Saturday, April 09, 2022




Giant, mysterious megalithic jars were unearthed in northeastern India

By Megan Marples, CNN - Thursday
© Courtesy Tilok Thakuria

Dozens of megalithic jars have been unearthed in Assam, India, at four previously unknown sites, according to a study published in the journal Asian Archaeology.

The stone jars range from 1 to 3 meters (about 3.2 to 9.8 feet) tall, according to study coauthor Nicholas Skopal, doctoral candidate at Australia National University in Canberra.

Some of the jars feature decorative carvings, while others are plain, he said. Around 65 jars have been discovered so far, but many more could be lurking beneath the ground, according to Skopal.

Researchers have yet to unravel the mystery of when these jars were made and which civilization used them, he said.

A handful of sites in the region with the same stone jars were discovered by the British in the 1920s, and prior to Skopal's 2020 excavation, there were seven known sites. His team was analyzing jars found at three of the locations.

While exploring the surrounding areas, they stumbled across four previously unknown sites with partially exposed jars, which was a pleasant surprise, Skopal said.

"By going out, surveying and documenting them properly, the government and universities can manage their heritage a lot better and preserve these jars for future generations," Skopal said.
A history of looters

By the time the research team found the exposed jars, most of their contents were long gone, Skopal said.

There are oral historical accounts of the Naga, local villagers, pulling beads and other items out of the jars, he said. While it's not known precisely when the beads were removed, since some of the locals still have them as family heirlooms, it's likely they unearthed the jars not too long ago, Skopal added.

"In one of the villages we're staying in, one of the elderly ladies actually showed me (some jewelry) that had been pulled out of the jar," he said.

Similar jars have been discovered in Laos, and researchers there have been fortunate to find jars that were still intact with artifacts like beads and human remains inside, Skopal said. He is hoping his team will eventually find unopened jars at the new sites in Assam to study the culture they originated from.


© Courtesy Tilok Thakuria
A handful of the jars featured chiseled designs.

"Some of the buried ones might have things still inside, but we haven't excavated yet," he said.
An unsolved mystery

It is difficult to date when these jars were first created, so researchers are not yet able to determine which civilization crafted the stone jars, Skopal said.

Early estimates date the artifacts to 400 BC or earlier, according to lead study author Tilok Thakuria, assistant professor in the History & Archaeology Department at the North-Eastern Hill University Tura Campus in Meghalaya, India.

Nailing down the time period in which these jars were created is the team's next priority, Skopal said.

To determine when the artifacts were buried, his team plans to use optically stimulated luminescence, called OSL. This is a dating method where you take a sediment sample from directly underneath the jar and determine when light last hit that sample, Skopal said.

The date would correspond with when the jars were buried, giving researchers a much better idea of when the jars were made.

Unearthing unopened jars will also be a big help in dating the stone pieces, according to Thakuria.

"We need to have a plan for excavation in Assam to recover material culture and to reconstruct social and cultural behavior of these groups of people," he said.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plain_of_Jars

The Plain of Jars is a megalithic archaeological landscape in Laos. It consists of thousands of stone jars scattered around the upland valleys and the lower ...

https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/plain-of-jars

Nov 18, 2009 ... The Plain of Jars is a collection of large stone jars interspersed throughout the Xieng Khouang plain in the Lao Highlands.

https://www.livescience.com/plain-of-jars-burial-site-true-age.html

Apr 28, 2021 ... The mysterious Plain of Jars in northern Laos — a landscape dotted with massive stone jars hewn from sandstone thousands of years ago — was ...

Ichthyosaurs had BLUBBER just like whales, study finds

Shivali Best For Mailonline - Thursday

From seals to whales, many marine animals have a thick layer of fat directly under their skin, known as blubber.

Now, a new study has shown for the first time that ichthyosaurs – ancient marine reptiles that lived 150 million years ago – also had blubber.

