no, i didn't get the message. It was apparently sent out in a fleet message a week or two ago, but it certainly should have gone out in an e-mail and been posted to the website. Because of how it is calculated, it should have gone out prior to june 1, actually, since decisions made in june based on the old formula are now ex post facto part of the new formula. It's like putting up a stop sign today and giving you a ticket for running it last week.
I'll call on tuesday to get a clarification, and maybe to get someone to send it out in an e-mail, hopefully they'll have the phones and computer fixed by then.
A few minutes ago someone in driver relations read me the e-mail that they got, which didn't say much, other than as of july 2, 2011 the cut-off for the acceptance rate is raised from 67% to 73%, and that driver relations should expect a lot of calls about it. The e-mail does not provide driver relations with any kind of explanation to offer the callers who have questions, however, which seems rather typical ("we've made this change, you're going to get a lot of calls about it. We're not going to explain to you why we've made these changes, so good luck with the calls. <snort>").
Doesn't take much to figure out why, tho. They started paying deadhead as an incentive to take more loads, which didn't help, so now they have to raise the acceptance rate to get more people to accept more loads, and so they can more concentrate the load offers to people who are most likely to accept them.
But it honestly doesn't affect me much. Even the girl in driver relations asked me why i was even concerned with it, seeing as how i don't turn much down ("you only turned down one load in june, and one in may!") it's a very rare thing for me to drop below 90%. But i was asking not because i'm concerned about it, but rather you can't play the game if you don't know the rules, especially if they change the rules without letting you know about it.
But it is, for sure, 73% now, and not 67%.
Again, it's calculated by using all of the days of the current month, and the previous calendar month. It's july 3, so you're dealing with the 3 days in july and all of june, with anything that happened before june 1 being out of the equation. It's loads accepted divided by loads offered. Legitimate refusals are not in the equation (e.g., more than 8 hours in advance is not counted as a load offered).