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Congress uses Zika virus to de-regulate trucking industry

Johan

I'm too lazy to set a usertitle.
Congress Is Using Zika To Weaken Truck Safety


Fighting the virus is tied to a bill that would allow fatigued truckers to stay on the road for more than 80 hours a week.


Truck driver Dana Logan tried on Wednesday to recount a crash that decapitated two fathers and two children, hoping to convince Congress to stop weakening rules that require truckers to get rest.

She couldn’t do it. A dozen years after the fatigued driver of another truck fell asleep and drove into an SUV stuck in traffic behind her rig on a Texas highway, Logan was still too devastated to finish talking about it.

She drives trucks with her husband, Tim, as a team. That June day in 2004 near Sulphur Springs, the other driver fell asleep and rammed the SUV, pushing it under the carriage of Logan’s trailer, shearing off the top half of the vehicle with its four helpless passengers inside.

Logan got as far as recalling how her husband rushed to help the other trucker.

“When Tim tried the get the injured driver out of the truck, he [the other driver] asked him, ‘Did I hit something?’ Those were his last words before he died,” Logan told reporters in a conference call aimed at legislation moving in Congress this week.

Sobbing, Logan had to stop. She asked her husband to finish.

What the Logans and other safety advocates are worried about are measures that would allow truck drivers to work more than 80 hours a week, tacked onto to separate appropriations bills in the House and the Senate.

The Senate on Thursday passed a measure that allows 73 hours of driving and an additional 8.5 hours on related work each week as part of a massive spending measure that will fund transportation, housing and military construction projects, as well as the Veterans Administration. Funding for Zika prevention was also added to that bill, making it very likely to pass.

In the House, measures were added to the transportation and housing appropriations bill under consideration in the committee that set similar rest rules, reverting to regulations originally set in the Bush administration that were repeatedly challenged and thrown out in lawsuits.

Both bills would prevent the Obama administration from enforcing a regulation that briefly went into effect in 2013 that effectively capped truck drivers’ working hours at 70 a week, and ensured they could have two nights off in a row. That rule was blocked by a rider in a 2014 spending bill, which had to pass to avert a government shutdown.

The newly inserted policy provisions represent a trend over the last three years of the trucking industry using must-pass spending bills to win regulatory concessions that are opposed by most safety advocates and likely could not pass as normal stand-alone bills. In this case, not only do the bills fund major parts of the government, they provide cash to fight Zika.

There’s not been any congressional hearings on any of these proposals,” said Jackie Gillian, the president of Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety. “The trucking industry doesn’t want to have hearings, they don’t want to hear from truck drivers like Dana Logan. They don’t want to hear from victims.

“They know that if they do have testimony and they have the experts up there, the people affected, that they would see how illogical and insane these proposals are,” Gillian said.

Those trucking interests see the complaints of safety advocates as illogical.

On the rest requirements, known as hours-of-service rules, the industry believes advocates are inventing problems.

“There’s this claim by these anti-truck groups that drivers are abusing it. There’s no data showing that,” said Dave Osiecki, who is in charge of public advocacy at the American Trucking Associations.

Osiecki argued that it’s nearly impossible for drivers to string together their hours to hit the 80-plus hour maximums that are theoretically allowed under the rules that the trucking provisions in both spending bills would preserve. “We just don’t see a need for it,” he said of the tougher Obama administration standard with two nights off.

The ATA maintains that the Obama rules don’t improve safety, and even worsen it, while the older rules, with one night off, do improve safety.

Nevertheless, police who enforce the highway safety laws do think there is a connection between getting more sleep and safety.

One is Illinois Trooper Douglas Balder. Balder was nearly burned alive when a truck driver completely ignored the rules, and drove into the back of Balder’s patrol car. Balder, also a military veteran, spent months in rehab to get back on the beat. He doesn’t want Congress rolling back safety rules, and joined Wednesday’s conference call to say so.

“I continue to take to the road every day to do my part to protect the people and ensure the law is upheld,” Balder said. “I cannot do my job alone. I urge Congress to take necessary action to ensure our safety, not to put us further at risk.”

The White House has threatened to veto the Senate spending bill, in part because of the rest rule rollback. But the prospect of a veto is less likely with the Zika measure attached.

Three senators, Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Cory Booker (D-N.J.) and Ed Markey (D-Mass.) had hoped to offer an amendment in debate Thursday to restore the Obama rest regulations, but they were not given a chance amid the back-and-forth around Zika and other pressing matters surrounding the larger legislation. Democrats tried to remove Zika funding from the bill on Wednesday, but were blocked.

Blumenthal took to the floor briefly to complain about being shut out.

“We need to make truck drivers, in effect, more safely empowered on the roads to take steps to protect themselves,” Blumenthal said. “Drivers who spend too much time behind the wheel are tired. They can’t drive as safely.”
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/congress-zika-truck-safety_us_573cfc0ae4b0646cbeec1b89

Next time you're ran over by a truck do not say "Thanks Obama !" but "Thanks Ryan !"
 

Mr. Daystar

In a bell tower, watching you through cross hairs.
Before you spew anything further, perhaps you should peruse the hundreds and hundreds of pages, of VERY fine print, that make up the DOT regulations. Maybe you should try and do that job for a week, and see what all of it incompasses. I don't think you really understand anything about what the rules really are, how they're enforced, but more importantly, just how fucking badly, those regulations, are manipulated, and left to the judgement and discretion, of how and when they are enforced, by the very people that enforce them.

