Founded | 1933 |
---|---|
Type | Trade Association |
Focus | Trucking Industry |
Location | |
Area served | United States |
Key people | Chris Spear, President and CEO David Manning, Chairman and President of TCW, Inc., Nashville, Tennessee. |
Website | trucking.org |
The American Trucking Associations (ATA), founded in 1933, is the largest national trade association for the trucking industry. ATA represents more than 37,000 members covering every type of motor carrier in the United States through a federation of other trucking groups, industry-related conferences, and its 50 affiliated state trucking associations. Former Governor of Kansas Bill Graves was replaced by Chris Spear as the ATA's president and CEO in July 2016.
According to its website the ATA's mission is to "develop, advocate, and advance innovative research-based policies that promote highway safety, security, environmental sustainability and profitability." [1]
On September 23, 1933, the American Trucking Associations was established as a national affiliation of state trucking organizations. The ATA was established by a merger of the American Highway Freight Association and the Federated Trucking Associations of America. [2]
The ATA began with a staff of eight working from a three-room suite in the Transportation Building in Washington, D.C. During World War II the Army requested that ATA recruit personnel for two quartermaster regiments to constitute the U.S.Army Transportation Corps. With calls to the 350 members of the ATA's Trucking Service War Council, 5,700 trucking industry employees volunteered for enlisted positions and 258 volunteered for officer commissions. After the war the ATA was in the forefront of the groups and industries supporting Dwight D. Eisenhower's Interstate Highway System. [3]
The American Trucking Association has worked on regulatory issues from the Code of Fair Competition in 1934 to the eventual deregulation of the industry.
The ATA's headquarters are in Washington, D.C.. The ATA has a legislative affairs office on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. [2]
In 2016, ATA named Chris Spear as the federation's ninth president, replacing former Kansas Governor Bill Graves. [4]
ATA is the trade association representing its members before Congress, the executive branch, the courts, and the regulatory agencies. It includes 50 state trucking associations, two conferences and three councils. Each state association is an independent organization with its own membership, dues structure, officers, budgets and staff, but having representation and voting powers within the federation. Like the state associations, ATA's conferences (each representing a segment of the industry) are autonomous organizations.
ATA is composed of motor carrier members and is governed by a board of elected carrier representative members. A smaller executive committee is composed of elected members that set policies and priorities. Allied members, representing suppliers to the trucking industry, also have representation within the organization. All ATA members are provided access to experts in safety, engineering, law, finance, communications, information and logistics technology, regulatory and legislative affairs, and a number of other areas of service to the trucking industry.
As members of the federation, ATA's councils are dedicated to continuing education and policy in specific trucking disciplines including safety management, [5] maintenance, [6] accounting and finance, [7] information technology, [6] logistics, and more.
The ATA's messages revolve around three core areas: the essentiality of the trucking industry to the economy; the industry's ongoing efforts and progress made to improve highway safety; and the industry's commitment to reducing emissions and carbon output.
ATA advocates the essentiality of the trucking industry in the U.S. economy. Trucks haul nearly 100 percent of consumer goods and more than 70 percent of all freight tonnage in the United States. Moreover, economists estimate that 80 percent of U.S. communities receive their goods exclusively by truck. [8]
Economists expect the U.S. population to grow by 27 million in the next 10 years, and overall freight tonnage to increase 26 percent by 2021, with the modal share hauled by truck increasing to 71 percent. To keep pace with this growth, ATA advocates increasing capacity and improving highway infrastructure at the nation's worst traffic congestion points to ensure the efficient movement of goods.
