The ‘ingenious strategy’ behind most truckers’ least favorite week of the year: International Roadcheck

truck fallen over

International Roadcheck Week is hardly the sexiest topic in trucking, but it is a darn-tootin’ important one. Inspectors in the U.S. and Canada halt tens of thousands of trucks for vehicle inspections for a few days every summer or early fall. They remove thousands of trucks and drivers from the road; in 2021, 16.5% of inspected vehicles were put out of service along with 5.3% of drivers.

It’s uncommon for truck drivers to actually get their vehicles inspected at random during most of the year. To avoid International Roadcheck Week, many truckers simply don’t drive during that period of time — which, presumably, means more unsafe vehicles and drivers on the road outside of the inspection blitz. It’s a question that ate at Andrew Balthrop, a research associate at the University of Arkansas Sam M. Walton College of Business. 

Around 5% fewer one-person trucking companies are active during International Roadcheck Week. But Balthrop and his fellow researcher, Alex Scott of the University of Tennessee, found a major upside to the inspection blitz — even with all the folks who avoid it. According to their working paper published in March 2021, vehicles are safer a month before and after the inspection period. There’s a 1.8% reduction of vehicle violations, according to Balthrop and Scott’s analysis. Surprise inspection blitzes don’t result in the same uptick of compliance. 

I caught up with Balthrop about his research last week at FreightWaves’ Future of Supply Chain conference, and we chatted again on the phone this week about his findings on International Roadcheck Week.

Enjoy a bonus MODES and a lightly edited transcription of our phone interview: 

FREIGHTWAVES: For our readers who are not aware of what Roadcheck Week actually is, can you explain a little bit about what it and why it is important to drivers and companies?

BALTHROP: “The International Roadcheck is part of an alliance between the inspectors in Canada and the ones in Mexico and the U.S. to have a unified framework for making sure trucks are safe to operate. That should make it easier to go across borders when you have this kind of unified structure.

“In the U.S., one of these CVSA inspection blitzes is the International Roadcheck that happens for three days in the summer. Usually it’s a Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. And usually it’s the first week in June.

“And in it, they focus on Level One inspections, the North American Standard Inspection where they inspect the driver records, the hours of service, the licensure and I believe medical records as well. Then they inspect the truck. It’s an in-depth inspection where the inspector will actually crawl under the truck to look at various things. And these inspections, from the data that I’ve seen, take about a half an hour on average.

“During the Roadcheck Week, they’ll do about 60,000 inspections, so 20,000 a day. They’re going to pull over a lot of trucks, and this can cause a little bit of congestion at the weigh stations and the roadside inspections localities as the inspectors are doing these inspections.”

Roadcheck Week doesn’t catch all truck drivers, but it has a long-lasting benefit to safety

FREIGHTWAVES: So, can most drivers kind of expect to be pulled over? How likely is that?

BALTHROP: “There’s 1 million or 3 million trucks on the road, somewhere around there on any given day. With 20,000 inspections, most drivers still will not get inspected, but there’s going to be a higher proportion of drivers inspected. 

“You’re more likely to get inspected on these days. If you don’t have a recent inspection on your record, or if you have a bad recent inspection on your record, you’re more likely to be pulled over on these days.”

FREIGHTWAVES: Your research focused on that it’s just unusual that this inspection is announced, that it’s planned. We were talking before about how normally, if you’re trying to assure quality or compliance, you would not announce an inspection in advance. It would be more of a surprise-type situation. 

Can you walk us through why that’s so unusual, or what’s the rationale that you see behind announcing it in advance?

BALTHROP: “It is unusual, and on the surface, it doesn’t make much sense, but it turns out to be kind of an ingenious strategy. So I’ll walk through it here. 

“Over the course of a year, there’ll be 2 million inspections of 3 or 4 million trucks out there. The average rate of inspections is pretty low. It’s not uncommon for truckers to go years without having an inspection. With this low inspection intensity, the FMCSA has sort of a problem of, how does it get anybody to abide by the regulations?

“I’m a jaded economist, and I don’t worry or consider too much ethics and morality and all that kind of stuff. It comes down to incentives for drivers to follow these inspections. The incentives do guide behavior. So, how could the FMCSA incentivize drivers to follow these regulations more closely and adhere to the standards?

“They do this by announcing the blitz. This does two things. On one side, it allows everybody to prepare in advance. There’s a bunch of anecdotal evidence out there that people do prepare for these blitzes in advance. They will have their trucks inspected beforehand for any problems. They’ll time maintenance and upkeep in advance to make sure that their vehicles are in order. “They’ll be a little bit more cognizant of the driver-side regulations. One thing we notice in our study is that hours-of-service violations really drop during these extensions, because people see them coming. They don’t fudge the books in any way.”

Owner-operators can evade Roadcheck Week. Big carriers, not so much.

BALTHROP: “The issue with the announcement, on the flip side, is that it allows people to just dodge the inspection entirely. For a long time, people have talked about how owner-operators and smaller carriers time their vacations for this particular time. They could do this for a couple reasons. To avoid the hassle is a nice way to put it, but it also allows you to be noncompliant to avoid the high-intensity inspections.

“You have this balance here that on one side you get the behavior you want with people complying with regulations. That’s the behavior the FMCSA wants. But on the flip side, you get a bunch of people that are kind of outright dodging inspections.

“When you compare these two things on balance, the policy is actually pretty effective because you get a lot of people focused on maintaining their trucks and obeying the rules during that particular week. Especially with the vehicle maintenance stuff, that lasts a long time. 

“In our research, we saw that vehicle violations, a month before and up to a month afterwards, is when you still notice your vehicle violations. That trucks are kind of better maintained around these blitzes.

“The ingenious aspect of it is that the FMCSA, by concentrating their inspection resources all at one time and announcing it, they’re making it clear that they’re serious about enforcing these regulations and everybody prepares for it. For the number of inspections that are happening, you get fewer tickets than you would have otherwise expected.

“The FMCSA, they’re putting people through a little bit of a hassle, but they’re not having to write a bunch of tickets to get people to comply. They’re not really punishing a whole bunch of people because, by making this apparent that this is going to happen, people comply and the FMCSA gets what they want essentially without having to come down on carriers too hard.”

A convenient time for a vacation, indeed

FREIGHTWAVES: OK, interesting. And how does this pattern of shutting down, how does that compare for an owner-operator versus a driver for a big fleet?

BALTHROP: “If you’re a motor carrier with thousands of power units, you can’t just pack up and not do business on a particular day. They just don’t have that option. So they get inspected at a higher intensity, and you see the larger carriers kind of more focused on making sure that they’re prepared for these inspections. With so many inspections, the larger carriers are going to be inspected at higher rates. You can really damage your reputation if your equipment isn’t in order on this particular day. 

“Versus the smaller carriers, especially if you’re talking about a single-vehicle fleet, an owner-operator type, it is not that difficult to just not work for those three days. And so you see a lot about that. 

“In terms of what the roadway composition looks like, if we look at inspection data and relative to a typical day with the usual inspections, on these Roadcheck days, you have about 5% fewer owner-operators on the road than you otherwise would expect.”

FREIGHTWAVES: Wow. And when you say owner-operators, you also mean just like fleets with just —

BALTHROP: “One-vehicle fleets.”

FREIGHTWAVES: OK, that’s interesting.

BALTHROP: “You know, you see a little bit of effect with the smaller fleets, below six vehicles, but it basically disappears by the time you get to a hundred vehicles.

“This effect is being driven by smaller carriers staying off the road in terms of avoidance. You see this goes also how you would expect; it’s also older vehicles that stay off the road. This is correlated with carrier size. The larger carriers use newer vehicles and owner-operators tend to use some of the older vehicles. But it’s particularly the older vehicles that are off the road.

“This makes intuitive sense. Older vehicles are more costly to keep compliant. Maintenance is more costly, and they’ve been around longer so there’s time for more stuff to have broken essentially.

How a truck driver gets stopped for inspection

FREIGHTWAVES: Can you explain a little bit more, the idea of having this inspection history and why it would benefit a larger or small carrier?

BALTHROP: “Getting flagged for inspection is sort of random, but not totally. If somebody notices something obviously wrong with your truck, that’s ground for a more in-depth inspection. Or if you get pulled over for some other reason, this can be grounds for inspection of some type. 

“But there’s also the inspection selection service. The computer program that is random, that it randomly flags people in for inspection, but it’s based on your inspection history.

“So if your firm hasn’t been inspected recently, or if your carrier doesn’t have a very dense inspection history, you’ll be more likely to trigger that system to pull you in and have you inspected. If you have a dense inspection history, you’re less likely to get inspected.”

FREIGHTWAVES: So how do you get pulled over for inspection? As a person who only drives a passenger car, my main interaction with being pulled over is, I’m driving down the freeway or wherever, and I get stopped by the police. How does it work for a truck driver? How does getting pulled over or inspected work in that way?

BALTHROP: “The law is that you cannot pass a weigh station without pulling in and getting weighed. At that point they may flag you to be inspected. Now, in the past decade or two, there’s been a bunch of electronic devices that are installed in cabs. You may have heard of PrePass or Drivewise. This allows you to pass weigh stations. 

“I don’t have data on how many trucks have the in-cab devices. But from a trucking perspective, they’re so convenient that you don’t have to stop every time you cross a state line. I think the vast, overwhelming majority of trucks have some sort of one of these electronic devices. The DOT inspectors at these roadside inspection points have a dial they can twist essentially about how many people they want to inspect. 

“So during the roadcheck inspection week, they’ll crank that dial all the way up and pull everybody over. And if they get too backed up, they might crank it back down a little bit and so on.”

FREIGHTWAVES: OK, interesting. It reminds me of a highly sophisticated E‑ZPass.

A $10 million-plus expense to trucking companies every year … but it’s worth it if just one fatal crash is avoided

FREIGHTWAVES: Zooming out, when we hear about large truck crashes, something like a vehicle maintenance issue is not really the most sexy explanation. But just looking at the FMCSA data, in 29% of all truck crashes, a major factor is brake problems. So it seems like a lot of the truck crashes on the road are caused by vehicle maintenance, versus something like the driver using illegal drugs or some other sort of more dramatic explanation. Can you speak a little bit to why this sort of vehicle maintenance is important for safety in preventing large crashes?

BALTHROP: “We did a little bit of a back-of-the-envelope cost benefit analysis of this. Let me try and make sure I remember it clearly, but we have it in the paper that the cost of this on one side is that you have the compliance costs the firms are undertaking, and then you have to add to that the delay costs from doing this, and then the cost of the inspection itself, having to pay federal inspectors to do this.

“On the benefit side, it reduces crashes. So when we add up, just looking at the cost of what an inspection is, we don’t have a good idea of how to measure the compliance cost. It’d be fun to measure the delay cost, but I don’t have good enough price data on that to get at that cost. 

“But if you look at what the cost of an inspection is, it is something like $100 or $120 is what you would pay to have one of these inspections done privately. A lot of people do this in the run-up to inspections, and have it done privately so that you can fix whatever the problems are and be sure that you would pass the FMCSA inspection.

