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Northwest Log Truckers Cooperative of       Washington  

 

 

Better service thru better compensation

 

 

 

 

Fuel Surcharge Rally at the Tacoma Dome May 11th, 2004

Photos of the May 16, 2006 Log Truck Rally at the Tacoma Dome


 

Executive Board of Trustee's

Rick Smith  Director

360-581-2451

Scott  Jerles Assistant Director

360-520-5586

Bruce Thompson Trustee

360-508-6144

 Mike Fetter Secretary / Treasure
253-350-7298

Bob Johnson Trustee

253-564-1254

 

Mike & Ona Hamilton Trustee

360-661-4207

Louie Matisons Trustee

360-


 Mission Statement 


Our cooperative is dedicated to promote the mutual welfare and interests of log truck operators throughout the States of Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana. Our membership consists of operators in every county in Western Washington plus many counties in Eastern Washington, as well as many members in Idaho, and Montana.

We desire our members to work cooperatively with northwestern logging contractors AND to educate timberland owners and logging contractors about the increasing costs we are facing and the need to fairly and adequately compensate the drivers who haul their products to mills and market. Higher hauling fees equal safer log trucks !


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Attention all members .

                                                                                                                        

 

You have a new board ready to go to work to improve the cooperative so lets all get together and make it work. We have a lot of work to do before the next legislation session.   The board members need your input and help to keep your Cooperative moving forward. If you have any question call one of your board members any time. If anybody would like to start a new chapter or needs any information posted here on the site, please contact Wayne Tuthill at 253-307-8321. I am here to help.  We all know that the market is bad at this time but it will not stay this way forever so lets stick together and make it work .

Your NWLTC Board

Cascade Chapter meeting

11/18/08 8:00 Am 

Dijon's Restaurant Buckley WA

    Washington Log Truck Study-

accomplished thru the efforts of the N.W. Log Truckers CO-OP of Washington and Senator Hargrove. The survey will soon reach your mail box. Your input  is essential in filling out this survey accurately and completely  It is the most important tool the legislature is going to have to base any and all changes  within our industry on. We ask that you take the time to please fill this survey out, whether you are a CO-OP of Washington member or not. This is your chance to make a difference.  Thank you. 

 

   

Sandra Hines    shines@u.washington.edu   
Kathy Barnard    kbarnard@wsu.edu   
Executive summary of report
The Washington Log Trucking Industry: Costs and Safety Analysis

 
 
Photo credit: Larry Mason/University of Washington
A truck is loaded with logs.


A report on the log truck industry just delivered to the state legislature indicates that the number of traffic accidents involving log trucks declined 11 percent while collisions for all commercial trucks increased by 15 percent in Washington between 2004 and 2006.

"This safety record has been built by drivers who have been in the business a long time," says Ken Casavant, Washington State University professor of economics and an author of the report. "A log trucker in this state is generally a seasoned driver with a lot of knowledge. Log truckers may not know everything about the business side of their work, but they sure know how to run their trucks."

But that safety record could be jeopardized in the future, the report from the University of Washington's College of Forest Resources and WSU's School of Economic Sciences says.

A survey of log truckers in Washington revealed an experienced but aging workforce with an average age of 55 and an average of 27 years experience in log truck operations. Fifty-one percent reported plans to retire or diversify out of the logging industry and nearly everyone surveyed said skilled drivers are harder to find now than 10 years ago. From 1998 to 2006, the number of log trucks registered in Washington declined by 36 percent.

The business side has been tough in recent years. The report found that in 2006, 28 percent of log-trucking companies lost money, 50 percent broke even and 21 percent made a profit. No such figures are available for 2008 but the price of diesel this year has jumped 80 percent, increasing the total cost of operations by 20 percent.

Problems for log haulers could also have implications for Washington's forest industry, which employs 45,000 people and generates $2 billion in wages and $16 billion in gross business revenues a year.