Scientists from the Natural History Museum in Oslo have studied the remains of an ichthyosaur discovered in the Solnhofen area in Southern Germany.

The specimen includes the complete internal skeleton, which was stunningly preserved thanks to its blubber, according to the team.


© Provided by Daily Mail
A new study has shown for the first time that ichthyosaurs – ancient marine reptiles that lived 150 million years ago – had blubber

What is blubber?

Blubber is a thick layer of fat, also called adipose tissue, directly under the skin of all marine mammals.

Blubber covers the entire body of animals such as seals, whales, and walruses - except for their fins, flippers, and flukes.

Blubber an important part of a marine mammal's anatomy. It stores energy, insulates heat, and increases buoyancy.

Source: National Geographic

Ichtyhosaurs were marine reptiles that lived in the age of the dinosaurs, and are famous for their fish-like shape, resembling today's dolphins.

The team studied the remains of two ichthyosaur specimens found in the Sonhofen area and housed in the Jura Museum.

The first was a complete ichthyosaur, which the researchers believe landed on its back on the seafloor either during or after its death, where it was covered in fine sediments.

Meanwhile, the second was a tail fin with intact tail vertebrae and soft tissue around – confirming ichthyosaurs had moon-shaped tails.

Dr Lene Liebe Delsett, who led the study, said: 'The complete specimen is really what makes this project unique because it tells a complete story.

'Ichthyosaurs are not common as fossils in Solnhofen, which at the time was a relatively shallow area with many islands, whereas ichthyosaurs were open ocean dwellers.

'We do not know why this one entered the lagoons, but it might be the reason why it died.


© Provided by Daily MailIn the study, the team studied the remains of two ichthyosaur specimens found in the Sonhofen area and housed in the Jura Museum. The first (pictured) was a complete ichtyosaur, which the researchers believe landed on its back on the seafloor either during or after its death, where it was covered in fine sediments


© Provided by Daily MailTo analyse the ichthyosaurs, the researchers took samples of the soft tissue and looked at it via X-ray crystallography and a scanning electron microscope, while UV light (pictured) was used to study the shape of the bones

'Seeing the specimen makes an impact because it is so obviously a complete, dead animal body, where we can see its shape because of the unique preservation.'

To analyse the ichthyosaurs, the researchers took samples of the soft tissue and looked at it via X-ray crystallography and a scanning electron microscope, while UV light was used to study the shape of the bones.

Their analysis revealed that phosphate in the tissues of the ichthyosaurs likely contributed to the preservation of their skin and connective tissue.

'We know from earlier research that ichthyosaurs likely had blubber, like whales have today,' Dr Delsett explained.

'Our research confirms this, for a group of ichthyosaurs where this has not been certain.

'The blubber is another strong similarity between whales and ichthyosaurs, in addition to their body shape.

'In the future, I hope that these two ichthyosaurs from Solnhofen can be used to enhance our understanding of swimming, as they preserve tail and body shape.'
United Airlines is delaying the return of Boeing 777 planes after dozens were grounded last year due to an engine failure

rhogg@insider.com (Ryan Hogg) - 

© Provided by Business Insider
United grounded its fleet of Boeing 777s carrying Pratt & Whitney engines following an incident last year. AP

United has pushed back the return of some Boeing 777s to late May.

Those carrying Pratt & Whitney 4000 engines were grounded in 2021 after a serious incident.

United told Insider it was working with authorities to ensure the safe return of the fleet.

United Airlines is delaying the return of Boeing 777 planes that contain the same engines as one that failed and shed debris over Denver last year.


CNBC reported the news on Friday.

Dozens of planes containing Pratt & Whitney 4000 engines have been grounded since the incident in February last year. The Boeing 777 jet had been headed for Honolulu, Hawaii, but was forced to return to the airport when its right engine failed. Debris fell from the plane but no injuries or damage to property was reported.

