Archive for the ‘Trucking Information’ Category

The FMCSA Safe Driving Manual

Monday, October 10th, 2011

In a single day a truck driver will face multiple instances where they narrowly avoid an accident. Whether by their actions or by an other’s, truck drivers are constantly placed in situations where one move can save or take a life. When the stakes are this big, it is important to know what you are doing.

To help truck divers improve their driving safety and accident avoidance, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has an “Accident Countermeasures Manual” on their website. In this manual both drivers and employers can find sections on accident prevent-ability, defensive driving, and important maintenance and inspection procedures.The main point covered in the manual is avoiding and distinguishing preventable accidents. The FMCSA broadly defines a preventable accident as one which occurs because the driver fails to act in a reasonably expected manner to prevent it. Each section of the manual will educate truckers on different areas of preventing an accident.

The first section, Accident Preventability Evaluations, includes information on educating yourself on preventable accidents. The definition of a preventable accident can, at times, vary from company to company as each employer has different safe driving standards. If you are a company driver, make sure you are well informed of your company’s safe driving standard. Also, familiarize yourself with your company procedure for evaluating accidents and determining whether they were preventable or not.

The second section is called Defensive Driving, and includes driving tips and questions for managers to improve their company driving practices. For drivers, some of the tips include recognizing hazardous situations, continually scanning the road around you, and always assuming other drivers will make errors. Doing this won’t guarantee you’ll never get in an accident, but it can help you do your part to avoid it.

The last section in the manual covers Preventive Maintenance and Inspection Procedures. Before heading out on the road, it is always important to inspect your truck. Also, when you are driving make sure your brakes work before getting in the freeway. By doing these small inspections along with others found in the manual, and keeping up on regular maintenance you can more readily avoid accidents.

Safe driving in one thing that is never overrated. The FMCSA has provided helpful guidelines to improve the driving standard of the trucking industry. To read the manual in full, visit http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/facts-research/research-technology/publications/accidenthm/accidentman.htm. CR England truck driving jobs

National Truck Safety Week Created by Shell

Friday, October 1st, 2010

Last week, Shell Oil started a safety campaign called the National Truck Safety Week by handing out cards called the Rotella Moment of Safety card.  They gave these cards out to Truck Drivers as well as non-truck drivers who drive personal vehicles.  It’s a card that the driver places strategically in their cab or front seat that they can look at it before starting their trip.  The card contains a picture of a loved one to remember why to drive safely.

This idea started in their own fleets and is now being shared with their customers and their customer’s families.

As their first National Truck Safety Week, Shell made it into an all out event with local television spots in the Toronto, Canada area and used messages like, “leave more space for trucks; stay out of the ‘no zone’; wear your seatbelt; and ensure your car is properly maintained.”  Mark Reed, Shell’s Rotella global brand manager, says “The hope is that Truck Safety Week will help drivers better understand how to share the roads to reduce collisions and injuries.”  Mark Reed feels that safety is a vital roll in Shell’s way of life.  In fact, Shell banded cell phone use by their fleet drivers before it became a law.  Seatbelt usage is a rule that must be followed also by the fleet drivers.  Reed also stated, “We do take it seriously.  If you choose to break these rules, you choose not to work for Shell.”

Corporations that create safety campaigns like these help improve the percentage of accidents on the road through awareness.  For more programs like this one through Shell, you can go to www.shell.ca/rotella.

http://www.trucknews.com/issues/story.aspx?aid=1000386682

We’d like to thank our freight broker training school for sending us this great story.

Work With Style

Friday, June 18th, 2010

Gadgets on trucks make life fun for many drivers.  A Truck Driver’s own little identity on the front of their truck.  We found some neat little gadgets for freight liners that were discovered in different truck part stores across the country.  A little chrome on your truck tells people your personality.

Rubber Duck Hood Ornament:  It gives a look of “I am tough”, with a touch of humor.  This brings a chuckle to those who pass by.

Cannon Ball Express Train Horn: Giving out 152 decibels of sound, it is volumes above other horns.

Chrome Heater Vent: This vent adds shine and a look of success to any truck.  A must have for those who like to dress up.

Chrome Plate Frame: Another Class A item to dress up your truck.  Put your own mantra on your license frame, instead of a commercial for other people’s companies.

Bull Horn Hood Ornament: For the bullish at heart or the Texan within.  This ornament tells others you have the strength it takes to be a Truck Driver.

These are only a few ornaments for your truck.  Go to http://www.iowa80.com to see more.  (We linked these images from their online catalog.)  If you have questions about truck driving jobs or about CR England please visit our web site, www.CREngland.com

// Tags: Chrometruckparts
Posted in Chrome

Fleet Types and Why There is a Difference

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

A lot of drivers out there can be undecided when it comes to taking a job with a carrier.  Knowing the different types of fleets can help you decide which job is right for you.

So here is some awesome information from an article that ran a few months ago that discusses the difference.

Private vs. Dedicated Fleets

“I recently had a discussion with Gary Petty, President of the National Private Truck Council (NPTC), and Gary Girotti, Vice President of Chainalytics’ transportation practice, about private and dedicated fleets.  Why do companies have a private fleet?”

