TheTrucker.com

Search narrows for top rookie military veteran driver

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio, — FASTPORT has announced its top three finalists for “Transition Trucking: Driving for Excellence,” a program dedicated to finding America’s top rookie military veteran driver. The program recognizes top drivers who have made the successful transition from active duty to driving for a commercial fleet. The top three drivers, listed with their military branch of service and current truck fleet, are: Jimmy Reddell/U.S. Army, Army Reserves/Stevens Transport; James Rose/U.S. Marines/PRIME Inc.; and Christopher Slindee/U.S. Army/Knight Transportation. The announcement was made during a ceremony at the MHC RoadReady Center in Chillicothe, Ohio, following a recognition event and tour of the adjacent Kenworth Chillicothe manufacturing plant. For the sixth consecutive year, Kenworth has teamed with the FASTPORT Trucking Track Mentoring Program and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation’s Hiring our Heroes Program to support “Transition Trucking: Driving for Excellence.” Kenworth is again providing The Driver’s Truck™ – a Kenworth T680 with a 76-inch sleeper – to serve as the program’s award to this year’s overall winner. The T680 features the complete PACCAR Powertrain with PACCAR MX-13 engine, PACCAR TX-12 automated transmission, and PACCAR DX-40 tandem rear axles. “Congratulations to our three finalists – Jimmy Reddell, James Rose and Christopher Slindee – and to the other successful drivers who achieved Top 10 status in this special recognition program,” said Jim Walenczak, Kenworth assistant general manager for sales and marketing. “Kenworth’s continuing participation is a way to thank our military veterans for their service, and to encourage the trucking industry to offer them career opportunities and support.” “Each of our three finalists achieved significant accomplishments during their military careers and are now excelling as professional truck drivers. It is always important to help our veterans make a smooth transition into civilian life, and the trucking industry certainly provides a key avenue for that objective,” said Brad Bentley, FASTPORT president. Other truck drivers, who achieved the Top 10 are: Steven Brown/U.S. Navy/EPES Transport System; Lucresha Daniels/U.S. Navy/PRIME Inc.; Marcus Ellis/U.S. Air Force/Stevens Transport; Will Gamez/U.S. Army, National Guard/Roehl Transport; Scott McFadden/U.S. Navy/Melton Truck Lines; Brad Stonebraker/U.S. Army/Melton Truck Lines; and Justin Utt/U.S. Marine Corps Reserve/Swift Transportation.   To qualify, drivers had to meet three eligibility requirements:   Must have been active military or member of the National Guard or Reserve. Graduated from PTDI-certified, NAPFTDS or CVTA member driver training school, with a valid CDL. First hired in a trucking position between January 1, 2020 and July 31, 2021.   A popular vote will take place online from Oct. 28 until Veteran’s Day Nov. 11. The winner will be determined by a Selection Committee and announced December 17 at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washington, D.C.    

U.S. transportation sector unemployment falls

WASHINGTON — The unemployment rate in the U.S. transportation sector was down 5.7 percent (not seasonally adjusted) in September 2021, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The September 2021 rate was down nearly 50% from September 2020’s 11.3 percent but remains above the 3.3 percent rate in pre-pandemic September 2019. To date, the transportation unemployment rate peak during the COVID-19 pandemic is 15.7 percent set in both May and July 2020 while the general U.S. unemployment rate peaked at 14.4 percent in April 2020. Throughout the pandemic, the unemployment rate for the U.S. transportation sector has been higher than the general U.S. unemployment rate with a difference ranging from 0.2 percentage points in June 2021 to 5.2 percentage points in July 2020. With a general U.S. unemployment rate of 4.8 percent, the gap in September is 0.9 percentage points.

