Friday, March 30, 2012

Feel like renting a movie this weekend?


 Here are the top 10 Trucker movies! Which one is your favorite?
 
01) Smokey and the Bandit (1977)
02) Wages of Fear (Le Salaire de la Peur) (1953)
03) They Drive by Night (1940)
04) Convoy (1978)
05) White Line Fever 
(1975)

06) Roadgames (1981)
07) Duel (1971)
08) Sorcerer (1977)
09) Big Rig (2007)
10) The Great Smokey Road Block (1977)

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Tire, Rim Thieves Target N.C. Trucking Companies

Via Tire Review


Some $80,000 worth of tires and rims were stolen from two commercial truck dealers in Greensboro, N.C.: Triad Freightliner and Whites International.




FMCSA to Delay CSA Review Process



The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration will delay its plans to implement a much-anticipated Compliance, Safety, Accountability program process that would have allowed carriers to seek an accountability review of crashes that went on their safety records, a top American Trucking Associations safety executive said.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

As Fuel Prices Soar, Trucking Industry Seeks Alternatives With Natural Gas


Via Forbes
by Eric Tech, president of the Navistar Engine Group 
This week, as the trucking industry converges onLouisville for the Mid-America Trucking Show, attendees are arriving with a collective pit in their stomachs as they watch the price of oil continue to escalate—up 41% since October alone.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Trucking-based economic indicator shows little growth


MINNEAPOLIS & LOS ANGELES — The Ceridian-UCLA Pulse of Commerce Index, based on truck strop diesel sales and issued by the UCLA Anderson School of Management and Ceridian Corp., rose 0.7 percent in February but was not enough to offset the 1.7 percent decline in the previous month.

Friday, March 16, 2012

Both OOIDA, ATA praise U.S. Senate’s passage of highway bill



Two groups which often are on opposing sides of trucking issues commended the U.S. Senate Wednesday for passing a long-overdue, long-term highway bill.
Tonight we will be starting a periodic BTG challenge, with the winner taking home amazing and extravagant grande prizes. 
All free of course. There is no schedule of challenges, they will be randomly posted here and on our Facebook Page at http://facebook.com/btginc1/ as well as twitter @btginc1. The challenges will come in many forms with many different objectives. 
The only requirement to participate, is to have already joined the BTG FB page and/or blog and/or twitter.... 
So here we goooo... 
Good luck....

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Trucking joke of the day

Heard this one today from a driver:

How do you know when your wife is messing with a Swift Driver?

When you come back after a week on the road and he is still trying to back out of the driveway.


Jordana Sutphin
Bernard Transportation Group Inc.
ph: 718-928-9900 ex 702
fx:  718-928-3889
 
 

Transportation and industrial shares show U.S. is on a slow road to recovery


Transportation and industrial shares are diverging in the United States, a signal that equity investors are starting to agree with what the bond market already knows: the U.S. economic recovery will remain sluggish for months to come.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Senate ready to overhaul highway, transit programs; Dems say bill will create nearly 3M jobs


WASHINGTON — The Senate is poised to pass an overhaul of highway and transit programs that gives states greater flexibility over how they spend federal aid, streamlines environmental regulations to get projects built faster and seeks to generate greater private investment in transportation projects.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Government delays requiring cars, trucks to have rearview cameras to prevent back-over deaths


WASHINGTON — Rules aimed at preventing drivers from backing over children by requiring automakers to include rearview cameras on new cars and light trucks will be delayed until the end of this year, federal transportation officials said Tuesday.
In a letter to lawmakers, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration needs more time for “study and data analysis” before it can issue regulations.
“I believe it is important to allot additional time to ensure that the final rule is appropriate and the underlying analysis is robust,” LaHood wrote.
The agency proposed more than a year ago that automakers include rear-mounted video cameras with in-vehicle display on all cars and light trucks by the 2014 model year.
Congress in 2008 set in motion the safety upgrades in response to dozens of accidents in which children were backed over. At issue in particular were blind zones in large sport utility vehicles and pickups.
Nearly 300 people are killed and 18,000 injured each year because of back-over accidents, according to NHTSA data. Many occur in driveways and parking lots. Nearly half the deaths involve children under age 5. The elderly also are frequent victims.
Lobbyists for the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, an industry trade association, met with White House officials in December about the proposed rules. Documents brought to the meeting by lobbyists, and posted online by the White House, urged the administration to permit manufacturers the option of including expanded mirrors on vehicles rather than cameras. The documents peg the estimated cost to the industry of requiring cameras at $2.7 billion annually.
Gloria Bergquist, vice president of the alliance, said automakers are concerned about the cumulative cost of federal regulations. She noted that the cameras already are standard equipment in many vehicle models or offered as options for which car buyers pay extra.
The government estimated that video systems would add about $200 to the cost of each new vehicle. But if the vehicle already has a built-in GPS screen, the cost could be as low as $58, Bergquist said.
Under the 2008 law, the government was required to issue final rules to address back-over accidents by Feb. 28, 2011. LaHood has extended that deadline twice previously.

