In testimony before the House Small Business Committee Subcommittee on Investigations, Oversight and Regulations, James Burg, president of James Burg Trucking Co., said proposed changes to the federal hours-of-service were unwarranted and would harm small businesses nationwide.
“These changes, if finalized, would have a profoundly negative impact on small businesses, would restrict productivity and would result in greater congestion and increased emissions,” said Burg, a member of American Trucking Associations’ board of directors, said during a June 14 hearing.
The current hours-of-service rules, which have been in effect since January 2004, made four primary changes to the regulations then in place: increasing the daily driving limit from 10 hours to 11 hours; increasing the required minimum daily rest from 8 hours to 10 hours; decreasing the number of hours on duty after which a driver may not operate a commercial motor vehicle from 15 hours to 14 hours; and allowing a driver to “reset” the weekly 60 or 70-hour on duty limits with 34 consecutive hours off duty.
Under the current proposal, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration is, among other changes, considering whether to reduce the daily driving limit from 11 hours to 10 hours and has proposed to limit the 34-hour restart provision by requiring that it include two periods from midnight to 6 a.m. and limiting its use to once per week.
Burg said that if the changes proposed by FMCSA following a court settlement with advocacy and labor groups were to take effect, his 75-truck fleet based in Warren, Mich., would need to “add additional trucks and drivers – and their corresponding expenses – simply to counter the loss in productivity.”
“By estimates, we would need to increase our retained earnings by between 20 percent and 25 percent just to maintain our current level of financial stability,” said Burg, who added that productivity losses also would “likely be felt by small business shippers, manufacturers and retailers in the form of increased costs.” ATA has said that the current rules are working and should be retained rather than changed based on political pressure.
“FMCSA’s proposed changes to the hours-of-service rules are unnecessary and unjustified,” Burg said. “Both safety and compliance have improved under the current regulations, which have been time-tested since 2003. In contrast, FMCSA’s proposal to replace these rules with an untested set of regulations leaves safety to chance.”

A balance has to be reached in regards to the HOS. What works for long-haul drivers, does not necessarily work for regional runners and vice versa. The industry took enough of a hit in the last change. Another change, as proposed, will only damage our trucking industry not improve safety. I agree it will add to congestion and emissions due to the additional trucks needed just to haul what is being moved at current. This then adds the question - where will they all park for their rest time? The new rules are not conducive to team running since sleeper birth can no longer be split in half. Safety stats have improved. Any other changes will only put the small business owner out of business. We definitely cannot afford that in this economy. There are enough "road blocks" in trucking without adding more.
If you want change, I propose that shipper and receivers learn how to better communicate. Trucking companies stop "lying" about the time they can deliver and everyone get on the same page. Find a way to work for efficiently. Think of the entire delivery cycle as one big set of team work instead of pulling against each other. These deals with "I am not going to load you until there is exactly 12 hours before you deliver" attitudes need to change. If the driver is there and you have dock space, load the truck. Let the driver roll, rest and roll. He does not need to bend to the shipper's will just because you are trying to make a power play. Learn to work together. Same with unloading. Why all the waiting? Why the forced lumpers or unload your own truck? The truck is in the dock - sleep time for the driver...PERIOD! Each entity needs to take responsibility for their part in this process instead of trying to pass it off to someone else and namely the driver each time. It is a team process. While that team may be comprised of 3 different companies or more...it is still a team process. Treat it as such. Communicate!!!!! Get'r done!
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