
Originally Posted by
bee utey
A small trucking company I know of works on road construction in Brisbane, and has real trouble getting truck drivers who don't wreck their trucks. Things like no mechanical sympathy, turning off dash cams to hide their bad driving etc, makes them very expensive to employ. So they employ an older bloke from far away in SA who has marginal health and modest experience in large trucks, simply because he's sane and careful.
The cut a long story short, to imagine there is a large pool of excellent but under appreciated truck drivers out there is simply ludicrous. The number of good, sane drivers is well balanced by the bad, nutso drivers out in the wild. These are the drivers that autonomous trucks will be first to replace. The good ones will hang on until retirement, knowing that they have to allow a company to profit from their work or they're out on their collective ears.
The above is valid to a point.
I have left the longhaul/OTR/interstate transport industry for the very real reasons of (a) total lack of care for drivers' welfare, from owners, despatchers and customers; (b) very few companies want to pay anything over the award wage for drivers; (experience is worthless); (c) over-zealous transport inspectors/police who see truckdrivers as nothing more than criminal scum who must be fined for something, any time you pull them over; (d) the preponderance of half-trained ****wits driving at you (or passing you) who have absolutely no idea of what they are doing/carrying, and whose sole criteria for being in the industry is that they get to drive something with 600 horsepower and/or 700 LED lights, or preferably both.
I have been a heavy vehicle professional driver for most of the last 40 years. How come I get paid the same rate as a person who has just done a CentreLink funded course to get a licence that allows them to drive a B-double (or worse yet, a RoadTrain) at 90 - 100 kmh on roads filled with holidaying families, grey nomads and drug-crazed idiots?
These people are getting jobs because the transport companies don't want to affect their bottom lines by either training drivers properly, or paying a reasonable wage to an experienced driver. And don't start with the union thing, either! The Totally Worthless Union - sorry, Transport Workers Union,
has agreed with bosses that, although a driver can (and is generally expected to) work up to 84 hours one week, and 72 hours the next, the poor boss is only required to pay the superannuation levy on the first 38 hours of each week. In return for supporting the bosses in that little effort, the TWU received an injection of quite a few million dollars from the Road Transport Association for a "training" fund. In that 40 years, I have never seen ANY training offered to the members of the TWU.
Try arguing about the social justice issues, as well as the strategic value of a well-managed heavy freight industry, rather than simply assuming that the band-aid of autonomous trucks is going to solve all these issues.
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1999 Disco TD5 ("Bluey")
1996 Disco 300 TDi ("Slo-Mo")
1995 P38A 4.6 HSE ("The Limo")
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