Program Airs: September 8, 2022
Idle time, whether it’s time spent waiting to load or unload a shipment or in a scale house line up, has significant impacts on your fleet operations. It increases the carbon emissions produced by your fleet, quietly consumes your fuel and personnel budgets, reduces operational efficiencies, and creates bottlenecks along your drivers’ routes. According to SmartWay, a partner of the US EPA, if each driver in a 25-truck fleet idled for only two hours, that fleet would burn 40 gallons of diesel each day, at a cost of over $46,000/year.
Brought to you by:
Ray LaPrade
Product Manager and Director of Compliance, Drivewyze Inc.
Ray LaPrade is the Vice President of Information Technology at CalArk International. He has spent his entire career in logistics information technology and is responsible for all technology at CalArk, as well as innovation, analytics, and business intelligence.
Stephen Petit
Partner at SiefkesPetit Communications
Stephen Petit is a partner at SiefkesPetit Communications, a public relations firm that specializes in trucking, logistics, and other industrial markets. He has covered commercial transportation for nearly 30 years and is the former editor of Today’s Trucking, the leading business-to-business publication for Canada’s trucking industry.
Sara Steele
Product Manager and Director of Compliance, Drivewyze Inc.
Sara Steele is Product Manager and Director of Compliance at Drivewyze. She has over a decade of experience in the trucking software industry, particularly in areas of regulatory compliance. In addition to her role with Drivewyze, Sara is secretary for the CVSA Enforcement and Industry Modernization Committee.
Dave Schaller
Industry Engagement Director, NACFE
Dave Schaller is the Industry Engagement Director for the NACFE. His responsibilities include interfacing with fleets and suppliers, writing reports, conducting workshops, giving presentations and running social media groups. Dave works closely with the drivers, fleets and sponsors for the Run on Less demonstrations. He holds an Electrical Engineering degree from Purdue University and an MBA from Ball State University.