“According to a survey by NPTC, eighty nine percent of the respondents cited “to achieve better customer service to key customers” as the primary reason. Cost reduction and improved flexibility was cited by 16 percent of the respondents, while 5 percent mentioned that they transported specialized commodities and had limited options to use third-party carriers.  I was somewhat surprised that customer service, instead of cost savings, was the top driver for having a private fleet. Mr. Petty provided other statistics that shed additional light on this finding. Several years ago, NPTC’s survey showed that customers were demanding, on average, 98 percent on time delivery (OTD). In the latest survey, this metric has trended up to 99.5 percent.”

“In addition, the definition of OTD is becoming more stringent: * 11 percent of the survey respondents are measured to a 1-minute delivery window; * 13 percent to a 10-minute window; * 9 percent to a 15-minute window; * 17 percent to a 30-minute window.  Two-thirds of NPTC’s members benchmark the performance of their private fleets against for-hire carriers. According to Mr. Petty, private fleets usually perform better. As an example, he referenced one company that ships 10,000 loads per month via its private fleet, and about the same amount using common carriers and dedicated fleets. ”

“Using the same scorecard for the private fleet and the outsourced alternatives, the private fleet is the best choice for this shipper from a cost and service perspective, particularly for delivering to key customers on high-volume lanes.  The large disparity in driver turnover between private fleets and common carriers is one possible reason why private fleet performance is better. ”

“According to Mr. Petty, private fleet turnover is 12-14 percent per year versus as much as 120-140 percent per year at some trucking firms.  Imagine my surprise when I later talked to Mr. Girotti of Chainalytics, and he declared that if you were deciding between starting a private fleet versus hiring a dedicated fleet, you would have to be “crazy” to go the private fleet route. ”

“According to Mr. Girotti, there is usually no difference in performance between private and dedicated private fleets. However, if you already have a private fleet, it probably makes sense to keep it. One of Chainalytics’ services is transportation master planning, where it helps companies make transportation network decisions by analyzing various transportation options (private versus dedicated fleets, fleet sizes and equipment options, continuous moves, backhauls, etc).”

“In order to accomplish this, Chainalytics reviews (line by line) a company’s transportation budget and conducts an activity based costing assessment. When a granular, “all in” cost analysis is completed, Chainalytics often finds little difference between private and dedicated fleets. While an LSP may have a margin of ten percent, the LSPs tend to do a better job at truck maintenance, can perform DOT compliance more efficiently, and tend to pay drivers less.  Further, many of Chainlalytics’ clients believe that a private fleet achieves better customer service. However, in Mr. Girotti’s view, these are often qualitative, subjective impressions not backed up by any quantifiable proof. Finally, while he agrees that private fleet driver turnover is much lower compared to common carriers, it is not significantly lower when compared to dedicated fleet operations. Dedicated fleet positions are the most desirable driving jobs offered by LSPs because drivers go out and come back the same day. Girotti knows of firms that have had dedicated fleets for over a decade with little driver turnover.  So, which is a better choice, private or dedicated fleets? If you talk to a practitioner, like Harry Haney, Associate Director of Transportation Operations at Kraft Foods, the answer is both. Kraft Foods operates both private and dedicated fleets, and it benchmarks them against each other and against “one-way” contract carriage. Kraft’s experience has been that private fleets, when sized and deployed properly, deliver a cost and service advantage. ”

Here is a link to the original article: http://logisticsviewpoints.com/?s=Gary+Girotti

The site offers a lot of information about trucking and also the freight broker business.

Stimulus Dollars Helping People Get Training

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

So, I’m looking at articles out there that I can relate to and I found this great one out of  Washington State about the stimulus dollars helping people get Truck Driving Jobs and become a Truck Driver.  The part that really struck me was that there seems to be a shift out there in trades that are no longer out there going to new technology.  Training is needed for a lot of people who has a skill that is no longer out there.  In this article called “Stimulus Funds to Spark New Careers”, it reports that because community colleges in the area are in need of a lot of money, that Tacoma-Pierce County Workforce Development Council used $1.4 million of the stimulus dollars for community college courses so that vital classes in courses would not be cut. The council also created programs to help in the cost of new training, which included truck driving.

A man’s story, which was so great it goes as follows:

“One student taking advantage of the help is Lokeni, who was laid off from his offshore oil drilling job in October.

Lokeni, 27, is now in his fourth week of a six-month commercial truck-driving program at Bates Technical College.

He said he tried to find work in the oil industry, but no one was hiring. When he researched training programs for truck driving, he thought he couldn’t afford them, he said.

“When I first found out I got into this program, I was on my knees thanking God,” said Lokeni, who lives in Parkland with his wife and 5-year-old daughter. “Job security to take care of my family – that’s what it’s all about.”

Truck driving has great job security and will be around for years to come and it won’t go away with technology.  One of the reasons I’m a truck driver.

Read more: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2010/03/15/1109887/funds-to-spark-new-careers.html#ixzz0iLzXQwGC

http://www.thenewstribune.com/2010/03/15/1109887/funds-to-spark-new-careers.html