CVSA safe driver week nets thousands of violations

WASHINGTON — Law enforcement in Canada, Mexico and the U.S. stopped 46,058 passenger vehicle and commercial motor vehicle (CMV) drivers engaging in dangerous driving behaviors during the Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance’s (CVSA) Operation Safer Driver Week safety initiative, according to a news release from the CVSA. Officers pulled over 28,148 commercial motor vehicles and 17,910 passenger vehicles on July 11-17, issuing 10,486 warnings and 16,863 citations. Throughout the week, law enforcement personnel pulled over and issued warnings or citations to drivers they observed engaging in dangerous driving behaviors, such as speeding or distracted driving. “The goal of Operation Safe Driver Week is to dissuade dangerous driving behaviors through interactions between drivers engaging in risky driving behaviors and law enforcement officers, and through a heightened law enforcement presence on our roadways,” the news release stated. Speeding, which was the focus of this year’s Operation Safe Driver Week, was the top driver-behavior violation for both types of drivers. Officers issued 11,039 citations and 5,478 warnings for speeding/basic speed law/driving too fast for conditions. That’s 9,349 citations and 2,929 warnings for speed-related offenses to passenger vehicle drivers, and 1,690 speed-related citations and 2,549 warnings to commercial motor vehicle drivers. Failure to wear a seat belt was the second most-cited violation, with 2,580 total citations and 1,308 warnings. Officers issued 1,355 citations and 354 warnings to passenger vehicle drivers, along with 1,225 citations and 954 warnings to commercial motor vehicle drivers. Law enforcement personnel also issued 9,302 warnings and 8,484 citations to drivers for state/local driver violations. “Examples of such violations may include vehicle-related observations an officer may notice during a traffic stop, such as equipment violations, expired license plate tags, inoperative lamps, etc.,” according to the news release. “Broken out by driver type, commercial motor vehicle drivers received 6,631 warnings and 4,007 citations, and passenger vehicle drivers were issued 2,671 warnings and 4,477 citations.” In addition to traffic enforcement, 2,469 motorists were assisted during Operation Safe Driver Week, highlighting law enforcement’s commitment to public service and roadway safety. Motorist assistance may include help fixing a flat tire, providing gasoline for a stranded vehicle, checking on someone who may be pulled over, assisting individuals in distress or experiencing a medical emergency, jump-starting a vehicle, traffic control, etc.

Infrastructure bill becoming hot potato in D.C.

WASHINGTON — Washington Rep. Pramila Jayapal, the head of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, says she has pushed President Joe Biden to hold the line and keep his ambitious social spending plan closer to $3 trillion instead of the $2 trillion range that he has floated to Democrats in recent days. Jayapal told The Associated Press in an interview on Oct. 7 that she had told Biden that his suggestion for compromise was “too low, and I said that I would really like to be closer to three.” The original amount for the package of Democratic initiatives, including expanded child care, health care, education and environmental programs, was $3.5 trillion. The Washington state Democrat has emerged as a top negotiator in the talks on Capitol Hill, using the clout of her liberal caucus — and its nearly 100 members — to thwart a group of House moderates who demanded a vote last week on a $1 trillion infrastructure bill. Biden tacitly endorsed the progressive caucus’s strategy last week, insisting that the spending package full of longtime Democratic priorities be linked to infrastructure. But he also floated trimming it back to a range between $1.9 trillion and $2.3 trillion, drawing pushback from Jayapal and others. Jayapal said that the conversation is ongoing and she isn’t “drawing any red lines” in the negotiations. A White House spokesman declined to comment on any private conversations. “The president knows” that progressives are pushing for the higher amount, Jayapal said. “I said it directly to him, I also said to his top aides, and we’re going to continue to figure out where we can go.” In only her fifth year in Congress, Jayapal is holding her growing caucus of liberals firmly together, marshaling influence that the left wing of the party hasn’t had in years. In doing so, she is hoping to help Biden win passage of his agenda, which includes a slate of social programs that Democrats have desired for decades. A small group of moderate House Democrats hoped to pass the bipartisan infrastructure bill alone and work on the social spending package later. But fearful that moderates would sink the larger bill, Jayapal and her members insisted that the two remain linked. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi abandoned a planned vote on the infrastructure measure after it became clear they lacked support to pass it. Jayapal says she’s “proud of this moment” not only because she is a woman of color at the negotiating table — she emigrated from India at age 16 and became the first Indian-American woman to serve in the House when she was elected in 2016 — but also because her caucus has stayed unified. “We are fighting for something that will benefit the entire country,” she said. But enactment of Biden’s agenda is far from certain. There are bigger obstacles in the Senate, where the support of moderate Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona will be needed for anything to pass. Both want the proposal scaled back. And while the liberals are fighting for Biden’s priorities, their stance risks dividing a party that remained mostly united through Donald Trump’s presidency. With thin margins in both the House and Senate, those splits could ultimately leave the party — as Biden told the caucus last week — with nothing. Some see an echo of the 2010 Tea Party wave. Like the progressives, the conservatives elected that year — who later formed the Freedom Caucus — often withheld their votes to shape the agenda and force concessions from their leadership. Jayapal rejects those comparisons to the Freedom Caucus, which she says is a “caucus of no.” The Congressional Progressive Caucus, she said, “is trying to get things done.” As chairwoman of the Progressive Caucus, Jayapal has proven to be an ambitious foil to the moderates, following the path blazed by liberal icon Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and former Democratic presidential candidate who is fighting for the progressive priorities in the Senate. But Jayapal seems to have another mentor in mind. She recently compared herself to Pelosi, who is renowned for her skill at counting and winning votes. “I am a good vote counter also,” Jayapal told reporters amid the negotiations. “I was an organizer for 20 years before I came to Congress, and I came in on a theory of change that if we really wanted to change politics so that they could work for working people, then we needed to be organizing on the inside,” Jayapal told The AP. “And so that’s what I’ve tried to do.” She said she answers texts “at all hours of the night” and has worked to build up a progressive caucus that was “more like a social club” when she first arrived in 2016. The caucus has also worked since Democrats won the House majority in 2018 to work more closely with outside allies. “We’re very, very strategic and coordinated,” Jayapal says. “So all of that I think has helped us to become a force, and it’s not something that happened overnight. It’s something we’ve been working towards for many years, over the last three years, and we’ve made incredible progress.” She also credits Sanders and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, liberals who ran to the left of Biden, with pushing him to embrace many of the ideas now at the heart of his social spending plan. “So when the president comes out and says this is my agenda, of course that helps us,” Jayapal says. “And we’ve elected more and more progressive members.”

