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Why Teamsters allowed 22,000 union jobs to vanish

As Americans report warm, fuzzy feelings toward labor unions, it’s unclear how America’s 2 million truck drivers will be affected

Yellow filed for bankruptcy on Aug. 7. It's the largest trucking bankruptcy in history. (Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

Yellow, the third-largest trucking company in the less-than-truckload sector, filed for bankruptcy on Aug. 7. Now its former competitors are in a bidding war for its terminals and trucks.

The company’s collapse put some 30,000 employees out of work, including 22,000 Teamsters members. That’s an uncomfortable reality for those celebrating what appears to be a comeback for organized labor: the Teamsters’ ratification of a “lucrative” contract for its 340,000 members at UPS; the historic strike among Hollywood writers and actors; and hard-line leadership at the United Auto Workers who are seeking new labor agreements with a 40% pay increase. A 2022 Gallup survey found that U.S. approval of labor unions has hit its highest point since 1965.

For former Yellow employees, the much-ballyhooed comeback of unions, strikes and workers doesn’t quite apply. 

It may be satisfying to place all of the blame on Yellow’s shutdown on Teamsters, whose leader appeared to only begin negotiating with the company when it was likely too late to reverse the exodus of customers


However, trucking insiders and outsiders are increasingly pointing fingers at Yellow management or its hedge fund backers

No party is unimpeachable for Yellow’s shuttering. And with only two unionized trucking giants left, it’s unclear how the revival of union organizing and hard-line labor leadership will affect America’s $800 billion trucking industry and its 2 million truck drivers. 

“You have a highly financialized, debt-driven, short-term company that is then pushing for more concessions, setting up a paradigm in which we think, ‘OK, well, why couldn’t the Teamsters just save these 1,000 jobs to protect the other 22,000?’” Rana Foroohar, global business columnist and associate editor at the Financial Times, told FreightWaves. “From the Teamsters standpoint, in the current system, if you give an inch, they take a mile.”

Yellow said its restructuring program would save the company. Outsiders disagree.

Trucking experts told FreightWaves in recent interviews that Yellow did have a chance to survive. However, the company’s One Yellow plan, which aimed to merge its four disparate trucking networks, was probably not the answer to the long-suffering firm’s woes


Yellow acquired several large competitors in the LTL space during the 2000s, miring the company in significant debt ahead of the Great Recession. At the end of 2007, according to its annual filing, Yellow had more than $822 million in long-term debt. That grew to nearly $1.5 billion by the end of 2022. 

This massive liability had long prevented Yellow from investing in new equipment or technology, experts told FreightWaves. However, Yellow was adamant that the One Yellow restructuring would save the company. 

“Early in 2023, when no one rationally believed IBT leadership would seek to destroy Yellow, killing 22,000 of its own members’ jobs in the process, Yellow’s future into 2024 and beyond was not in question,” a Yellow  representative said in an emailed statement to FreightWaves.

One Yellow was supposed to cut costs and boost freight volumes for the trucking giant. Matthew Doheny, Yellow’s chief restructuring officer, said in an Aug. 7 document that Yellow anticipated that One Yellow “would grow EBITDA starting next year at $450 million to over $700 million within three years of implementation.” The plan did seem to please Yellow’s lenders; Doheny wrote that Yellow was beginning to refinance some of its lending requirements, which would have given more liquidity to the LTL carrier. A Yellow representative said the company had retained bankers to begin refinancing. 

Some weren’t convinced by the strategy. Satish Jindel, president of transportation research firm SJ Consulting Group Inc., told FreightWaves that no other LTL carrier has the super-regional model Yellow proposed, making the untested model dubious.

“Ultimately, the company needed to be smaller,” J. Bruce Chan, a transportation analyst at the investment bank Stifel, told FreightWaves. “There are some differences of opinion over how that should have happened. The plan for Yellow, vis-à-vis their change of operations, was to integrate four networks with distinct operations and ultimately distinct cultures. That’s really where they went wrong because integrating cultures is very challenging. In that way, they destroyed a lot of value. What could have been done potentially is to shut down certain parts of the network or to sell off other parts of the network in order to fund the operations [remaining].”