"Due to the delay in the return of our PW777 aircraft to active service, the May flight schedule is being reconfigured to account for the lack of these aircraft," United told pilots in a note circulated on Friday and seen by CNBC.

CNBC reported that 52 United planes carried the Pratt & Whitney 4000 engines. The aircraft are now unlikely to return until at least May 12.

"We continue to work conscientiously with Boeing, Pratt & Whitney and the FAA to safely return these aircraft to service soon, and our current plan will allow them to return in the second half of May," United told Insider in a statement.

In a safety directive issued last month, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) last month issued safety directives to increase inspections of fan blades on those engines. Those directives go into effect April 15.

Boeing did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment made outside of normal working hours.
 
More safety concerns for Boeing aircraft

The delay marks the latest signal of safety fears around some Boeing aircraft. On Tuesday, an Air France pilot was recorded as he seemingly struggled to control a Boeing 777 in Paris as it arrived from New York.

In March, China grounded its entire fleet of Boeing 737-800 passenger jets after a China East airliner with 132 people crashed in the southern Chinese region of Guangxi.
 
CARGILL
America's wealthiest agriculture family has gotten even richer as the Ukraine war sends food prices skyrocketing

htowey@insider.com (Hannah Towey) -

Martha "Muffy" MacMillan speaks during Women's Entrepreneurship Day at the United Nations in 2015. She is one of 12 billionaire heirs to the Cargill dynasty. 
Jemal Countess/Getty Images

The Cargills, an agricultural dynasty going back six generations, are one of America's richest families.

Three more Cargill heirs just joined Bloomberg's Billionaire Index, bringing the total to five.

The Ukraine war has sent food prices to a record high, "hitting the poorest the hardest," the UN says.


Three heirs of the Cargill-MacMillans, a six-generation dynasty that founded the world's largest agriculture company, have joined Bloomberg's Billionaire Index — bringing the total number of family members on the list to five.


The Cargill-MacMillans have consistently ranked among the 25 richest families in America, and are currently listed by Forbes as the nation's fourth-richest family, behind the Waltons, Kochs, and Mars. Together, the family has a combined net worth of $51.6 billion, Bloomberg reported in September.

The recent rise in the secretive family's fortune comes as the Ukraine war sends food prices around the world to record highs, a trend that will hit "the poorest the hardest," the UN said Friday.

But as rampant inflation and instability spark fears of a global food crisis, Big Agriculture companies have so far benefited from the volatility.

Cargill Inc. made $4.9 billion last year, its highest profit ever, per the Bloomberg report. And public competitors like Tyson Foods, Archer Daniels Midland, and Bunge each out-performed the market this week as the cost of soybeans, grains, and corn surge.

Approximately 90 family members own 88% of Cargill Inc., according to a Forbes profile from 2020. That makes the agriculture and commodities behemoth one of the largest, closely-held private companies in the country.

Cargill was one of the later companies to announce it would be scaling back its business in Russia, despite the fact that a shipping vessel charted by the company was hit by a missile as it left a Southern Ukraine port in late February.

When contacted by Insider, a Cargill spokesperson said they "cannot speak for the family members" and pointed to the company's statement on the situation in Ukraine posted to its website.

"We are scaling back our business activities there to only operate essential food and feed facilities and have stopped investment," the company announced on March 30. "This region plays a significant role in our global food system and is a critical source for key ingredients in basic staples like bread, infant formula and cereal. Food is a basic human right and should never be used as a weapon."

Cargill will also be donating "any profits from these essential activities to humanitarian aid," the statement continued.

SEE


• Plawiuk, Eugene W. Background on Cargill Inc., the Transnational Agribusiness Giant // Corporate Watch: GE Briefings. November 1998. 

https://www.academia.edu/33513470/William_Engahl_Seeds_of_destru



Kristyn Wong-Tam Is Leaving Toronto City Council & Plans To Run As NDP Candidate In Toronto Centre



Brooke Houghton -
Narcity


Toronto city councillor Kristyn Wong-Tam announced in a statement on Friday that they will not be running for reelection for City Council in October 2022.

