Senior Drivers Staying Behind the Wheel

Prefer Life on the Road to Retirement
By Mindy Long, Special to Transport Topics

This story appears in the Nov. 3 print edition of Transport Topics.

Truckers such as Bill Compton, Tom Camp, Henry Bates and Al Weddle have more in common than their love of the road.

None of them has plans to retire, despite being well beyond the normal retirement age in the United States, which is between 65 and 67, in the Social Security Administration鈥檚 view.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e in good health and can pass a physical and know you鈥檙e doing a good job, I feel like a person is better off to keep working,鈥 said Compton, 76, who has worked for 34 years at Con-way Truckload, based in Joplin, Missouri.



Weddle, 83, has spent 57 years with Overland Park, Kansas-based YRC Freight, driving out of the Albuquerque, New Mexico, terminal. He said he鈥檇 be bored if he weren鈥檛 on the road.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 have anything else to do other than about six months of working around the house and the yard or working on my old cars,鈥 Weddle said.

Camp, 74, is the senior-most safe driver for UPS Inc., where he has been behind the wheel for 52 years. Today, he delivers packages in Livonia, Michigan, for the Atlanta-based company.

鈥淩etirement isn鈥檛 for everybody,鈥 Camp said. 鈥淲orking gives you something to look forward to in the morning.鈥

Bates, 84, an owner-operator from International Falls, Minnesota, has driven for MinStar Transport Inc. since 2008. He enjoys the work but also relies on the money.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 make that much with a Social Security check,鈥 he said.

Carriers said more and more drivers are continuing to work as they age.

Bob Costello, chief economist for American Trucking Associations, said that, based on his analysis of more than 700,000 tractor-trailer drivers, including for-hire and private fleet drivers, 47% were over the age of 50. He didn鈥檛 have any data on how many were older than 60.

鈥淭heir health is there, and they want to work,鈥 said Mitch Lilly, senior vice president of labor and employee relations for YRC Freight, a unit of YRC Worldwide, which ranks No. 5 on the Transport Topics Top 100 list of the largest U.S. and Canadian for-hire carriers. 鈥淲e seem like we have more in that 40-and-over-years-of-service category than we once did.鈥

Bert Johnson, vice president of human resources for Con-way Truckload, a unit of Con-way Inc., which ranks No. 4 on the for-hire TT100 list, said the average age of truck drivers is continuing to grow.

The average age 鈥渋s 48 now and roughly 21% of commercial truck drivers are in the neighborhood of 55 to 65,鈥 he said.

Pete Dannecker, director of loss prevention at A. Duie Pyle, based in West Chester, Pennsylvania, and No. 82 on the for-hire听 TT100, said: 鈥淚 am seeing people who want to work. Some retire and then say, 鈥楬ey, I鈥檇 like to drive a little longer.鈥 Other drivers are looking to softly retire, and we鈥檙e going to take advantage of that.鈥

A. Duie Pyle driver Walter Baumert, 74, officially retired and moved to Florida from New Jersey three years ago. 鈥淩etiring was great, but it gets boring after a while,鈥 he said, adding that he travels back to New Jersey about four times a year and works for A. Duie Pyle for about a month at a time. Baumert simply calls his terminal manager and lets him know when he鈥檒l be ready to work.

鈥淲hen I鈥檓 in Florida, I can鈥檛 wait to get back up to New Jersey and work again. I don鈥檛 need to do this. I want to do it,鈥 he said.

Carriers said older drivers bring value to the company. For example, they tend to understand how freight moves across the country, Johnson said.

鈥淭hey know how to plan themselves so they can make the most efficient use of their time. They鈥檙e also more aware of the ups and downs as it relates to sleeping,鈥 he said.

Ernest Williams, 81, a driver for Miami-based Ryder Dedicated, started driving in 1959. He has been with Ryder for 22 years and has served the same dedicated account in Knoxville, Tennessee, for 13 years.