Oregon State Police use horrific crash photos as teaching tool

KENT, Ore. — An 18-wheeler driver was cited for careless driving after a catastrophic head-on collision with another big rig on Oct. 6 along Highway 97 near Kent, Oregon. According to the Oregon State Police’s (OSP) Facebook page, a rig hauling a loaded flatbed was traveling southbound when the driver attempted to pass on a corner in a no-passing zone. While passing, the driver, who was traveling at a high rate of speed, according to the OSP, slammed on his brakes, leaving more than 200 feet of skid marks before the trailer partially jackknifed and struck a northbound red semi almost directly head on. The impact tore off the entire right side of the red rig’s cab. The flatbed load separated from the other truck after the impact and came to a rest in the northbound lane and shoulder. Another 18-wheeler clipped the wreckage and was also damaged. No one was killed. The OSP shared multiple graphic photos of the accident scene in what it said was an effort to promote safer driving among commercial motor vehicles. Names of those involved in the accident were not given.

I-70 crackdown on bad driving begins

COLUMBUS – The Ohio State Highway Patrol (OSHP) is joining forces with other members of the 6-State Trooper Project to focus on speed, safety belt and impaired driving enforcement on Interstate 70 over the next 72 hours. The initiative began Friday and will continue through Sunday, according to an OSHP news release. The effort will include the Indiana State Police, Pennsylvania State Police and OSHP. Since 2020, there have been more than 4,700 crashes on I-70 in Ohio, including 27 fatal crashes, according to the OSHP. Of the 27 fatal crashes, 56 percent involved alcohol and drugs and 26 percent were speed related. Ohio troopers have arrested nearly 1,000 motorists impaired by alcohol and drugs on I-70 since 2020, the OSHP said. “Every traffic stop we make is a chance for our troopers to educate motorists on safe driving habits,” Colonel Richard S. Fambro, OSHP patrol superintendent, said. “We are committed to reducing unsafe driving behaviors on all of Ohio’s roadways, including the more than 225 miles that make up Interstate 70.” The 6-State Trooper Project is a multi-state law enforcement partnership between  Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia.  

INDOT imposing new weight restrictions for big rigs in Indy

INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT) will implement a weight restriction on the I-65/I-70 exit ramps in downtown Indianapolis as part of the North Split reconstruction project. The restriction will begin Sunday, Oct. 10, and be in place through November 2022, according to an INDOT news release. INDOT said the measure will reduce traffic congestion, prevent infrastructure damage and improve safety for downtown commuters and pedestrians. Vehicles exceeding 13 tons gross vehicle weight will be restricted from using the I-65/I-70 collector-distributor exit ramps at Michigan and Ohio streets (Exit 83A), and the Washington Street exit ramp from I-65 northbound/I-70 eastbound (Exit 111). Vehicles exceeding the weight limit that have been using these exits as a short cut should use the official North Split detours on I-465 to avoid the downtown construction Signage indicating the weight restrictions will be placed on I-70 westbound prior to the collector-distributor exits, and on I-65 northbound and I-70 eastbound before vehicles enter the South Split. Once the signage is in place, restrictions will officially begin. Indiana State Police troopers will be stationed near the appropriate exit ramps to enforce the restrictions and redirect overweight vehicles to the proper detour. Please share this information within your organization. If you would like to learn more about the North Split project, please visit our website at northsplit.com, or feel free to reach out with any immediate questions.  