“With that $120 figure, if you aggregate that up to 60,000 inspections or whatever, and you take that in comparison, I’m going to give you a bad figure here, it’s on the order of $10 million. That is about the value of a statistical human life. Looking at this economically, it’s worthwhile if it saves one human life. If you identify just one faulty brake system that would’ve resulted in an accident, you’re getting some value out of the program. 

“When you add those other costs in there, we’re going to need to save a couple of lives, but in terms of cost benefit analysis with this kind of stuff, we’re usually looking at orders of magnitude differences in cost and benefits to say something for sure. 

“If you can save just a couple lives, this program will pay for itself.”

Time to start inspecting in the winter

FREIGHTWAVES: Then one last question: Is there any rationale for this program happening in the summer? 

BALTHROP: “I think part of it is that for the inspectors this gets much harder and much more miserable to do in winter conditions.”

FREIGHTWAVES: That makes sense.

BALTHROP: “Inspectors are less productive. One of the things that we talk about in the paper, that they have in addition to the International Roadcheck, is that they have Brake Week where they focus a little bit more on brake inspections. You have Operation Safe Driver a little bit later on in the summer, usually in September, where it’s a little bit more focused on passenger vehicles and how they drive around these trucks.

“But there’s not one in the winter time. There’s an unannounced brake check that usually happens in May, a surprise inspection that’s just one day. But you’re right in pointing out that it might be worthwhile having one of these in the wintertime. You have this periodic high-intensity inspection that kind of incentivizes everybody to be compliant through the summer. 

“But there’s nothing in the winter, so that’s an area. But if I was managing the FMCSA, that would be one of the first questions I ask, ‘Why don’t we have one of these in the wintertime?’”

FREIGHTWAVES: That makes sense. Maybe they can do it in the South or something. Maybe a Miami January inspection … 

That’s it for this special bonus MODES. Subscribe here if you’re not already receiving MODES in your inbox every Thursday. Email the reporter at rpremack@www.freightwaves.com with your own tales on International Roadcheck Week or any other trucking topics. 

Why the Northeast is quietly running out of diesel

The nozzle of a diesel fuel pump is inserted into the tank of a commercial truck as its driver looks on the bankground.

The East Coast of the U.S. is reporting its lowest seasonal diesel inventory on record. And some trucking companies appear spooked.

The East Coast typically stores around 62 million barrels of diesel during the month of May, according to Department of Energy data. But as of last Friday, that region of the U.S. is reporting under 52 million barrels. 

The sharp increase of diesel prices has been a major stressor in America’s $800 billion trucking industry since the beginning of 2022. According to DOE figures, the price per gallon of diesel has reached record highs — a whopping $5.62 per gallon. It’s even higher on the East Coast at $5.90, up 63% from the beginning of this year. 

When relief is coming isn’t yet clear, and experts say higher prices are the only way to attract more diesel into the Northeast.

“I wish I had some good news for the Northeast, but it’s bedlam,” Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis at OPIS, told FreightWaves. 

2022 has seen record-setting diesel prices. (SONAR)

Everyday Americans don’t fill up their cars with diesel, but the fuel powers our nation’s agriculture, industrial and transportation networks. More expensive diesel means the price of everything is liable to increase. Trucks, trains, barges and the like consumed about 122 million gallons of diesel per day in 2020

Patrick DeHaan, a vice president of communications at fuel price site GasBuddy, reported that retail truck stops are hauling fuel from the Great Lakes to the Northeast, calling it “extraordinary.” We’ve also seen anecdotal reports from truck drivers posting company memos:

Pilot Flying J and Love’s, two of America’s largest truck stops, told the Wall Street Journal yesterday that they were not planning to restrict diesel purchases, but were monitoring low diesel inventory.

Not unlike every other supply chain crunch we’ve seen in the past few years, the cause of the Northeast’s diesel shortage is multifaceted. A yearslong degradation of refineries is rubbing against the Gulf Coast preferring to ship its oil to Europe and Latin America.

Here’s a breakdown:

1. The East Coast has lost half of its refineries. 

As Bloomberg’s Javier Blas wrote on May 4 (emphasis ours): 

In the past 15 years, the number of refineries on the U.S. East Coast has halved to just seven. The closures have reduced the region’s oil processing capacity to just 818,000 barrels per day, down from 1.64 million barrels per day in 2009. Regional oil demand, however, is stronger.

Rory Johnston, a managing director at Toronto-based research firm Price Street and writer of the newsletter Commodity Context, told FreightWaves that refining is a “thankless industry,” with intense regulations that have limited the opening of new refineries. The Great Recession of 2008 led to several East Coast refineries shuttering, but there have been more recent shutdowns too. One major Philadelphia refinery shuttered in 2019 after a giant fire (and it already had declared bankruptcy), and another refinery in Newfoundland shut down in 2020.

2. It’s a financial risk to bring diesel to the Northeast.

The Northeast has increasingly relied on diesel from the Gulf region. Much of that diesel travels to the Northeast through the famous and much-adored Colonial Pipeline. You may remember the 5,500-mile pipeline from last year, when a ransomware attack shuttered it for nearly a week!  

It takes 18 days for oil to travel on the Colonial Pipeline from its source in Houston to New York City (or, more specifically, Linden, New Jersey), Kloza said.

That’s a long enough time to prioritize Colonial pipelines financially risky for traders — or, as Kloza said, “incredibly dangerous” — thanks to a concept called “backwardation.”

Backwardation refers to the market condition in which the spot price of a commodity like diesel is higher than its futures price. It’s only gotten stronger over time in the diesel market, Kloza said. So, a company could send off a shipment of diesel and find that it dropped by $1 per gallon in the time the diesel traveled from the Gulf Coast to New York — er, New Jersey. That could mean hundreds of thousands or more in lost profits, so traders often avoid such a fate.

“We’re not in an era where there are any U.S. refiners or big U.S. oil companies who would ‘take one for the team’ and bring cargo in where it’s needed,” Kloza said. 

The desperation is showing in New England and the mid-Atlantic regions. New England diesel retail prices are up 75% from the beginning of 2022, per DOE data. In the mid-Atlantic, diesel is up 67%. 

It’s not worth the risk, even amid ultra-high prices. As FreightWaves’ Kingston reported last week, the spread between a gallon of diesel in the Gulf Coast and its New York harbor price is usually a few cents. Last week, that swung up to 66 cents.

But that uptick still isn’t justifying moving oil to the Northeast — particularly when traders can make so much more money selling diesel abroad. 

3. Of course, we can blame COVID and the crisis in Ukraine. 

The catalyst for this diesel shortage, of course, is the ongoing conflict in Ukraine — particularly Europe’s desperation for diesel after weaning off Russian molecules. 

As CNBC reported in March, Europe is a net importer of diesel. Europe consumed some 6.8 million barrels of diesel each day in 2019; Russia exported some 600,000 barrels per day of that. Today, Europe has only eliminated one-third of its Russian diesel, so prices are expected to continue to climb amid that transition. Latin America, too, has been clammoring for U.S. diesel.

The Gulf Coast has been happy to provide such diesel, amid “insane” prices for diesel abroad, said Johnston. Waterborne exports of diesel from the U.S. Gulf Coast hit record highs last month, according to oil analytics firm Vortexa. (The records only date back to 2016.)

Naturally, COVID is also to blame for the Northeast’s run on diesel. Those refineries still retained on the East Coast scaled back during the pandemic due to staffing issues. It takes six months to a year to reignite refineries that were previously shuttered, Kloza said.

The ‘everything shortage’ endures

It’s been a tale as old as, well, last year. An industry is quietly hampered by supply issues for years, or even decades, and COVID pulls back the curtains on its unsteady foundation. It’s particularly jarring for commodities we never thought about before, like shipping containers or pallets, but that quietly underpinned our livelihood all along. 

Recall the Great Lumber Shortage of 2020? Big Lumber had unusually low stockpiles of wood by the summer of 2020, thanks to a vicious 2019 in the lumber industry shuttering sawmills and the spring of 2020 sparking staffing issues. (There was also a nasty beetle infestation.) Those in lumber expected the pandemic to slow the economy, not ignite online shopping, construction and housing mania. It meant lumber went from around $350 per thousand board feet pre-pandemic to a crushing $1,515 by the spring of 2021. The lumber price roller coaster persists today.  

In diesel, there’s no beetle infestation, but there are plenty of other headaches. It all means higher fuel prices on the East Coast, particularly the Northeast, to lure molecules from the Gulf Coast. And, down the line, probably more expensive stuff for you. 

Do you work in the trucking industry? Do you want to say that you hate or love MODES? Are you simply wanting to chitchat? Email the author at rpremack@www.freightwaves.com, and don’t forget to subscribe to MODES.

Updated on May 13 with the latest comments from truck stops.

Exclusive: Central Freight Lines to shut down after 96 years

Nearly, 2,100 employees will be laid off right before Christmas. Central Freight Lines is the largest trucking company to close since Celadon ceased operations in 2019.


Waco, Texas-based Central Freight Lines has notified drivers, employees and customers that the less-than-truckload carrier plans to wind down operations on Monday after 96 years, the company’s president told FreightWaves on Saturday.

“It’s just horrible,” said CFL President Bruce Kalem.

A source close to CFL told FreightWaves that CFL had “too much debt and too many unpaid bills” to continue operating, despite exploring all available options to keep its doors open.

Kalem agreed.

“Years of operating losses and struggles for many years sapped our liquidity, and we had no other place to go at this point,” Kalem told FreightWaves. “Nobody is going to make money on this closing, nobody.” 

Central Freight will cease picking up new shipments effective Monday and expects to deliver substantially all freight in its system by Dec. 20, according to a company statement.

A source familiar with the company said he is unsure whether CFL will file Chapter 7 or “liquidate outside of bankruptcy,” but that the LTL carrier has no plans to reorganize.

The company reshuffled its executive team nearly a year ago in an effort to stay afloat, including adding the company’s owner, Jerry Moyes, as CFL’s interim president and chief executive officer. Moyes remained CEO after Kalem was elevated to president in July.

“I think it was surprising that there wasn’t a buyer for the entire company, but buyers were interested in certain pieces but not in the whole thing,” the source, who didn’t want to be identified, told FreightWaves. “Part of it could have been that just the network was so expansive that there was too much overlap with some of the buyers that they didn’t need locations or employees in the places where they already had strong operations.”

Third-party logistics provider GlobalTranz notified its customers that it had removed CFL as “a blanket and CSP carrier option immediately, to prevent any new bookings,” multiple sources told FreightWaves on Saturday.

CFL, which has over 2,100 employees, including 1,325 drivers, and 1,600 power units, is in discussions with “key customers and vendors and expects sufficient liquidity to complete deliveries over the next week in an orderly manner,” a CFL spokesperson said. Approximately 820 employees are based at the company headquarters in Waco.

Despite diligent efforts, CFL “was unable to gain commitments to fund ongoing operations, find a buyer of the entire business or fund a Chapter 11 reorganization,” another source familiar with the company told FreightWaves.