Women in Trucking

 
Joyce Brenny, a former driver who started and now heads a 100-employee company, was named the 2012 Influential Woman in Trucking Tuesday.
The award was made by Navistar and the Women in Trucking Association at the annual meeting of the Truckload Carriers Association in Orlando, Fla.
 
Brenny's industry experience began when she was a short-haul driver after high school. She founded Brenny Transportation Inc. in 1996. The company, based in St. Cloud, Minn., began with three employees and has since grown to a more than $15 million company with three additional divisions: Brenny Specialized, Brenny Global and Brenny's national agent division.
 
"What the award means to me is the opportunity to have a chance to do more for women in trucking, and help drivers earn respect and be a voice for folks behind the scenes," Brenny said.
Brenny has leveraged her position in the industry to assist charities in her community, both through financial contributions and by volunteering her and her staff to participate in coat and food drives, as well as a "Trucks and Toys" for the "Toys for Tots" campaign. She is the chairwoman of the Minnesota Trucking Association, the first woman to hold this title.
 
Two runners-up for the award were also recognized at the TCA event: Sandra Ambrose-Clark, president of ESJ Carrier Corp., and Judy McReynolds, president and CEO of Arkansas Best Corp.
 
Jordana Sutphin
Bernard Transportation Group Inc.
ph: 718-928-9900 ex 702
fx:  718-928-3889

Friday, March 09, 2012

Teamsters Respond to Government on Mexican Truck Program


Hoffa: It's Bizarre To Argue That U.S. Truckers Aren't Hurt by Program
WASHINGTON, March 8, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Teamsters Union filed counterarguments in its lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Transportation's pilot program to open the border to dangerous and illegal Mexican trucks. General President Jim Hoffa said the federal government's claim that Mexican trucks won't affect Teamster truck drivers is "bizarre."
The Teamsters filed the motion in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit Court late yesterday. The case was consolidated with a similar lawsuit by the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association against the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA).
"The FMCSA makes the bizarre argument that our members aren't harmed by a program that opens the border to low-paid truck drivers and dangerous, dirty trucks," Hoffa said. "Try telling that to our members.
"U.S. commercial truck drivers must follow all U.S. safety regulations while Mexican drivers only need to follow selected Mexican regulations. The government is flat-out wrong to say Mexican trucks and drivers meet equivalent standards."
The purpose of a pilot program is to demonstrate the impact of Mexican trucks on U.S. highway safety. The law requires the program to include a statistically valid number of trucks. In other words, program administrators can't cherry pick the safest trucks and drivers and then conclude from their safety record in the U.S. that opening the border to all Mexican trucks won't harm highway safety.
FMCSA argues that the pilot program "is designed to include a representative sample of the population of Mexico-domiciled trucks."
The government's brief claims that "FMCSA will closely track the safety performance of participating carriers." Hoffa pointed out that the first trucking company that FMCSA allowed into the program – Grupo Behr de Baja California – withdrew because of its poor safety record.
"How are we to believe that FMCSA will closely track safety when it admitted a carrier into the program that had a poor safety record according to FMCSA's own records?" Hoffa said.
"The last time we checked, three drivers and two trucks made nine trips beyond the border zone in six months," Hoffa said. "That sure isn't a representative sample. We predicted at the beginning that this program would be a dismal failure and it looks like we were right. FMCSA should just pull the plug on this program and save the taxpayers some money."
Hoffa further said that Mexico has clearly failed to provide the same access to its markets that the U.S. offers to Mexico. The U.S. State Department last month warned against taking unnecessary trips to vast areas of Mexico, and yesterday the Texas Department of Public Safety cautioned against going to Mexico for spring break.
"Mexico can't guarantee the safety of U.S. truckers because it can't control the drug cartels that killed 12,000 people last year," Hoffa said. "U.S. drivers are scared to death to drive down there. How is this a reciprocal trade deal?"
The suit claims the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration breaks the following laws:
  • It waives a law that trucks must display certain proof that they meet federal safety standards.
  • It breaks the law requiring the pilot program to achieve an equivalent level of safety because Mexican drivers don't have to meet the same physical requirements as U.S. drivers.
  • It breaks the law that Mexico must provide simultaneous and comparable access to U.S. trucks. Mexico cannot do so because of the limited availability of ultra-low sulfur diesel fuel in Mexico.
  • It breaks the law that the pilot program must include enough participants to be statistically valid. The FMCSA's proposal ensures that only the best Mexican trucks participate, which would allow it to justify letting any Mexican truck over the border in the future.
  • It doesn't comply with the environment requirement of the National Environmental Policy Act.
The Teamsters case is USCA Case #11-1444 and the document number is 1362495. A copy of the brief can be viewed here.

Read more here: http://www.bradenton.com/2012/03/08/3926313/teamsters-respond-to-government.html#storylink=cpy

Tuesday, March 06, 2012

Friday, March 02, 2012

Gas Prices Hit Trucking

Via Fox40

If you've felt the pain of filling up your car lately - gassing up a tractor trailer can make you feel helpless.

Thursday, March 01, 2012

Truckers Against Trafficking receives Congressional Recognition award

Via Landline Magazine

Since 2009, the group Truckers Against Trafficking has been working tirelessly to combat human trafficking in the United States.