Ton limit lowered for Kentucky bridge

FRANKFORT, Ky. —Engineers with the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KYTC) have lowered the tonnage limit on a heavily-used bridge after a recent inspection. A 22-ton load limit has been enacted for the U.S. 42 Prestonville Bridge in Carroll County, Kentucky. The steel truss bridge spans the Kentucky River near its confluence with the Ohio River, at mile point 5.8, and connects Carrollton, Kentucky, and Prestonsville, Kentucky. The bridge had a 40-ton rating, but after a recent, routine inspection, KYTC engineers determined that a 22-ton limit would be more appropriate, a KYTC news release stated. The suggested route for vehicles exceeding the 22-ton limit is U.S. 42 to U.S. 421 to I-71 to KY 227, according to the KYTC.    

Trucker loses life in Indiana wreck

SELLERSBURG, Ind. — A crash between two 18-wheelers on Oct. 5 along Interstate 65 turned into a fatal crash investigation and had traffic backed up for several miles, according to a news release from the Indiana State Police (ISP). At around 11:40 a.m., emergency crews responded to the 34 mile-marker of I-65 just north of the Austin exit after a red 2001 International semi collided into the rear of a second rig that was slowed in traffic. The preliminary investigation reveals that northbound traffic on I-65 near the 35 mile-marker was diverted into the left lane as road crews had the right lane closed for roadway maintenance, the ISP report stated. Due to the lane closure, a blue 2019 Freightliner, driven by Tavares Jackson of Tuscaloosa, Alabama, was slowed in the right lane. At the same time, the red International semi approached from the south and collided with the rear of the trailer pulled by the Freightliner. The red International then traveled off the east side of the interstate before coming to rest on its side. The driver of the red semi was rushed to the hospital by Scott County emergency crews but later succumbed to his injuries. The identity of the deceased driver is not being released at this time, pending notification of family. The driver of the blue Freightliner was not injured.

Campaign encourages seat belts, safe driving practices

FRANKFORT, Ky. — Kentucky officials are participating in a campaign to encourage safe driving practices including the use of seat belts. The high-visibility enforcement campaign called Operation Crash Reduction will run Oct. 8 to 11 and emphasize seat belt use to save lives, a statement from the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet said. “While drivers can never control who they share the road with, one thing within everyone’s control is the decision to buckle up and put the phone down every time you get in a vehicle to keep yourself safer no matter what,” Gov. Andy Beshear said in the statement. The Transportation Cabinet is partnering with state and local law enforcement and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to support the initiative. From 2015 to 2019, October was the most likely month for fatal crashes, officials said.

Kentucky I-64 bridge replacements scheduled

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A multi-bridge replacement project is scheduled to begin on Oct. 10 on Interstate 64 in Franklin County, Kentucky. According to the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KYTC) District 5 office, the project includes replacing four sets of bridges (eight existing bridges) along I-64 East and West between mile markers 47 and 52. The overpass bridges to be replaced are: KY 151/Grafenburg Road (mile point 46.4) South Benson Creek (mile point 49.1) KY 1665/Evergreen Road (mile point 49.8) KY 2817/Cardwell Lane (mile point 51.5) Each new bridge replacement will be widened to support up to three lanes of traffic, and all bridge decks will be replaced, the KYTC said. Motorists may see barrier walls installed and shoulder closures while work is in progress. Two lanes of traffic will be maintained during daytime work (7 a.m. to 7 p.m.). Nightly lane closures are to be expected between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m., which will reduce the interstate to one lane and will occur intermittently for the duration of the project. The date and duration of this work may be adjusted if inclement weather or other unforeseen delays occur.

