Food prices climb as trucking companies look for drivers
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[June 10, 2021]
By Kevin Bessler
(The Center Square) – The cost of a steak
to put on the grill continues to escalate and it is largely due to a
shortage of truck drivers in Illinois and the rest of the country.
The shortage began before the COVID-19 pandemic and is getting worse.
The American Trucking Association says there was a shortage of 61,000
drivers at the end of 2019.
The Illinois Trucking Association recently conducted a survey of
companies around the state and 97% said they were short of truck
drivers.
Matt Hart, executive director of the ITA, said the main problem appears
to be enhanced unemployment benefits.
“In many cases, they were set up to where people could actually make
more money by staying home than going to work, and we are seeing it in
the trucking industry, the restaurant industry, the manufacturing
industry, so that is the number one issue that I hear when I talk to
trucking companies across the state,” said Hart.
Twenty-five states have eliminated the extra federal benefits in an
effort to drive more people back into the workforce. Gov. J.B. Pritzker
has said Illinois will not be joining the movement.
Other contributing factors mentioned by industry officials include an
aging workforce, retirements because of the pandemic, and a federally
mandated drug and alcohol clearinghouse program.
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Hart said the shortage is having an effect on not only the things that
we are buying but the things we throw away. He notes Chicago’s garbage
facilities are being overrun because there are not enough drivers to
haul the trash out of the city.
The lack of drivers is also causing intermittent gas shortages. There is
plenty of fuel available, but the problem is getting it to the pumps.
Recently, two Casey’s General Stores ran out of fuel in Decatur and
Warrensburg.
The average pay for a truck driver is around $51,000, but some companies
are offering more compensation in an effort to lure drivers.
According to the website Overdrive, this week, Averitt Express is
raising salaries for all regional truckload dry van drivers without a
hazmat endorsement to 52 cents a mile, with an estimated annual
compensation of $62,400 per year. Additionally, all qualified regional
truck drivers will receive a $5,000 sign-on bonus for a limited time.
Paper Transport is increasing driver pay in regional positions between
8% and 25% across its Midwestern operation area, which includes
Illinois.
“The pay is very, very good,” Hart said. “I don’t know of a single
trucking company that has not been increasing its pay just to try to
keep up with the demand that is out there right now.” |