>Another thing we FECC drivers should be screeming about is
>the allowance they make for deadheading.
>
>IE. .15 per mile after first 100 mi(C units).20(D units)
>
>These are the same figures that have been used for at least
>the last 18 years.Totaly unrealistic today.
This is something that I figured out in my first weeks of running, and I see it reflected in some of my "between the lines" reading of conversations with dispatch. I gather that at least recently most of the traffic for them has been originating in the upper Midwest or Northeast region, but that they have a lot of trucks just sitting in the south (when I put myself available today I was told that there were 6 D-Units in the Orlando area, interestingly enough the same number that were here when we arrived for a break, funeral, wedding, and truck outfitting time). The trucks aren't moving into the areas where the loads are, and I quickly began to wonder if it was due to the low pay for relocating. Frankly, the cost of deadheading back to the "traffic origination zone" makes even a fairly good paying run mediocre at best, and it can turn a mediocre run lousy in nothing flat. I wonder how long they can remind us about running "according to our contracts" when the trucks start refusing to move absent sufficient compensation. I am optimistic about the business, and expect to do well as the "slow season" fades into the "busy season," but you can bet I'm watching that deadheading issue real close.
Doug