Well ttruck alluded to it. Please explain...
Forced dispatch means you have
no choice to accept or refuse the load. Period. If you refuse to do the load, you will be terminated. The term applies almost exclusively to company drivers - A.K.A., employees.
The notion of an independent contractor being forced to accept a load, or be terminated, is just silly. If you are an electrical contractor, for example, and a building contractor calls you and offers you a job doing the wiring on a house, you can accept or refuse that job offer. If you refuse it, there can be consequences, like the building contractor may or may not be as quick to call you in the future. You may drop a spot of two on the list of electrical contractors to be called when jobs are available. But you are still able to refuse the job and are not forced to do it.
It's
exactly the same with trucking and expediting. Refusing a load and then having negative consequences does
not equal forced dispatch. Forced dispatch does not mean that your carrier won't or can't make you life harder if you refuse to take a load.
Even at Landstar, turning down loads have consequences. They just aren't as centralized, because Landstar doesn't have centralized dispatch. But an agent can certainly put you at the bottom of the go-to list for load offers if you turn down loads.
At Panther or most anywhere else where you are an independent contractor, refusing a load and then dropping to the bottom of the board does not mean you have just been subjected to forced dispatch, sorry. You are not forced by the carrier to accept loads any more than the carrier is forced by you to give you loads.