ATA's safety message focuses on three different key areas: improving driver performance, safer vehicles, and safer motor carriers. The ATA maintains that the trucking industry is safer than it has ever been, according to truck vehicle miles traveled (VMT) figures from the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), and National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) data on crashes. Since new Hours-of-Service regulations took effect in 2004, the truck-involved fatality rate has come down more than 20 percent and is at its lowest since the U.S. Department of Transportation began keeping those records in 1975. The fatality rate has declined more than 66 percent since 1975. The trucking industry has also seen an increase in safety belt usage. [9]
In 2008, ATA released a progressive 18-point safety agenda to help further improve highway safety. [10] ATA recommends the following in order to increase safety through improving driver performance: uniform commercial drivers license (CDL) testing standards, additional parking facilities for trucks, a national maximum speed limit of 65 mph, strategies to increase use of safety belts, increased use of red light cameras, and more stringent laws to reduce drinking and driving. [10] In order to make vehicles safer the ATA supports: targeted electronic speed governing of certain non-commercial vehicles, electronic speed governing of all large trucks, and new large truck crashworthiness standards. Finally, the ATA promotes making motor carriers safer through: a national employer notification system, a national clearinghouse for positive drug and alcohol test results of CDL holders, and required safety training by new entrant motor carriers. [10]
ATA supports environmental sustainability policies that provide the trucking industry with realistic ways of reducing greenhouse gas emissions without impeding the freedom of movement essential to the U.S. economy. ATA has six recommendations to reduce carbon emissions in the trucking industry: enacting a national 65 mph speed limit and governing truck speeds to 65 mph or lower, decreasing idling, increasing fuel efficiency, reducing congestion through highway improvements, promoting the use of more productive truck combinations, and through supporting national fuel economy standards for medium- and heavy-duty trucks. These proposals together can reduce diesel and gasoline fuel consumption by 86 billion US gallons (330,000,000 m3) and CO2 emissions of all vehicles by nearly a billion tons over the next decade. [11] [ dubious – discuss ]
Also, ATA recommends that shippers and carriers join the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) SmartWay Transport Partnership Program. In 2009 ATA was awarded the SmartWay Excellence Award. [12] By 2012, the SmartWay Transport Partnership will cut carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by 33 to 66 million metric tons per year. [13]
The ATA has instituted a five step plan to meet the above goals:
ATA Conferences bring together groups of member motor carriers and suppliers in a specific line of business. Conferences are open to all ATA members and have policymaking and advocacy authority in their operational areas.
The ATA National Driver of the Year Award recognizes one professional truck driver for his/her exemplary accomplishments and excellent driving attributes. [17] Contestants for the ATA award start out by winning at the company level and are nominated by state trucking associations. [18]
At the national level, the Driver of the Year Award is presented to a driver whose professional qualifications, experience and performance are noteworthy. A driver may be nominated for an outstanding deed of heroism or highway courtesy; an outstanding contribution to highway safety, and/or a long record of safe and courteous driving - or a combination of part or all of these. [18] An impartial panel of judges from the trucking industry, government and law enforcement chooses the winner. [19]
The honor is considered among the highest a commercial truck driver can receive. [20] As the ATA National Driver of the Year, the winner receives a cash prize, trophy and diamond lapel pin at the ATA Annual Awards Banquet. [21]
Past ATA National Driver of the Year Award Winners are: [22]
Year | Driver's Name | Company | State |
---|---|---|---|
1948 | Verle Langford | Eveready Truck Service | Colorado |
1949 | Martin Larsen | Indianhead Truck Lines | Minnesota |
1950 | Lloyd Reisner | Hancock Truck Lines | Indiana |