Kalem said the company had 65 terminals prior to its decision to shutter operations. 

FreightWaves received a tip from a source nearly two weeks ago that CFL wasn’t renewing its East Coast terminal leases but was unable to confirm the information with CFL executives. 

Another source told FreightWaves that some of the LTL carrier’s West Coast terminals had been sold recently, but that no reason was given for the transactions.

At that time, Kalem said the company was “working to find alternatives” and couldn’t speak because of nondisclosure agreements. He said executives at CFL, including Moyes, were trying to do everything to “save the company.”

“Jerry [Moyes] pumped a lot of money into the company, but it just wasn’t enough,” Kalem said.

Kalem said he’s aware that a large carrier is interested in hiring many of CFL’s drivers but isn’t able to name names at this point. 

“Central Freight is in negotiations to sell a substantial portion of its equipment,” the company said in a statement. “Additionally, Central Freight is coordinating with other regional LTL carriers to afford its employees opportunities to apply for other LTL jobs in their area.”

As of late Saturday night, Kalem said fuel cards are working and drivers will be paid for freight they’ve hauled for the LTL carrier until all freight is delivered by the Dec. 20 target date.

“I’m going to work feverishly with the time I have left to get these good people jobs — I owe it to them,” Kalem told FreightWaves. “We are going to pay our drivers — that’s why we had to close it like we’re doing now. We are going to deliver all of the freight that’s in our system by next week, and we believe we can do that.”

During the outset of the pandemic, Central Freight Lines was one of four trucking-related companies that received the maximum award of $10 million through the U.S. Small Business Administration’s Paycheck Protection Program (PPP). This occurred around the time that CFL drivers and employees were forced to take pay cuts, a move that didn’t go over well with drivers.

“It all went to payroll,” Kalem said about the PPP funds. “Yes, our employees and drivers did take a pay cut over the past few years, and we gave most of it back, even raised pay over the past several months, but it just wasn’t enough to attract drivers.”

FreightWaves staffers Todd Maiden, Timothy Dooner and JP Hampstead contributed to this report.


Watch: Central Freight Lines’ impact on the LTL market


FreightWaves CEO and founder Craig Fuller reacts to the Central Freight Lines news:

“With Central struggling for many years and unable to reach profitability, it makes sense that they would want to liquidate while equipment and real estate are fetching record prices.”


Central Freight Lines statement

Here is the statement given by Central Freight Lines to FreightWaves late Saturday after reports surfaced of its impending closure:

“We make this announcement with a heavy heart and extreme regret that the Company cannot continue after nearly 100 years in operation. We would like to thank our outstanding workforce for persevering and for professionally completing the wind-down while supporting each other. Additionally, we thank our customers, vendors, equipment providers, and other stakeholders for their loyalty and support.

“The Company explored all available options to keep operations going. However, operating losses sapped all remaining sources of liquidity, and the Company’s liabilities far exceed its assets, all of which are subject to liens in favor of multiple creditors. Despite diligent efforts, the Company was unable to gain commitments to fund ongoing operations, find a buyer of the entire business, or fund a Chapter 11 reorganization. Given its limited remaining resources, the Company concluded that the best alternative was a safe and orderly wind-down. As we complete the wind-down process, our primary goal will be to offer the smoothest possible transition for all stakeholders while maximizing the amount available to apply toward the Company’s obligations.

“Central Freight is in negotiations to sell a substantial portion of its equipment. Additionally, Central Freight is coordinating with other regional LTL carriers to afford its employees opportunities to apply for other LTL jobs in their area. Discussions are ongoing and no purchase of assets or offer of employment is guaranteed.”


Brief history of Central Freight Lines

1925Founded in Waco, Texas, by Woody Callan Sr.
1927Institutes regular routes in Texas between Dallas, Fort Worth and Austin.
1938Dallas facility opens as world’s largest freight facility.
1991Receives 48-state interstate operating authority, expands into Oklahoma.
1993Joins Roadway Regional Group and begins service in Louisiana.
1994Expands into Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois and Mississippi.
1995Consolidation of Central, Coles, Spartan and Viking Freight Systems into Viking Freight Inc. is announced. Central’s Waco corporate HQ starts closure.
1996Becomes the Southwestern Division of Viking Freight Inc.
1997Investment group led by senior Central management purchases assets of former CFL from Viking Freight and reopens as a new Central Freight Lines.
1999Expands into California and Nevada.
2009CFL Network provides service to Idaho, Utah, Minnesota and Wisconsin.
2013Acquires Circle Delivery of Tennessee.
2014Acquires DTI, a Georgia LTL carrier.
2017Acquires Wilson; new division created with an increase of 80 terminals.
2020Wins Carrier of the Year from GlobalTranz.
Acquires Volunteer Express Inc. of Dresden, Tennessee.
Source: Central Freight Lines

Warehouse cramming is about to begin — Freightonomics

nVision Global, is a leading Global Freight Audit, Supply Chain Management Services company offering enterprise-wide supply chain solutions. With over 4,000 global business “Partners”, nVision Global not only provides prompt, accurate Freight Audit Solutions, but also providing industry-leading Supply Chain Information Management solutions and services necessary to help its clients maximize efficiencies within their supply chain. To learn more, visit www.nvisionglobal.com

Warehouse space is at a premium right now and with peak season right around the corner, shippers are starting to scramble for space. 

Zach Strickland and Anthony Smith look into what shippers are doing to prepare for the end-of-year crunch. They welcome Zac Rogers from Colorado State University to the show to talk through the industry tightness. 

The three also talk about the latest Logistics Managers Index results and what they mean for the fourth quarter of 2021. 

You can find more Freightonomics episodes and recaps for all our live podcasts here.

Seasonality pushing rejections and rates higher ahead of the Fourth

This week’s DHL Supply Chain Pricing Power Index: 75 (Carriers)

Last week’s DHL Supply Chain Pricing Power Index: 70 (Carriers) 

Three-month DHL Supply Chain Pricing Power Index Outlook: 70 (Carriers)

The DHL Supply Chain Pricing Power Index uses the analytics and data in FreightWaves SONAR to analyze the market and estimate the negotiating power for rates between shippers and carriers. 

The Pricing Power Index is based on the following indicators:

Load volumes: Absolute levels positive for carriers, momentum neutral

The Outbound Tender Volume Index at 15,980 is nominally higher now than basically at any point in the past 12 months with the exception of the week prior to Thanksgiving/Black Friday last year. OTVI captures all electronic tenders, including rejected ones, so when accounting for the rejection rate, we can get an even more accurate look at volumes. 

OTVI rose through the back half of May into the national holiday and has risen even further since. Throughout the back half of May and into the middle of June, tender rejections declined substantially. Meaning, current volume throughput is actually understated when comparing OTVI now to OTVI in November 2020. After adjusting for rejected tenders, the accepted outbound tender volume index is just 2.2% below the 2020 peak in November. At that time, OTVI surged towards 17,000, but the rejection rate moved in-kind towards its natural ceiling of 28%. So, the total accepted freight tenders in mid-June is comparable to the peakiest of peak seasons in 2020. Incredible. 

However, since the middle of June, tender rejections have begun increasing again heading into Independence Day, a time when many drivers spend time off the road with their families. The move higher in OTVI this week has been driven primarily by higher rejection rates, rather than higher freight demand. 

Over the past month, the drivers of freight volumes have continued to be imports and from just about every port. The west coast continues to provide seemingly non-stop container ships, while Houston, New Orleans, Miami and Savannah are seeing very strong throughput as well. 

It is van volumes that are driving freight markets higher right now. The Reefer Outbound Tender Volume index has tumbled 25% since its all-time high in the weeks after the polar vortex in February. Since Memorial Day, ROTVI has fallen another 10.5%. This is likely a factor of declining grocery demand, but I would expect the trend to reverse course in the near future as summer festivities accelerate. 

Dry van volumes pushed higher in the back half of May and into June while reefer volumes have declined significantly. 

SONAR: VOTVI.USA (Blue); ROTVI.USA (Green)

The congestion at our nation’s ports has spread from Los Angeles and Long Beach to Oakland, California. The California coastline is a parking lot of container ships, most of which are full to the brim with imports, awaiting berth. As detailed in the economic section, there are some signs that the reversion is underway with Americans paring back spending on pandemic superstar categories in favor of airlines, lodging and entertainment. But spending remains strong despite the moderation, and low inventory levels offset much of the decline that will occur from slowing demand. Real inventories are 3% higher now than pre-pandemic, but real sales growth is far outpacing inventory growth, leading to the lowest inventory-to-sales ratio in decades. 

On the manufacturing side, the ISM Manufacturing PMI expanded in May after declining in April. We’ve been in expansionary territory for 12 consecutive months. New orders, production, imports/exports and employment are all growing. The major issues should come as no surprise: Deliveries are slowing, backlogs are growing and inventories are too low. 

In all, there are many, many catalysts to keep freight demand strong for the foreseeable future. Americans are traveling and spending on services at a high clip, but the high savings rate is enabling it to occur without a massive detriment to goods spending. 

SONAR: OTVI.USA (2021 Blue; 2020 Green; 2019 Orange; 2018  Purple)

Tender rejections: Absolute level and momentum positive for carriers

After declining steadily from mid-March to mid-May, the Outbound Tender Reject Index has reversed course heading into Independence Day. This is typical for a national holiday as carriers selectively choose loads to bring drivers closer to home. OTRI now sits above 25% for the first time in June. 

One of our newest indices in SONAR gives us the ability to compare markets on as close to an apples-to-apples basis as possible. FreightWaves’ Carrier Trend Market Score indices are divided into two perspectives – shipper/broker and carrier. The scores are positioned on a scale from 1-100 and have values measuring van and refrigerated (reefer) capacity. The higher values represent more favorable trends for whichever perspective. For instance, a value near the high-end of the range would suggest very favorable conditions for carriers in our carrier capacity trend score index. 

For the past several weeks, capacity disparities have been driven by import volumes. The markets with the tightest carrier capacity coincide with the nation’s busiest ports. Ontario, California, Savannah, Georgia, and Atlanta all have carrier capacity trend market scores of 100. 

SONAR: Capacity Trend Market Score (Carriers – VAN)

By mode. Reefer rejection rates tumbled from it’s all-time high in March to under 35% in mid-June before popping higher over the past two weeks. Reefer rejections are still quite high from a historical standpoint at 38%, but are significantly lower than just three months ago when reefer carriers were rejecting half of all electronically tendered loads. 

SONAR: VOTRI.USA (Blue); ROTRI.USA (Orange)

Dry van tenders make up the majority of all tenders, so the van rejection rate mirrors the aggregate index closely. Van rejections have surged from ~23% to ~26% over the past two weeks. 

Yes, one-in-four loads being rejected is not ideal, but it’s better than 30%. I am unaware of any meaningful signals that capacity is being added at a rate that would change my outlook. With so many catalysts for demand, and many constraints on drivers including the Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse, driver training school closures and continued government unemployment benefits, the outlook is tight throughout this year and into 2022. That’s not to say we won’t see improvement as consumers revert to pre-pandemic spending habits and drivers enter or reenter the market. But I’m not expecting any quick reversal of this environment; there are simply too many catalysts driving volume and suppressing capacity. 

