Chameleon carriers, broker liability, unqualified truck drivers. These are all longstanding issues that trucking stakeholders have been sounding the alarm on for years. Those cries seemed to have fallen upon deaf ears … until now.
For decades, the federal government and the general public have turned a blind eye to the widespread problems plaguing the trucking industry. Truck drivers went from highway heroes to a burden on traffic at best and vehicular homicidal maniacs at worst.
Since President Donald Trump returned to the White House, the Department of Transportation has implemented sweeping policies targeting bad actors in trucking. Non-domiciled CDLs and English proficiency have been in the crosshairs.
Those two issues are directly tied to safety, but the Trump administration seized on shifting attitudes toward immigration to push those policies quickly forward. The federal government now has the opportunity to do the same with other longstanding problems in the trucking industry.
Mainstream media attention
In the past week alone, CBS News has published two reports that the general public may see as “bombshells,” but the writing has been on the wall for years.
On April 12, “60 Minutes” aired a segment on chameleon carriers, exposing Super Ego’s web of carriers. A week later, CBS Sunday Morning dove into broker liability, putting C.H. Robinson on blast.
That report found that more than 10,000 chameleon carriers have been created in the past five years, roughly one out of every 100 new applicants. In some cases, the fraud was not subtle, with identical registrants and addresses. CBS News also reported that it had found fake information, including 100 new companies using the non-working email address [email protected].
If you are reading Land Line, none of this is new. For a national audience, it is, and that can be a game-changer.
‘Politics is downstream from culture’
That quote is attributed to Andrew Breitbart, founder of Breitbart News. If you believe that to be true, the trucking industry could experience a renaissance.
Also known as the Breitbart Doctrine, the quote suggests that values, traditions, language, art and social norms shape government policy, laws and who gets elected, not the other way around. Entertainment, media and education influence how we see the world.
Trucking’s biggest problems have always lived in the shadows. To industry outsiders, a “chameleon carrier” might as well have been a portable cage for a lizard and “broker liability” was legal jargon. Many likely (and falsely) assumed that the CDL process is far more rigorous than getting a cosmetology license.
When outlets like CBS News push those issues into the national spotlight, they stop being industry problems and start becoming public safety concerns. Once voters start paying attention, politicians tend to follow.
We have seen this playbook before.
During the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic, truck drivers briefly regained their status as highway heroes. For a short window, the country paid attention.
That attention led to awareness of two longstanding issues: truck parking and restroom access. Not coincidentally, government action followed.
In 2021, Washington state introduced bills addressing both issues, including the nation’s first legislation focused on restroom access for truck drivers. Similar efforts have followed at the state and federal levels.
Meanwhile, issues like chameleon carriers, broker liability and unqualified drivers remained largely ignored. In addition to not being part of the pandemic conversation, the American Trucking Associations has deflected attention from those topics by perpetuating the false “driver shortage” narrative it spoon-fed to the public through lazy mainstream reporting. That narrative got lawmakers to consider measures like under-21 drivers and bigger, heavier trucks.
That narrative is shifting, and it couldn’t happen at a better time.
With new attention on bad actors in trucking, the industry has an opening it has not had in years, but attention alone is not enough. Mainstream media will not always get the details right. That is reality. What matters is whether the core message aligns with what truck drivers have been saying all along.
If the Breitbart Doctrine holds, this moment in time is crucial for truck drivers. Not because the problems are new, but because the audience is.
When voters connect chameleon carriers and other trucking bad actors to highway safety, political pressure builds. In Washington, pressure is often the prerequisite for policy.
Will this attention last long enough to drive real reform? It can, but only if truck drivers keep banging that drum and get involved in grassroots advocacy.
Now is not the time to let off the gas. It is time to put the pedal to the metal. LL
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