Posted on 04/01/2015 6:59:31 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
The great conundrum of the U.S. economy today is that we have record numbers of working age people out of the labor force at the same time we have businesses desperately trying to find workers. As an example, the American Transportation Research Institute estimates there are 30,000 35,000 trucker jobs that could be filled tomorrow if workers would take these jobsa shortage that could rise to 240,000 by 2022.
While the jobs market overall remains weak, demand is high for in certain sectors. For skilled and reliable mechanics, welders, engineers, electricians, plumbers, computer technicians, and nurses, jobs are plentiful; one can often find a job in 48 hours. As Bob Funk, the president of Express Services, which matches almost one-half million temporary workers with employers each year, If you have a useful skill, we can find you a job. But too many are graduating from high school and college without any skills at all.
The lesson, to play off of the famous Waylon Jennings song: Momma dont let your babies grow up to be philosophy majors.
Three years ago the chronic disease of the economy was a shortage of jobs. This shortage persists in many sectors. But two other shortages are now being feltthe shortage of trained employees and of low-skilled employees willing to work. Patrick Doyle, the president of Dominos Pizza, says that the franchises around the country are having a hard time filling delivery and clerical positions. Its a very tight labor market out there now.
This shortage has an upside for workers because it allows them to bid up wages. When Wal-Mart announced last month that wages for many starter workers would rise to $9 an hour, well above the federal legal minimum, they werent being humanitarians. They were responding to a tightening labor market.
(Excerpt) Read more at forbes.com ...
I’m actually fairly involved in some of the issues surrounding this. 10 years tops. Too much money at stake. The only saving grace is that they might need human presence in the event of an emergency, but I doubt it. Your drone comment is probably accurate — much easier to have drone monitoring capabilities on the trucks rather than a single driver.
As for safety, it is pretty clear that the trucks only a few generations from current tech will actually be more safe than with human drivers. They will have fewer accidents but will have different causes than human driver based accidents. Congress will give an agency statutory authority to regulate the use of driverless trucks and vehicles, and the agency will make a safety evaluation that will clear the vehicles. Congress critters will have their hands clean because it was an agency that gave final permission.
My personnel opinion is that in 10 years America will still not be ready for driverless trucks, not even drone trucks. I don’t think anyone is going to be ready at that point to say a fuel truck carrying thousands of gallons of fuel will be okay to be driverless. Even if the technology is there, I don’t think people will be ready for it. And I don’t think the technology will be there yet. I think we will just be getting into drone planes making deliveries from Amazon on a regular basis in 10 years. Just my humble opinion.
Can’t find them from our public schools.
You’re right.
And truck drivers get drug tested on a continuing basis.
That disqualifies a lot of folks.
I know a guy who works at a trash hauling outfit, they pay good money and no overnight travel. But you have to have a CDL and a lot of young guys can’t get there.
The takers are lazy but not dumb. Why give up at least $60k a year tax free and no work to work for $20, 30, 40, 50 or even 60K a year with no to minimal benefits and pay taxes?
Not working pays way too much.
I’ve been told with a straight face that it will take at least $30 an hour to get a guy to take a laborer job.
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