Wong-Tam represents Ward 13 and says she has decided "after a great deal of consideration and conversations" to put their name "forward to seek the NDP nomination to become the next Member of Provincial Parliament for Toronto Centre," in June's provincial election.



According to their statement, their resignation from their post at City Council will be effective on May 4, 2022.

"To the residents of Ward 13 - Toronto Centre, it is with much gratitude and love that I announce that I will not be seeking re-election for City Council in October," wrote Wong-Tam.

"The amazing Ward 13 team will continue to work at full speed to support residents as well as the interim Councillor and ensure a smooth transition after the next municipal election."


In a thread of tweets posted on April 8, Wong-Tam wrote, "Serving you as your City Councillor in Toronto Centre for almost 12 years has been the greatest honour of my life. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for the trust you have placed in me."

Multiple NDP MPPs commented on the Twitter thread writing warm words of encouragement to Wong-Tam.


"Kristyn, this is incredible news! You will be a fantastic MPP for Toronto Centre and I look forward to serving with you as part of our @OntarioNDP team at Queen's Park!" wrote Tom Rakocevic, Ontario NDP MPP of Humber River-Black Creek.
DAMNED IF THEY DO DAMNED IF THEY DON'T
Alberta's Kenney urges party to back him or risk division and election loss to NDP

EDMONTON — Premier Jason Kenney, in a speech to party members deciding his fate, told them he is an unblemished election winner who saved Alberta from servitude in a dystopian socialist hellscape.


© Provided by The Canadian PressAlberta's Kenney urges party to back him or risk division and election loss to NDP

“I’m 12-0!” Kenney said Saturday in a speech before cheering, applauding, whooping, placard-waving supporters in Red Deer.

“I know a thing or two about winning elections.”

The speech to the party formally launched what has become a fractious, acrimonious intraparty fight to determine whether Kenney should remain in charge of the United Conservatives.

Kenney has faced open dissent from some party and caucus members for more than a year, and he made it clear in his speech this vote must end the feuding one way or another.

“If the members decide they want to have a leadership election, I will step aside,” he said.

“But if the members decide that they want to choose the path of unity and stability … then I, and I believe all of our members, will expect every member of our caucus and our team also to respect the decision.”

Ballots will be mailed out this weekend to almost 60,000 party members. They must be returned by May 11, with results announced May 18.

If Kenney gets less then 50 per cent plus one of the votes, a leadership race must be called.

Kenney’s critics say his policies coupled with an imperious, controlling management style have alienated supporters and sent popularity numbers plunging to the point the party could lose the next election to Rachel Notley’s Opposition NDP.

Kenney has labelled his opponents racial and religious bigots bent on dismantling his big-tent conservative coalition.

In his speech, he said decisions he had to make during COVID-19, particularly restrictions on personal freedoms, lit the powder keg of anger against him.

“I ask for your forgiveness if there were decisions that we made which you think were wrong or which offended you,” he said.

But he said now is not the time to fight past battles with the next provincial election just around the corner in May 2023.

Kenney reminded them he left his job as a Conservative MP to unite feuding conservatives under the new UCP in 2017 and then defeat the NDP in the 2019 election.

He characterized that 2019 campaign as a mission to stop “left wing ideologues who want to turn Alberta into some kind of socialist lab experiment” with an agenda he said had pulverized the economy, atomized jobs and sent thousands fleeing.

“I decided something had to be done,” said Kenney. “I knew if (the NDP) got a second consecutive term they would fundamentally change this province forever.

“We would lose this province as a beacon of hope.

“They would drive their toxic ideas into our schools, they would regulate and unionize everything that moves, they’d crush businesses with their class warfare politics of resentment, and they’d turn Alberta into a vassal state for (Prime Minister) Justin Trudeau’s Ottawa.”

The ballot question is simple: “Do you approve of the current leader? Yes or No.”