SONAR: OTRI.USA (2020/21 Blue; 2020 Green; 2019 Orange)

Freight rates: Absolute level and momentum positive for carriers

Throughout June, spot rates have moderated while contract rates have pushed higher. The Truckstop.com dry van rate per mile (incl. fuel) has fallen from $3.21 to $3.11 since the beginning of June, while FreightWaves van contract rates have risen from $2.50 to $2.59/mile, exclusive of fuel. 

I still believe the Truckstop.com dry van national average will not retest the post-vortex surge pricing that brought spot rates up to an all-time high of $3.30. But, there aren’t many catalysts to bring spot rates down anytime soon either. Demand is unwavering with continued strong consumer goods demand, humming industrial recovery and a potentially cooling, yet still sizzling, hot housing market. And carriers can’t fill enough trucks to keep up with demand. 

Prior to the seasonal movements we’re seeing in tender rejections, routing guides generally had been improving through Q2. We should continue to see a convergence between spot and contract rates, but spot rates will remain historically very elevated throughout the summer as demand simply outstrips capacity. 

SONAR: TSTOPVRPM.USA (Blue); VCRPM1.USA (Green)  

Economic stats: Momentum and absolute level neutral

Several economic releases this week are worth noting.

Weekly jobless claims were released Thursday and give us one of the best close-to-real-time indicators of the overall economy.  This week, the data was again very promising as the labor market continues on a bumpy but trajectorially stable recovery path. 

First-time filings totaled 411,000 for the week ended June 19, a slight decrease from the previous total of 418,000 but worse than the 380,000 Dow Jones estimate, the Labor Department reported Thursday. Initial claims have held above 400,000 for consecutive weeks after falling to a pandemic low of 374,000 three weeks ago. As things stand, the current level of initial claims is about double where it was prior to the Covid-19 pandemic. 

The good news on the jobs front is that continuing claims are on the decline, falling to 3.39 million, a drop of 144,000. That number runs a week behind the headline claims total.

Initial jobless claims (weekly in May 2020-May 2021)

At the time of writing, the newest weekly data for the week ending May 29 had not been updated in SONAR. This week, claims fell from 405,000 to 385,000. 

SONAR: IJC.USA

Consumer. Turning to consumer spending, as measured by Bank of America weekly card (both debit and credit) spending data, total card spending (TCS) in the latest week accelerated to 22% over 2019. This is the first time in June that TCS has topped 20% over 2019, but spending has been running up 16-19% consistently on a two-year comp for months. For contect, the average pre-pandemic two-year growth rate was about 8% (from 2012 to 2019). 

The Bank of America team highlighted service spending in the nation’s two largest state economies, California and New York, which are now fully reopened. Spending at restaurants is now well above 2019 in both states, and the team believes there is more capacity for spending to accelerate in the states that were slower to reopen given pent-up demand. 

There was also a notable acceleration in spending on clothing this week, according to Bank of America. It could be a reversal from some softening in the early weeks of June, or an indication of people refreshing wardrobes ahead of a return to work, more travel and vacations. One tepid statement for freight markets from this week;s report: Leisure spending is on the rise and durable goods spending is flatlining.  

FreightWaves’ Flatbed Outbound Tender Reject Index, both a measure of relative demand and capacity, moves directionally with the ISM PMI. 

SONAR: ISM.PMI (Blue); FOTRI.USA (Green) 

Manufacturing. Over the past two weeks, regional manufacturing surveys have reported generally positive readings amid logistical challenges. The New York Fed’s Empire State business conditions index declined 6.9 points to 17.4 in June, retreating from strong readings the past two months. The Empire State Index is a diffusion index with a baseline of zero; any reading above zero indicates improving or expansionary conditions. 

Delivery times lengthened to a new record during the month, new orders and shipments fell, and inventories entered negative territory. The supply chain and transportation challenges are as visible upstream as downstream, but overall the manufacturing sector is handling. Growth continued throughout the second quarter in both the Empire State and Philly Fed indices. 

The Philadelphia Federal Reserve’s business activity index edged lower to a still robust 30.7 in June from 31.5 in the prior month. Unlike NY, the pace of shipments growth accelerated in the Philly region during June. The employment subcomponent rose to a very healthy 30.7 from 19.3 last month, the regional bank said. 

Record-long lead times, wide-scale shortages of critical basic materials, rising commodities prices and difficulties in transporting products are continuing to affect all segments of the manufacturing economy, but demand remains strong. 

For more information on the FreightWaves Freight Intel Group, please contact Kevin Hill at khill@www.freightwaves.com or Andrew Cox at acox@www.freightwaves.com.

Check out the newest episodes of our podcast, Great Quarter, Guys, here.

Project44 acquires ClearMetal to strengthen predictive tools

Project44, a leader in real-time visibility of the global supply chain, announced on Thursday it has acquired ClearMetal, a San Francisco-based supply chain planning software company that focuses on international freight visibility, predictive planning and overall customer experience. The terms of the acquisition were not disclosed.

ClearMetal, founded by top software engineers and data scientists from Stanford, Google and other Silicon Valley elites, has created a “continuous delivery experience” that leverages proprietary machine learning algorithms that can forecast supply chain disruptions. 

In an interview, Jason Duboe, chief growth officer at project44, explained that bringing in ClearMetal’s elite team is essential for the company’s future predictive solutions.

“Their team construct is fundamentally different. When you look at their data science, machine learning and computer science background, they are best in class,” he said. “Applying the team to solve really interesting challenges, starting with highly predictive ETA and deeper exception management to create more predictive analytics is really a key component here.”

Project44 recently acquired Ocean Insights to gain global supply chain vessel visibility and has announced it has expanded its truckload tracking services within Asia. Bringing on this new team of engineers will allow the company to capitalize on strong predictive tools, strengthening the supply chain of its customers.

“We’re going to be expanding deeper into Asia, and from a port perspective, getting data much earlier than competitors,” explained Duboe. “Our freight forwarder integrations will give us much deeper visibility from an end-to-end perspective in these regions.”

Along with the acquired skills the ClearMetal team will bring to project44, it brings a large book of customers, including large CPGs, retailers, manufacturers, distributors and chemical companies. These advanced use cases will strengthen the predictive planning tools, and project44 continues to expand into different customer markets.

“What we gain from ClearMetal is a holistic platform for anybody that joins the platform in the future,” said Duboe. “They have large customers with incredibly demanding and advanced use cases. So when it comes to order and inventory, functionality, supplier onboarding, and moving upstream into those processes, we can capture exceptions earlier on.”

Click here for more articles by Grace Sharkey.

Related Articles:

Project44 expands real-time visibility into China

Project44 reels in Ocean Insights in ‘largest acquisition in visibility space’

‘Project44’s vision has always been global’

What trade war? Near-record imports at top US container port

The Port of Long Beach saw its second-busiest January to start the new year despite the effects of the ongoing China-U.S. trade war and widespread economic uncertainty.

Long Beach, which with the Port of Los Angeles comprises the busiest U.S. container gateway, moved 847,765 twenty foot equivalent units (TEUs) of containers in January. That was down 11% from January 2025, the hub’s best January and second-busiest month in its 115-year history. 

Those gains came on late 2025 orders, as well as some early frontloading by importers ahead of the February Lunar New Year holiday.

Imports fell 13.1% to 409,818 TEUs while exports improved 0.8% to 99,478 TEUs. Empty containers, an indicator of future import shipments, were off by 11.5% to 338,470 TEUs.

“We are leading the nation in trade, and providing a safe harbor in the sea of tariff and trade uncertainty for our customers and the goods movement industry,” said port Chief Executive Dr. Noel Hacegaba in an online media briefing Wednesday. It was the first such event since Hacegaba succeeded Mario Cordero, who retired.

Long Beach moved a record 9.9 million TEUs in 2025, boosted by importers bringing in shipments earlier than usual in the face of a spring game of tariff tag between President Donald Trump and China.

Hacegaba anticipates continued uncertainty following the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling last week declaring unconstitutional two-thirds of tariffs imposed by Trump in 2025 under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA).

While some tariffs remain in place, Trump pivoted to an additional universal 10% additional temporary tariffs which expire in July.

“While this decision ruled on the legality of the IEEPA tariffs, it did little to remove the uncertainty we’ve seen – and continue to see – across the global supply chain,” Hacegaba said. “Our customers are seeking clarity on whether tariffs already paid will be refunded, and consumers are seeking relief from higher prices.”

Read more articles by Stuart Chirls here.

Related coverage:

Maersk pulls U.S., other sailings from Red Sea

CEO Nixon steps down at ONE

Port Houston posts record January as exports surge; Corpus crude slips

Panama wrests control of Canal terminals from China operator

Maersk pulls U.S., other sailings from Red Sea

Just weeks after making a high-profile return to the Red Sea-Suez Canal trades, Maersk said it will again divert some voyages, including a U.S. service, away from the volatile Middle East route.

“We are currently experiencing unforeseen constraints arising from the wider operating environment in the Red Sea region,” the world’s second-largest carrier said in a customer advisory. “After conversations with our security partners, it is clear that these constraints are making it challenging to avoid delays in regard to passage through the area. Therefore, we have made the decision to reroute some of our upcoming sailings on the ME11 and MECL services from Trans Suez to Cape of Good Hope.”

Maersk (MAERSK-B.CO) did not offer further details on what it termed temporary changes. FreightWaves has reached out for comment.

The U.S. has been massing naval and air forces near Iran while President Donald Trump has threatened an attack on the eastern Arab nation. Tehran on Friday responded to Trump’s threats, saying it would destroy U.S forces and equipment in a confrontation. Washington on Friday urged American diplomatic staff to leave Israel ahead of a conflict.

Of the six MECL services connecting the Middle East and India to the U.S. East Coast, Maersk over the next three weeks will divert one westbound sailing and two eastbound voyages. 

The ME11 service connecting the Middle East/India to Mediterranean ports will divert two of three westbound sailings, and two of four westbound voyages.

The moves allow Maersk to move some ships around while keeping crucial port services and network connections in place with minimal schedule disruption.

Maersk in January announced a return after a two-year absence from the Suez route, under protection of unspecified naval forces.

Both the U.S. and European Union provided military escorts for merchant shipping after Houthi rebels in Yemen in late 2023 began attacking merchant shipping in support of Palestinians in Gaza. The longer, diverted voyages add as much as 14 days’ sailing time to a voyage.

Read more articles by Stuart Chirls here.

Related coverage:

CEO Nixon steps down at ONE

Port Houston posts record January as exports surge; Corpus crude slips

Panama wrests control of Canal terminals from China operator

“Textbook” case: Why trans-Pacific container rates continue to fall

Russian cybercrime ring targeted freight firms in US, Europe, report says

A Russian-linked phishing-as-a-service group ran a months-long phishing campaign targeting freight and logistics companies across the U.S. and Europe, stealing more than 1,600 login credentials.

