Mizzou Driver: Produce Folks, Get Your Act Together

Mizzou Driver: Produce Folks, Get Your Act Together

Tod Taylor has been trucking off and on for over 25 years, but it’s the only profession he’s known for the past seven years.  He has pretty much done and seen it all during his career and is thankful the equipment has improved immensely.

He still has vivid memories of his first job trucking  in January 1986 when he was driving for a company with a 1982 cabover.  “They left me in New York City for three weeks, mainly to pick up and drop trailers.  I vowed I’d never go back there,” he recalls.

He hasn’t strayed much from those feelings today.  A company driver for Professional Services Transportation Inc. (PSI) of Huntsville, MO, Tod says he refuses to drive inside of Interstate 287 in New York.   He, as well as PSI pretty much also avoids trucking in California because of the rules, regulations and gridlock.

“You can’t make any time in California or New York.  You are dealing with too many things that eat the clock up,” he states.

While hauling meat is the primary focus for PSI, the company also transports its share of fresh produce.  In fact, he finds some similarities between the two categories of loads.

Tod had just hauled a load of meat from Milwaukee and made two drops in Atlanta.  Now he was parked at an Atlanta truck stop and in 14 hours (3 a.m.) was scheduled to make his first of three more drops.  Sounds a little like some produce hauls, in which he also aired some opinions.

“If the produce people would get their act together, it wouldn’t be bad (hauling fresh fruits and vegetables).   You wait three days to pick up two skids.  You wait for those skids because the product has to be harvested.  Trucking just don’t pay enough to do that.  When I get lucky and finally get loaded, then they don’t want to pay you anything to haul it,” he reflects.

Tod believes a minumum of two dollars per mile is needed to haul produce out of California and many other places, “but most guys aren’t getting that.  They want you to drive 3,100 miles for $2,800.  You can’t do that, especially when you are there three to four days waiting for a load.  It’s not worth it.”

At age 50, Tod has never owned his own truck, although he has considered it from time to time.  However, he has always decided against being an owner operator “because I don’t need all of the extra headaches.”

Tod drives a beautiful 2012 Kenworth T-660, which had only 37,000 miles on it.  He loves the truck that is powered by a Paacar 455 h.p. engine, 15-speed automatic transmission, and pulls a 53-foot Great Dane holding a Carrier refrigeration unit.  The truck is a light oak leaf color with an 84-inch studio sleeper.  The cab has a lot of modern features including a GPS system built into the dash.

He concludes, “Trucking has come along way from that ’82 cabover freight shaker I used to drive.”