I don't need an app to know that if I deliver to a grocery house or load at a packing plant I will get jacked around.
I remember when I had my big trucks sitting at Budweiser for over 24 hrs waiting on loads. Driver would call and say I’m leaving with the load not waiting any longer. The keg line was the worst. Drivers pulled out empty everyday after waiting 10-12 hrs. Had no affect. Guy dumped his empty kegs on the ground once. Cops got called, turned ugly for awhile. He sat over 20hrs waiting to unload. I pulled out of MTD in Tennessee same thing 10-20 hrs to get loaded. When I ran local union job I always took the grocery loads. I knew where I would be all day. This is a good thing making shippers understand the tables are turning. They may find it harder to get or ship loads. AND that is a game changer. Been in the trucking industry for over 40 years. This is a leverage drivers have never had.
But it sure would be helpful to know in advance what you are getting into.I don't need an app to know that if I deliver to a grocery house or load at a packing plant I will get jacked around.
I got stiffed on detention twice in all the years driving. I never ran a load for those shippers again.I just want to know. How do the customers get away without paying detention? Does the contract mean nothing? (Not that it solves the drivers lost time and revenue but it beats a kick in the ass)
At grocery houses it is more than not getting paid detention time. You do their work. You can have a trailer load of one item, wrapped, on 4-way pallets and have to knock off two or more layers. Or knock it all down and put it on small wood. That's just for a load all one item. Most loads are made up of several different items and sizes. Sort and segregate to their block patterns and pallet sizes.I just want to know. How do the customers get away without paying detention? Does the contract mean nothing? (Not that it solves the drivers lost time and revenue but it beats a kick in the ass)
Companies don’t go after detention time in most cases for fear of losing the customer.I just want to know. How do the customers get away without paying detention? Does the contract mean nothing? (Not that it solves the drivers lost time and revenue but it beats a kick in the ass)
Yeah if memory serves, you're right I think we had one of those back in the day.Companies don’t go after detention time in most cases for fear of losing the customer.I just want to know. How do the customers get away without paying detention? Does the contract mean nothing? (Not that it solves the drivers lost time and revenue but it beats a kick in the ass)
Companies don’t go after detention time in most cases for fear of losing the customer.I just want to know. How do the customers get away without paying detention? Does the contract mean nothing? (Not that it solves the drivers lost time and revenue but it beats a kick in the ass)
Those are customers they shouldn’t mind losing
Apparently you do, since they aren't all that way.I don't need an app to know that if I deliver to a grocery house or load at a packing plant I will get jacked around.
Nah, I thought he was talking about something else.Apparently you do, since they aren't all that way.I don't need an app to know that if I deliver to a grocery house or load at a packing plant I will get jacked around.
One of them changed ???