Group of D.C. demonstrators parks up near the White House

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Updated Oct 9, 2017
A member of the ELD or Me group this morning at the White House.A member of the ELD or Me group this morning at the White House.

Twenty-nine bobtail trucks staged in the wee hours on Constitution Avenue between the Washington Monument and the White House today in an attempt to garner the attention of the President on the electronic logging device mandate. Demonstrators seek a two-year delay, which the H.R. 3282 ELD Extension Act of 2017 would put in place, and, ultimately for many, repeal is the goal.

“That’s the ELD mandate,” noted trucker and ELD or Me organizer Tony Justice when he and Magner passed this pile of horse manure near the White House this morning.“That’s the ELD mandate,” noted trucker and ELD or Me organizer Tony Justice when he and Magner passed this pile of horse manure near the White House this morning.

As noted in yesterday’s report on the Channel 19 blog, Operation Black and Blue organizer and small fleet owner Scott Jordan called today’s efforts in part something of an attempt to approximate a truck show among the tourists, residents and others that are commonly throughout the area, something another group of around 11 trucks had been engaged in both Wednesday and Thursday — most of that contingent, including one among protest leaders in Mintu Pandher, left this morning before today’s activities began.

So far, overall the groups have been unsuccessful in garnering anything other than local or niche press coverage around the nation, and that appeared to be the case thus far this morning when Overdrive‘s Carolyn Magner was on-site.

The demonstration followed an ongoing push on Capitol Hill to build support for H.R. 3282, which remains at 55 cosponsors as of this morning, and a meeting yesterday with Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration officials that gave Scott Reed a “good feeling,” he says. At once, he says “no promises were made” by officials relative to the ELD mandate, where the discussion centered. Participants included Reed and small fleet owner Scott Jordan, Sikh community owner-operator leader Mintu Pandher, trucker John Allen, RTM Transportation independent owner-operator Joe Alfaro (of Las Vegas) and others.

Scott Reed, of Buckland, OhioScott Reed, of Buckland, Ohio

Attendees were invited back for further discussions in the future, however, DOT officials confirm.

Independent owner-operator Joe Alfaro is of Cuban-American descent — his father immigrated to the U.S. in the 1960s — and pictured here across the street from the Washington Nationals baseball stadium, near DOT headquarters, on Wednesday. His heritage, baseball, standing up for what you believe in — “it doesn’t get any more American than that,” he said then.Independent owner-operator Joe Alfaro is of Cuban-American descent — his father immigrated to the U.S. in the 1960s — and pictured here across the street from the Washington Nationals baseball stadium, near DOT headquarters, on Wednesday. His heritage, baseball, standing up for what you believe in — “it doesn’t get any more American than that,” he said then.

Asked about some suggestions in social media that officials offered the coalition of protest groups a formal seat on the Motor Carrier Safety Advisory Committee (MCSAC) of industry stakeholders, safety advocacy groups and law enforcement officials, however, Worthy said that was not the case.

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Clearly, however, the groups got DOT Secretary Chao’s attention. The meeting “was informative,” said FMCSA External Affairs Director Sharon Worthy, “for FMCSA and for the visiting group. FMCSA did not offer any seats on the MCSAC. In fact, MCSAC was never mentioned. We [FMCSA] said that we would meet with the group again on future issues.”

Owner-operator Mike Landis, who along with Mintu Pandher and several participating truckers who’d staged on Constitution Avenue Wednesday and Thursday but who left D.C. this morning, says his group, at least, is prepared to return to D.C. if nothing changes relative to FMCSA’s engagement with independent drivers on these issues.

After the meeting House Rep Brian Babin (R-Texas), the sponsor of the ELD Extension Act of 2017, met with truckers outside the DOT headquarters. Today, notes Magner, there was plenty of praise for the Congressman and hope that the truckers’ efforts resulted in the Congressman’s bill’s success.

