Maritime and Logistics News
  • Maritime & Ocean News
    • Container Shipping News
    • Dry Bulk Shipping News
    • Breakbulk Shipping News
    • Chemical Shipping News
    • Crude Oil Shipping News
    • Cruise Shipping News
    • Fishing News
    • Freight Forwarders News
    • LNG & LPG Shipping News
    • Multimodal Transport News
    • Railway News
    • Straits News
    • Trucking News
  • Global Ports News
    • Port Accidents News
    • Port Congestion News
    • Port Infrastructure News
    • Port Strike News
    • Schedules News
  • Air Cargo News
    • Air Cargo Carriers News
    • Air Freight Forwarder News
    • Airports News
  • Logistics News
    • Supply Chain News
    • Warehousing News
    • Cold Storage News
    • Logistics Parks News
  • Vessels News
    • Bunkering News
    • Incidents News
    • Offshore News
    • Pilotage News
    • Piracy News
    • Services News
    • Ship Breaking News
    • Shipbuilding News
  • Tech. & Sustainability News
    • Green Logistics News
    • Responsibility Projects News
    • Useful Maritime Associations News
  • Languages
Thursday, January 22, 2026
Advertisement
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Air Cargo Carriers News

Trucking Alliance’s safety agenda 1: reforms that hit the driver cab first

January 21, 2026
in Air Cargo Carriers News, Air Cargo News, Air Freight Forwarder News, Airports News, Breakbulk Shipping News, Bunkering News, Chemical Shipping News, Cold Storage News, Container Shipping News, Crude Oil Shipping News, Cruise Shipping News, Dry Bulk Shipping News, Fishing News, Freight Forwarders News, Freight Rates & Reports News, Global Ports News, Green Logistics News, Incidents News, LNG & LPG Shipping News, Logistics News, Logistics Parks News, Maritime & Logistics News, Maritime & Ocean News, Maritime Safety & Security News, Multimodal Transport News, Offshore News, Pilotage News, Piracy News, Port Accidents News, Port Congestion News, Port Infrastructure News, Port Strike News, Railway News, Responsibility Projects News, Ro-Ro Shipping News, Schedules News, Services News, Ship Breaking News, Shipbuilding News, Smart Development and Growth News, Straits News, Supply Chain News, Tech. & Sustainability News, Trucking News, Useful Maritime Associations News, Vessels News, Warehousing News
0
SHARES
2
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The Trucking Alliance, which in terms of numbers is one of the smaller industry lobbying and support groups but which includes some of the bigger players in trucking, has long focused on safety issues in its efforts to shift public policy.

After a tumultuous 2025 in the intersection where trucking, safety and politics all came together in often unexpected ways, the group is laying out its agenda not just for 2026 but for years to come, freely acknowledging there are some shifts in the regulatory landscape that will take a few years to ferment and develop.

In this three-part joint video and editorial series, Freightwaves is presenting highlights of an interview editor at large John Kingston conducted with key members of the Trucking Alliance’s leadership team: Steve Williams, the co-founder and president of the Trucking Alliance, as well as the chairman and CEO of carrier Maverick USA; Lane Kidd, managing director at the Trucking Alliance; Greer Woodruff, senior vice president of safety, security and driver personnel at J.B. Hunt Transport Services (NASDAQ: JBHT); and Brett Sant, senior vice president at Knight Swift (NYSE: KNX).

In this joint video/editorial offering, those four officials discuss advocacy for steps that would have a direct impact on drivers behind the wheel. While theoretically all regulatory measures in trucking can make their way down to those steering the tractors, these recommendations would be felt the most inside the cab.

There have been some recent wrecks that have caught the public’s attention in part because of video that showed tragic crashes where the truck driver very much appears to be at fault. There was a November crash in California that took three lives. An August illegal u-turn by an immigrant in the U.S. without authorization also led to three deaths. Video of both were widely circulated online and by various media outlets.

“With many transformational changes, sometimes it just takes one episode of incident for huge changes to occur,” Kidd said. With the attention these two crashes created, Kidd said, Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy also has taken notice. “Sean Duffy and the leadership at FMCSA are probably more attuned to the trucking industry than any previous appointees I’ve seen in the last 20 years,” Kidd said.

Hair testing remains a priority

While the two cited fatal wrecks had no evidence of drug involvement, they had the effect of bringing up that issue as well. If there’s been one issue that has defined the Trucking Alliance, it’s been not just drugs but advocacy for hair testing of drivers, rather than urine testing, to determine if a driver should be removed from the road.

“These other drivers that use drugs and drink behind the wheel, and you know aren’t properly trained and do unsafe things out there damage the reputation of the overwhelming majority of safe professional drivers,” Sant said. “That’s part of why we have this agenda. We want to protect the reputations of the really good companies out there and the really great drivers out there.”

Despite the growing acceptance of recreational marijuana usage–though not yet at the federal level–Kidd said “I don’t think it will be a heavy lift to keep marijuana as a prohibited drug in the industry as it relates to hair testing.” But he also noted the paradox: the Department of Transportation will “disqualify a truck driver if that driver fails a urine exam for drug use. The Department of Transportation will not disqualify a truck driver if he fails a hair test for drug use.”

Progress on requiring a hair test, which can detect marijuana usage long after actual consumption, had been making progress in fits and starts for several years. The Trucking Alliance was optimistic about hair testing becoming part of standard driver regulation, “but we saw the Biden administration stop on a dime after the first Trump administration left office,” Kidd said.

The regulation had been moving through the Department of Health and Human Services, “but for whatever reason, the Biden administration stopped it and it did not move forward for four years,” Kidd said.

