I'm going to address one thing I mentioned in a previous post on this thread, lest I create the wrong impression - as well as comment further on the quoted remarks below.
I mentioned that the person doing empty moves being happy about saving the company money by getting people to move on their own dime - rather take a paid empty move (at least until I threw a wrench into the works)
Just to be clear, I have
absolutely no problem with her (or the company) doing that - and here's why:
1. You never know where a load will pop up to be covered. In actual fact, in the instance I cited, I got her to give me the paid move to a "better" location several hundred miles away (this was on a weekend - a Saturday or Sunday night) ...... only to end up
getting dispatched on Monday on a load that picked up about 35 miles away from where I was originally sitting (and taking the empty move didn't put me any closer to the freight I eventually picked up) So, in this instance at least, it was money that was
totally wasted by the company - it delivered no benefit whatsoever to either myself or the company. In fact, taking the empty move cost me far more than it did the company - because it resulted in unnecessary wear and tear on my vehicle.
2. Do a little math - figure the money involved to empty move whatever percentage of a carrier's fleet - and then multiply that by whatever period of time you care to. I'd guess that any way you cut it, that over a year's time it might just add up to some real money. No big deal probably - if it puts a vehicle on the freight (provided the person in that vehicle wants to run and isn't sitting there waiting on that golden, home-run load that gonna take them to Nirvana ....) - and thereby generates some profit for the company.
3. The company "owes" me nothing - except a fair shot at the opportunity to serve them, under the agreement (contract) we have between us.
HHHHHHHMMMMMMMMM, 13 vans sitting in Toledo, and that's only Bolt vans.
What's your point exactly - that many of Bolt's drivers live in Toledo ? No big surprise there I suppose - since that's where they are located and it is right in the freight lanes.
Alot of others are sitting, all companies, not only Bolt........and yet they keep putting more and more vans on.......
Who is "they" ..... ?
Last time I looked, both Panther and Fedex both were not taking on new vans or Sprinters (but were holding orientation to cover driver turnover for fleet owners with
vehicles already leased on ....)
I remember in orientation how Brian said Bolt doesn't put more trucks on than they could keep busy. Granted, some leave. But why replace them if you have alot of drivers sitting and sitting waiting for a load?? Doesn't make sense to me!!!
I'm sure it doesn't .......
Yes, drivers and o/o's do leave - all the time. I don't have any specific numbers about Bolt and how many vehicles are leaving or have left (but I know a few), but I'd venture a guess that those there with the responsibility for o/o or driver retention would prefer to have less turnover - who in their right mind wouldn't ?
Some of the
"alot of drivers sitting and sitting waiting" might have to do with
the type of load they're waitin' on ......
Here's the deal in case you or someone else doesn't "get it" .... the name of the game in this business (at least from a carriers perspective) is loads, loads, and loads.
BTW, did I mention - it's
loads ?
A carrier makes money by booking loads that will generate a profit for the company - and they retain customers by covering their loads whenever asked to do so - and not giving the customer the opportunity (or an excuse) to look elsewhere for that service.
A carrier will likely make more profit if they can dispatch those loads on the trucks that are leased on to them directly - although I'm sure carriers are often able to make money on those loads they have to farm out to a partner carrier. Probably not always, but if I had to guess probably more often than not.
Since a carrier stands to make more money on loads that they can dispatch to their own trucks, it behooves them to have as much
geographic coverage as possible. One never knows where an available load (that would generate some profit) might pop up - since past history is never any guarantee of future performance. So coverage is critical.
It costs a carrier very little to have a few more trucks than a few less - and the upside potential is that you can make probably significantly more profit if you have more not less.
Beyond that, the current market conditions and freight rates are determined by the laws of supply and demand - too many vehicles chasing too little freight is gonna mean lower freight rates - that's just the way it is.
One can sit around and moan about how
"the companies ought to do something to get us some decent paying loads" or how another company is still paying "X" for a fuel surcharge (yeah ... how long ya figure that's gonna last .... when their competition is only charging 1/2 that rate .... or less ?)
But none of that type of thing is gonna make any difference at all - they just simply are not effective actions to cause a change in the situation.
I'd be curious to know how many folks who aren't happy with the amount they are running have maybe taken some business cards of their carriers sales personnel (or whatever other promotional material might be available) and dropped into a local business or two just to make sure that they
are at least aware that your carrier even exists.
The above reminds of an instance I ran into early after I started expediting - I had a round trip on a load - had to take some stuff to be processed and then bring it back to where I had originally picked it up. While waiting for the stuff I was hauling to get done I spent a little time talking to the guys on second shift that handled shipping .... and found out that
the only expedite companies they were even aware of were the one I was leased to and Panther. Wow .... And this was a big company - a 24/7 operation.
Anyways, the above are at least a part of the economic realities of this business - you don't have to like them necessarily - but you do have to know about it, understand it, and deal with it - at least if you want to be in this game.
If anyone thinks the reality is much different than the above, my guess is you are seriously deluding yourself.