The group dubbed “Diesel Vortex” — operated from at least September 2025 through February, focusing on platforms widely used by brokers, carriers and supply chain operators, according to a joint investigation released on Tuesday by cybersecurity researchers Have I Been Squatted and Ctrl-Alt-Intel.

The investigation found 1,649 unique credentials were compromised, drawn from 3,474 stolen login pairs. Impacted parties included users of DAT Truckstop, Penske Logistics, Electronic Funds Source (EFS), Timocom and other freight-focused systems, according to the report.

Researchers described Diesel Vortex as a structured phishing-as-a-service operation, not a lone hacker. The group built dedicated phishing infrastructure for logistics load boards, fleet portals and fuel card systems, using targeted email and voice phishing to capture credentials and multi-factor authentication codes in real time.

A key breakthrough in the investigation came after analysts discovered an exposed .git directory on a phishing domain, enabling them to reconstruct the group’s codebase and review a 36.6MB SQL database dump dated Feb. 4, Have I Been Squatted and Ctrl-Alt-Intel said in the report.

That database showed 52 phishing domains deployed, more than 75,000 targeted contact emails and 35 confirmed EFS check fraud attempts.

Diesel Vortex also used a dual-domain architecture designed to evade detection, with one “advertise” domain visible to victims and a hidden “system” domain loading phishing content inside an iframe, an element that loads another HTML element inside of a web page, such as external ads, videos or tags.

Operators controlled victim sessions through a Telegram-based console, steering targets through credential capture flows and secondary email phishing modules in real time. 

According to the report, the platform was internally branded “GlobalProfit” and appeared to be under active development as a broader phishing-as-a-service product, potentially marketed to other operators. 

Have I Been Squatted and Ctrl-Alt-Intel said they coordinated with multiple industry partners during the investigation and worked to notify affected parties.

Breaking Down the Document Barrier Between Delivery and Cash

Every load that moves across the American freight network generates a paper trail. Proof of delivery documents. Bills of lading. Rate confirmations, accessorial charges, invoices – the list is endless. By the time a single shipment reaches its destination, carriers and brokers are managing a half-dozen or more documents, and each one needs to be validated and reconciled before an invoice is issued and revenue can be recognized.

For decades, that process has largely been manual. When a billing specialist or back-office employee misses something like a signature, a mismatched quantity, or an undocumented accessorial, the ripple effects go far beyond a simple delay. Invoices stall. Factoring submissions get rejected. Disputes multiply. Cash flow slows, and earned revenue sits in limbo. 

That adds up to constant operational drag that quietly erodes margins. It’s a problem hiding in plain sight. The cumulative cost of manual document processing is enormous in an industry where margins are already razor-thin.

That’s the problem Hyperscience is built to solve.

Ask any operations or back-office leader at a mid-to-large logistics or transportation provider about their biggest operational bottleneck, and document processing (including managing bills of lading, proof of delivery, freight invoices, and other shipping documents) will likely top the list. 

The challenge is not only volume, but also variation and lack of consistency. Documents arrive from dozens of different shippers, in different formats, and through different channels. Some are clean PDFs. Others are photographs of crumpled papers taken on a driver’s phone. Signatures are sometimes illegible. Accessorial charges are invoiced but lack supporting documentation. Quantities sometimes don’t match.

Each discrepancy creates work. Someone has to catch it, chase down the right information, correct the record, and restart the billing cycle. Multiply that by hundreds or thousands of loads per week, and there’s a significant operational cost in labor hours, delayed invoices, and revenue.

The financial stakes are real. Slower billing means slower cash flow, and incomplete documentation delays factoring. There is also a hidden financing cost that compounds with every billing delay. Carriers pay for fuel, payroll, insurance, and equipment long before payment arrives. When billing stalls, capital remains tied up—or must be borrowed—creating interest carry that increases with each passing day. At scale, even modest delays erode margin. On the back end, disputes and rebills strain customer relationships and damage credibility.

A Faster, More Accurate Path from Load to Invoice

Hyperscience transforms the delivery-to-cash process by classifying, extracting, and validating freight documentation at intake—ensuring downstream systems receive complete, trusted, billing-ready data. Rather than routing documents into a manual review queue, the system ingests load documentation the moment it arrives, regardless of format—from structured PDFs to driver-submitted images—and reconciles extracted data directly against records in the carrier’s TMS or ERP. Built-in completeness and consistency checks flag discrepancies in real time, preventing missing signatures, unsupported accessorials, or quantity mismatches from delaying billing or triggering downstream disputes.

The result is not just faster billing, but first-time-right billing. Carriers generate invoices sooner and with the documentation required to withstand scrutiny. For organizations dependent on factoring, clean submissions translate directly into faster access to cash and fewer costly resubmissions. Hyperscience assembles complete, validated documentation packages that meet factoring requirements on the first pass, eliminating the delays and disputes that slow revenue realization.

Fewer Exceptions, Lower Costs, More Throughput

One of the most significant operational benefits of automated document processing is what it does to the exception queue, which is, for a lot of companies, a perpetual backlog of loads that require human attention.

In a traditional workflow, exceptions are a constant drain on billing team capacity. Every load that hits the exception queue requires a specialist to investigate and manually resolve. When volume spikes, that queue grows and billing slows until the cycle perpetuates itself.

Hyperscience dramatically reduces that burden by automating 80 to 90 percent of routine loads. Intelligent classification, extraction, and rules-based validation handle the discrepancies that don’t require human judgment, routing only genuinely complex exceptions to billing specialists. 

The result is a leaner, faster workflow wherein specialists spend their time on work that actually requires their expertise, rather than on routine checks that a well-designed system can handle automatically.

The downstream effects compound into efficiencies that produce meaningful margin improvement, whether that’s from lower manual processing costs or the ability to scale billing capacity as volume grows.

Getting Billing Right the First Time

Disputes are expensive. Every time an invoice goes out with an incorrect line item, it creates work for the carrier’s billing team and for the customer’s accounts payable department. It’s an unfortunate reality that rebills damage credibility and that persistent disputes damage relationships.

The goal, of course, is to get billing right on the first attempt. That’s easier said than done in a manual workflow, where the accuracy of an invoice is only as good as the attention of whoever reviewed the documents. Hyperscience raises that floor significantly.

By layering high-accuracy data extraction with table reconciliation, cross-document matching (BOL, POD, rate confirmations), and contract-driven business rule enforcement, Hyperscience validates that line items, rates, mileage, fuel surcharges, detention, and other accessorials align with TMS and ERP system-of-record data before an invoice is issued. Built-in confidence thresholds, exception routing, duplicate detection, and full audit traceability ensure that only complete, verified charges move forward—so the invoice delivered to the customer is accurate, defensible, and dispute-ready from day one.

Compliance and Audit Readiness

Beyond the immediate financial benefits, automated document processing also has implications for compliance and operational risk. Freight billing documentation is subject to scrutiny from customers as well as regulatory requirements.

A manual workflow comes with inherent compliance risk. Documents get lost, inevitably, and employees skip validation steps under pressure. When a customer disputes a charge six months after the fact, finding the supporting documentation can be frustrating if not disastrous.

Hyperscience addresses this by producing structured, standardized outputs with full document-level lineage for every load. Every extraction, validation, and reconciliation is logged, which creates a complete audit trail and makes reporting faster and more airtight. If and when compliance questions arise or if a customer disputes a charge, the documentation is accessible.

The system also flags incomplete or non-compliant documents in real time so that issues are resolved before they escalate into financial risk. No one wants to discover at audit time that documentation was missing or non-compliant.

The Bottom Line

The freight industry has always operated on thin margins, and the operational environment of the past several years has only intensified the pressure. Fuel costs, labor costs, capacity fluctuations, and customer expectations around pricing and billing accuracy have all made it harder to protect the margin that remains.

In that context, the administrative infrastructure of freight billing is one straightforward way to improve financial performance. The difference between a carrier that bills in two days and one that bills in five means better cash flow and less revenue that leaks away before anyone notices it’s gone.

Hyperscience gives carriers and brokers the tools to close that gap: faster billing, cleaner invoices, fewer disputes, lower processing costs, and the operational scalability to grow without growing the back-office headcount to match. 

Click here to learn more about Hyperscience

Dalilah and the broken chain between load board and crash scene

Congress named a bill after a five-year-old girl who cannot walk, talk, or eat because a driver with an illegally issued CDL hit her car at more than 60 miles per hour. Senator Jim Banks introduced the Dalilah Law in February of this year, and I have written at length about what is in the bill, what it gets right on English proficiency and lifetime CDL disqualification, and what it walks past entirely. What I have not yet written about is how Dalilah’s Law intersects with the other enormous legal development that will define how this industry handles accountability for crashes in 2026 and beyond: Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II, currently sitting before the United States Supreme Court with oral arguments on March 4th.

Everyone makes the noise, but few understand the scope and depth of the perspective and context that paints the entire story here. 

These two things look like separate issues from 30,000 feet. CDL reform on one side. Broker liability on the other. As a driver, fleet owner, former executive, and freight broker turned risk guy and crash litigation guy, they are not separate. They are the same problem wearing different clothes, and the reason they are the same problem is that the freight most likely to be hauled by a driver with a fraudulently obtained CDL, or a chameleon carrier, or a reincarnated authority, or an operator with an out-of-service rate that should disqualify them from any serious shipper’s routing guide, is the freight that moves through the spot market to whoever answers the phone at the lowest rate. That is how Partap Singh, the driver who hit Dalilah Coleman, ends up on a load. That is how the carriers I have been tracking for a decade end up on loads. That is how it works, and neither bill addresses the mechanism that makes it possible.

Case in point: after the Indiana Amish crash three weeks ago, the carrier remained on the highway, hauling freight for the same shippers it had always hauled for. The death of four had no bearing on whether shippers and brokers continued to provide that carrier with freight.

The reality of how freight moves

The public mental model of trucking is a shipper with a dock, a carrier with a truck, a handshake, and a delivery. That is not how the overwhelming majority of freight moves, and it is definitely not how the freight that generates the most dangerous crashes moves.

Most freight moves through intermediaries. It starts with a shipper who either has a contract carrier network or does not. If they have a contract network, those carriers are their first call. When those carriers reject the load, which is what a tender rejection represents, the shipper or the shipper’s 3PL goes to the spot market. At the end of 2025, tender rejection rates hit multi-year highs, topping 13% during the peak holiday period, indicating shippers were scrambling for spot capacity at levels not seen since early 2022. During the freight recession, when the market was at its worst, rejections were below 4%. The market is tightening fast, and every load that gets rejected by a contract carrier goes to a broker who has to find someone willing to haul it.

That is the pool. The carriers who answer those calls are either those with extra capacity or those who need the load badly enough to answer calls that contracted carriers are turning down. Some of them are excellent operators who simply have open trucks. A lot of them are the ones nobody else wanted to call. This is not a moral judgment. It is a market structure reality. In a tightening freight environment, the spot market becomes the relief valve for loads that better carriers decline, and it gets priced down until someone takes it.

