Thursday, February 19, 2009

Owner-operators Struggle to Keep Business Afloat

Owner-operators Struggle to Keep Business Afloat
Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Trucking’s owner-operators have been hit with high diesel prices, cut loads, and lower shipping rates. The self-employed drivers are almost going bankrupt and seem to be at the risk of losing their jobs.

The housing decline and less consumer spending have cut into loads, and the extra trucking capacity at hand is causing freight rates to spiral downward. In addition, diesel prices, which are always higher in winter, have experienced an astronomical spike, doubling over the past four years.

According to the Department of Labor, nearly 9% of the nation’s 3.4 million truck drivers are independent owner-operators. John Saldanha, who teaches logistics at Ohio State University, said that trucking will be deeply affected if owner-operators ever lose their jobs; the trucking scene will turn into a group of regional and national oligopolies that, once the economy revives, would send shipping prices higher.

On the other hand, business looks far more promising for the large public trucking companies as they have had their stocks climb since January. Big trucking companies, like J.B. Hunt Transport Services Inc. and YRC Worldwide Inc., tend to buy everything from fuel to tractors in bulk; as such, thousands of gallons of diesel are bought at a time on the commodities market to be stored later on.

In the end, owner-operators are left feeling neglected and on the fringe more than ever. In order to survive in the business, truckers call for caps on diesel prices, or tax credits for them and further constraint for intermediaries who broker truck loads.

Annually, rumors of a nationwide truck strike circulate. In January, some truckers kept their trucks off the road for a week in the hope that a week’s strike might be what they need to not ultimately lose their jobs.

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