the trucking industry’s top 10
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The Trucking Industry’s Top 10. Rebecca M. Brewster President and COO American Transportation Research Institute. ATRI. Trucking industry’s NFP research organization Commercial Drivers Congestion and Mobility Economic Analysis Environment Safety Security Technology - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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The Trucking Industry’s Top 10
Rebecca M. Brewster President and COO
American Transportation Research Institute
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ATRI Trucking industry’s NFP research organization Commercial Drivers Congestion and Mobility Economic Analysis Environment Safety Security Technology Transportation Infrastructure Trucking Industry Operations
www.atri-online.org
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Board of Directors
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Research Advisory Committee
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2012 Top Industry Issues
1. CSA2. Hours-of-Service3. Economy4. Driver Shortage5. Fuel Issues/Fuel Prices6. EOBR/ELD Mandate7. Driver Retention8. Truck Parking9. Driver Health/Wellness10. (Tie) Congestion/Bottlenecks10. (Tie) Highway Infrastructure
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Supply Chain Impacts Two year data
collection effort 1,000 Motor Carriers Nearly 6,000
Commercial Drivers Shippers Law Enforcement
Third year of driver data collection initiated March 2013
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CSA Knowledge Test Drivers - median performance
unchanged at 6.00 (out of 14) Carriers – median performance
dropped one point from 11.00 to 10.00
Drivers are still hugely uninformed; growth in CSA comprehension has not occurred despite attitudes becoming more negative
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Driver-Reported Levels of CSA Training and
Education
2011 2012 20130%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
41%32% 26%
36%
33% 30%
23%35% 36%
CSA Training By Year
Multiple Sessions
One Session
None
Year
Perc
ent o
f Res
pond
ents
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What Drivers Know/Don’t Know
Questions with Highest Correct Responses A trucking company can remove a bad driver's
inspection and crash data from its SMS scores by terminating the driver – FALSE
Under CSA, only out-of-service violations are counted in the measurement system – FALSE
Clean roadside inspections can actually improve a driver or carrier's CSA scores – TRUE
Questions with Fewest Correct Responses Which BASICs are publicly available? Who has access to official driver CSA scores?
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CSA Scores and Crash Risk Highlights from
Previous Research Comparative Review
of Statistical Tools ATRI’s Findings
Analyzed Both Percentile Scores & “Alerts”
Interest from U.S. DOT IG
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BASIC Scores and Crash Risk
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Scores Below vs. Above Threshold
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Controlled Substances/Alcohol
Percentile Scores and Crash Rates
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Controlled Substances/Alcohol
No Score vs. Below Threshold vs. “Alert”
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Driver Fitness Percentile Scores and Crash Rates
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Driver Fitness No Score vs. Below Threshold vs. “Alert”
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Crash Risk As Number of Scores or “Alerts” Increases
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Statistically Defensible Safety Conclusions
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Statistically Defensible Safety Conclusions
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Hours-of-Service Analysis to
quantify impacts of 34-hour restart changes
Released June 17th
House T&I Committee Hearing on changes June 18th
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Impacts of 34-Hour Restart Changes
Driver Survey Internet-based survey with 2,292
unique responses 67% employee drivers; 33% owner-
operator Longer haul 53% regular route; 89% use 70hr/ 8 day
schedule Veteran truckload drivers (68% 10+ years
driving) 93% of drivers indicated use of restart
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Impacts of the 34-Hour RestartMotor Carrier Survey
Internet-based survey with 560 unique responses Truckload Irregular route 70 hour/ 8 day schedule Majority small (<100 PU) carriers
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Why Drivers Use 34-Hour Restart Maximize on-duty hours – 68.5% Flexibility – 67.3% Maximize drive time – 49.1% Maximize time at home – 45% Avoid calculating a rolling week –
40.7% Others – plan for contingencies,
shipper delays, weather, unexpected maintenance
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How significantly will the 1am to 5am rule impact your
operations?
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How significantly will the 1 restart per week impact your
operations?
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Motor Carrier Survey Impacts from Changes
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Logbook Analysis Logbook data from 40,000+
drivers Analysis to evaluate FMCSA
Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) Percent of drivers using restart Percent of restarts out of
compliance with 1-5 a.m. and 1 per week
Variations in driver weekly averages
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Striking DifferencesFMCSA
Data analysis on 1,035 drivers
Drivers from carriers undergoing Compliance Reviews
15% of drivers averaged 70+ hours per week
ATRI Data analysis on
14,000+ drivers Drivers from
carriers representing normal operations
0% of drivers averaged 70+ hours per week
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Driver GroupAvg. Weekly Work Hours & Driver
Group ThresholdsDriver Count
PercentFMCSA
RIA
Moderate 45 (<52.6) 11,995 84% 66%
High 60 (52.6 to <65) 2,169 15% 19%
Very High 70 (65 to <75) 38 0% 10%
Extreme 80 (75 or more) 0 0% 5%
34-Hour Restart
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FMCSA Restart Change Costs
Restart Change Safety Benefits
Restart Change Health Benefits
Additional Restart-Related Productivity
CostNet Benefits (Costs)
~Restart Only~
FMCSA Table ES-9 Results* $ 331,000,000 $ 210,000,000 $ 254,000,000 $ - $ 133,000,000
ATRI Medium 7-Day Scenario $ 1,005,640 $ 501,267 $ 408,643 $ - $ (95,730)
Average Additional Weekly Work Time
Lost per Driver* ATRI Scenario + Additional Cost
7.5 min lost $ - $ - $ - $ (94,966,788) $ (95,062,518)
15 min lost $ - $ - $ - $ (188,927,937) $ (189,023,667)
30 min lost $ - $ - $ - $ (376,850,234) $ (376,945,964)
34-Hour Restart
*Not captured by FMCSA in RIA.