Alabama swamped, 4 killed in floods from slow-moving front

PELHAM, Ala. — Terrified drivers climbed out of swamped cars and muddy floodwater flowed through neighborhoods after a stalled weather front drenched Alabama for hours, leaving entire communities under water Thursday and killing at least four people, with still more storms possible. Dozens of people had to be rescued Wednesday night in central Alabama, where the National Weather Service said as much as 13 inches (33 centimeters) of rain fell, and a south Alabama town temporarily lost its main grocery store when a creek came through the doors of the Piggly Wiggly. Near the coast, heavy rains caused sewage to bubble out of underground pipes. Metro Birmingham remained under a flash flood watch, and meteorologists predicted another wet day for most of Alabama and parts of Florida, Georgia and Tennessee. As much as 5 more inches (13 centimeters) of rain was possible through Thursday evening, the weather service said. A 4-year-old girl and an 18-year-old woman died in separate incidents when floods carried away vehicles in northeast Alabama, said Marshall County Coroner Cody Nugent. Searchers found the bodies of a boyfriend and girlfriend, both 23, inside a car that was swept away by a swollen stream in the Birmingham suburb of Hoover, said Shelby County Coroner Lina Evans. “Normally it’s just a trickle. It was raging,” she said. She identified the victims as Latin Marie Hill and Myles Jared Butler, both of Hoover. The rain caused havoc in places across north Alabama, submerging cars in metro Birmingham and parts of the Tennessee Valley. Rescue crews helped motorists escape as low visibility and standing water made travel life-threatening in some areas. Some of the worst flooding happened in Pelham, outside Birmingham, where 82 people were rescued from homes and more than 15 were pulled from vehicles after creeks and streams overflowed their banks, the Pelham Fire Department said early Thursday. More than 100 rescuers with 16 boats were involved, the statement said. “Water was coming in the car so fast I had to bail out the window,” said Jill Caskey, who watched Thursday morning as a tow truck hauled away her sport utility vehicle from a low-lying parking lot in Pelham. The car stalled as she was trying to navigate floodwaters during the deluge. A police officer helped her to high ground, and Caskey’s husband picked her up on a roadside. But it then took them three hours to travel a few miles home because of flooded roads. Caskey has heard the weather safety mantra of “turn around, don’t drown,” but said “it really happened so fast I didn’t have time to think about it.” The Alabama deluge came about seven weeks after flooding killed more than a dozen people in Tennessee. Such floods may be more common in the future because of global warming, scientists say. Federal research has found that man-made climate change doubles the chances of the types of heavy rains that swamped Baton Rouge, Louisiana, with 26 inches (66 centimeters) of rain in 2016, killing a dozen people and damaging 150,000 homes. In south Alabama near the Florida line, water covered streets in the flood-prone Escambia County towns of Brewton and East Brewton, inundating a shopping center and sending as much as 3 feet (1 meter) of water into the Piggly Wiggly. Two schools had to cancel classes, said Escambia Sheriff Heath Jackson. To the south, in Baldwin County, as much as 250,000 gallons (946,000 liters) of waste water overflowed from sewage systems along Mobile Bay, officials said. Heavy rain extended into Georgia, with the National Weather Service saying as many as 6 inches (15 centimeters) of rain have fallen in a crescent from Columbus to Macon and then northeast toward Athens, Gainesville and South Carolina. On Wednesday, news outlets reported that rising waters forced people to evacuate from a motel in Macon after the parking lot and ground floor rooms flooded. In adjoining Jones County, schools canceled classes Thursday as floodwaters submerged some roads and left some unpaved roads impassable. Rising waters on the Ocmulgee River led Jones County deputies to rescue people who were trapped in their home on Wednesday. At least eight county roads in Putnam County were closed, with at least one washed out. Flood warnings were posted along rivers in six states, and gates were opened at the dam on Lake Sinclair in central Georgia to reduce water levels. Rains should end in Alabama by late Thursday as storms move eastward. Flash flood warnings were in effect through Friday along the weather front, stretching from the Florida Panhandle through northern Georgia and mountainous regions of the eastern Tennessee and the western Carolinas. Back in Pelham, Michael Halbert waded through his neighborhood to a townhome that filled with more than 40 inches (102 centimeters) of water. He tried to get items off the floor, but still lost some of his belongings, and his Jeep filled with water outside. “Flood insurance is going to have fun,” he said.

Beer spill causes hiccups on Wisconsin highway

JACKSON COUNTY, Wis. — A semi truck full of beer overturned just after 9 a.m. on Wednesday along Interstate 94 near the Hixton community in Wisconsin, strewing cans of foamy brew on the shoulder. According to a Facebook post from the Wisconsin State Patrol, recovery of the spilled suds lasted several hours, and traffic was backed up for miles. There were no injuries reported. The crash remains under investigation.    

