Thx Piper, yes, I figured out what FSC was when I saw your other recent post here. That threw me off because that was never a part of the settlement check; we were just paid a flat commission rate and everything was figured in to that total.
As far as new players in the van biz, check this one out: I am working for a small family owned expediting/air freight/courier biz here in Los Angeles, still have my same van that I used in the Rpberts/FECC days, so I get some decent sized loads as opposed to the other drivers who want to use their family cars. FECC contracts out to us when they are short van drivers in the LA area. This is a slap in my face: I would get full pop on these runs, now my company gets these runs for what I used to get (I'm assuming this of course) , now I get what my company pays me after taking their cut out of the deal, which I know is a very small percentage. Talk about a shame... On one FECC run I even called up recruiting to see if they were looking for So Cal van drivers to join the FECC fleet, he (Aaron I think it was) told me they were covered just fine in So Cal. I said "That's funny, I'm doing a FECC run right now..." He replies back that they outsource their runs to whoever can cover the load, they will do that sometimes. So, bottom line, it is about survival these days, my company will take the load and get it covered just to keep the drivers busy, to satisfy FECC as a customer/broker, and also for my companies survival. The drivers probably don't even know that it is a FECC load, they really don't care, as long as they see a paycheck at the end of the week.
Also, just as a side note, this little company I work for pays FSC for ALL miles, not just loaded miles, and the rate varies as well depending on national fuel prices. And of course there are other brokers and customers, not just FECC. So, back to topic, who knows what the customers get charged per mile, I guess that is the old way of thinking, now it is about bidding and getting the load in the first place, just like getting your kitchen remodeled or a new roof put on your house, the customer will go for the cheap rate. I have been told to get ready for a really good run, only to sit and wait for nothing, because the customer never will call my guys back because we try to get a decent rate but the customer found someone who will do it for less. In this era it pays nothing to sit empty and ***** & moan about society, any load is a good load as much as I hate to say it.
Maybe this should have been posted on the other thread, but it is still relevant I think to the overall "theme" going on here.