1951 | John Castner | Pierce Auto Freight Lines, Inc. | Oregon |
1952 | Allen C. Sagerhorn | Consolidated Freightways, Inc. | Oregon |
1953 | Pat Burkholder | Garrett Freight Lines | Nevada |
1954 | Gomer W. Bailey | Buckingham Transportation, Inc. | Colorado |
1955 | Floyd J. Pemberton | Commercial Carriers, Inc. | Michigan |
1956 | Lewis E. Cook | Reed's Transfer & Storage Co. | Iowa |
1957 | Ernest Roedel | Freight Ways, Inc. | Missouri |
1958 | Reuben C. Thomas | Sessions Company, Inc. | Alabama |
1959 | Carl C. Crim | Hugh Breeding, Inc. | Oklahoma |
1960 | Russell L. Brown | American Petrofina Co. | Texas |
1961 | Melvin O. Griffith | Eagle Transport Co. | Texas |
1962 | Arthur M. Lear | St. Johnsbury Trucking Co. | Maine |
1963 | Wm. C. Nunley | Yellow Transit Freight Lines | Oklahoma |
1964 | Woodrow W. Given | Service Lines, Inc. | Tennessee |
1965 | Russell L. Beaulieu | Branch Motor Express Co. | Rhode Island |
1966 | Donald Beaudette | Land O’Lakes Creameries, Inc. | Minnesota |
1967 | James A. Martin | B & L Motor Freight | Ohio |
1968 | Wray Mundy | D C International | Colorado |
1969 | Frederick Marsh | Watt Transport, Inc. | Rhode Island |
1970 | Frank DeLucia | Adley Express Co. | Connecticut |
1971 | W.T. “Shorty” Smith | Central Freight Lines, Inc. | Texas |
1972 | Clarence Hoffman | Raymond Motor Trans. Company | Minnesota |
1973 | Curtis C. Stapp | System 99 | California |
1974 | Wilbur “Bill” Moore | Pacific Intermountain Express Co. | New Mexico |
1975 | Calvin W. Lane | Coors Transportation Co. | Colorado |
1976 | Harry R. Thomas | Robertson Truck-A-Ways, Inc. | California |
1977 | Olen Lee Welk | C&H Transportation Co., Inc. | Dallas, Texas/Missouri |
1978 | William M. Whim | Mid-American Lines, Inc. | Kansas |
1979 | Frank M. Waldron | C&H Transportation Co., Inc. | Arizona |
1980 | Malvin B. Mathews | Complete Auto Transit | Georgia |
1981 | Kenneth W. Olson | Murphy Motor Freight Lines | Minnesota |
1982 | William G. Yates | Hobart Corporation | Ohio |
1983 | Arthur E. Schooley | Jack Cooper Transport | Missouri |
1984 | N.F. Plunkett Jr. | Chevron USA | Alabama |
1985 | John Chamberlain | Giant Food | Washington D.C. |
1986 | Davis C. Wrich | MacMillan Bloedel Bldg. Materials | Maryland |
1987 | Jack Wilhite | Liquid Transport, Inc. | Indiana |
1988 | Louis E. Mora | Sierra Pacific Power Co. | Nevada |
1989 | Charles K. Thompson | Neal Oil Co. (APC) | South Carolina |
1990 | Alan J. Koole | Steelcase, Inc. | Michigan |
1991 | John D. Porter | Con-Way Central Express | Ohio |
1992 | Jerry Pitra | Super Valu Stores, Inc. | Minnesota |
1993 | David P. Maphis | Hadley Auto Transport Co. | California |
1994 | LaVant Bean | Anderson Trucking Service | Minnesota |
1995 | Floyd R. Buffington | CF Motor Freight | Illinois |
1996 | David G. McDonald | Roadway Express | Kansas |
1997 | Harold Likins Jr. | Farmland Industries | Kansas |
1998 | James E. Sheriff | Roadway Express | Illinois |
1999 | Thomas W. Hawks | Overnite Transportation Company | Tennessee |
2000 | William Whim | ABF Freight System, Inc. | Kansas |
2001 | Steven Williams | Nobel Sysco | Colorado |
2002 | Kevin Scott Harris | ABF Freight System, Inc. | New York |
2003 | Doris Hansen | Quality Transportation, Inc. | Montana |
2004 | Charles Brown | Yellow Transportation, Inc. | Kansas |
2005 | Larry Springer | Central Freight Lines | Texas |
2006 | James Wilcox | Yellow Transportation, Inc. | New Mexico |
2007 | William Gray Jr. | UPS Freight | Maryland |
2008 | David J. May | Con-way Freight | New York |
2009 | Keith Suits | Rite Aid Rome Distribution Center | New York |
2010 | Anthony A. Jones | Central Freight Lines | Texas |
2011 | Dalton “Rickey” Oliver | Walmart Transportation LLC | Mississippi |
2012 | Ronald Fuller | Central Freight Lines | Texas |
2013 | Gary Babbitt | Central Freight Lines | Texas |
2014 | Carl Schultz | Davis Express | Florida |
2015 | James Hylan Grise | Walmart Transportation LLC | Kentucky |
2016 | Frank Calvert | AAA Cooper Transportation | Alabama |
2017 | Gary Plant | Walmart Transportation LLC | Colorado |
The Technology & Maintenance Council (TMC) creates standards for engineering and maintenance practices. [23]
For example, Recommended Practice RP 243 [24] tells tire manufactures how to use yellow and red dots on tire rims to let installers know the balance points of the tire. [25]
In 2013, the Supreme Court of the United States held in American Trucking Ass'ns, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles that certain environmental requirements imposed by a city were preempted by federal law. [26]
