Watch Now


Teamsters unionizes some truck drivers at large US Postal Service fleet

A Teamsters spokesperson said the union represents some 300 employees at 10 Roads Express

10 Roads Express employs more than 4,400 drivers. Several dozen have voted to join Teamsters in recent months. (Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

New terminals at a major contractor of the U.S. Postal Service voted to unionize with the Teamsters union, according to a Thursday press release from the Teamsters.

10 Roads Express, the trucking company, employs more than 4,400 truck drivers, according to SAFER Web. Thirty-six drivers at 10 Roads Express voted to join the Teamsters last week, according to the union; the drivers are based in Carter Lake and Council Bluffs, Iowa, as well as Omaha, Nebraska.

More than 30 truck drivers at 10 Roads Express, all based in Kansas, voted to join the Teamsters in June, according to the union.

A Teamsters spokesperson said the union represents some 300 employees at 10 Roads Express. Around 200 of them joined the union in the past two years.

10 Roads Express did not respond to a FreightWaves request for comment. Reached by the CCJ, 10 Roads Express declined to comment on the Teamsters’ organizing efforts in the fleet or why drivers decided to unionize. 

10 Roads Express was the second-largest contractor with the Postal Service in the 2022 fiscal year, according to a list of top Postal Service vendors from Culhane Meadows, a law firm that specializes in government contracting work. That year, the Postal Service awarded more than $700.4 million to 10 Roads Express.


Under Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, the Postal Service has diverted some of its over-the-road freight spending from its longtime trucking partners into the freight brokerage market, as FreightWaves reported in 2022. That pivot is expected to save the Postal Service cash, but it’s expected to squeeze carriers that have worked with the quasi-governmental agency for decades.

Large carriers like 10 Roads Express may be protected during this transition, as longtime parcel expert Satish Jindel told FreightWaves last year.

Meanwhile, trucking companies have seen drivers increasingly unionize this year amid a nationwide push for more labor organizing. Several dozen employees at a subsidiary of Werner, an Omaha-based trucking company, voted to unionize in August and September. Werner employs some 10,200 truck drivers.

Drivers at the Richmond, Virginia, terminal of Napa Transportation, a trucking company that employs nearly 400 drivers, voted to join the Teamsters in June.

Email [email protected] with your thoughts. Subscribe to MODES for weekly trucking insights.

2 Comments

  1. TJ

    Why anyone would want to join the mafia Teamsters is beyond me. Hate to say it but the Unions might have helped bring about the safety era but they are going to be the death of many of American company due to they are getting too greedy. They forget that many companies still have to answer to investors who expect to make money themselves and not give it all to the employees. They may have a welcome ear at the moment in the current administration, but the tide will turn.

  2. Captial Heights Driver

    Interesting that the American Postal Workers Union (APWU) was not mention in this article. 10Roads Drivers in Columbus,
    OH, Harrisburg, PA, Pierre, Illinois, Brandywine/ Capital Heights, MD, and Richmond, Va nearly 300 drivers that have recently voted to joined the AWPU. We already had over 1K drivers in the Southern States whom are represented by the APWU.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Rachel Premack

Rachel Premack is the editorial director at FreightWaves. She writes the newsletter MODES. Her reporting on the logistics industry has been featured in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, Vox, and additional digital and print media. She's also spoken about her work on PBS Newshour, ABC News, NBC News, NPR, and other major outlets. If you’d like to get in touch with Rachel, please email her at [email protected] or [email protected].