The Nevada Trucking Association has joined forces with a broad group of state and national trucking associations from across the country in support of a comprehensive policy blueprint to eliminate bad actors who exploit regulatory gaps, undermine safety, and create unfair competitive advantages in the commercial trucking industry. The action plan, The Fight for Fairness and Safety: Paving the Way for a Trucking Resurgence, addresses seven critical areas where fraudulent and illegal operators undercut law-abiding businesses, endanger public safety, and damage the reputation and morale of America's professional truck drivers.
The Trucking Association Executive Council (TAEC), which developed the action plan through a special task force, is comprised of trucking leaders from coast to coast. The initiative comes as the trucking industry nationwide and in Nevada faces daunting freight demand, frivolous attacks from plaintiff’s trial lawyers, and unfair competition from illegal operators who manipulate licensing systems, engage in freight fraud, tamper with safety records, and operate outside legal boundaries.
"Nevada’s trucking industry is built on the hard work of family-owned businesses, independent owner-operators, and professional drivers who play by the rules. But bad actors who exploit loopholes in our regulatory systems are putting everyone at risk… This is unacceptable,” said Paul J. Enos, CEO, Nevada Trucking Association. “We are focused on solutions and resolute on seeing them implemented. By doing so, we will save lives, save small businesses and set the table for a trucking resurgence in Nevada."
The Trucking Resurgence action plan identifies seven major vulnerabilities that bad actors exploit:
The report emphasizes that most of the solutions are immediately actionable and do not require long, drawn-out legislation or rule makings. Most involve technology-driven solutions, including AI-powered data analysis to detect fraudulent patterns, integrated databases to prevent operator schemes, and enhanced verification systems to ensure regulatory compliance. These reforms would not create new burdens for legitimate operators but would leverage existing data more effectively to identify and eliminate bad actors.
Bennie Gamble, Nevada Trucking Association Board President, Devine Intermodal added: "Our Nevada Trucking Association members represent the safest and most reliable fleets in the state, but we cannot compete with those who simply don’t follow the laws. It not only comprises highway safety, but it is also demoralizing to our professional drivers who are on the roads everyday doing the right things and moving this state. We have a duty to fight for them, and this action plan will level the playing field."
The report builds on recent federal actions, including Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy's order strictly enforcing English language proficiency requirements which resulted in more than 5,000+ drivers being placed out-of-service for safety violations, and another order cracking down on the issuance of non-domiciled CDLs, many of which were issued improperly or illegally. The TAEC recommendations would extend similar accountability measures across all identified problem areas.
The trucking industry in Nevada represents over 50,000 jobs and 80% of communities exclusively depend on trucking to move their goods. This network in Nevada along with the TAEC task force that developed these recommendations brings extraordinary depth of experience to this work.
"These commonsense reforms are supported by trucking leaders from across America – from the East Coast to the West Coast, from the South to the Upper Midwest,” emphasized Rebecca Oyler, President of the Pennsylvania Motor Truck Association and TAEC Task Force member. “We are calling on the appropriate government and law enforcement agencies and all supply chain partners, from shippers and brokers to insurance companies and trucking fleets, to come together and put these commonsense solutions into action.”
The Nevada Trucking Association will continue to work with the TAEC as well as federal and state officials to ensure that progress is made on each of these areas. Regardless of how long or any challenges that exist, the Nevada Trucking Association remains committed to paving the way for a trucking resurgenc
The Kenworth truck assembly plant in Chillicothe, Ohio, recently held the fifth annual Kenworth Truck Parade in the heart of downtown Chillicothe.
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