Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg makes recruiting truck drivers a priority as industry reaches a breaking point image

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg makes recruiting truck drivers a priority as industry reaches a breaking point

The Department of Transportation is pushing new measures to recruit more truck drivers.  According to the American Trucking Associations, the U.S. needs another 80,000 truckers.

About 72% of goods transported in the U.S. are carried by truckers. But with high turnover rates and dwindling driver supply, the industry has reached a breaking point.

U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg told CBS News that he has made recruiting drivers, keeping trucks on the roads, and making sure shelves are stocked top priorities.

"Oh, I'm very concerned about this, and it reflects the fact that as long as we go through phase after phase of this pandemic, we're seeing disruptions in supply," Buttigieg said.

Buttigieg spoke to CBS News as his agency announced new efforts to bolster the number of truckers as part of the Biden administration's pledge to fix the supply chain.

The Department of Transportation announced Thursday that it will fund over $32 million for states to improve the commercial driving license process.

Over 100 companies are committing to expand trucking apprenticeship programs and a task force to investigate predatory truck leasing.

"We've got to recruit more people into the job and we've got to keep them there," Buttigieg said.

Drivers have been fleeing in droves—with yearly turnover hitting 90% in parts of the trucking industry.