"These guys are doing everything they can to make it under difficult circumstances. They're not buying new trucks. They work long hours," says Larry Mason, a researcher with the UW College of Forest Resources and lead author of the report. Concerns about costs and safety, he says, prompted the legislature, led by Sens. James Hargrove and Brian Hatfield, to commission the study.

"Analysis of accident data provided by the Washington State Patrol and the Washington Department of Transportation for all collisions involving log trucks for years 2002 through 2007 showed no trend of increasing safety hazard to warrant public concern," the report says. A review of Washington Department of Labor and Industries data for on-the-job injuries and fatalities of log truck drivers also showed no trend indicating worsening safety problems.

Of the 129 log truck companies that responded to a survey conducted as part of the investigation, nearly 65 percent are owner-driver operations with a single truck and trailer. In 2006, a trucker on average made $33,000 a year and worked 69 hours a week.

"These are men and women who have worked all their adult lives in the forest product industry and love being in the trucking business," Casavant says. "Many are like small farmers -- they like to run their own businesses."

Loading logs is often assumed to be the most dangerous part of log truckers' work, Mason says. Loading involves backing trucks up to log landings -- sometimes up steep, winding logging roads slick with mud or snow -- securing loaded logs with cable binders and making one's way along logging roads back to the highway. However, only 11 percent of surveyed log truckers said that was the most dangerous part of their job. The other 89 percent indicated that increasing traffic congestion and worsening road conditions are the biggest dangers they face.

In addition to rising costs, aging drivers and long hours of service, other factors that could affect safety and economic viability include the ongoing effects of deregulation, poor driver recruitment and an influx of out-of-state log trucks, all of which should be monitored, the report says.

"There is ample evidence to suggest that the sustainability of log trucking businesses is in question and such uncertainty is a legitimate matter for private and public concern," the report says. Changes to business and occupation taxes as well as state-sponsored programs to assist truckers making investments to reduce fuel consumption and pollution were cited as possibilities for relief.

See the report "The Washington Log Trucking Industry: Costs and Safety Analysis" at http://www.ruraltech.org/pubs/reports/2008/log_trucks/index.asp. Other authors of the report are Bruce Lippke, UW professor of forest resources; Diem Nguyen, WSU research assistant; and Eric Jessup, WSU assistant professor of economics.

###

For more information:
Mason, (206) 543-0827,
larrym@u.washington.edu
Casavant, (509) 335-1608,
casavantk@wsu.edu  

 

  

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Special Membership Drive Prices

6 or more Trucks.... $350.00

3 to 5 Trucks.....  $200.OO

1 to 2 Trucks.....$100.00

Vendors....  $100.00

Drivers....  $25.00

Starting June1st 2009 Membership dues will be due on or by June 1st each year.  If you have paid your dues in another month we will prorate it to bring your membership up to date. This will keep the membership list current.

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WCLA

Log truck  Insurance 

Insurance Agency Inc.

For a Quote

Jerry Chertude

360-3525033

  

                                                      

Log Truckers Cooperative Act 2009

Sponsored by

 

SUMMARY

The following summary is not prepared by the sponsors of the measure and is not a part of the body thereof subject to consideration by the Legislative Assembly. It is an editor’s brief statement of the essential features of the measure as introduced.

 

 

 

Relating to log hauling rates for log haulers.

 

Be It Enacted by the People of the State of Oregon:

SECTION 1. (1) The Legislative Assembly finds that:

a) Oregon’s forest products industry is a vital component of Oregon s economy and has a direct relationship to the economic health and welfare of workers, rural communities and businesses.

(b) Central to the viability of the forest products industry is a stable workforce of skilled, experienced loggers and log haulers available to harvest and transport wood from Oregon’s forests.

(c) Stability of this workforce is endangered when inadequate compensation rates for log haulers induce the haulers to shortchange safety through inadequate equipment maintenance, inadequate investment in new equipment and violation of hours of service limitations just to earn a living wage.