A Yellow representative said One Yellow “already accounted for parts of the network that made more sense to divest than integrate.” She added that the plan would have addressed the debt that resulted from these acquisitions, which occurred under different management and a different board of directors. 

“Arguments that prior acquisitions were a reason Yellow is now in bankruptcy has the entire situation backwards,” a Yellow representative said. “The IBT prevented Yellow from fixing these issues by refusing to negotiate — or to even meet to discuss — aspects of One Yellow on which IBT approval was necessary.”


Even if the integration plan was the best path for Yellow, the company did not solidify the necessary flexibilities in its 2019 labor agreement with Teamsters to make consolidating networks possible. A Yellow representative said these other changes could not be approved at that time because the plan was still in development.

“It was a bad bargaining decision to not create more flexibility with workers,” Aaron Peck — who is the CEO of Mothership, a freight booking platform that works with LTL companies — told FreightWaves.

(Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

Through its 2019 agreement, Yellow was able to complete consolidation in the Western U.S. in 2022. However, supplemental agreements in other parts of the country thwarted Yellow’s plans. A key sticking point for Teamsters was Yellow’s insistence that it would need to convert nearly 1,000 Yellow linehaul truck drivers into a “utility driver” role. Former Yellow employees previously told FreightWaves that the utility driver role would not only be a worse kind of job, but offer less pay, which a Yellow representative disputed.

“IBT leadership made mountains out of molehills: in total, 1,000 out of 6,000 line haul drivers would have been impacted,” a Yellow representative said. “Keep in mind that 400 Holland drivers were already performing ‘utility’ work, so the company was really only asking 600 additional drivers in the network to handle utility work. This is a practice widely used within the industry and drivers would have the chance to exercise their seniority to ‘bid’ on these jobs. As a result, the work would likely have gone to the most junior drivers who did not have seniority.”

Yellow previously offered the equivalent of an $11 hourly wage increase in pay and benefits if Teamsters accepted the company’s One Yellow plan. A Yellow representative said this was not their best and final offer and would have negotiated further, and said that they were not asking for concessions from Teamsters. Teamsters previously said they had already given $5 billion in concessions to Yellow since 2009.

‘Too little, too late’

Chan said Teamsters’ refusal to negotiate on a proposed change of operations was ultimately the “trigger point” for Yellow’s bankruptcy, but it wasn’t the fundamental reason. Yellow’s debt prevented the company from investing into technology or equipment. Partially as a result of that, Yellow struggled with pricing and service levels. The company’s revenue per shipment was typically much lower than its peers, including other unionized ones.

The Yellow representative said that the company would “still be in business today and for years to come” had Teamsters negotiated. 

On July 18, following months of the Teamsters’ refusal to negotiate and the company’s previous request to defer payments, Yellow ultimately missed a required contribution to its pension and health care funds. Teamsters shortly after issued a notice of a strike as early as the following week.

Doheny of Yellow wrote in the Aug. 7 document that Yellow warned Teamsters that a strike notice would “irreparably harm” the company. And it did; on the Monday before the strike notice, Doheny wrote that Yellow hauled around 40,000 shipments. By Friday, Yellow counted “near zero” shipments.

Ten hours before the threatened strike, Doheny said Teamsters General President Sean O’Brien offered to secure a 30-day extension on Yellow’s health and pension obligations. That avoided a strike, but Doheny wrote this was “too little, too late.” The loss of customers sparked a sort of bank run on Yellow, Peck said. Yellow’s customers had mostly fled and the lack of incoming freight bills would push Yellow to the edge.

“The Union’s threat of a strike was the final straw that sealed Yellow’s fate,” Doheny wrote. “At bottom, after the catastrophic harm he had already deliberately caused Yellow, after his belligerence, after his months long refusal to engage Yellow’s management in a good faith effort to save the jobs of Yellow’s 30,000 employees, including its 22,000 Teamsters, Mr. O’Brien’s last second outreach amounted to little more than meaningless showmanship, and was an insult to all of Yellow’s employees who have now lost their jobs and to all who fought so hard for so long to save Yellow.”

Doheny’s sentiment was reflected in an Aug. 7 press release from Yellow that announced the company’s shutdown. The company said Teamsters forced Yellow into bankruptcy. 

