increase year-over-year.

PepsiCo, Mondelez, Procter & Gamble, and other retailers plan to hike up prices further yet due to the dearth of trucking capacity.

 

Why do truckers hate the ELD mandate?

Why do truckers hate the ELD mandate?
Bonita R. Cheshier/Shutterstock

ELDs and HOS limit drivers to a maximum of 11 hours driving in a consecutive, 14-hour block. But that doesn’t line up with the reality of a trucker’s day.

Almost 63% of truck drivers say they wait three hours or more every time they’re at a shipping dock. So, their 14-hour time block for making money could be quickly used up while not driving.

Drivers are paid by the mile, not per hour. So, some drivers have told Business Insider that they’ve seen their weekly pay sink due to the new time limits.

The 14-hour time block also forces drivers to re-configure their sleep schedule and means that drivers crowd truck stops at the same times every day, meaning there’s less parking for others.

 

Who supports the ELD mandate?

Who supports the ELD mandate?
American Trucking Associations President and CEO Chris Spear (R), with President Donald Trump (2nd L), Vice President Mike Pence (3rd L) and Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Seema Verma (L)
Alex Wong/Getty Images

Small fleet owners like those represented in the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association (OOIDA) contested the ELD mandate in Congress last winter.

Politicians on both sides of the aisle supported the mandate, along with large companies represented in the American Trucking Associations.

One key reason: Fatigued driving leads to car crashes. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration estimated in 2014 that universally-mandated ELDs could prevent up to 1,714 crashes, 522 injuries, and 24 deaths each year.

The ELDs also allow trucking, a notoriously sluggish industry when it comes to technology, to benefit from data and insights that aren’t available on a paper log.

For instance, the device allows drivers and their employers to track how long they’ve been waiting at a shipping dock, and ensure that the driver is paid for the time spent at the dock. (Right now, only 3%of drivers kept waiting at shipping docks said they usually received payment from the shipping companies.)

 

Will anything change with the ELD mandate?

Will anything change with the ELD mandate?
Tetona Dunlap/AP

ELDs are likely to stay. But the leaders of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Association (FMCSA), which enforces the road laws, have pledged to overhaul the HOS law to be more accommodating to truck drivers.

“We’re moving as quickly as possible to reform hours of service,” FMCSA Chief Administrator Ray Martinez said at a recent public hearing.

The proposed changes include revising the expanding 14-hour workday in case of adverse driving conditions and eliminating the mandatory 30-minute break, which often prove redundant when drivers already spend hours of their time on “break” while waiting for freight.

These rules could ease some of the burdens of the unpopular ELD law, while ensuring roads are safe.

“A lot of drivers say they’re against ELDs, but I think they’re more against the HOS law than the ELDs themselves,” Jason Poat, who owns a small trucking fleet in Wingo, Kentucky, told Business Insider.

Shipping companies want Congress to increase shipping truck size – The Hill

The shipping industry is pushing Congress to increase the size of some shipping trucks, which could affect the nation’s highways, consumers and e-commerce.

Shipping companies like FedEx, UPS and Amazon say allowing so-called twin 33s, a configuration that allows trucks to haul two connected 33-foot trailers, would help increase shipping capacity and lower costs when online sales are booming. Current law limits the trucks to two 28-foot trailers.

But opponents worry the new regulation could be a safety hazard, and opposition from trucking unions and railroad interests have succeeded in delaying changes to existing law.

“These trucks would be at least 84 feet long, and we know that current double trailer trucks have an 11 percent higher fatal crash rate than single trailer trucks,” said Catherine Chase, president of Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety, a road safety advocacy group.

Chase said double trailers are more difficult for drivers to maneuver because the second trailer is more likely to swerve out of its lane and more difficult for drivers to see around with their mirrors.

Truck-related fatalities rose 9 percent in 2017, reaching their highest levels since 2007, she noted. That affects regular drivers as well; when trucks collide with passenger vehicles, nearly every fatality is among the passenger vehicles.

Chase added that many of the nation’s roads and bridges would require improvements to handle an uptick in bigger, heavier trucks.

Sen. Roger WickerRoger Frederick WickerSenate Republicans demand Google hand over memo advising it to hide data vulnerability Shipping companies want Congress to increase shipping truck size Ricin attacks will continue MORE (R-Miss.) said that he opposed twin 33s on safety grounds.

“The overwhelming majority of law enforcement officers and other independent safety advocates I have spoken to have expressed significant concerns over these trucks, which are longer than an eight-story building is tall,” Wicker, whose state includes some of the rail interests that oppose the provision, wrote in a letter to The Wall Street Journal.

Wicker cited a Department of Transportation study showing that larger trucks take longer to stop than the current trucks on the road.

Advocates of the longer trucks say that such arguments are superfluous.

“Twin 33s, without adding any weight, can do 18 percent more work with just one truck than an existing set of twin 28s,” said Randy Mullett, executive director for Americans for Modern Transportation, a coalition of shippers and carriers pushing for the new provision.

Adding more capacity to existing trucks, he argued, will lead to fewer trucks on the road, and thus fewer accidents.

Shippers say that the current truck configurations for sending parcels fill up because of bulk, well before they reach the 80,000-pound legal weight limit. The group is not looking to increase weight limits for the longer trucks, he added, meaning that even an increase in weight would fall under current limits.

Shipping groups say that the huge spike in online shopping has made it tougher to efficiently fulfill orders using the so-called less than truckload trucking options available, as opposed to the familiar longer, single-trailer full truckload trailers that tend to transport similar goods to big box stores or distribution centers.

“We’re changing the way we buy as American consumers, and it’s dramatically changed the way we ship small packages,” said Mullett, adding that freight volumes are projected to grow 40 percent in the next three decades.

“We’ve got a lot of areas in the country that are congested. In many areas they’re pretty much maxed out,” he continued.

Increased efficiency, he said, would bring down the cost for consumers while also boosting profits for shippers.

–This report was updated on Oct. 11 at 7:50 a.m.