(d) The safety of Oregonian using the public highways is endangered when log haulers are induced to compromise safety to earn a living wage.

(e) Many log haulers serving Oregon’s forest products industry own and operate a single log-hauling vehicle, and a log haulers compensation from forestland owners compensates the log hauler for both the haulers personal services and the cost of maintaining and operating the haulers vehicle.

(f) The cost of maintaining a log-hauling vehicle in safe operating condition is increased by the need to operate the vehicle on unpaved roadways in forest areas (g) Based on patterns and configurations of forestland ownership, the hauling of forest products is performed by numerous log haulers who are economically dependent on a small group of large commercial forestland owners

(h) An imbalance of market power exists when one forestland owner owns, possesses or acquires economic control over more than 100,000 acres of forest in a labor market area.

(i) The imbalance of market power in determining compensation and the lack of opportunity to join together to bargain over compensation prevents log haulers from operating in a manner suitable for the public interest of Oregonians and results in inadequate compensation for log haulers.

(j) It is in the public interest to ensure a reasonable rate of compensation for log haulers to ensure that log haulers earn a reasonable living wage without compromising the safety of their vehicles or the safety of their operation.

(k) It is in the public interest to create a process whereby the State Forester will oversee a system to ensure adequate haul rates for log haulers and thereby ensure that the public welfare of the State of Oregon is protected

(L)(A) 49 U.S.C. 14501 (c)(1) limits the authority of states to enact or enforce laws related to a price, route or service of a motor carrier with respect to the transportation of property.

(B) 49 U.S.C. 13506 (a)(6) provides that the United States Secretary of Transportation and the Surface Transportation Board have no jurisdiction over the transportation by motor vehicle of agricultural or horticultural commodities, other than the manufactured products thereof.

(C) 49 C.F.R. 372.115 lists “Trees: Sawed into lumber” as a commodity that is not statutorily exempt from regulation by the United States Secretary of Transportation and the Surface Transportation Board, but not logs that are not sawn into lumber or otherwise un- processed

(2) The Legislative Assembly finds that

(a) The transportation of unprocessed logs by motor carrier is the transportation of an unmanufactured agricultural commodity that is exempt from regulation by the secretary and the board under 49 U.S.C. 13506 (a)(6); and

(b) The preemption under 49 U.S.C. 14501 (c)(1) of state regulation of transportation of property by motor carrier does not apply to the provisions of sections 1 to 6 of this 2007 Act.

 

SECTION 2. As used in sections 1 to 6 of this 2007 Act:

(1) “Cooperative association” means a cooperative non-profit membership-based entity;

a) Whose purpose is to promote the interests of log haulers through participation in a process to determine hauling rates under section 3 of this 2007 Act;

(b) That is registered as a cooperative association with the State of Oregon; and

(c) That represents at least 75 log haulers.

(2) “Economic control” means the legal right, whether through ownership, contract or otherwise, to make or influence decisions regarding the harvest of trees and disposition of logs harvested from the subject land.

(3) “Forestland” means agricultural forestland used primarily for the growth of trees to be harvested for commercial use.

(4) “Forestland owner” means

(a) A person or public body, as defined in ORS 174.109, that owns directly, or through affiliated persons, or possesses economic control over, more than 100,000 acres in the State of Oregon; or

b) An agent or subsidiary of a person or public body described in paragraph (a) of this subsection if that agent or subsidiary is involved in contracting or negotiating contracts or other arrangements, written or oral, with forest products harvesters or log haulers.

(5) “Labor market area” means:

(a)Counties whose commercial forest land is comprised primarily of Douglas fir located predominately in Western Oregon; or

(b)Counties whose commercial forest is comprised primarily of pine located predominantly in Eastern Oregon.

(6) “Log hauler” means a person having a place of business in this state who is engaged in the agricultural activity of hauling trees harvested from Oregon forestland under a contract or subcontract, directly or indirectly, with a forestland owner.