FMCSA’s new state licensing requirements take effect in November

WASHINGTON — The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) will soon require state driver’s licensing agencies (SDLAs) to check an applicant’s drug and alcohol use history. According to the Federal Register, beginning Nov. 8, state agencies must run names through an FMCSA-administered database containing “driver-specific controlled substance and alcohol records” before issuing new commercial driver’s licenses (CDLs), renewing licenses, upgrading licenses or transferring commercial licenses or permits. If violations are found, the applicant’s request for a license will be denied until they comply with return-to-duty requirements. The FMCSA has also mandated that current license holders be reviewed through the database, and if violations are found, their commercial learner’s permit (CLP) or CDL privileges will be downgraded until they comply with return-to-duty requirements. The FMCSA said that the rule “will help keep unsafe drivers off the road while increasing compliance with the commercial motor vehicle driving prohibition.” There are two ways the SDLAs will receive notification of the driver’s prohibited status, according to the Federal Register. The SDLA “pulls” the information from the clearinghouse by conducting a required query prior to a specified commercial licensing transaction or the FMCSA “pushes” the information to the SDLA whenever a drug or alcohol program violation is reported to the clearinghouse for a CLP or CDL holder licensed in that state. The FMCSA will also “push” a notification to the SDLA when the driver complies with return to duty requirements and is no longer prohibited by FMCSA’s regulations from operating a commercial motor vehicle. In addition, if the FMCSA determines that a driver was erroneously identified as prohibited, the agency will notify the SDLA that the individual is not prohibited from operating a CMV; the SDLA must promptly reinstate the commercial driving privilege to the driver’s license and expunge the driving record accordingly. Click here to view the complete ruling from the Federal Register.

Truckload of Corvettes catches fire

WHITE HOUSE, Tenn. — A Jack Cooper Transport truck full of 2022 Chevrolet Corvettes caught fire Tuesday night in a parking lot near Nashville. The sports cars had just left the Corvette manufacturing plant in Bowling Green, Kentucky, according to Corvette Action Center, a Corvette enthusiast website. The truck driver was not injured; however, the four Corvettes that sat closest to the transport truck’s cab were destroyed. Numerous videos circulated on Facebook Wednesday showing the truck going up in a massive ball of flames. A spokesperson for Chevrolet told Road & Track magazine that the Jack Cooper driver pulled into a truck stop to investigate an issue with the truck. “Our vehicle logistics supplier is investigating,” the spokesperson said. “As we learn more, we will reach out to affected dealers and customers.” Click here for a video of the incident.

Feds shut down tractor-trailer smuggling operation

EL PASO, Texas – Federal agents arrested a Texas man on Oct. 5 for harboring and transporting more than 100 noncitizens who were driven to various U.S. cities in tractor-trailers. Roberto Benavides, 47, was arrested at his residence in the 14000 block of Warren Belin Drive in Horizon City, Texas, according to a news release from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE). Benavides was a target of a Homeland Security-El Paso investigation for more than a year, the news release stated. ICE, Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) and El Paso members of the Border Enforcement Security Taskforce investigated the case with the assistance of the U.S. Border Patrol’s (USBP)and El Paso Sector Integrated Targeting Team (ITT). “Human smugglers are callous individuals who are driven by greed with total disregard for the health and safety of the people they exploit and endanger,” Acting Special Agent in Charge Taekuk Cho said. “HSI will continue to work tirelessly utilizing our broad authorities alongside our partners to combat smuggling networks responsible for this dangerous and often deadly activity.” El Paso Sector Chief Patrol Agent Gloria I. Chavez said that she is “extremely proud of the work our El Paso Sector agents conduct each and every day to disrupt these Transnational Criminal Organizations. Our seamless partnership with Homeland Security Investigations has allowed for enhanced targeting of this illicit activity. Together, we will continue to succeed in combating these criminal organizations while saving human lives in the El Paso region.” On Sept. 30, agents also executed two federal search warrants on two area properties used to facilitate human smuggling activity, according to the ICE news release. Agents seized more than $27,000 from both properties and encountered 37 noncitizens, including 23 Hondurans, six Ecuadorans, four Peruvians, two Mexicans and two El Salvadorans.

Zebras escape from Illinois pumpkin farm, snarling traffic

PINGREE GROVE, Ill. — Two zebras that escaped from a suburban Chicago pumpkin farm had travelers on a state highway doing double takes as the exotic animals hit the road during their brief taste of freedom. The young male and female zebras escaped Sunday from a pen inside an indoor zoo at Goebbert’s Pumpkin Patch and Apple Orchard in Pingree Grove. They crossed Route 47 several times and wandered through farm fields in the northwest Chicago suburb. Illinois State Police were called due to the ensuring chase being near Interstate 90, The Daily Herald reported. Other police agencies also joined the pursuit of the striped escapees. A passenger in a car filmed the animals running into a field and posted the video on TikTok. “They look like zebras. They got stripes. They are!” the driver exclaims in the video. Kane County Undersheriff Pat Gengler said police blocked traffic several times in the area, worried that cars would strike the zebras or gawking motorists would get in accidents. After about two hours, workers with the pumpkin patch and the zoo tracked down the animals on all-terrain vehicles and captured both of them. The zebras, which are supplied to the pumpkin patch by another business, were not injured during the pursuit. “It was pretty exciting for a while. It was all hands on deck,” said Jacob Goebbert, a farm employee.

