Are you setting your drivers up to fail?
Traffic congestion has been a long-standing problem, costing the trucking industry billions every year. Driver frustration, lost revenue, additional costs, and crashes are all the result of congestion. The question is, what are you doing about it? If you are doing nothing, you are likely setting your drivers up to fail.
Knowing where the congestion is
The American Transport Research Institute (ATRI), an organization that conducts transportation research with an emphasis on the trucking industry, reports the transportation bottlenecks annually. These bottlenecks are one primary cause of congestion, and the costs related to congestion.
The study conducted by ATRI provides the following for each bottleneck:
- Average speed
- Peak average speed (speed during peak or “rush” hours)
- Non-peak average speed
- If the bottleneck’s speed is improving or worsening
As an example, during peak hours, the average speed through Fort Lee, NJ, on I-95 is 19 miles per hour and the non-peak speed is 30 miles per hour. How does knowing this and doing nothing about it set your driver up to fail?
Planning for congestion
If your driver supervisors do the normal trip planning and assume an average speed of 55 miles per hour for 11 hours of driving (the limit), or a daily total of 605 miles (or more in the case of some driver supervisor), there is going to be a problem. If your driver spends an hour at 19 miles per hour, the driver will be at least 36 miles short of the planned 605 miles at the end of the day. This means the driver will have two choices once the limit is reached. Either falsify a record or stop 45 minutes from the expected destination. At this point, no matter what the driver does, the driver will be wrong as far as someone is concerned.
How do you keep this from happening? By:
- Knowing where the bottlenecks are in your operational area;
- Avoiding the bottlenecks altogether, if possible;
- Planning runs to cross through the unavoidable bottlenecks at non-peak times; and
- Factoring in the delays these bottlenecks create when planning runs.
If this can be done effectively, you will be able to:
- Avoid having your drivers stuck in the bottlenecks at peak time (happier drivers);
- Avoid lost time while stuck idling in traffic (less lost revenue and lower costs); and
- Reduce your risk when it comes to high-density traffic crashes (rear-end, lane change, merging, etc.).
Key to remember: The bottom line is that knowing where the bottlenecks are and having a plan to deal with them will allow both you and your drivers to be successful.