“Yellow considered all angles but in the end determined that business was lost and not recoverable,” a Yellow representative said in a statement to FreightWaves. 

In an Aug. 7 statement, the Teamsters hit back at Yellow’s assertion that the union led to the downfall of the company.

“Teamster families sacrificed billions of dollars in wages, benefits, and retirement security to rescue Yellow,” O’Brien said in the Aug. 7 release. “The company blew through a $700 million government bailout. But Yellow’s dysfunctional, greedy C-suite failed to take responsibility for squandering all that cash. They still don’t.”

A Yellow representative said the $700 million loan, which was issued in 2020 as part of the CARES Act, could only be spent on pension, health and welfare payments for union employees and modernizing Yellow’s fleet of tractors and trailers. A June Congressional report concluded that this loan was a mistake in part due to Yellow’s “precarious financial position at the time of the loan.”

Teamsters ultimately sacrificed some 22,000 union jobs, and it was apparently because the union no longer trusted management 

If Teamsters viewed Yellow management as consistently shoddy, that would be one reason why the union may have been OK with letting the company shutter. 

“They lost confidence in the management,” Jindel told FreightWaves. “I would rather take a chance with other companies where I have some trust in what they’re doing. 

“If I am in a car and I’m with you and you’re heading off a cliff, it doesn’t matter how much money you give me to ride in the car,” Jindel added. “I am going to get out of the car.” 

A Yellow representative said Teamsters would have “no rational basis to believe that about management.”

“(T)he current Yellow management team, commencing with Darren Hawkins’ promotion to CEO in 2018, had been working on One Yellow for nearly 5 years and was fully ready to implement the final stage — the network optimization — when that was stopped by the IBT leadership,” a Yellow representative said.

Since the Great Recession, Yellow workers have struggled to receive similar pay and benefits as other unionized truck drivers. Most stinging to these employees may have been the underfunded pensions. Former Yellow employees previously told FreightWaves they had to scrap their retirement plans as a result. Some drivers estimated that they would earn $1,000 less per month in retirement. 

“We have a lot of people who can’t retire now,” Pete Boese, a South Bend-based truck driver who previously worked at Yellow, told FreightWaves in July. “The pension is a pretty big deal.”  

Labor experts speculated that Teamsters figured Yellow would never be in the financial position to ever deliver these benefits back to employees. The union likely wouldn’t want to have a massive chunk of its members with significantly worse pay or benefits — or for potential new union shops to see such disparities in Teamsters’ portfolio and to pass on organizing with them. 

“You want UPS to be your model,” Steven Greenhouse, a former longtime labor reporter at The New York Times, told FreightWaves. “You wouldn’t want a very modest contract with Yellow to be your model.”

Greenhouse added that a rational union labor may agree to modest pay bumps to keep a company alive. However, Greenhouse said Teamsters likely believed that Yellow’s chances of survival were weak.

(Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

Other labor experts agreed with this assessment. 

“The union and anybody in that position has to make a calculation whether or not you have confidence in management,” Marick Masters, a business professor at Wayne State University in Detroit, told FreightWaves. “Yellow had been granted loans to help it along, but nothing seemed to have worked.”

Such decisions may be prudent for a union that is looking to build its base and maintain high standards among its members. However, they’re less appealing when you’re on the other side of things — namely, any of the 30,000 people who used to work at Yellow. 

“It’s the individual workers who are losing their jobs,” Cornell University’s Kate Bronfenbrenner, who is the institution’s director of labor education research, told FreightWaves. “Many of them might say half a paycheck is better than no paycheck.”

A Yellow representative said Teamsters “sacrificed” Yellow as a warning shot to other firms. 

“Yellow would have been one of the greatest business turnaround success stories if IBT leadership did not maliciously stop it, harming their own members in the process,” a Yellow representative said. “Instead, the Teamsters chose to destroy Yellow to serve as a warning to other companies to get better future deals. Yellow and the 22K employees IBT leadership were supposed to represent were sacrificed.”

Unions are becoming bold in a way we haven’t seen in decades. It’s unclear how that will affect truck drivers.