David Smelcer, a logistics manager for Ryder Dedicated, a unit of Ryder Supply Chain Solutions, which ranks No. 11 on the for-hire TT100, said Williams 鈥渢akes care of the customer unlike anyone else I鈥檝e ever worked with.鈥

Smelcer added that Williams works unsupervised, and sometimes they鈥檒l go a week or more without talking to him.

鈥淗e is down there by himself breaking freight, loading freight, delivering freight. You know Ernest is doing what he is supposed to be doing,鈥 Smelcer said.

That鈥檚 the kind of dedication to getting the job done that can be counted on from older workers that companies welcome, said Angela Buchanan, vice president of safety and human resources for Tulsa, Oklahoma-based Melton Truck Lines.

鈥淚 wish I had 100 of them because they are so experienced and skilled and they figure it out,鈥 she said, adding that older drivers tend to be more careful. 鈥淭heir bodies talk to them a little bit and from a work-safety standpoint, they are very careful about how they work. From a driving perspective, they become a little more patient.鈥

Carriers said they haven鈥檛 seen the need to require age-specific trainings for drivers. Dannecker said, 鈥淭he standard DOT physical and their excitement and will to work are all we鈥檝e needed.鈥

Con-way often asks older drivers to conduct trainings. 鈥淭hey understand the dangers, so we ask them to lead the demonstrations on many things,鈥 Johnson said.

Con-way also pairs new drivers with experienced drivers so older drivers can share their knowledge and serve as a mentor.

鈥淭he new drivers can call on a regular basis to get answers and help solving any problem,鈥 Johnson said.

At FedEx Custom Critical in Green, Ohio 鈥 a unit of FedEx Corp., which ranks No. 2 on the for-hire TT100 鈥 Terry O鈥機onnell, 72, uses his experience to help other drivers as a field safety liaison. He took on the position five years ago after driving over-the-road for 19 years. Now he logs 50,000 miles a year in a Sprinter van traveling the country to review safety issues and policies with the company鈥檚 custom-critical drivers.

O鈥機onnell came to truck driving after 30 years of service in the U.S. Coast Guard.

鈥淚 find it so rewarding in the latter years of my life to make a difference. I thought my years of making a difference were over when I left the Coast Guard,鈥

he said. 鈥淚 could sit home and watch Law & Order reruns, perhaps, but that would be of no value to society.鈥

Older drivers often have impressive safety records.

鈥淛ust because they鈥檝e been around for a long time and driven a lot, it doesn鈥檛 mean they鈥檙e unsafe,鈥 said YRC鈥檚 Lilly, adding that a driver鈥檚 age doesn鈥檛 affect insurance costs. 鈥淢ore importantly, it is the safety record of the company more than the age of drivers.鈥

Weddle has logged 5,830,000 safe miles, and Compton has more than 4 million.

Ryder鈥檚 Williams was recently honored for having 1 million safe miles at the company, but he said he has no idea how many miles he has logged in his professional driving career. 鈥淚 wish I鈥檇 kept a running total of the miles I鈥檝e traveled in my lifetime, but I never even thought of it when I was younger,鈥 he said, adding that he has driven in 48 states, six Canadian provinces and Mexico. Bates admits he doesn鈥檛 push it as hard as he used to and prefers not to drive overnight.

鈥淚 find nighttime driving and backing up harder, and I don鈥檛 care as much for the loading and unloading, but you have to service every load,鈥 he said.

Williams said that he has gotten used to the physical aspect that comes with being a professional driver and loading freight is no harder today than it was when he started. 鈥淭here are tricks of the trade you learn,鈥 he said.

Compton has cut his workweek to four days. 鈥淭he company said that I鈥檇 paid my dues and it is fine,鈥 he said.

Even though drivers said they don鈥檛 want to retire, they know they will have to, eventually. Ralph McDaniel, 72, recently retired from Melton Truck Lines to help care for his wife but said he hadn鈥檛 ever planned to stop driving. 鈥淲hen I reached 65 and went on Social Security, that was just another milestone to pass. I still wanted to drive,鈥 he said, adding that he鈥檇 go back on the road in a heartbeat.

Bates said, 鈥淛ust like there is a beginning to everything, so is there an end. You can鈥檛 figure you鈥檒l drive forever."