Finding another route

A traditional rulemaking to achieve hair testing is not likely, Kidd said. “I think we have to find another way,” he added. There are “some other ways that we’re looking at and under consideration that would give the FMCSA the ability to go ahead and recognize hair testing today.” A strategy to get that implemented is expected to be disclosed by the Trucking Alliance in the coming weeks and months.

One significant safety reform the Trucking Alliance backed fully was the establishment of the Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse, the vault of names identifying drivers who have failed drug or alcohol tests. Woodruff described it as “hugely successful.”

“It has identified drug and alcohol use and it has taken those drivers out of service until such time as they go through the substance abuse and professional requirements to return to a safety sensitive job,” Woodruff said.

But returning to the Alliance’s consistent theme, its lack of hair testing means the Clearinghouse is “deficient.”

Looking at training schools

Another area of reform the Trucking Alliance seeks that would have an impact on drivers themselves is tighter regulation of driver training schools.

In the white paper the Alliance produced in conjunction with its list of goals, it said “the most persistent criticism of truck driver training schools is that many schools prioritize speed and profit over safety, producing graduates who have only the bare minimum skills necessary to obtain a CDL. This can pose a risk to public safety and sets new drivers up for failure in their careers. The core issue stems from schools that have a short curriculum, rather than a comprehensive safety education.”

Kidd said an initiative by DOT’s Duffy would “revoke the privileges of about 3,000 schools because it looked like they weren’t performing as they should have been.” The end result, he predicted, would be “a better curriculum and a more robust training system at the schools.”

Looking over the sweep of the proposals being made by the Trucking Alliance, Woodruff said the priorities were “aspirational, and they’re not going to be solved quickly.”

“We’ve got to build consensus within the industry and with the regulators,” he said. “There may be some legislation required. So there’s a lot of heavy lifting here to get things done, and we’re committed to that.”

More articles by John Kingston

Five State of Freight takeaways: tighter market is holding

Louisiana staged truck accident indictment widens as trials and sentencings loom

In Flowers Foods drivers’ case, employee arbitration vs. litigation issue can’t be overlooked

The post Trucking Alliance’s safety agenda 1: reforms that hit the driver cab first appeared first on FreightWaves.

Tags: AndDriverForThatThe

Related Posts

ATA: Unvetted truckers moving US tanks
Air Cargo Carriers News

ATA: Unvetted truckers moving US tanks

January 22, 2026
Union Maritime MR2 Tankers with WindWings® gain SOLAS approval
Container Shipping News

Union Maritime MR2 Tankers with WindWings® gain SOLAS approval

January 21, 2026
Outgoing governor signs New Jersey hazmat rail bill
Air Cargo Carriers News

Outgoing governor signs New Jersey hazmat rail bill

January 21, 2026
Echo Global Logistics acquires ITS Logistics to create $5.4 billion combined entity
Freight Forwarders News

Echo Global Logistics acquires ITS Logistics to create $5.4 billion combined entity

January 21, 2026
Winter storm targets key freight corridors across the Southeast
Air Cargo Carriers News

Winter storm targets key freight corridors across the Southeast

January 21, 2026
A. Duie Pyle bets on port-adjacent LTL hub near Port of Virginia
Freight Forwarders News

A. Duie Pyle bets on port-adjacent LTL hub near Port of Virginia

January 21, 2026
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Trump to name Fox TV host Sean Duffy to head DOT

Trump to name Fox TV host Sean Duffy to head DOT

November 19, 2024
FedEx sends specialists to streamline European operations

FedEx sends specialists to streamline European operations

August 21, 2025
Vintage VLCC prices firm up

Vintage VLCC prices firm up

February 25, 2025
At RailTrends, CPKC and UP CEOs talk about higher levels of rail service

At RailTrends, CPKC and UP CEOs talk about higher levels of rail service

November 18, 2024
PUMA Chooses Maersk Warehouse,

PUMA Chooses Maersk Warehouse

0
Cape Rates Soar to $40,000 Per Day, Surging Twofold Within One Week

Cape Rates Soar to $40,000 Per Day, Surging Twofold Within One Week

0
Allelys Successfully Navigates Challenges in Transporting Cargo to Rothienorman Substation

Allelys Successfully Navigates Challenges in Transporting Cargo to Rothienorman Substation

0
Hanwha Ocean secures a contract for an ultra-large ammonia carrier

Hanwha Ocean secures a contract for an ultra-large ammonia carrier

0
ATA: Unvetted truckers moving US tanks

ATA: Unvetted truckers moving US tanks

January 22, 2026
Union Maritime MR2 Tankers with WindWings® gain SOLAS approval

Union Maritime MR2 Tankers with WindWings® gain SOLAS approval

January 21, 2026

Trucking Alliance’s safety agenda 1: reforms that hit the driver cab first

January 21, 2026
Outgoing governor signs New Jersey hazmat rail bill

Outgoing governor signs New Jersey hazmat rail bill

January 21, 2026

Recent News

ATA: Unvetted truckers moving US tanks

ATA: Unvetted truckers moving US tanks

January 22, 2026
Union Maritime MR2 Tankers with WindWings® gain SOLAS approval

Union Maritime MR2 Tankers with WindWings® gain SOLAS approval

January 21, 2026

Trucking Alliance’s safety agenda 1: reforms that hit the driver cab first

January 21, 2026
Outgoing governor signs New Jersey hazmat rail bill

Outgoing governor signs New Jersey hazmat rail bill

January 21, 2026

Stay ahead in the dynamic world of maritime and logistics with our comprehensive news coverage. Explore the latest industry trends, breaking news, and insightful analyses. Your gateway to informed decision-making in shipping, trade, and logistics awaits.

Follow Us

Our Partners

shipstrack.com
E-tracking
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2020-2024 SeasNews - Shipping News & Magazine.

No Result
View All Result

© 2020-2024 SeasNews - Shipping News & Magazine.