It’s curious whether the shutdown of Yellow is an exception to the rule or if even more union trucking fleets will shut down as the leaders of labor organizations become more militant

One reason why we probably won’t see many more shutdowns as massive as Yellow is, well, there aren’t many large unionized carriers left. ABF and TForce are the two largest, nationwide trucking companies with unionized workforces. They represent a collective 16,400 Teamsters members. Both companies saw Teamsters negotiations this year conclude without much hubbub. 

“Yellow management and the financiers who pull the strings continue to blame union contracts for their demise,” O’Brien said in an Aug. 7 statement. “The fact is, Teamster-represented companies like ABF and TForce Freight are not only able to fairly compensate workers, they are also wildly profitable. The Teamsters successfully and continuously negotiates strong contracts to preserve the integrity of our members’ work and ensure they are justly compensated.”

A Yellow representative said the closure of the trucking giant has left many employees unlikely to find new union work.  

“Had IBT leadership been willing to negotiate, employees would still have jobs, seniority, health care, and more money in their pockets,” the representative said. “Instead, they’re looking for new work in an industry where unionized company market share was just cut in half and the prospect of more than a handful of former Yellow employees securing new union jobs is unrealistic.”

As the number of union companies wears away, that leaves those still remaining at risk, Jindel said. Union companies have, by nature, less flexible workforces than their nonunion competitors. Even if those nonunion companies pay the same or more as their union counterparts, flexible work rules allows non-union fleets to reallocate workers where it suits them. That’s a key advantage for those firms, albeit one that union supporters say leads to worse quality of life for workers.  

Some labor experts believe that Teamsters is scheming to unionize more trucking fleets. They believe it’s unlikely that Teamsters would have allowed Yellow to shutter if there wasn’t something else in the works to replace those members. As Chan pointed out, even amid the ongoing freight recession, employee truck drivers are still demanding — and winning — better conditions and pay.

But organizing labor unions in the United States, whether or not it’s in the trucking industry, is challenging. Even if the Teamsters union believes that it will be able to add a new trucking fleet to its membership, the laws of the U.S. are stacked against it. 

“Corporations fight harder, more vigorously, more ferociously against unions and unionization efforts than companies in any other industrial nation — whether it’s Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Chile, France, Germany or Britain,” Greenhouse said. “In those countries, it’s not all out war when workers seek to unionize. With Starbucks, Amazon, Trader Joe’s and Apple, it’s all out war.”

So far, the companies that have bid so far on Yellow’s assets are not unionized. That may change. Or it may ultimately indicate where the trucking industry is flourishing.

Email the reporter at rpremack@freightwaves.com with your feedback. And be sure to subscribe to MODES for your weekly transportation scuttlebutt.

Read more about what Yellow workers had to say ahead of the historic bankruptcy

How Teamsters and trucking giant Yellow ended up in a bitter battle

Why Teamsters is willing to sacrifice 22,000 union trucking jobs

Yellow truck drivers sound off on troubled fleet, Teamsters

‘Big trouble’: Yellow truck drivers ponder next moves amid potential bankruptcy

18 Comments

  1. MD

    I would really like to know where these yo-yo’s like Walter Johnson, PNC and Robert get their BS from. That is exactly what it is BS. The truth to the story is that Yellow had 600 cry baby Teamster LH drivers that did not want to work the dock. They thought they were better than that, these LH drivers rarely got dirty and yes they all were making over $100,000. Now most are struggling to find jobs which Sean O’Brien said not to worry about that he would have jobs for them when he and his cronies came into our terminal to tell the workforce that he was not giving any concessions. Never did the company ask for concessions so that was nothing more than a lie. I also need to set the record straight on concessions, the employees agreed to a 15% pay cut but continued to get their pay increases and the best insurance in the country not to mention even with the changes in the pension, one of the best pensions in the country as well. Not many folks get what the these employees were getting. By 2015 more than half those who took the pay cut either left or retired so all these comments about all the money lost or given up is once again untrue. People have choices, if it was so bad, they could leave and find something else, the truth was, their was noting better unless you worked for UPS. Talk about bad management and squandering money, why was the union over seen by the US Government for 20 years or more ? Because they are ALL crooks, I hope they lose their jobs as well just like those they represented at Yellow, they deserve to be out of work as well. Walter, Robert and PNW, Yellow did not cut off making pickups until after the the union sat down with the company and said they would take everything the company had to offer but still refused to give the company an opportunity to make the change to one Yellow and with out the change the lending institutions refused to support the company financially. That is when the large customers started pulling out and the company could no longer make ends meet. The upper management that some claim is at fault was trying for more than a year to make changes and every change was met by a roadblock from Sean O’Brien, so not sure how it could be blamed on upper management when the union tied their hands at every chance they could. Big difference in Hoffa vs. O’Brien, Hoffa was intelligent and knew what needed to be done in todays world to keep union business’s in business and protect jobs. O’Brien is nothing more than a moron with very little education and thinks that threats and intimidation is going to get the job done. I guess he will be learning real quick how things work. YELLOW WAS A GREAT COMPANY WITH GREAT PEOPLE WHO DID NOT DESERVE THIS….