But the process has been tortuous as unhappy party members battled to mark a ballot and have their say.

It was supposed to be before 2022. Then it was supposed to be late in 2022 before it became a one-day, in-person vote Saturday in Red Deer.

But less than three weeks ago, after the membership cutoff date, the UCP board changed it to a provincewide mail-in contest.

The board said widespread interest — with 15,000 party members expected to make the trip to cast a ballot — made the one-day in-person option impossible.

Opponents, including UCP caucus member and Kenney opponent Brian Jean, said they worry the goalposts were moved to broaden the voting base because it had become clear Kenney would lose the in-person contest in Red Deer.

Jean, in statement, said, “Kenney's rhetoric and approach have divided our party. The premier gave a speech that said the choice is between more of the same or Rachel Notley's NDP.

“You know someone is losing when they resort to fear.”

Political scientist Duane Bratt, with Mount Royal University in Calgary, said Kenney's demand of unity if he wins is easier said than done, especially if he gets a slim majority.

“Do you expect (no-voters) to say, ‘You won, we lost, therefore we will work really hard for you and we will volunteer for you and we will donate money to you, and we will run as candidates for you?’

"Or do they just say, ‘We’re walking away.”

“No matter what the result is, I don’t know how this party stays unified.”


This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 9, 2022.

Dean Bennett, The Canadian Press
ALBERTA
Ex-medical examiner says she fears lawsuit from former justice minister


EDMONTON — A former Alberta chief medical examiner says she is afraid to testify at her wrongful dismissal trial for fear a lawyer who was once justice minister will sue her for defamation.

Dr. Anny Sauvageau’s lawsuit, which began last week, has dealt with allegations of political interference in the Officer of the Chief Medical Examiner during her time there in 2014.

An affidavit filed with the Court of Queen’s Bench on Friday says Sauvageau’s lawyer, Allan Garber, received an email from a lawyer for Jonathan Denis threatening to sue Sauvageau over her testimony.

Denis, who was justice minister under the Progressive Conservatives from 2012 to 2015, went on to become a founding partner of the Calgary-based firm Guardian Law Group.

The email, which was filed as an exhibit in the affidavit, accuses Sauvageau of engaging “in a seven-year campaign of defamation and harassment of Mr. Denis.”

“Her false accusations of political interference while she was chief medical examiner for Alberta were found to be without merit in an independent investigation by Peter Hourihan, the erstwhile public interest commissioner of Alberta,” read the email from Guardian Law Group lawyer Kyle Shewchuk.

“We have been closely watching Dr. Sauvageau’s current trial and are aware that, the report’s findings notwithstanding, Dr. Sauvageau’s defamation of Mr. Denis has continued unabated.”

The email goes on to say that her actions must stop and that “we reserve the right to refer to this correspondence should Dr. Sauvageau’s defamation continue.”

Shewchuk also refers to an article in the Edmonton Journal about Sauvageau’s testimony about a visit from assistant deputy minister Maryann Everett.

The article says that Everett allegedly told Sauvageau that the chief medical examiner’s role was to make Denis, who was justice minister at the time, “look good.”

In Sauvageau’s affidavit filed Friday, she says that she has not defamed Denis and that her evidence was about Everett.

Sauvageau says in her affidavit that she cannot afford to defend herself in a defamation lawsuit.

“My counsel has advised me that my testimony is privileged, but I am afraid that I might be sued by Jonathan Denis,” the affidavit says.

“The financial consequences of a lawsuit frighten me, especially since I do not have a job.”

In an email Friday, Shewchuk says “we disagree with all of these assertions.”

He did not comment further, saying that Brendan Miller of Foster LLP has been retained on the matter.

Miller said in an email that he and Denis "disagree with the characterization by Dr. Sauvageau and her counsel regarding the April 7, 2022 letter."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 8, 2022.

Daniela Germano, The Canadian Press
Android spyware linked to Russian hackers tracks location, records audio



MobileSyrup - Apr 2

Researchers uncovered a previously unknown, Russian-linked Android malware that masquerades as a system app called ‘Process Manager’ while collecting a wealth of user data.

According to Lab52 (via Bleeping Computer), the malware is linked to Turla, a Russian state-sponsored hacking group. Turla is known for using custom malware to target European and American systems, typically for espionage. Moreover, Turla was recently linked to the ‘Sunburst‘ backdoor used in the 2020 SolarWinds attack.


Lab52 identified a malicious APK — the file type used for Android applications — called ‘Process Manager.’ It’s not clear how threat actors distribute the APK to users. Based on the connection to Turla, it’s possible threat actors use phishing schemes or social engineering to get the app installed on devices.

Once installed, however, the app disguises itself with a gear-shaped icon to look like a system component. Coupled with the ‘Process Manager’ name, it could be easily mistaken for part of the Android system.

On first launch, Lab52 says the app prompts the user to grant it 18 permissions, including access to location, camera, call logs, SMS, the ability to read and write to storage, and more. With these permissions, Process Manager can effectively gather a huge amount of data about the device’s owner.

Lab52 noted it’s not clear if the app uses the Android Accessibility service to grant itself permissions, or if it tricks users into granting permission.

Further, once the malware gets the permissions, it removes its icon and runs in the background. Interestingly, the app shows a notification saying that it’s running, which seems counterintuitive for a spyware app that would want to remain hidden.

Lab52 also found that the malware installed additional apps on victims’ devices, including one called ‘Roz Dhan: Earn Wallet cash,’ a popular money earning app. The malware appears to install the app using its referral system, likely earning a commission for the creators.

All this seems relatively strange for spyware — Bleeping Computer suggests the unsophisticated nature may indicate the spyware is part of a larger system.

The publication also suggests some ways Android users can protect themselves. For one, check the ‘Permission manager’ feature in the Settings app (on my phone, it’s available in the ‘Privacy’ menu). It’s a good idea to revoke permissions for any apps you don’t trust, or that appear risky. Users should also pay attention to the new camera and microphone use indicators that appear on devices running Android 12. If these indicators show up when you’re not using the camera or microphone, it could indicate the presence of spyware on your device.

Source: Lab52 Via: Bleeping Computer
The US is trying to fix medical devices’ big cybersecurity problem


Nicole Wetsman - Yesterday 
The Verge
© Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge


Medical devices are one major weak point in health care cybersecurity, and both Congress and the Food and Drug Administration took steps towards closing that gap this week —Congress with a proposed bill and the FDA with new draft guidelines for device makers on how they should build devices that are less likely to be hacked.

Devices like infusion pumps or imaging machines that are connected to the internet can be targets for hacks. Those attacks can siphon off patient data or put their safety directly at risk. Experts consistently find that devices in use today have vulnerabilities that could be exploited by hackers.

The FDA, which regulates medical devices, has been trying to get a handle on this problem for a while. Back in 2014, it put out guidance for medical device makers that outlined how they should incorporate cybersecurity before they asked the agency to clear their products. The agency then put out a draft guideline in 2018. This new draft replaces the 2018 version and is based on feedback from manufacturers and other experts and changes in the medical device environment over the past few years, Suzanne Schwartz, director of the Office of Strategic Partnerships and Technology Innovation at the FDA, told The Verge.

The new document is still just a draft, and device makers won’t start using it until it’s finalized after another round of feedback. But it includes a few significant changes from the last go-around — including an emphasis on the whole lifecycle of a device and a recommendation that manufacturers include a Software Bill of Materials (SBOM) with all new products that gives users information on the various elements that make up a device. An SBOM makes it easier for users to keep tabs on their devices. If there’s a bug or vulnerability found in a bit of software, for example, a hospital could easily check if their infusion pumps use that specific software.

