It wasn't that long ago that 40 hours was the standard work week. Now we work harder and longer to try and maintain the same standard of living.
I don't even know what you're talking about. The 40 hour work week has never been the standard in trucking. And in non-trucking and non-farming sectors, the 40 hour work week is and has been the standard since the standard 40-hour work week was established by the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938.
Drivers are crying because they've been cut back to 70 hours a week and forced to have 30 minutes a day to call their own.
Correct. Trucking is the only industry where the government forces independent small business owners to limit their working hours and earning potential. Imagine that you own your own dry cleaner and the same rules were applied to you. Instead of working from 6AM to 6PM six days a week for 72 hours, and then doing maintenance at night or on Sunday afternoons for another 8-12 hours, which is the normal in dry cleaning, you are now forced to shorten your work hours during the week and not perform work of any kind on the weekends, be it cleaning clothes or performing maintenance. Not only is your way of life altered, but your earning possibilities and thus your earnings are dramatically reduced.
The end result will be that we'll work a little less for exactly the same money.
Just one week into the new rules show that, on the average, drivers are working for less time than just the 30 minutes per day the rules might indicate, and are also earning disproportionally less money. The mandated 30 minute break is reducing the number of stops many drivers can make by 1 or 2 per day, and the 1-5 AM rest period during the 35 hour restart is costing many drivers and extra 12-18 hours per week in unavailable work time because their normal restart time doesn't fall so as to allow for two consecutive 1-5 AM periods, so they have to wait until another one rolls around. It's not affecting LTL companies all that much, and it may or may not be affecting expediting that much, but it most definitely is affecting OTR truckers in a big way. Swift, CR England, Con-Way and several other companies have reported reduced productivity and efficiency, and I know for a fact that Paschal Truck Lines lost an average of 6.4 hours per driver last week.
Personally I'd cheer a 60 hour work week and 2 half hour breaks every day.
That's because, clearly, you have a union employee mentality rather than the mentality of an independent small business owner.