  2. PNW

    A couple things aren’t quite tight in this article. The customers started leaving Yellow in the west AFTER one yellow was implemented. Reason being many shipments were either weeks or months late or lost. The customers did not leave yellow as the strike loomed. Yellow management stopped picking up freight on the Thursday before the looming strike on Monday. In fact the freight that did get picked up was to be returned per management. Yellow using utility drivers was not a new thing it had been used before and failed, but they continued to push a failed idea. The “super regional”plan isn’t exactly a new concept. It was modeled after FedEx freights system. Could it work? Probably! Problem was yellow could never keep enough talent around to make it work. Yellow had holland reddaway and new penn as a great model for success. They refused to adapt to better technologies these companies had or even work with these people. End result was a flood of talented and smart people leaving the company for years and years. There are many ways to point the finger. But the fact is Yellow was a “zombie” company. It survived for alot of years on low interest loans and the wrong people made a lot of money off it. The employees union and non union were way under paid for the industry. It’s to bad it had to happen.

  3. Bob Devlin

    “As Americans report warm, fuzzy feelings toward labor unions…”

    This is some kind of a joke, right? Public sentiment has never been lower toward unions, with good reason.

  4. Joe Sunday

    If Jimmy Hoffa was still alive today the teamsters would be stronger than ever and be a good union. Those that came after him started the downward spiral…giving bad loans to cronies, real criminals, and non-trucking interests, etc., etc. Money that belonged to the members. Sad.

  5. Robert

    In this article it says that on the Monday prior to the looming strike YRC was doing 40000 shipments and that it went to zero when customers heard of the coming strike possibility. That’s a outright lie because as a P&D driver for New Penn at that time frame all drivers were told we weren’t making any pickups from our customers that’s how it went to zero!!!

  6. Walter Johnson

    This mess with Yrc and it’s absolute incompetent CEO and the rest of Yrc’s idiot management team are the main reason that Yrc went out of business. If all the money that was given to them through the TEAMSTER’S concessions some 5 billion dollars and 700 million that they never should have gotten. My question is why Yrc haven’t been much more scrutinize on where all that money went. The government did a very poor job in a so called investigation into the 700 million dollars Yrc received from the Government. If there was a credible investigation into where the money went I believe lot’s of criminal charges would be issued to yrc and it’s criminal organization. I didn’t agree with some of. Mr.O’Brien’s negotiation tactics I can say with 100% certainty
    that he or the IBT wasn’t the cause of Yrc going out of business. Greed is why they are out of business.

  7. Mike Smith

    How can any company stay in business, paying 60% of more of there 22,000 employees $100,000 plus a year driving a forklift.In 2022 they pay 3. Some billions of dollars in salary. That include there management team to……. there are master degrees that don’t pay that kind of money.

  8. Mike

    One Yellow was never going to work. The culture of Holland was to take care of its customers and deliver their freight on time no matter what it took. YRC did not have anything close to that culture. The beginning of their steep downfall was when profitable Holland had its hands tied when they were put on the same antiquated computer operating system as YRC. The Holland system was far superior to the YRC system and they could have switched to that platform but it was going to be “easier “ to switch Holland to the old outdated YRC system. That was when Holland no longer was able to effectively deliver overnight, 2 and 3 day freight with a lot of freight being weeks late. The loyal Holland customers began to leave and Yellow, having just consistently started being profitable each quarter, started to loose money and it was all downhill from there.

Comments are closed.

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 rpremack@freightwaves.com or rpremack@protonmail.com.