Expediting is all about being prepared. We keep our trucks in top runing condition and fuel tanks full so we'll be ready to pick up emergency freight on a moment's notice. We manage our sleep and time to mazimize our availability and long-distance capability. We maintain cash reserves to ride out the slow times. We carry HAZMAT emergency response guidebooks in our trucks. We have our permit books at the ready to demonstrate our legal compliance to any authority that asks. We (many of us) use computers and GPS mapping tools to back up and improve upon the directions carriers provide.
With Katrina on everyone's mind, it strikes me that many expediters can be better prepared for natural disasters than we now are. This is especially true if your carrier is one that typically is called upon to respond when a disaster hits.
I've been searching the Internet with little success, looking for some sort of volunteer aid worker guide book that talks about how to prepare for entry into and activities in a disaster area. Expediters are not considered disaster aid volunteers. We're paid to haul freight into an area and that's it. Nevertheless, going in means you will be exposed to many of the same stresses disaster aid workers and victims encounter. Being prepared for that would enable us to do a better job as expediters and take care of ourselves at the same time.
Several common sense items come to mind like bring extra drinking water in with you for your own needs, top off your fuel tanks before entering. Call "your people" ahead of time to let them know you may not be available by cell phone for a while as service may be down. BE prepared to go to the bathroom when bathrooms are not readily available. Take a first-aid class and carry a first aid kit so you and your codriver can help each other when a typical 911 response is likely to be delayed. Know how to not get in the way of others rushing to help in a chaotic situation. There are other items trained emergency responders know about but I don't.
I know numerous expediters have been in and out of Kartrina and other disaster areas before. Could you share your ideas that would help expeidters working in disaster areas? I know there are trained emergency responders that frequent the EO Open Forum. Your ideas would be appreicated too.
Perhaps we can pool the expertise of our Open Forum participants and produce a brochure or online article for expediters to refer to when they are dispatched on a disaster-aid load.
Phil Madsen, Senior Field Editor
Expediters Online
With Katrina on everyone's mind, it strikes me that many expediters can be better prepared for natural disasters than we now are. This is especially true if your carrier is one that typically is called upon to respond when a disaster hits.
I've been searching the Internet with little success, looking for some sort of volunteer aid worker guide book that talks about how to prepare for entry into and activities in a disaster area. Expediters are not considered disaster aid volunteers. We're paid to haul freight into an area and that's it. Nevertheless, going in means you will be exposed to many of the same stresses disaster aid workers and victims encounter. Being prepared for that would enable us to do a better job as expediters and take care of ourselves at the same time.
Several common sense items come to mind like bring extra drinking water in with you for your own needs, top off your fuel tanks before entering. Call "your people" ahead of time to let them know you may not be available by cell phone for a while as service may be down. BE prepared to go to the bathroom when bathrooms are not readily available. Take a first-aid class and carry a first aid kit so you and your codriver can help each other when a typical 911 response is likely to be delayed. Know how to not get in the way of others rushing to help in a chaotic situation. There are other items trained emergency responders know about but I don't.
I know numerous expediters have been in and out of Kartrina and other disaster areas before. Could you share your ideas that would help expeidters working in disaster areas? I know there are trained emergency responders that frequent the EO Open Forum. Your ideas would be appreicated too.
Perhaps we can pool the expertise of our Open Forum participants and produce a brochure or online article for expediters to refer to when they are dispatched on a disaster-aid load.
Phil Madsen, Senior Field Editor
Expediters Online