Or to be more to the point, maybe you should STFU, and try and pull a 48' trailer around a city, and make pick ups and deliveries. Or try and get a tanker into a gas station, then explain to an irrational hood rat why he has to put out his cigarette.....when you're in his hood, at 2:00am

The reality is, companies can replace a road experienced driver for chump change, because when they made all of these wonderful rules, and required all of those seasoned drivers, to be subject to a host of new nonsense, the good ones, that would stand together, and expect good conditions, and fare wages all said fuck this, and retired, or like I did, moved into another field.

The industry is allowed to pay by the mile, or a percentage of gross, instead of making it mandatory to pay hourly.
 

Ace Boobtoucher

Founder and Captain of the Douchepatrol
How's it feel to get completely schooled by a stupid trucker, johan?
 

Mr. Daystar

In a bell tower, watching you through cross hairs.
I'm not sure Johan got schooled either. Thewhitedevil actually confirms his point.

The point is, the industry, and government themselves have caused the problems. Don't blame a man for wanting to feed his family, because if he refuses to do the job, someone else will do it, and likely for less money. The people making the regulations, and enforcing them have abused their power, and tried to turn the job, into a $10 an hour gig, and now refer to truck drivers as "unskilled" labor...lets see assclown do it. He flaps his jaws about this country, and it's problems, but he couldn't put a fucking bicycle, in places I've put a 48' trailer. He's a fucking troll, that lives in a socialist shit hole, but since they would probably arrest, and jail him for badmouthing his countries laws, he rags on this country. Congress CONSTANTLY tacks amendments onto bills, that are unrelated, and they shouldn't be allowed to, but why fuck with the working class? Why, because he's a fucktard that would rather give the world to lazy, useless slugs, then try and make conditions better for those that have earned it. This is just another example of him flapping his jaws about something he knows nothing about.

He is right, in the sense that fatigue is a common problem in the industry, but the people that make the rules, make no effort to fix the problem, they simply allow it to continue, and reap the rewards of huge fines, and abuse their power.
 

Johan

I'm too lazy to set a usertitle.
The point is, the industry, and government themselves have caused the problems. Don't blame a man for wanting to feed his family, because if he refuses to do the job, someone else will do it, and likely for less money.

Exactly. Don't blame the workers for doing as much as they could with the current regulations to put food on the table. Blame those who put these regulations. But, much more important, try to change things, to make possible for the truckers to have a living wage without being forced to drive 80 hours/week
 

Mr. Daystar

In a bell tower, watching you through cross hairs.
Exactly. Don't blame the workers for doing as much as they could with the current regulations to put food on the table. Blame those who put these regulations. But, much more important, try to change things, to make possible for the truckers to have a living wage without being forced to drive 80 hours/week

Any driver that is forced to work 80 hours a week, could easily make that go away, by dropping a dime on the company....provided he is even able to get a job anywhere else.. There is no possible way, one man could, without taking something. And if you would have paid closer attention to your own article, you would see they were a team. I'm not sure how that works, but one man is allowed 60 hours in 7 days, or 70 hours in 8 days, and that works out to 10, or 11 hours of driving, and 4 hours of dock time, etc., and that also requires them 8 hours in a bunk after that time, or before starting a new cycle. That would, and has worked fine, the problem lies with the shit wages companies are aloud to pay, which causes drivers to rush, and speed, so they can haul an extra load for the week, when all the government would have to do, is make it mandatory a company pay hourly only, creating an attitude of, what's the rush, and causing the drivers to let off that throttle, or for those getting a percentage of the load, not over load the truck. So yeah, I blame the clowns that fucked up the industry, you're just so used to a government that tells you it's always right, don't question us.....so you don't.
 

Johan

I'm too lazy to set a usertitle.
So yeah, I blame the clowns that fucked up the industry, you're just so used to a government that tells you it's always right, don't question us.....so you don't.

Yeah, as a french I'm used not to question the government. 'cause us french don't question our government.


France Could Be Immobilized By Massive Protests Over Labor Law Reforms
http://time.com/4348204/france-labor-law-reform-strikes/

Since March, proposed labor reforms aimed at loosening the vast labyrinth of labor regulations—contained in France’s 3,689-page “Work Code”—has sparked the most explosive political battle in more than 10 years, with mammoth street protests, strikes and violent clashes with police. After weeks of protests and sit-ins, the government finally rammed the bill through parliament without no vote on May 10, over the objections of millions of regular French—who have long enjoyed watertight labor protections—and to the fury of many lawmakers within the ruling Socialist Party.
That has tipped the argument into a full-blown labor crisis that now threatens to wreak havoc on the world’s sixth biggest economy.

Since Monday, union activists have blockaded some French oil refineries, burning barricades and battling police, and leaving about one-third of French gas stations without fuel. Union leaders have called a national strike in multiple industries for Thursday, including at nuclear power plants, which provide most of France’s electricity. “Towards total paralysis?” asked Le Parisien newspaper on its Wednesday’s cover, showing long gas lines.


You're right, we don't question the government : we challenge it, we fight it
And in case you would argue that only a radival minority is fighting and the people actually supports the government : according to a poll published in Le Parisien on Wednesday, 61% of the people blames the government for the unrest.
 
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