Package carriers, warehouse operators and other logistics companies are cutting payrolls as the need to ship goods decreases while the U.S. economy “pivots toward spending on services.” According to preliminary figures released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, “freight and parcel carriers cut more than 14,000 jobs from May to June.” This drop has been par for the course following the massive surge in hiring throughout the pandemic “when strong e-commerce growth triggered a rush to expand supply chains from shipping docks to distribution centers.” Read more…
Author Archives: jpeters
AFTER FLOODING THE MARKET DURING COVID, DRIVERS NOW STRUGGLING TO PAY BILLS
With so many consumers snatching up goods for their pandemic lifestyles, many people took advantage of the snarled supply chains by joining the truck driving industry. One such person, Arnesha Barron, “saw a moment to make her dream of starting her own trucking company come true.” But what was first an optimistic bet on the COVID trucking boom, the wager soon became a more troubling realization. Read more…
TRUCKER JOB EMPLOYMENT MOVES UP AND DOWN IN THE SAME MONTH
In the most recent monthly Bureau Labor Statistics report, the number of truck transportation jobs vacillated in what could only be described as “an up-and-down affair.” In June, total jobs in the truck transportation sector “declined by 200 jobs from May, according to the BLS, coming in at 1,609,700 jobs on a seasonally adjusted basis.” But this number was an adjusted figure for May, “which was an increase of 700 jobs from the initial May employment report.” The April jobs went on to be revised upward by 100 jobs as well. Read more…
140 LOGISTIC JOBS COMING TO ANN ARBOR
Governor Gretchen Whitmer and the Michigan Economic Development organization announced that RXO Corporate Solutions, LLC. is expanding its operations into Ann Arbor, bringing over 140 jobs with their upcoming expansion. RXO Corporate Solutions, LLC. is a premier logistics provider that offers transportation solutions . Read more…
SUPREME COURT RULES AGAINST TRUCK DRIVERS
The Supreme Court ruled against unionized drivers “in a dispute about the pressure that organized labor can exert during a strike,” specifically “against unionized drivers who walked off the job with their trucks full of wet concrete.” Both liberal and conservative justices united in the decision, with lone dissenter, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, claiming “the ruling would hinder the development of labor law and ‘erode the right to strike.’” Read more…
NEW SURVEY REVEALS DECLINE IN NUMBER OF PEOPLE SEEKING TRUCK DRIVING JOBS
The Conversion Interactive Agency and People Data Analytics (PDA) conducted a new survey that has shed light on the current state of truck driving jobs and how today’s market conditions are affecting drivers. Key takeaways include the fact that “truck driver job seekers have decreased since the Fall 2022 Driver Survey,” with this number being down 6% from the previous Fall survey, and a little over 3% from the Spring Survey. The survey goes on to add that “33.8% of drivers that stated they are currently looking for a truck driving job is the lowest since Conversion and PDA began asking this question in the Spring of 2021.” Read more…
BACK OFFICE TRUCKING JOBS STILL IN DEMAND
There is currently an ongoing demand for both truck drivers and back-office operations staff that supports them, despite the current freight recession. According to a recent article by Hilary Daninhirsch of Transport Topics, companies and brokerages are continuing to “require teams of dispatchers, load planners, logistics coordinators, and sales and administrative staff to manage their operations.” The article goes on to note how “trucking companies and brokerages are often behind the hiring curve for back-office and support staff, in part due to market variability.” Read more…
MANITOBA TO PROMOTE TRUCKING JOBS AND SUPPORT TRAINING
The MTA will be given close to $400,000 in yearly funding from the Manitoba government over the next four years to help promote residents about jobs in the trucking industry, and support workforce training for those already in trucking. Aaron Dolyniuk, MTA executive director, said in a statement: “Manitoba’s trucking industry needs to bring 4,300 drivers over the next four years into the industry to meet demand. That means we need to recruit, train, and retain a new driver in Manitoba every eight hours, every day, for the next four years,” Read more…
LOGISTICS FIRM XPO CUTTING JOBS
Logistics company XPO Inc is cutting jobs, even as “it surpassed Wall Street targets for first quarter adjusted profits” due to cost controls for waning freight demand. Many of XPO customers, such as Ford Motor Co, General Electric Co and Caterpillar Inc, have met with “a decline in shipments as high inflation and fears of an impending recession make consumers wary about spending.” – Read More
HOUSE SUBCOMMITTEE HEARS TESTIMONY ON TRUCKER ISSUES
The House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure’s Subcommittee on Highways and Transit heard testimony recently from several leaders in the trucking industry, including Lewie Pugh, executive vice president of the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association, Anne Reinke, president and chief executive officer of the Transportation Intermediaries Association, David Fialkov, executive vice president for Government Affairs of NATSO, and Cole Scandaglia, senior legislative representative and policy advisor of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. Some of the issues included “the need to attract younger drivers to the profession” and the importance of providing adequate truck parking. Read more…