 

SECTION 3. It is the intent of this section to displace competition with a regulatory program in the Oregon log hauling industry to a limited degree. The regulatory program is intended to grant immunity from federal and state antitrust laws to Oregon log haulers and forest land owners as defined in Section 2., for the limited purpose of allowing the haulers and the forest land owners to bargain collectively and to arrive at negotiated hauling rates for the transportation of logs by the haulers from forest lands in Oregon. The activities of any party that comply with the provisions of this section may not be considered to be in restraint of trade, a conspiracy or combination or any other unlawful activity in violation of any provision of ORS 646.705 to 646.826 or federal antitrust laws.

      (a) An Oregon log truck cooperative may negotiate with one or more landowners or an association of landowners to establish the hauling rates at which members of the cooperative or association will haul logs by its members or under the control of its members. The landowners may negotiate the haul rates of Oregon logs through a committee that sets forth the views of the landowners and votes on any issues being negotiated as authorized by this section, including the hauling rate of logs. Participation by a land owner in the hauling rate negotiations is voluntary.

      (b) If the forest landowners negotiate a haul rate through a committee under paragraph (b) of this subsection, nonparticipating land owners are not bound by the acts of the committee.

      (c) Any agreements that arise from negotiations conducted under this section are binding only on the parties that participate in the negotiations and agree to be bound.

      (d) The State Forester is authorized to actively supervise the conduct of an Oregon log haulers cooperative organized under this chapter, and a representative committee of land owners in establishing the hauling rate for logs from forestland in Oregon. The State Forester is authorized to supervise the negotiations between the parties, review the hauling rate established by the negotiations and approve the hauling rate proposed by the parties. The State Forester must approve the proposed hauling rate and any adjustments to previously approved rates before the hauling rates may be implemented.

      (e) The State Forester may compel the parties to take whatever action the State Forester considers necessary to:

      (i) Ensure that the parties are engaging in conduct that is authorized under this section;

      (ii) Ensure that the policies of this state are being fulfilled under the regulatory program; and

      (iii) Enjoin conduct by any of the parties that is not authorized by the State Forester or conduct that the State Forester finds does not advance the interests of this state in carrying out the regulatory program.

      (f) The State Forester may adopt rules to carry out the State Forester’s authority under this section.

      (g) The State Forester may designate persons as deemed necessary to carry out the responsibility of actively supervising the conduct of the parties, including serving as intermediaries between prospective parties. Persons designated by the State Forester must be employees of the Oregon Department of Forestry.

      (h) The State Forester by rule may set and collect fees from the parties who are participants in a regulatory program as needed.

      (i) The State Forester may approve a proposed rate of compensation only if the that the rate is adequate to ensure  a sufficient supply of haulers, and that log haulers will earn living wage will working within existing or future regulation regarding hours, fuel costs, weight, and equipment maintenance.

 

SECTION 4. A forestland owner may not:

(1)  Discriminate against any person trade association, labor union, or cooperative association for participating in the rate determination process.

(2)  Once a hauling rate has been determined by the State Forester, the rate may not be lowered by those forest landowners who participated in the process in that labor market area for 12 months.

 

SECTION 5.

(1) Sections 1 to 5 of this 2008 Act are intended to displace existing market

forces based on a legislative finding that the existing market forces do not permit the af-

fected market to function normally and do not ensure the safety and stability of the log-

hauling industry or ensure the safety of the general public

(2) Activities carried out under sections 1 to 5 of this 2008 Act do not constitute a conspiracy or a combination in restraint of trade or an illegal monopoly, nor are they carried out for the purposes of lessening competition or fixing prices arbitrarily, as long as the activities are carried out for the purpose of preparing for, initiating or participating in a de-

termination of a hauling rate under sections 1 to 6 of this 2007 Act.

 

 


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253-307-8321

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Copyright © 2006-2007 Northwest Log Truckers Co-op of Washington
All rights reserved
Revised: Friday October 17, 2008 06:13 PM