The broker’s job in that transaction is officially to arrange the transportation. In practice, it is to find the cheapest carrier to move the load. That is not an accusation. That is the function brokers serve in the spot market. The margin they make is the spread between what the shipper paid and what the carrier accepted, and in a market where shippers are still pushing back on rate increases despite rising rejections, that margin pressure gets passed directly down to carrier rates.

What carrier selection actually looks like

I was a CDL driver. I was a freight broker agent. I owned trucks and a small fleet. I owned a brokerage. I worked as a fleet executive for PE enterprise companies. I have been on every side of the phone call that makes carrier selection happen, and I can tell you with authority that the actual carrier selection process in the spot market is almost never as rigorous as what a compliance manual suggests.

The practical standard for most spot market carrier selection is this: Does FMCSA say the carrier is satisfactory or not-rated? If yes, we’re done. Complete the carrier packet. Provide a W9, Insurance, etc., and here is your rate confirmation, BOL, etc. 

That is the complete vetting process for the vast majority of transactions. Does the DOT number pull up clean? Is the authority active? Is the insurance current? Satisfactory or not-rated? Fine. You have the load.

The problem is that a satisfactory rating is a snapshot of whether a carrier passed its last compliance review, which is often a small sample of its operational profile. I’ve done over 100 of these. It is not a rolling assessment of what is happening on their trucks today. I have pulled the data. I have run the analysis. There are carriers operating right now with satisfactory ratings from FMCSA who have killed multiple people in the past two years and injured dozens more. They still show satisfactory because the compliance review cycle has not caught up with their current performance, or because their CSA scores have not crossed the intervention threshold that would trigger a new review, or because they are newer authorities without enough history for a full rating. The $75 tool that checks their authority status does not tell you any of that, and most brokers are not using anything beyond it.

This is why the government’s position in Montgomery is so troubling. The United States government filed an amicus brief in Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II, arguing that holding brokers liable for negligently selecting carriers would impose an undue burden on interstate commerce because brokers are entitled to rely on FMCSA data as their vetting standard. The government is arguing that a system it cannot fully maintain, does not update in real time, and has acknowledged in its own reports is insufficient to accurately reflect carrier safety risk, should serve as the safe harbor that protects brokers from accountability for every selection decision they make.

The Ninth Circuit and the Sixth Circuit both got this right. Cox v. Total Quality Logistics, from the Sixth Circuit in 2025, involved a carrier called Golden Transit whose safety record was so bad that more than 7 out of every 10 of its trucks were not legally allowed to be on the road. The broker put a load with them anyway. Total Quality Logistics had access to the same FMCSA data as every broker. They saw what was there and moved the freight because it was cheap. If the Supreme Court rules in favor of C.H. Robinson this summer, that will be the standard the industry locks in. You can look at a 70 percent OOS fleet and still tender freight to them, and the injured party has no recourse against the entity that made that selection.

The case started with a 2017 crash in Illinois. C.H. Robinson brokered a load of plastic pots to Caribe Transport II. Caribe’s driver veered off the road and hit Shawn Montgomery. Both the district court and the Seventh Circuit found for Robinson, holding that the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act of 1994 preempts state negligent selection claims against brokers. The Court took the case in October 2025 because four circuits are equally split. A decision comes before July.

The exempt commodity loophole and where the worst carriers work

Before you can understand why Dalilah’s Law and Montgomery are connected, you need to understand a piece of this that most people never discuss, which is that a significant portion of freight in this country moves under an arrangement where broker authority is not required, the carriers involved are not subject to the same compliance infrastructure as regulated freight carriers, and nobody is responsible for vetting the safety of the operator putting the truck on the load.

FMCSA’s own published guidance states: if the underlying transportation is exempt from commercial jurisdiction, and you would not need motor carrier operating authority to transport the commodity, you do not need broker authority to broker it. FMCSA uses garbage as its own example.

Municipal solid waste. Scrap metal. Certain construction debris. Various agricultural commodities. In some arrangements, government freight movements fall outside the definitions of regulated commerce. If you are arranging the movement of those commodities, you are not a broker under federal law. You do not need a $75,000 surety bond. You do not need a broker authority from FMCSA. You can put any carrier you want on that freight, and the regulatory framework that governs broker-carrier selection decisions in regulated freight does not apply to you.

The carriers who end up moving this freight are largely the same carriers that cannot access better shippers’ routing guides because their safety performance disqualifies them. They bid low because they have to. They bid low because they can, because without the overhead of proper compliance infrastructure, they have a cost structure that legitimate carriers cannot match without losing money. The shipper, government entity, or municipality awarding the contract usually selects the lowest bidder because the commodity has no tangible cargo value. Nobody cares if the garbage arrives safely. The shipper’s only concern is that it disappears. The result is a pipeline that routes the most problematic operators to the most vulnerable stretches of the work: the heavy equipment, the residential streets, and the highway runs where the truck will be around other people, with the least oversight over who is operating it.

This is where Partap Singh ends up. This is where the networks I track find their work when they lose access to regulated freight lanes. The fraud networks, the chameleon carriers, and the reincarnated authorities do not exclusively haul garbage, but they find their way into the exempt-commodity pipeline because that is where the barrier to entry is lowest, the scrutiny is minimal, and the question of who put them on the load is legally unanswerable.

Then there’s interlining freight carrier to carrier 

Before you can understand where the accountability gaps live, you have to understand the difference between interlining and brokering, because the industry conflates them and the law treats them very differently. Interlining is a carrier-to-carrier arrangement. The originating carrier cannot complete the move, whether due to distance, equipment, regulatory jurisdiction, or capacity, and hands the shipment to a second carrier at a transfer point. Both carriers hold appropriate operating authority. Both carry insurance covering their portion of the move. Both sign documentation. The liability follows the freight, and when something goes wrong, you can trace it to whichever carrier had it at the time. Brokering is different in every meaningful way. A broker does not touch the freight. A broker does not transport anything. A broker arranges transportation between a shipper and a carrier for compensation, and under federal law, that specific function requires broker authority, a $75,000 surety bond, and recordkeeping obligations. In an interlining arrangement, both carriers are co-participants in a single move, and each owns a share of the liability. In a brokered arrangement, the broker is the matchmaker, and the carrier is the sole operator, which is exactly why the question of who the broker matched with matters so much, and exactly why the industry has spent thirty years trying to avoid being accountable for that answer.

The freight seldom just goes from shipper to carrier

Dalilah’s Law is specifically about CDL eligibility. It will disqualify undocumented drivers, require English proficiency, create a lifetime bar from CMV operation for those who drive without proper status, and tie federal highway funding to state enforcement. I have explained all of this in previous writing. I believe the lifetime disqualification provision is meaningful, and the English proficiency regulatory lock-in is well-structured.

The bill does not address how a driver like Partap Singh gets on a load in the first place. It addresses whether he is legally eligible to have the CDL he used. It does not address the selection decision that put him in the seat on that day, or who made that decision, or whether that entity had any obligation to verify what they were selecting.

In virtually no case involving a serious crash does freight move in a straight line from a shipper who cares about safety directly to the carrier who caused the crash. It moves through intermediaries. It moves through brokers. It moves through spot market transactions where the last question anyone asks before the rate confirmation goes out is whether the driver has good English or a clean safety record. It moves through load boards and TMS systems and automated matching algorithms that check the status boxes and move on. The chain between the shipper’s loading dock and the crash scene runs through multiple commercial decisions, and Dalilah’s Law touches one link in that chain, the CDL itself, while leaving the rest of the chain untouched.

Montgomery could touch more of that chain. If the Court rules for Montgomery and establishes that state negligent selection claims against brokers are not preempted by federal law, every broker in the country faces a new standard of care for carrier vetting. You cannot put a carrier on a load with a 70 percent OOS rate and defend your selection by pointing at a satisfactory rating that has not been updated since the last compliance review. You have to look at the data and use it. There are tools and services that pull crash history, OOS rates, violation patterns, and authority history in ways that FMCSA’s basic status check does not. If brokers face real liability for negligent selection, they will use those tools. They will make better selections. Some of the carriers I have been documenting for years would stop getting loads.

What the bond crisis tells you about where the market is

There is one more piece of this that nobody is connecting to the safety conversation, and it is directly relevant to who the worst carriers are hauling freight for and to the condition of their cash flow.

The Transportation Intermediaries Association reported a 65 percent surge in fraud complaints between September 2024 and February 2025. Double brokering, where a fraudulent entity takes a load and rebrokers it to a real carrier without anyone’s knowledge, costs the industry between $500 million and $700 million a year. By mid-2025, one fraud tracking service had flagged 619 carriers for verified double brokering based on more than 75,000 complaints. The scheme is textbook: buy an old MC number with a clean history, operate for a few weeks, rack up unpaid loads, disappear, reappear under a new identity. This is chameleon carrier logic applied to brokerage fraud.

When the worst carriers get caught in these arrangements, they are frequently not paid at all or are paid pennies on the dollar by a broker that is either insolvent, fraudulent, or operating on the edge of both. The $75,000 surety bond, intended to protect carriers from non-payment, was set at that level by MAP-21 over a decade ago and has never been adjusted. When a broker fails, and multiple carriers have claims against the same bond, claims are paid pro rata. The average claim is approximately $1,900. The bond is divided 50 ways, and carriers recover only a fraction of what they are owed. About one in five brokers that experiences a drawdown on their bond have claims that exceed $75,000, meaning the bond is insufficient to cover what is actually owed.

The FMCSA’s January 2026 bond enforcement changes tightened the rules considerably, requiring brokers to maintain fully collateralized trust funds or proper surety bonds and giving sureties the authority to move for suspension of a broker’s operating authority when a legitimate claim goes unpaid. This is a meaningful improvement. It also landed at exactly the moment when broker margins are compressed to multi-year lows, mid-market brokers are operating under leveraged credit facilities with covenants tied to gross margins that their shipper contracts no longer support, and the spot market is just now starting to tighten after three years of a freight recession that drove thousands of carriers and brokers out of business.

The cash flow math on all of this hits the carriers hardest, who are already operating on the thinnest margins. A small carrier or owner-operator who hauls a load, waits 45 days, files a bond claim, waits another 90 days, and recovers $400 on a $2,200 invoice has not just lost that load’s margin. They have lost the capital they needed to operate safely, maintain equipment, and pass their next inspection. The financial desperation that the factoring system creates is amplified when it is not just about slow payment but about non-payment. The carriers most likely to be working for brokers who eventually skip out are the ones who cannot get into better networks, cannot get QuickPay programs because their safety profile makes them unattractive to shippers who offer them, and are taking whatever load will keep the truck moving.

Financial desperation has a safety cost. When a carrier cannot make their next insurance payment or fuel bill because the last three loads went to bond claims, which were divided among 40 creditors, the decision to skip a brake inspection or push past hours is made in a different context than it would be otherwise. This is not an excuse. It is a systems observation. The bond non-payment crisis and the safety crisis are the same crisis from different angles.

