Truck drivers protest rising diesel fuel prices in front of the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Monday as prices have risen to an average of $4.24 per gallon. Several hundred truckers took part in the demonstration.
Nicholas Kamm, Getty Images
WASHINGTON With horns blaring and American flags flying from their cabs, hundreds of truckers drove around Capitol Hill in a driving rain Monday in a gear-jamming, engine-revving, ear-splitting protest against high fuel prices.
"The economy is going down because the price of gas is going up," said Ron Winger, a Pennsylvania trucker.
David Ayers, a songwriter from Atlanta, provided the soundtrack for the demonstration with his song, "What Are They Going to Do When the Big Rigs Don't Roll?"
The chorus goes: "The only trick I get for my truck/Is the jack in the price when I fill it up./It's like pumping my money down an endless hole./But what are they going to do when the big rigs don't roll?"
"It's not just the truckers" who are hurting from high fuel costs, said Ayers, who came to the rally with the co-writer, Barry Allen of Nashville. "It's everybody in the United States, all working people."
After driving into the nation's capital, the convoy circled through the National Mall at the base of Capitol Hill before parking at RFK Stadium. Then the drenched drivers marched over to call on Congress.
They urged a moratorium on fuel prices, a halt to subsidies for big oil companies, release of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and more domestic oil production.
Mark Kirsch, an independent trucker from Myerstown, Pa., said members of Congress have done nothing so far to ease the crisis and need to act now. Otherwise, they will feel the wrath of the electorate in November.
"It they're not going to get off their butts, then we need to get somebody else in there who will do something," saidKirsch.
"We're looking at nearly $1,000 to fill a truck up," said Jamie Barnhart, an owner-operator from Washington, D.C., who said the tank on his truck holds a little more than 200 gallons. "Two years ago, it was $500, and I can remember when I could fill my tank for $165. We've got to put a moratorium on fuel prices."
Indeed, the average price that truckers paid for diesel fuel reached a new record of more than $4.18 a gallon, an increase of 3.4 cents per gallon since last week, the federal Energy Information Administration reported Monday.
Participants said about 350 trucks took part in the protest, which was organized by a group called Truckers and Citizens Unite.
"We're running our trucks for zero profit," said William Lockridge, another independent trucker from the District. "The whole economy is in danger. When the trucks stop, the economy stops."
- KSL-TV welcomes 2 new anchors, new format
- West Jordan teen releases 5th iPhone app
- Studies try to find why poorer people are...
- Law school grad pays off $114,460 in debt...
- 18 cheap ways to captivate teens
- Top 10 poorest states in America
- KSL TV news icon Bruce Lindsay calls it a career
- Millennials love to spend money they don't have
- Billboard battle heats up as company...
29 - Studies try to find why poorer people...
26 - Millennials love to spend money they...
13 - KSL TV news icon Bruce Lindsay calls it...
12 - Law school grad pays off $114,460 in...
9 - House GOP plans summer tax cut vote
7 - Consumer confidence highest in 4½...
6 - Why Americans aren't saving for retirement
6






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments