What the US transport strike actually means for you
A US transport strike kicked off Monday and it's pulling in airlines, freight, and trucking all at once. Hubs in New York, LA, and Chicago are the choke points. You don't need a labour-economics degree to feel it — your two-day Amazon order is already five days, and that's before it gets worse.
Why this one is different
Truckers and warehouse workers have been compressed for years. Per-mile pay hasn't kept up with fuel, maintenance, or rent in the regions where you actually base a trucking operation. Median trucker wages sit around $47K. The cost of living in most logistics hub cities is up 15-20% in two years. The math stopped working.
The strike is also broader than the 2023 UPS contract fight. This time it's UPS, FedEx, and J.B. Hunt at once, with airline ground crew piling on. That's why ports backed up within 48 hours instead of the usual two-week lag.
What to stock now (without panic-buying)
I'm not telling you to do prepper math. But if you regularly order online and your household genuinely runs on Amazon Subscribe-and-Save, this week is when you bump the order. Specifically:
If you take a daily prescription that comes through mail-order pharmacy, refill it. Don't wait. A weekly pill organizer is worth $8 right now just so you can rationally see how many days you have left.
Coffee, pet food, and diapers tend to be what people regret missing. A 2-lb bag of whole-bean coffee outlasts ground coffee and rides out a delay. A large bag of dog food beats three small ones during a freight slowdown. Buy the size up, not the brand up.
What you don't need: toilet paper. The 2020 spike was driven by panic, not actual supply. There's already 4-6 weeks of TP sitting in regional warehouses. Same for bottled water if you have municipal water that works.
The home-delivery workaround
Two things are still moving normally: USPS (technically not on strike — different union structure) and most local courier services. If you can switch a recurring order to USPS shipping, do. If a small business near you delivers locally via their own van, they're suddenly faster than Amazon for the first time in your adult life.
This is also a good week for a collapsible grocery cart if you've been avoiding store runs. Eight bags of groceries one trip, no Uber surcharge.
If you run a small business
Build a buffer. The National Retail Federation pegged retailer/manufacturer losses at $5B per week. That's the macro number. The micro number that hits you: backorders extending, customers cancelling, and your COGS rising because expedited freight just doubled.
Talk to your customers now, in plain language, before they email asking why their order is late. The companies that handled the 2021 supply chaos well were the ones who emailed first.
What's next
The Teamsters are dug in. Management is dug in. Mediation hasn't even started for some of the parallel sub-disputes. My guess: 7-14 days for a partial settlement on the bigger carriers, 3-4 weeks before everything is moving normally again. Could be wrong. Hope I am.
One thing worth remembering: a strike is a working person's only real leverage. The reason your packages are late this week is the same reason your packages got delivered at all last week.
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