Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Kansas City, Kansas City Here I Come-Part II Maintenance and Rail Operations

Kansas City Terminal  Maintenance Team-Matt Peterson, Don Kelso, Toby Lightfoot, join our operators Ryan Ardary and Chad Dewey.   Toby is typically the first person to see our drivers when they visit the Kansas City shop.  He does a great job of making our drivers feel welcome. 
Our Kansas City shop has 8 tractor and 8 trailer bays

400 containers are stacked in Kansas City at the rail yard.  Darrin Miller spent a good amount of time showing Chad and Ryan the ropes in intermodal. 
We have 4 drivers out of Kansas City that are certified to run this crane and move containers.  Our containers are able to be stacked 5 high. 

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Kansas City, Kansas City Here I Come-Part I Terminal Operations

Chad Dewey and Ryan Ardary made a trip to the greater Kansas City area and took an enterprise glance at our presence in all 4 divisions.  Enjoy this deep dive into the offerings of our company and our people. 
 The KK terminal at 9001 NE Birmingham.  This is a full service terminal.
Ryan getting a taste of the "field."  It is a far cry from the 4 walls of our corporate office.

Chad ran into Norman Dixon from Haltom City, Texas.  Norman told him that Mark Bowen was a great Fleet Manager to work with every day.  Norman is one of our finest SW Net drivers.  

Ryan caught up with Mathew Johnson from Alexandria, LA in the Kansas City break room.  Mathew is a Will-Run driver that stays out 12 weeks at a time.  He says he does this time off pattern so he always gets a full week off.  He is single, so he says that the job currently fits him perfect.

Thursday, March 19, 2015

Real Talk

We need to show the good, the bad, and the ugly on this blog.  It is a blog that was always intended to change the status quo.  I received this e-mail today about our current detention pay program and his perception of the communication.  He doesn't even mention the rate of pay and the fact that we wait until the 4th hour to start the compensation clock.  His items all relate to communication.

Mr. Rogers,
 
Recently I've been hearing the biggest gripe about detention pay and how drivers including myself have no clue if we even are getting it. I have called in my times on several loads and never hear more.  The other drivers have had the same experience. I don't know if you're aware that according to the people we call the times in to, they don't get to see the obc messages to detention center.  It's sad to hear our drivers griping out loud and scaring prospective recruits. If there was some way a notification of detention pay could come over to drivers it would be great. Thank you for allowing me to message you.
 
We can fix this, can't we? 
 

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Driver Ride Along-David Groves Midwest Region

 
 
Midwest Fleet Manager David Groves had the pleasure of riding to Clorox in Rogers, AR for a pick up with his driver Michael Dennison. As you can tell by the pictures, Michael kept David pretty busy!

 

Larkin Talks Labor


If you’ve been paying attention to any of the trucking industry economists in the last two years, you’ve heard a cadence of good news: Manufacturing is making a steady comeback, construction and housing starts are up (albeit from dreadful depths), and inventories remain near historic lows. All these indicators obviously are good news for carriers, and fleets have capitalized with stronger pricing power and the desire to expand.

But a rapid growth in carrier size hasn’t materialized, thanks in large part to the driver shortage that has curtailed any desires to expand. Fleets could add power units, but they couldn’t find anyone to fill those seats.

As it turns out, the driver shortage may not be anything that the trucking industry has the power to directly control. John Larkin, managing director and head of Transportation Capital Markets Research for Stifel, Nicolaus and Company, told attendees at the Truckload Carriers Association’s 77th Annual Convention in Orlando this month that the labor force participation rate is at its lowest level since 1970.

The cause, said Larkin, is a mix of baby boomers retiring, discouraged workers and lack of opportunity. But the biggest issue is the rapid increase of entitlement programs in the last six years.
“Many trucking companies tell me that the person they are competing with for drivers isn’t other carriers, it’s the welfare state,” said Larkin. “Some of that is the function of the social welfare net that some people find it more desirable to sit on the couch and max out on welfare payments, food stamps and unemployment benefits rather than engage in an honorable profession like trucking.”

While the unemployment rate in the United States sits at 5.5 percent, well below the 10 percent it reached in October 2009 during the Great Recession, Larkin said when you factor in the under-employed (defined as part-time workers that would prefer a full-time job and over-qualified workers working menial jobs) the true unemployment rate is roughly 11 percent.

Noting that healthcare and the leisure & hospitality industries have the strongest job growth going back to August 2008, other industries such as construction and manufacturing have suffered. Larkin said there are about 2 million blue-collar jobs available in the United States. “The reality is many people that are unemployed can’t qualify for blue-collar jobs because they can’t pass a drug test or meet other minimum criteria,” said Larkin. “It isn’t a trucking-only problem that we have in the United States, the jobs are out there.”

Larkin added that during the Great Recession 22 percent of the jobs lost were low-paying jobs, but as we’ve recovered, 44 percent of new job creation are lower-paying, low-benefit jobs.
If some estimates hold true that the trucking industry will face a mammoth shortage of 250,000 drivers by 2020, the problem only is exacerbated. The silver lining, said Larkin, is that it should create a positive pricing environment.

Stifel analysts currently project a 3 to 5 percent increase in freight rates this year overall. A myriad of regulatory pressures, including hours of service changes, electronic log mandate, Compliance Safety Accountability, drug testing and increased driver training requirements could create the “mother of all capacity crunches” sometime in 2017 and 2019, said Larkin, adding, “That could be exciting for everyone in the room.”

Constrained capacity could be so bad however that Larkin said it could affect the growth of the overall U.S. economy, calling that scenario “worrisome.”

“But it could also lead to more free thinking by Congress that perhaps would open up some possibilities for more productivity, including getting young driver trainees into the system before they turn 21 years old so we don’t lose all these high school graduates to other industries,” said Larkin.

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Blogger Respect


One of our drivers has set up his own blog.  Check out the third paragraph and his comment about the productivity bonus.  Good Stuff!

Saturday, March 14, 2015

One Thousand

Today we reached a nice achievement.  We officially reached 1,000 asset tractors in our Eastern Network.  This fleet size was a team effort.  From CDP, Orientation Centers/Safety, On-boarding Managers, Fleet Managers, Load Planners, and Leadership, it has taken a village to help us grow from 775 asset tractors last September to our current fleet size of 1,000.    
 
We don't have the luxury of resting on our laurels.  More capacity is expected and needed for our customers.  Our Bigger Truck helped us achieve our growth.  Our philosophy of treating our drivers with respect will be the secret to us retaining our Professional Drivers.