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Truck drivers in high demand

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Truck driving instructor Luke Schier in the yard of Kishwaukee College's truck driving school in DeKalb on Thursday, Dec. 6, 2012. (Curtis Clegg - cclegg@shawmedia.com)

MALTA – Wesley Mayne of DeKalb got an associate’s degree after graduating from high school, but he feels limited by his job at a grocery store.

“I was just trying to find something that would make me more employable,” he said.

So Mayne went back to Kishwaukee College, where he is enrolled in an eight-week commercial drivers license program. The 160-hour course – taught as a four-week full-time class or an eight-week part-time class – qualifies students to drive 18-wheel tractor-trailer trucks.

Despite a slow economy and a national unemployment rate of 7.7 percent, there are not enough truck drivers to meet the demands of U.S. industry – and the problem is only getting worse.

Joseph Dahm, coordinator of transportation programs in Kishwaukee College’s Career Technologies Division, estimates that there could be a nationwide shortage of 300,000 drivers in the next five to 10 years.

“There is a lot of potential for drivers in this area,” Dahm said. “We can get guys hired right out of class, or even before.”

A number of factors contribute to the shortage of drivers. Many drivers from the baby boomer generation are retiring, and younger potential drivers are less willing to work as long-distance drivers. New regulations restrict the number of hours a driver can spend on the road each day, require tougher medical and drug testing standards for drivers and track individual and company safety records.

“There are a lot more regulations in the industry,” said Pat Burch, owner of Royce Transfer in Rochelle, member of the Kishwaukee program’s advisory committee and employer of some recent program graduates. “Now they have a national safety program that tracks companies as well as the drivers.”

She added that additional regulations increase the pressure on companies to hire and retain only drivers with very good driving records. Burch has employed as many as nine drivers at once at her trucking company, but currently she only employs six.

“We’d like to be able to grow again but a lot of it is finding drivers who are well-trained and willing to work,” Burch said. “It’s a hard job to do and it has a lot of responsibility.”

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