Dalilah’s law cannot fix what it does not address

The bill Senator Banks introduced is real legislation that addresses a real problem. A driver who entered the country illegally in 2022, obtained a CDL through California’s permissive licensing framework, and hit a five-year-old girl at 60 miles per hour because nobody was checking what they were supposed to check represents a genuine failure that deserves a legislative response. The lifetime disqualification provision, the English proficiency regulatory lock-in, and the funding withholding mechanism are meaningful tools.

But Dalilah Coleman was not hit because Partap Singh had a CDL. She was hit because someone made a selection decision, and she was on a road where that decision eventually expressed itself as a crash. The CDL is the end of the enforcement chain. The selection decision is somewhere back in the middle. The load board tender is at the beginning. None of that chain gets touched by a bill that focuses exclusively on who is eligible for the credential.

The chameleon carrier networks I document in my investigative work do not depend on undocumented drivers. They depend on authority recycling, shell entities, insurance fraud, and the ability to put a new DOT number in front of a broker who checks the status boxes and moves on. The 496 individuals I found who collectively control 9,571 carriers responsible for 15,767 crashes, 9,031 injuries, and 584 deaths are not hiding because of their immigration status. They are hiding in plain sight in the same FMCSA data that the government is telling the Supreme Court brokers should rely on as their complete due-diligence standard.

Montgomery and Dalilah’s Law both point to parts of the same broken structure. One addresses who can drive. The other will address whether anyone is accountable for choosing who drives. Neither one, as currently written, addresses the machinery of the spot market that ensures the worst operators keep getting loads until the body count forces someone to look.

The real accountability question is not just whether the driver had a valid CDL. It is who decided to put that driver on that load, what they knew or should have known when they did it, and whether the regulatory and legal framework we have built around that decision creates any actual consequence for getting it wrong. Right now, the answer to that last question is mostly no. The government just went to the Supreme Court to keep it that way.

This article is a commentary by an independent contributor and does not represent the views or policies of FreightWaves. Rob Carpenter is VP of Compliance at TruckSafe Consulting, founder of www.theteaintel.com carrier intelligence platform, an independent contributor to FreightWaves, a Certified Director of Safety, a Certified Director of Maintenance//Equipment, driving instructor, and an expert witness in highway accident litigation. He has been a CDL driver, freight broker agent, fleet owner, and brokerage owner; a PE fleet executive; holds a CPC in Transport Management in the UK; and advises some of the largest fleets, captives, providers, and insurers worldwide.

Illinois trucking insurance pool losing money amid fraud allegations

The Illinois Commercial Auto Assigned Risk Plan has posted underwriting losses approaching levels typically associated with market distress, raising new questions about oversight, exposure verification and whether some trucking companies may be exploiting the system.

Financial data obtained by FreightWaves shows that, across active policy years from 2014 through the second quarter of 2025, the Illinois commercial assigned risk pool recorded:

  • $435.7 million in earned premium
  • $625.3 million in incurred losses (including IBNR)
  • $67.1 million in loss adjustment expenses
  • $129.6 million in other underwriting expenses

That translates to a combined ratio well above 150% over the period — and roughly 191% as of the second quarter of 2025, meaning the program is paying out nearly $1.91 for every dollar it collects.

Zach Meiborg, President of the Meiborg Companies, says these losses “absolutely” stem from the fraudulent reporting on carriers part and the historical lack of oversight in the state pool of insurance.  

“This is a huge problem because we have quality insurance companies turning away from writing insurance in Illinois because they’re compelled by state law to participate in the state pool, when these insurance providers know they’re going to get hosed in the state pool,” Meiborg said in an interview with FreightWaves. “The problem has recently gotten better with the use of a technology such as GenLogs, but we have a long way to go.”

How the assigned risk pool works

Illinois requires insurers writing commercial auto liability coverage in the state to participate in an assigned risk mechanism. The program was designed to ensure coverage remains available to businesses unable to obtain insurance in the voluntary market.

Premiums in the assigned risk market are typically significantly higher than standard rates, reflecting elevated risk profiles.

Meiborg said the numbers show the structure has possibly been abused.

Some carriers allegedly underreport fleet size when applying for coverage, Meiborg said. He claims certain policies are issued on a “fleet card” or self-reported basis without vehicle-level verification, allowing operators to insure a fraction of their actual trucks.

“Where these fleets are filling out their application showing that they have 10 trucks, what they actually are running are closer to 100 or 200 trucks,” Meiborg said.

He contends that compliant carriers ultimately subsidize those allegedly gaming the system through higher premiums.

According to data obtained by FreightWaves, the Illinois Commercial Auto Assigned Risk Plan is paying out nearly $1.91 for every dollar it collects. (Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

Broker: ‘They caught it — and they’re working on it’

Chris Patrick, vice president at transportation insurance brokerage Cottingham & Butler, said the Illinois assigned risk pool financial results over the last decade are “really bad” from an underwriting standpoint, but cautioned against oversimplifying the cause.

Patrick said AIPSO, the nonprofit that administers assigned risk business in many states, has tightened rules significantly in recent months.

“In June, there were 210 motor carriers in the Assigned Risk Plan… this past month it’s down to 130,” Patrick said.

He added that policy forms have been revised and rates increased to discourage abuse, and that application approval has become more restrictive.

“They didn’t catch it up front. They caught it — now they’re working on it,” Patrick said.

Patrick acknowledged that misrepresentation can occur in commercial trucking insurance, particularly when agents and carriers act in concert. But he also noted underwriting losses can be driven by broader industry pressures including:

  • Nuclear verdict exposure
  • Claim severity inflation
  • Long-tail reserve development
  • Aggressive entry of new carriers during the 2020–2022 freight boom

“Industry-wide, auto liability typically doesn’t make much money,” Patrick said.

Industry pressures add fuel

The surge in new authorities during the COVID-era freight boom brought thousands of new small carriers into the market. As freight rates have fallen and insurance costs risen, some operators may be under financial strain.

“To stay alive, they’re resorting to doing this kind of stuff,” Patrick said of bad actors allegedly underreporting exposure.

Safety advocates note that underinsuring fleets can increase risk to the public if improperly covered vehicles are involved in crashes.

Patrick pointed to “chameleon carriers” — companies that shut down and reopen under new authorities — as an ongoing enforcement challenge.

$500 million claim under scrutiny

Whether cumulative underwriting losses approach $500 million depends on how the losses are calculated — including how reserves develop across policy years and how operating expenses are attributed.

The financial data shows total incurred losses exceeding earned premium by roughly $190 million across active policy years through Q2 2025, before adding expenses.

FreightWaves contacted the Illinois Department of Insurance seeking comment on:

  • Audit processes within the commercial assigned risk market
  • Exposure verification controls
  • Enforcement and fraud investigations
  • The accuracy of the financial data

The department has not responded.

A bigger industry issue?

Patrick noted that Illinois is not necessarily unique, and that assigned risk commercial auto markets in other states may also face adverse underwriting results.

Still, both men agree the current numbers are not sustainable.

“The problem is tremendous,” Patrick said.

Meiborg believes greater transparency is needed.

“If we could just shed light on the fraud, it will really help to clean up our industry,” he said.

How New York’s new driving penalties impact truckers

A revised points system for driving violations in New York state that has gone into effect in recent weeks doesn’t target truck drivers, but a regional attorney is warning that drivers of those vehicles are at significant risk of being caught up in the more stringent regulatory agenda.

In a recent blog post on his law firm’s website, Adam Rosenblum with the New York area-based Rosenblum Law Firm, summed up the tougher landscape.

“New York’s overhaul is not a minor policy tweak — it is the most aggressive tightening of driving penalties the state has ever implemented,” he wrote. “Even one ticket that used to be considered routine can now result in license suspension.”

In an interview with FreightWave, Rosenblum stressed that the rules are the same for truck drivers and automobile drivers. But given the sheer amount of time a truck driver spends on the road, and the drastic impact of a truck driver having their livelihood put at risk by a suspension, Rosenblum said truck drivers are more exposed to the new rules.

Violations sticking around longer

Rosenblum said one of the biggest changes in New York–which he described as having one of the most stringent regimes of any of the 50 states–is the extension of the “lookback” period to 24 months from 18 months.

The lookback period is defined as the length of time a violation stays on a driver’s total points violations. A total of 11 points results in a driver’s license suspension. 

“Imagine you got a ticket today that’s worth six points,” Rosenblum said. “And then 19 months from now, you receive a five-point conviction.” Under current law, the total sitting on the driver’s record would not be 11 points–which triggers a suspension–because in month 19, the five points incurred 18 months earlier would have disappeared from the driver’s record, so a suspension would not kick in. 

But with the added months in the “lookback” period, taking it up to 24 months, the two violations would be added together to total 11 points. And that brings in a suspension, Rosenblum said.

The changes in New York’s regulations came through a rulemaking process, not legislation. Rosenblum described them as part of “a continued ongoing tightening of rules and regulations around driving in New York State,” which he said is “the strictest in terms of points and fines.”

As far as opposition to the changes, Rosenblum was blunt. “I don’t know who would oppose it,” he said. “Who’s going to stand up for the rights of drivers and say they shouldn’t have their licenses suspended that easily? It’s a hard argument to make.”

More points for certain violations

Rosenblum cited several recent changes in regulations that are part of the stricter regime. One of the biggest: speed violations in a construction zone. 

He said New York regulations previously had a graduated series of points violations starting with three points for one to 10 miles mile per hour over the speed limit a construction zone, four points for 11 to 20 miles per hour, and 11 points–the license suspension trigger point–if a driver goes through a construction zone at more than 40 miles per hour over the speed limit.

Under the new regulations, the speed doesn’t matter. Rosenblum said a violation at any speed will hit a driver with eight points, a good chunk of the road to the 11-point suspension trigger. And given the longer look-back period, those points are sticking around for two years as opposed to 18 months.

The duration of a license suspension varies, Rosenblum said, but added that an initial suspension could be 60 days. Driving history would be a consideration in determining the ultimate length of the suspension.

Rosenblum stressed that there is nothing in the recent series of New York changes that are specific to CDL holders. They are across the board for anybody behind the wheel of a motor vehicle.

Watch out for those parkways

But there is one regulation that would almost certainly affect only CDL holders: raising the number of points a driver gets for striking the top of a bridge. That would likely be possible only for CDL holders driving on roads with limited height bridges, such as the Northern State or Southern State parkway on Long Island. 

Rosenblum said that unfortunate occurrence formerly carried zero points. Now, it will be eight.

And driving while intoxicated is now a full 11 points, as is driving with a suspended license (formally known as aggravated licensed operation). With the 11 points, the suspension is guaranteed. 

Will a driver know where they stand on the road to 11 points? Rosenblum wasn’t so sure. 

The ticket issued by a police officer will not show the number of points or the size of a minimum fine, he said. That could partly be because some of the fines are up to the discretion of a judge. 

But it would be possible for the ticket to list information on the range of fines, Rosenblum said. Points that are applied to a driver are not subject to the discretion of a judge, so that figure could be added to a ticket automatically. But at present, they are not.

An online account with the New York Department of Motor Vehicles can be created for a small fee that allows a driver to go online and see where they stand on the road to the 11 point trigger, Rosenblum said. 