A truck or lorry is a motor vehicle designed to transport freight, carry specialized payloads, or perform other utilitarian work. Trucks vary greatly in size, power, and configuration, but the vast majority feature body-on-frame construction, with a cabin that is independent of the payload portion of the vehicle. Smaller varieties may be mechanically similar to some automobiles. Commercial trucks can be very large and powerful and may be configured to be mounted with specialized equipment, such as in the case of refuse trucks, fire trucks, concrete mixers, and suction excavators. In American English, a commercial vehicle without a trailer or other articulation is formally a "straight truck" while one designed specifically to pull a trailer is not a truck but a "tractor".
The vast majority of passenger travel in the United States occurs by automobile for shorter distances and airplane or railroad for longer distances. Most cargo in the U.S. is transported by, in descending order, railroad, truck, pipeline, or boat; air shipping is typically used only for perishables and premium express shipments. Transportation is the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States.
Commercial vehicle operations (CVO) is an application of intelligent transportation systems for trucks. It would allow trucks and buses to travel without having to stop for weight, credential, and safety checks, by using highway sensors to check them automatically as they are driven at prevailing speeds.
Corporate average fuel economy (CAFE) standards are regulations in the United States, first enacted by the United States Congress in 1975, after the 1973–74 Arab Oil Embargo, to improve the average fuel economy of cars and light trucks produced for sale in the United States. More recently, efficiency standards were developed and implemented for heavy-duty pickup trucks and commercial medium-duty and heavy-duty vehicles.
A truck driver is a person who earns a living as the driver of a truck, which is commonly defined as a large goods vehicle (LGV) or heavy goods vehicle (HGV).
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) is an agency in the United States Department of Transportation that regulates the trucking industry in the United States. The primary mission of the FMCSA is to reduce crashes, injuries, and fatalities involving large trucks and buses.
The Professional Truck Driver Institute (PTDI) is a non-profit organization that provides certification of training courses for drivers of commercial motor vehicles. It was formed in 1986 during the standardization of commercial driver's licensing by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration in the United States. Its management was taken over by the TCA in 1996. PTDI is the first nonprofit organization to develop uniform skill performance, curriculum, and certification standards for the trucking industry and to award course certification to entry-level truck driver training courses and motor carrier driver-finishing programs.
New England Motor Freight, Inc. (NEMF) was a unionized less-than-truckload (LTL) and truckload freight carrier, based in Elizabeth, New Jersey. It was one of the largest LTL carriers in the US Northeast when it entered Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2019 and subsequently shut down all operations in 2020.
Hours of service (HOS) regulations are issued by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) and govern the working hours of anyone operating a commercial motor vehicle (CMV) in the United States. These regulations apply to truck drivers, commercial and intercity bus drivers, and school bus drivers who operate CMVs. These rules limit the number of daily and weekly hours spent driving and working, and regulate the minimum amount of time drivers must spend resting between driving shifts. For intrastate commerce, the respective state's regulations apply.
The trucking industry serves the American economy by transporting large quantities of raw materials, works in process, and finished goods over land—typically from manufacturing plants to retail distribution centers. Trucks are also used in the construction industry, two of which require dump trucks and portable concrete mixers to move the large amounts of rocks, dirt, concrete, and other building materials used in construction. Trucks in America are responsible for the majority of freight movement over land and are tools in the manufacturing, transportation, and warehousing industries.