Tonka trucks are latest victims in snarled supply chain

NEW YORK — Container ships are stacked up by the dozen in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of California. They’re also waiting in line on New York’s coast. As the supply chain has slowed due to a myriad of reasons, including labor shortages, many retailers are scrambling to figure out how they will get the items they need to make this Christmas season bright for shoppers — and for their bottom lines. Some are saying that a shortage of truck drivers is to blame. But the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers (OOIDA) Association says that isn’t necessarily true. “Pay them,” OOIDA Vice President Lewie Pugh said of drivers. “As a matter of fact, trucking companies could solve both of their top two concerns by addressing what matters most to drivers.” Truckers who responded to a recent OOIDA survey on the issue said that compensation is the most critical issue in the industry, while “carriers insisted on perpetuating their decades-old claim that they can’t find enough workers,” according to OOIDA. “The real problem is carriers aren’t taking the necessary steps to keep their drivers,” Pugh said. “This fact is demonstrated in other ongoing research and the high ranking of retention in this latest survey.” Pugh said OOIDA has long held that the myth of a truck driver shortage is actually more of an extremely high turnover problem in the truckload sector. “There is a pretty simple solution to everything and that is to pay drivers for their time,” he added. “We think it’s rather hypocritical for big trucking to keep saying there is a shortage when, according to the survey, the top concern of drivers isn’t even on their radar.” On the flip side, the American Trucking Associations says that the truck driver shortage is the worst it’s ever been. Regardless, tons of goods remain backed up and out of consumers’ reach. With three months until Christmas, the Basic Fun toy company has made an unprecedented decision: leave one-third of its iconic Tonka Mighty Dump Trucks destined for U.S. store shelves in China. Why? Given surging prices of shipping containers and clogs in the supply network, transportation costs to get the yellow bulky toy to U.S. soil is now 40% of the retail price, which is roughly $26. That’s dramatically up from 7% a year ago. And it doesn’t even include the cost of getting the product from U.S. ports to retailers. “We’ve never left product behind in this way,” says Jay Foreman, CEO of Basic Fun. “We really had no choice.” Tonka trucks are popular among some truckers who haul them on the back of their otherwise empty flatbeds. Folklore says that if the trucks are pointing toward the cab, the driver is heading home. If the trucks are pointing away from the cab, the driver is off to catch a load. Others say that it’s bad luck to haul an empty trailer, so that’s why the Tonka’s are strapped in. Toy companies are racing to get their products to retailers as they grapple with a severe supply network crunch that could mean sparse shelves for the crucial holidays. They’re trying to find containers to ship their goods while searching for alternative ports. Some are flying in some of the toys instead of shipping by boat to ensure delivery before Dec. 25. And in cases like Basic Fun, they are leaving certain toys behind in China and waiting for costs to come down. Like all manufacturers, toy companies have been facing supply chain woes since the pandemic started and temporarily closed factories in China in early 2020. Then, U.S. stores temporarily cut back or halted production amid lockdowns. The situation has only worsened since the spring, with companies having a hard time meeting surging demand for all sorts of goods from shoppers re-entering the world. Manufacturers are wrestling with bottlenecks at factories and key ports like Long Beach California — and all points in between. Furthermore, labor shortages in the U.S. have made it difficult to get stuff unloaded from ships and onto trucks. But for toy makers that heavily rely on holiday sales, there’s a lot at stake for the nearly $33 billion U.S. industry. The fourth quarter accounts for 70% of its annual sales. On average, holiday sales account for 20% of the overall retail industry. And 85% of the toys are made in China, estimates Steve Pasierb, CEO of The Toy Association. The snarls are so severe that some retailers are telling companies they don’t want products if they’re shipped after mid-October. That’s because products that typically took four to six weeks from when they left a factory in China to landing at a U.S. distribution center now take 12 to 16 weeks, says Marc Rosenberg, a toy consultant. The struggles are happening as the U.S. toy industry enjoyed a nearly 17% increase in sales last year and a 40% increase in the first half of this year as parents looked to entertain their kids at home, according to NPD Group, a market research firm. But while analysts expect strong growth in 2021, many toy companies said they’ll see their sales reduced because they won’t be able to fulfill orders on hot items, particularly surprise hits. They are also incurring big costs that will force some toy companies to shutter. Toy executives say they can’t raise prices any more than 10% — even though it won’t completely cover the higher costs — because they’re worried about shopper reaction. Mattel Inc., the nation’s largest toy company, warned this summer it’s raising prices in time for the holiday season to offset higher shipping costs, though it didn’t say by how much. Costs of containers on ships have increased more than six-fold from last year with some brand executives saying they’ve gone up to $20,000 from roughly $3,000 a year ago. That has forced big retailers like Walmart and Target among others to charter their own ships. Foreman calculates 1,800 Tonka trucks fit on each 40-foot container. So at $20,000 per container, that’s costing him $11 each. That’s up from an average of $1.75 each in a typical year. He says he’s focusing on shipping smaller items like Mash’ems — soft, squishy, water-filled collectibles — onto containers as he looks to maximize the total dollar value of the container and profit margins. He estimates he can fit $150,000 worth of Mash-ems in a container versus $40,000 worth of Tonka trucks. Some like MGA Entertainment, the maker of L.O.L dolls, are expediting the flying of its toys because it now costs roughly the same shipping. Jim Silver, editor-in-chief of TTPM, a toy review site, says big discounters like Target and Walmart should have a healthier supply of toys compared with smaller ones because of their clout. Target says it has been teaming up closely with its vendors and transportation partners to keep stores well-stocked and ready for its customers. But Melissa McCollum, owner of Learning Express Toys in Birmingham, Alabama, says she’s received only 25% of the holiday toys as of mid-September; typically, that figure is 50%. And The Toy Book, the leading trade magazine serving the toy industry, is promoting a curated list of in-stock products that retailers can get fast from U.S. warehouses. Many toy companies like Basic Fun and PlayMonster have reduced advertising. “We would be advertising to empty shelves,” said Tim Kilpin, president of PlayMonster, who says 15% to 20% of its holiday goods are snarled in the supply chain. Koosh, a toy ball made of rubber filaments, was completely sold out in August, and there’s no chance of it being replenished by Christmas, he says. The bottlenecks are expected to have lingering consequences. Toy makers are facing pressure from retailers to ship the first flow of holiday 2022 goods in early March instead of late April and the second cycle in June instead of by late July, says Andrew Yanofsky, head of marketing and operations at WowWee. That will force companies to make decisions about how much to make and reorder without having a full picture of the sales data, he says. Yanofsky said he placed a big bet initially on Got2Glow Fairy Finder, a light show in a jar that allows children to find virtual fairies, because he knew he wouldn’t be able to replenish the production given the snarls. “We took a risk on excess material beyond the scope of what we thought we could sell, ” he said. Even the few toy companies that make goods in the U.S. have struggled because of labor shortages. John Gessert is CEO and president of American Plastic Toys, based in Walled Lake, Michigan with another plant in Mississippi. He says the company is missing 35% to 40% of its front-line workers. Now, it’s shifting away its focus on play kitchens that require six workers and more toward less labor intensive toys like basketball sets, which require just three workers to put together. “I have never had such a complicated puzzle to fix. “he said. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Skanska ordered to pay $92K for evidence loss in bridge case

