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Kansas driver training school exec says 18-year-olds would make bad long-haul drivers

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Kansas driver training school exec says 18-year-olds would make bad long-haul drivers

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — The director of a Kansas City truck driving school says he thinks 18-year-olds would make bad long-haul truck drivers.

Jeffrey Steinberg of the Apex CDL Institute was commenting on the fact that the nationwide shortage of truckers has some industry officials and national lawmakers supporting a plan to allow 18-year-olds to become long-haul drivers.

Apex trains truckers and would likely have more students if federal proposals to allow those under 21 to drive big rigs across the country.

“Sure, I’d make money” if the law was changed, Steinberg said. “But is it going to create more problems than it would solve? In my opinion, yes. I don’t think it’s safe.”

Bills before the U.S. House and the Senate — co-sponsored by U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran of Kansas — both propose that people under 21 who have commercial drivers’ licenses be allowed to take their cargo across state lines. Federal law now requires truckers to wait until age 21 to get a CDL permitting them to drive big rigs across the country.

As has been previously reported in The Trucker, Steinberg is not alone in his objection to dropping that minimum age to 18.

The 160,000-member Owner Operator Independent Drivers Association, headquartered in Grain Valley, Missouri, has joined more than a dozen traffic safety groups in writing protest letters to a congressional committee that will hear the idea.

The federal proposals set training requirements for young CDL holders.

“Younger drivers both lack overall experience and are less safe behind the wheel than their older counterparts,” the April 17 letter said. “In fact, CMV drivers under the age of 19 are four times more likely to be involved in fatal crashes.”

Republican-led proposals before the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee would affect Kansas City, a central trucking hub, and other communities long state borders. Both Kansas and Missouri allow 18-year-olds to obtain CDLs, but only for travel within one state.

Some industry analysts with deliveries surging because of Amazon, eBay and Fed Ex, it’s long past time to relax interstate restrictions.

“What isn’t interstate commerce these days?” asked Satish Jindel of shipping logistics adviser SJ Consulting Group, Inc. “Anyone who makes a distinction between interstate and intrastate trucking is stuck in the past.”

He said whether the minimum age is 18 or 21, the federal government needs to be consistent with the state CDL laws.

The American Trucking Associations expect the costs of delivered packages — in addition to groceries, furniture and most every consumer product — to climb as road shippers try to find 51,000 drivers to fill the empty cabs.

That’s up from a trucker shortage of 20,000 in 2013 and 36,500 in 2016. The ATA recently forecast a shortage of 100,000 drivers by 2021.

With the median age of a long-hauler at 49 and shipping demands ascending, the industry aims to recruit 90,000 new drivers a year for the next decade to keep cargo moving, said Sean McNally, ATA vice president of communications and press secretary.

OOIDA’s Norita Taylor said major carriers could fix the driver shortage by paying more but they don’t want to do that.

“Their shareholders benefit from high turnover and low pay,” said Taylor. “Dropping the minimum age to 18 is just another way to get cheap help.”

The median annual wage in 2015 for a trucker working with a private fleet, such as a driver for Walmart, was $73,000, according to ATA.

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The Associated Press is an independent global news organization dedicated to factual reporting. Founded in 1846, AP today remains the most trusted source of fast, accurate, unbiased news in all formats and the essential provider of the technology and services vital to the news business. The Trucker Media Group is subscriber of The Associated Press has been granted the license to use this content on TheTrucker.com and The Trucker newspaper in accordance with its Content License Agreement with The Associated Press.
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