A specialized set of jargon describe the tools, equipment, and employment sectors used in the trucking industry in the United States. Some terms may be used within other English-speaking countries, or within the freight industry in general. For example, shore power is a term borrowed from shipping terminology, in which electrical power is transferred from shore to ship, instead of the ship relying upon idling its engines. Drawing power from land lines is more efficient than engine idling and eliminates localized air pollution. Another borrowed term is "landing gear", which refers to the legs which support the front end of a semi-trailer when it is not connected to a semi-truck. Some nicknames are obvious wordplay, such as "portable parking lot", in reference to a truck that carries automobiles.
The National Private Truck Council (NPTC) is a national trade association in the United States which represents private motor carrier fleets.
The National Network is a network of approved state highways and interstates for commercial truck drivers in the United States. The Surface Transportation Assistance Act of 1982 authorized the establishment of a national network of highways designated for use by large trucks. On these highways, Federal width and length limits apply. The National Network (NN) includes almost all of the Interstate Highway System and other, specified non-Interstate highways. The network comprises more than 200,000 miles (320,000 km) of highways.
The trucking industry in the United States has affected the political and economic history of the United States in the 20th century. Before the invention of automobiles, most freight was moved by train or horse-drawn vehicle.
Michael H. Belzer is an American academic and former truck driver, known as an internationally recognized expert on the trucking industry, especially the institutional and economic impact of deregulation. He is a professor in the economics department at Wayne State University. He is the author of Sweatshops on Wheels: Winners and Losers in Trucking Deregulation. Along with Gregory M. Saltzman, he coauthored Truck Driver Occupational Safety and Health: 2003 Conference Report and Selective Literature Review, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, 2007. He has written many peer-reviewed articles on trucking industry economics, labor, occupational safety and health, infrastructure, and operational issues.
An auto transport broker is a type of cargo broker that specializes in the shipping and transportation of vehicles. Most vehicles shipped in the U.S. are cars and trucks, but many brokers handle boats, RVs, motorcycles and other types of vehicles as well. Auto transport is classified as "specialized freight trucking" under NAICS code 484230.
People who are driving as part of their work duties are an important road user category. First, workers themselves are at risk of road traffic injury. Contributing factors include fatigue and long work hours, delivery pressures, distractions from mobile phones and other devices, lack of training to operate the assigned vehicle, vehicle defects, use of prescription and non-prescription medications, medical conditions, and poor journey planning. Death, disability, or injury of a family wage earner due to road traffic injury, in addition to causing emotional pain and suffering, creates economic hardship for the injured worker and family members that may persist well beyond the event itself.
Public Law 113-45 is a U.S. federal law that requires that the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration go through the standard rulemaking proceeding, allowing comment from the public and the trucking industry, before it sets any requirements for truck drivers related to sleep apnea. It was introduced in the United States House of Representatives during the 113th United States Congress and was signed into law by President Barack Obama in October 2013.
WTI Transport, Inc. is a for-hire carrier based in Tuscaloosa, Alabama with terminals in Birmingham, Mobile and Whites Creek, TN. A flatbed company of approximately 370 tractors, WTI hauls freight throughout the Southeast, Midwest, Southwest, and East Coast. WTI’s fleet is a mixture of company drivers and owner-operators. Shipments consist mainly of roofing, building materials, and all types of aluminum, iron and steel products. Currently, WTI was a subsidiary of Daseke, which is now owned by TFI International.
Women In Trucking Association, Inc.(WIT) is an American non-profit organization which focuses on the employment of women in the trucking industry and addresses obstacles that might keep women from entering or succeeding in the trucking industry. It was founded by Ellen Voie in 2007. Jennifer Hedrick was named the CEO after Ellen Voie. The organization focuses mainly on women who are already a part of the industry or have an interest in it and works as a support network with 5,500 members in which 600 are drivers and others are corporations. WIT headquarters are located in Plover, Wisconsin, United States.
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