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34-Hour Restart
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Hours-of-Service Second phase
data collection underway to quantify actual impacts
Motor carrier and driver surveys launched September
Logbook analysis underway
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Navigation System Use Quantify extent
of use, perceived utility, benefits and risks from nav systems
Carrier (169) and driver (677) surveys
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Assessing the Use of Navigation Systems in the
Trucking Industry Majority (54%) of drivers reported using a
nav system specifically designed for truck routes 23% of drivers utilize systems designed
for car use 8% used a smartphone application 15% do not use a nav system
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Assessing the Use of Navigation Systems in the
Trucking Industry Majority of carriers (51%) allow or
encourage nav system use Of the carriers who provide nav system,
21% provide passenger car system Respondents generally trust the systems
to be accurate 73% of drivers and 62% of carriers are at
least somewhat trusting
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Assessing the Use of Navigation Systems in the
Trucking Industry Majority of respondents (drivers and
carriers) reported no crashes due to nav system errors Only 2% of drivers reported crashes attributable
to nav system errors Among carriers who reported nav system-
related crashes, most common errors were:1. Directing driver to a road unsuitable for trucks
(41%)
2. Navigating to roads with inadequate bridge/overpass clearance (34%)
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What is the NAFMP? Multi-year collaborative
research to develop, test and evaluate components of a fatigue management program (FMP) for commercial vehicle operators
4 research phases, 10 years
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NAFMP Website Implementation Manual – includes
recommended guidelines for all NAFMP components
Return-on-Investment calculator Online Training
www.NAFMP.org
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WWW.NFAMP.ORG
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Module TitleTarget
AudienceEstimated Duration
1FMP Introduction and Overview
Carrier Executives and Managers 45 min
2 Safety Culture and Management
Carrier Executives and Managers
1.5 hours
3 Driver Education Drivers 3 hours
4 Driver Family Education
Drivers’ Spouses and Families
45 min
5T3 for Driver Education/Family Forum
Carrier Safety Managers, Trainers
3.5 hours
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CModule TitleTarget
AudienceEstimated Duration
6 Shippers and Receivers
Shippers and Receivers 30 min
7Motor Carriers Sleep Disorders Management
Carriers Executives and Managers
1.5 hours
8Drivers Sleep Disorders Management
Drivers 1.25 hours
9 Driver Scheduling and Tools
Dispatchers and Managers 1 hour
10Fatigue Monitoring and Management Technologies
Carriers Executives and Managers
1 hour
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Freight Bottleneck Analysis
Ongoing monitoring of 250 truck freight-significant locations
Avoiding/scheduling around truck freight congestion chokepoints
www.atri-online.org
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Freight Performance Measures
2013 Top Ten BottlenecksRank Location Average
Speed2011 Rank Change
1 Chicago, IL: I-290 at I-90/I-94 30.13 1 02 Houston, TX: I-610 at US 290 41.99 14 +123 Austin, TX: I-35 35.79 4 +14 Fort Lee, NJ: I-95 at SR-4 28.98 2 -2
5 St. Louis, MO: I-70 at I-64 West
41.62 11 +6
6 Louisville, KY: I-65 at I-64/I-71
44.93 3 -3
7 Houston, TXL I-45 at US-59 38.55 17 +108 Cincinnati, OH: I-71 at I-75 48.12 9 +19 Houston, TX: I-10 at I-45 45.63 15 +6
10 Dallas, TX: I-45 at I-30 42.44 7 -3
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Operational Costs of Trucking Annual report
first issued in 2008
Real-world motor carrier operational data
2013 Update released 9/4/13
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Operational Costs of Trucking: 2013 Update
Average Carrier Costs per Mile
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Operational Costs of Trucking: 2013 Update
Average Carrier Costs per Hour
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Operational Costs of Trucking: 2013 Update
Average Total Costs by Sector
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Supporting the Industry’s Research Agenda
Charitable contributions to ATRI Participate in ATRI surveys and
data collection – Top Industry Issues
Recommend research ideas Join the Research Advisory
Committeewww.atri-online.org