The higher point totals for violation also can have an impact on a “driver responsibility assessment” if that driver is subject to that regulation. 

According to New York’s Department of Motor Vehicles, that assessment “is a fee you must pay to DMV over a three-year period if you are convicted of certain traffic offenses in New York State or accumulate 6 or more points on your driving record within 18 months.” The DMV’s website gives no indication the 18 month period has changed along with the increase in the lookback period.

Rosenblum said the fee under the assessment now is 6 points resulting in a $100/year fine for 3 years. For every point above six, it’s an additional $75 per year.

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Feds renew Wilson Logistics waiver, launch training data inquiry

truck in parking lot

WASHINGTON — Federal officials have extended an exemption giving Wilson Logistics increased team-driver flexibility while acknowledging allegations from a former company official that the company’s driver training data may be inaccurate.

The exemption renewal, which allows Wilson Logistics drivers with a commercial learner’s permit (CLP) to work as team drivers during the period between passing the CDL skills test and receiving their CDL – without requiring the accompanying CDL holders to be on duty in the front seat – could have been derailed based on assertions from Bruce Stockton, the carrier’s former chief safety officer.

Stockton, who applied for the extension on behalf of the Strafford, Missouri-based company last year, subsequently warned the agency that he had since obtained “personal knowledge” that there may be “incorrect or false data” in the renewal application.

“I learned, on December 3rd, 2025 that the driver qualifications for new CLP applicants to the CDL training program at Wilson Logistics, Inc. were changed/reduced, and not justified or even discussed with the lead person responsible for safety at Wilson Logistics, Inc.,” Stockton told FMCSA.

“The length of the training program has also been shortened and did not consider recent improvement in the company’s crash frequency that may now be in jeopardy if this program is allowed to continue.

“I urge the FMCSA to conduct a more detailed investigation into this renewal before granting, as qualifications by applicants to enter the program have changed since the renewal application was prepared. In the overall interest of safety for the driving instructors as well as the motoring public, I have serious concerns that this renewal should occur without further oversight and monitoring.”

Despite Stockton’s allegations, FMCSA is proceeding with the renewal, which became effective on February 24 and expires on February 24, 2031. The agency’s rationale remains consistent with its initial exemption in 2021: drivers who have passed the CDL skills test have already demonstrated the ability to operate safely and would be allowed to drive solo immediately if they were in their home state.

The agency noted it has granted the same exemption to other applicants, notably CRST Expedited, New Prime, C.R. England, and Werner Enterprises.

30-day clock

To address concerns raised by those opposing Wilson Logistics’ application that the company’s training program was being used for “cheap labor,” FMCSA added a strict window to the exemption, whereby CLP holders can now only operate without a trainer in the front seat for 30 days after passing their skills test. The 2021 approval did not require such a restriction.

In addition, “FMCSA will follow up on Mr. Stockton’s allegations regarding Wilson Logistics’ entry level driver training and third-party testing programs,” the agency affirmed.

Click for more FreightWaves articles by John Gallagher

Trump’s independent contractor rule revived, minimal difference from earlier version

The latest independent contractor (IC) rule proposed Thursday by the Wage & Hour division of the Department of Labor is being viewed as mostly a carbon copy of the first Trump administration’s regulation.

The strange twist of that first Trump regulation is that it was formally implemented in the last days of the first Trump administration, was kept alive by a court order after the Biden administration attempted to kill it without going through a rulemaking process, and ended up being legally in place until the Biden IC rule went into effect in early 2024.

What all that means is that a Trump IC rule was in effect at the Wage & Hour division of the DOL for most of the Biden administration.

That the Trump administration would target the Biden IC rule at the Wage & Hour division was never in question. That was signaled in September as part of the Trump administration’s regulatory agenda. 

Can have a long run

But with the early 2026 release of the proposed Trump rule, it is possible that for at least half of the remainder of the Trump administration, it will have had its own rule on IC status in place at the Wage & Hour division, where the rule will provide guidance in settling worker classification disputes that come before the agency.

In a prepared statement released in conjunction with the publication of the proposed rule in the Federal Register, the DOL said its IC guidelines “would make it easier to properly differentiate between employees with the protections under the Fair Labor Standards Act and those workers who work as independent contractors.”

At stake in the distinction between employee and IC, whether that decision will be made before the Wage & Hour division in a dispute pursued in that forum, or in a court, is the requirement that employers must extend to employees numerous legally-mandated benefits, such as overtime payments, workers compensation, minimum wages and Social Security contributions.   

The most significant difference between the Trump rule and the Biden rule always was the former’s elevation of two standards above a five-point set of guidelines to determine whether a worker is a true IC or should be considered an employee.

In an email message sent soon after the release of the DOL proposal, the trucking-focused Scopelitis law firm said the new Trump proposal, like its earlier rule, “emphasizes the concurrence of two factors – control and the opportunity for profit or loss – as core guideposts (and) is intended to provide more predictability and certainty regarding the worker’s status.”

The  Fisher Phillips law firm, which focuses on labor and employee relations, said something similar in an email blast sent out after the proposal was released.

Five tests, two are more important

“Similar to the rule released during the first Trump administration, the proposal evaluates the ‘economic realities’ of the working relationship,” the firm said. “The proposal outlines two core factors, placing greater weight on the individual’s control over the work; and their opportunity for profit or loss.”

The proposed Trump rule does still contain three other tests that the Wage & Hour division would be expected to consider in cases involving IC status. Those three, according to the Department of Labor, are “the amount of skill required for the work, degree of permanence of the working relationship, and whether the work is part of an integrated unit of production.”

But under the Biden rule, while none of the five were considered dispositive, all were to be weighed equally. That always was seen as making it more likely for the Wage & Hour division to conclude a worker was an employee rather than an IC. 

But by elevating the control and profit/loss standards, observers believe a finding of employee status becomes less likely.

Is it a big deal?

Richard Reibstein, a partner with the law firm of Troutman Locke who specializes in IC law, has long argued in his blog that the Wage & Hour division’s IC rule receives an outsized amount of attention. His argument has been that it is federal and state courts and their decisions on IC-related litigation that has far more impact in creating legal precedents used to settle classification disputes.

Reibstein said the new rule would be “much ado about nothing.”

He said except for minor differences, “a review of the proposed regulation…has no meaningful differences from the wording of the 2021 rule on IC status issued by the first Trump administration.”

With “control” being one of the two “core factors” in the new/revived rule, Reibstein said the Trump rule does not view a worker as being under “control”–and therefore more likely an employee than an IC–if that worker needs to do such things as “satisfy health and safety standards; comply with specific legal obligations; satisfy health and safety standards,” and several other points.

There had been concern in the trucking industry about the Biden administration rule that some requirements considered standard activities for their ICs could be interpreted as constituting “control,” thereby making the worker an employee. 

Reibstein said the new rule, when formally adopted, is likely to face lawsuits. 

But returning to his theme that the Labor Department IC rule is less significant in the history of IC legal precedents than public debate would otherwise signal, Reibstein wrote that “because no court has relied upon either of those (Trump/Biden) rules in determining the IC status of workers, such litigation has limited practical meaning.”

Comments on the proposed rule are open until the end of the day on April 28. The portal for the rule can be accessed at Regulation.gov.

The American Trucking Associations, long a critic of the Biden administration rule, released a statement that said the latest Trump IC proposal “represents a significant step forward to defend the livelihoods of the hundreds of thousands of truckers who choose to work as independent contractors,” quoting ATA President & CEO Chris Spear.  “We thank President Trump for listening to the concerns of professional drivers and taking action to protect individual opportunity, our supply chain, and our economy. “

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Walmart agrees to $100M settlement over payments to gig delivery drivers

Blue facade with the Walmart logo on a building.

Walmart has agreed to a $100 million judgment to settle allegations from the Federal Trade Commission and 11 states that the company caused on-demand delivery drivers to lose tens of millions of dollars’ worth of earnings by deceiving them about the base pay, incentive pay and tips they could earn.

Under a proposed order from a judge in U.S. District Court for Northern California, Walmart (NASDAQ: WMT) is also required to implement an earnings verification program to ensure drivers are paid promised earnings and tips. 

The FTC alleged that Walmart showed gig workers in its Spark Driver delivery program inflated base pay and tip amounts. The complaint also alleged that Walmart deceived customers by falsely claiming that 100% of customer tips would actually go to drivers.

Walmart crowd sources drivers through the Spark app. Drivers select orders they want to deliver with their own vehicles and pick them up at Walmart stores. Workers decide whether to accept delivery jobs based on Walmart statements about the base pay and tips that a driver can expect to receive if they complete the assignment.

“Labor markets cannot function efficiently without truthful and non-misleading information about earnings and other material terms,” said Christopher Mufarrige, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “Today’s settlement reflects the Trump-Vance FTC’s focus on ensuring a healthy labor market for American workers, which is critical to the nation’s success.”

The FTC under Chairman Andrew Ferguson has partnered with other agencies to investigate anticompetitive labor practices that harm workers. 

The complaint alleges that Walmart failed to notify drivers that, unlike the payment for the goods being delivered, the payment for the advertised tip amount had not been preauthorized, and therefore drivers would not receive that amount if the customer was unable to cover the cost of the tip or if the charge otherwise failed. The company also failed to inform drivers that it would split tips when a customer’s delivery was split across multiple drivers.

Another deceptive practice, according to the FTC, occurred when the company failed to inform drivers their base pay and tips would be reduced when it removed orders from “batched” orders, which involve delivering goods to multiple customers during one trip. In many instances, Walmart either failed to notify drivers at all about the change in base pay and tips or only notified them of the change in their earnings after they completed the delivery.

Walmart also misrepresented the incentive pay drivers can earn in exchange for completing certain tasks, according to the FTC. The company failed to disclose all the conditions that must be met to earn the promised incentive pay for completing certain tasks and denied the promised earnings on the basis that drivers failed to meet all the conditions. Walmart, for example, has offered to provide drivers a referral incentive when they refer new drivers to the service yet failed to adequately disclose that it will only pay the incentive if the newly recruited driver performed deliveries in a particular zone or for a particular store. Even when drivers meet the incentive conditions, Walmart sometimes fails to provide the promised incentive pay.

On multiple occasions, Walmart failed to provide collected tips to drivers as promised and didn’t refund the tip to customers. 

The FTC said Walmart violated the FTC Act and the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act. The court order also prohibits Walmart from modifying an offer for base and incentive pay or tips after the initial offer except under limited circumstances, such as when a driver failed to provide the required service or the customer cancels an order. The company also must not misrepresent earnings and other information included in the Spark delivery offers. 

In a statement, Walmart said it values “the hard work and dedication of the drivers who deliver great service and products to our customers.” It added that it has issued payments to affected drivers and continues to make additional payments as appropriate.

“We are continuously improving procedures to ensure fairness and transparency for drivers,” Walmart said.

Click here for more FreightWaves/American Shipper stories by Eric Kulisch.

Write to Eric Kulisch at ekulisch@freightwaves.com.

Walmart e-commerce sales top $150B for first time

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