PENSACOLA, Fla. — The construction company Skanska has been ordered to pay more than $92,000 after a judge ruled it had destroyed evidence in a lawsuit over damage to the Pensacola Bay Bridge during Hurricane Sally. Businesses, residents and local governments are suing the company for economic damages after its barges came loose and hit the bridge, causing serious damage during the hurricane that hit in September 2020. The bridge — a vital connection between Pensacola and Gulf Breeze along U.S. 98 — reopened in May. U.S. Magistrate Judge Hope Cannon issued the order Friday, saying the funds will cover legal fees and costs associated with the loss or destruction of cell phone data involved in the case. The Pensacola News Journal reported that attorneys for Skanska have asked for the payment to be reduced. The company has previously said it took all reasonable steps to secure its equipment but said the storm’s power was unforeseeable and extreme.  

Man who fell from big rig on I-40 dies

UPDATE: Steven Carney, who police say fell from an 18-wheeler earlier this week along Interstate 40 near Nashville, has succumbed to his injuries, according to the Nashville Police Department’s Twitter feed.   Previous report: NASHVILLE — A Tennessee man was critically injured after falling from a moving 18-wheeler Monday night along Interstate 40 near Nashville. According to the Twitter account for the Nashville Police Department (NPD), 41-year-old Steven Carney of Joelton, Tennessee, was hanging onto the passenger side of the big rig when he fell off. He is listed as being in critical condition. Investigators did not say why Carney was hanging on to the truck. The rig’s driver was uninjured. Earlier this month, the Atlanta Police Department (APD) issued an alert for 18-wheeler drivers after social media posts show someone hanging on to the back of a tractor-trailer that’s driving down the interstate. According to an APD Facebook post, this isn’t the first incident of its kind to be reported in the Atlanta area. So far, there have been no injuries reported in Georgia.