Surge of Foreign Drivers in the Trucking Industry
In recent months, I have engaged with numerous senior executives from major trucking companies across the U.S. A prevailing sentiment among them is their recent acknowledgment of the significant influx of foreign drivers and motor carriers. Most had assumed this was a slow trend, but they were unaware it had reached an exponential scale.
Unrecognized Changes in Driver Training
Until this summer, the term “non-domiciled CDL” was unfamiliar to many, and the extent of untrained drivers entering the sector was largely overlooked. Despite firms investing in better training and compliance, smaller operators benefited immensely by being able to “train” their drivers with minimal oversight from federal regulators.
A Misguided Solution to the Driver Shortage
This situation has been fueled by the longstanding belief, heavily promoted by the American Trucking Associations (ATA), that the U.S. is facing a perpetual truck-driver shortage. The ATA pushed Congress and FMCSA to reduce entry barriers, under the impression that new drivers would flock to large fleets rather than smaller operators.
Changing Dynamics in Freight Brokering
However, the landscape has shifted dramatically. With significant investments in technology, freight brokers have not only caught up but surpassed larger fleets, providing advanced automation and technology. These brokers exploit their ability to source the cheapest capacity available, largely ignoring compliance with safety standards.
Regulatory Changes and Their Impact
Key regulations that have dismantled barriers and weakened safety enforcement include:
- 2016 – English-proficiency requirements for CDLs were no longer enforced by the DOT.
- 2018 – Implementation of the ELD mandate, allowing self-certified devices that permit editing of driving hours.
- 2019 – Introduction of non-domiciled CDLs, allowing foreign nationals to acquire U.S. commercial licenses.
- 2022 – The Entry-Level Driver Training rule led to a rise in unaccredited “CDL mills,” which sell licenses with minimal training.
Challenges Facing Compliant Carriers
The poorly trained foreign drivers often do not meet the standards required by compliant major carriers due to issues like lack of work authorization and experience. Consequently, they frequently end up with small, often foreign-owned fleets that offer pay significantly below the market rate and engage in long, exhausting hours with tampered electronic logging devices (ELDs).
A Dire Outlook for the Industry
The repercussions of these developments are glaring:
- Legitimate carriers struggle to remain financially viable, while rule-abiding motor carriers are pushed to the margins.
- Cargo theft has grown into a national security crisis, often coordinated by foreign dispatchers along with foreign-born drivers within the U.S.
- Despite substantial investments in safety technology, fatal truck-related accidents have surged by approximately 40% since 2014, primarily due to the presence of inexperienced and overworked drivers operating massive vehicles.
In summary, a well-meaning yet severely misguided effort to resolve the driver shortage, coupled with regulatory loopholes, unchecked immigration, and advancements in technology, has fundamentally disrupted America’s trucking industry in under a decade. Alarmingly, few in Washington or corporate boardrooms anticipated these developments.