The FDA also put out legislative proposals around medical device cybersecurity, asking asking Congress for more explicit power to make requirements. “The intent is to enable devices to be that much more resilient to withstand the potential for cyber exploits or intrusion,” Schwartz says. Manufacturers should be able to update or patch software problems without hurting the devices’ function, she says.

The FDA’s efforts dovetail with a proposed bill introduced in Congress this week, the Protecting and Transforming Cyber Health Care (PATCH) Act, which would codify some of the FDA’s proposals. The bill would require device manufacturers to have a plan to address any cybersecurity issues with their devices, and require an SBOM for new devices. If the bill passes, then those elements become requirements rather than just recommended guidelines from the FDA.
“This would give us extra teeth”

“This would give us extra teeth,” Schwartz says. “This really, for the first time, would establish, very explicitly, authority in the area of cybersecurity and tie that directly to the safety of medical devices.”

Notably, these new recommendations and the legislation would primarily apply to new devices coming onto the market — they don’t cover the millions of medical devices already in use in the United States. The FDA has guidelines, written in 2016, that outline how device makers should keep tabs on potential cybersecurity issues in their existing devices already on the market. Schwartz says that the FDA doesn’t have active plans to update that guidance, but it’s something the agency would consider.

The focus of the new draft guidelines and the FDA’s push for legislation around device cybersecurity is to make sure new devices coming online are in better shape than the ones that have been on the market and that have existing cybersecurity issues. “We want the devices of tomorrow not to have the same legacy issues that we’re dealing with today,” she says.
Biden says investment bankers 'could all retire and nothing much would change,' but if truckers quit 'everything comes to a halt'

htowey@insider.com (Hannah Towey) - Yesterday 

President Joe Biden (C) delivers remarks on his 'Trucking Action Plan' with apprentice truck driver Maria Rodriguez and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. 
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Biden spoke about the Trucking Action Plan this week, which aims to strengthen the supply chain.

He said 'nothing much would change' without investment bankers, but 'everything' would halt if truckers quit.

Walmart just raised the starting salary of its truck drivers to between $95,000 and $110,000 a year.


President Joe Biden delivered remarks on the White House's Trucking Action Plan on Monday, an initiative that aims to "increase the supply of truck drivers" as the nation continues to struggle with labor gaps and supply-chain issues.

"All of you here today are people our economy should be built around because you all — you all are the people who literally make it run," Biden told the crowd containing truckers and their families, speaking from behind a podium centered between two massive semi-truck tractors. "That's not hyperbole."

"I have nothing against investment bankers. They could all retire and nothing much would change. You all quit, everything comes to a halt," he continued.

Companies have struggled to hire truck drivers this year, creating labor gaps in an already strained supply chain. But some truckers have pushed back on the idea that the nation faces a "shortage" of truckers, arguing that the industry's real problem is low pay and job quality.

Jason Miller, associate professor of supply-chain management at Michigan State University, previously told Insider that there isn't a shortage of truck drivers. Instead, he said, truckers have shifted from working for mega carriers to driving for smaller operators or becoming owner-operators themselves.

This has prompted many carriers to offer massive sign-on bonuses and wage hikes. On Thursday, Walmart announced it is shifting its pay structure so that its private fleet drivers can earn between $95,000 and $110,000 in their first year.

That's nearly double nearly the average truck driver's salary of $50,340 a year, according to data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. By comparison, a first-year investment banking analyst at J.P Morgan is paid a starting salary of $110,000, as Axios reported Friday.

In his remarks Monday, President Biden said 2021 was "the best year for trucking employment since 1994," adding that there are now 35,000 more trucking jobs than there were before the pandemic.

He also acknowledged the issues facing women in the trucking industry, and said increased wages, reduced wait times, and improved safety will benefit the recruitment and retention of female drivers.

Biden's speech did not address the lack of truck parking across the country, a critical need for trucker safety and sleep that drivers say has been overlooked by the White House.
Read the original article on Business Insider