Owner-operator Rob Hallahan (pictured, left, with Brian Bucenell, both of ELD or Me) said his experience this week protesting inside and out of Capitol Office buildings has been one marked by open minds. “All week, people have listened, asked questions and responded to us. It’s been a great effort and I think we were noticed.” Today, he says, “Even the police have told us they stand with us. DOT has been respectful and allowed us to park without a hassle.”Owner-operator Rob Hallahan (pictured, left, with Brian Bucenell, both of ELD or Me) said his experience this week protesting inside and out of Capitol Office buildings has been one marked by open minds. “All week, people have listened, asked questions and responded to us. It’s been a great effort and I think we were noticed.” Today, he says, “Even the police have told us they stand with us. DOT has been respectful and allowed us to park without a hassle.”

Owner-operator Alfaro, for his part, echoes a multitude of others in a bedrock concern about the simple cost of doing business in trucking as an independent. “The cost of being in business is growing exponentially,” he says, and the ELD mandate is another part of that. “I’m most worried about the future of this business and how many more costs I may ultimately incur.”

He says he makes this stand not only for the independent truckers but for “independent small business people in general … down to the guy with a kiosk at the mall.”

With all the attention on D.C., an under-reported aspect of the ELD mandate protest events this week has been out west, where many drivers and owner-operators associated with Operation Black and Blue and the Indian-American Sikh community have engaged in demonstrations in Sacramento early in the week, Bakersfield on Wednesday and in a convoy of a number of trucks from Yuba City, Calif., to Fresno, noted Virginia-based owner-operator Deep Singh. “We are not against ELDs” carte blanche, Singh said, rather the mandate coming at a time when there is no accountability in the form of regulation or, he believed, in the marketplace for shippers and receivers at loading docks, among other concerns.

An influx of owner-operators from that community on Wednesday this week well-outnumbered those otherwise participating, Landis estimates, and was probably key in what success has been seen in his view.

More views from the nation’s Capitol from this week follow:

Mike and Ramona Jellison, of Seymour, Iowa. Mike runs in this 2017 Peterbilt 389 hauling reefer LTL to California and elsewhere. “I feel like we owe it to our kids and grandkids to” stand up against what he views as “a violation of our consitutional rights and civil liberties” in the ELD mandate.Mike and Ramona Jellison, of Seymour, Iowa. Mike runs in this 2017 Peterbilt 389 hauling reefer LTL to California and elsewhere. “I feel like we owe it to our kids and grandkids to” stand up against what he views as “a violation of our consitutional rights and civil liberties” in the ELD mandate. Lancaster, Pa.-based owner-operator Mike Landis’ cabover, a 1999 Pete 362, also pictured Wednesday with the White House slightly visible through the trees in the background. “It’s my everyday money maker,” Landis says. After hauling in a 1988 double bunk for years, he “bought the 1999 back in July. I stumbled across it. The owner was 80 years old and had ordered it brand-new.” Landis — with Jellison and Robbie Harris, Pandher and others — was among those who departed the scene before demonstrations started today.Lancaster, Pa.-based owner-operator Mike Landis’ cabover, a 1999 Pete 362, also pictured Wednesday with the White House slightly visible through the trees in the background. “It’s my everyday money maker,” Landis says. After hauling in a 1988 double bunk for years, he “bought the 1999 back in July. I stumbled across it. The owner was 80 years old and had ordered it brand-new.” Landis — with Jellison and Robbie Harris, Pandher and others — was among those who departed the scene before demonstrations started today. A group of truckers from the ELD or Me group were among those expressing a sense of renewed camaraderie near the end of what has been a weeklong effort. Said ELD or Me Facebook page creator Tony Justice, pictured near the center alongside Lee and Lisa Schmitt to the left and Rob Hallahan to the right, called the experience this week among the most fulfilling in his lifetime. “It’s definitely a group effort. There’s no I, I, I in this group, it’s us, us, us. We’ll see in the coming weeks how successful we were.”A group of truckers from the ELD or Me group were among those expressing a sense of renewed camaraderie near the end of what has been a weeklong effort. Said ELD or Me Facebook page creator Tony Justice, pictured near the center alongside Lee and Lisa Schmitt to the left and Rob Hallahan to the right, called the experience this week among the most fulfilling in his lifetime. “It’s definitely a group effort. There’s no I, I, I in this group, it’s us, us, us. We’ll see in the coming weeks how successful we were.”

–Carolyn Magner contributed to this report.