Good morning. Took a long holiday weekend to get away clear my head and chase a little white ball around the grass....Thank you for 3 days of heavy thunderstorms....that's logistics.
Like I said, clear rules. If you read the message, and I have, the rules regarding turn downs aren't even the least little bit clear.No rate change. If you read the message all we did was relax the turn down rules. That's it, that's all.
It isn't about taking the load. It is simply saying anything below a threshold won't reset a drivers hours upon a turn down.
Life was easier before we tried to relax the policy????
The QC message is stupefyingly confusing, with no contextual meaning, which the follow-up clarification message only made worse. You can't get any more Pantheresque than that.Well the CEO answering questions, texts, Facebook posts all day on what was intended to be a good thing for the fleet....yeah I don't see that as very Pantheresque.
Fair enough.But the questions are valid and let me go back to ops and discuss. Probably be Monday at this point.
Ah! The first hint of what it actually means! Chalk one up for the Vivid Expediter Imagination Hypothesis Method of Drawing Conclusions. (I learned that at Panther, by the way).It isn't about taking the load. It is simply saying anything below a threshold won't reset a drivers hours upon a turn down
I don't know that is was any easier, per se, but it was certainly a lot more comprehensible. .Life was easier before we tried to relax the policy????
Using my highly developed Vivid Expediter Imagination Hypothesis Method, I can conclude that it is, in fact, a percentage, and not a flat rate. For example, using the "formula" (m/p) x 100 = BR where m= minimum threshold rate in whole cents rate, p= contract percentage, and BR= Bid Rate, and using the 100 multiplier to correctly place the decimal point...Should be percentage (which is Panthered by the way).
The QC message is stupefyingly confusing, with no contextual meaning, which the follow-up clarification message only made worse. You can't get any more Pantheresque than that.
Fair enough.
Please make it a point to get details. For example, the FMCSA is very clear that the weight threshold for a CMV is 10,001 pounds or more. So, with a cargo van/Sprinter, does the 60 cent threshold mean we will have our hours reset if we turn down a load that is 60 cents or more, but if it's 59 cents or less we will not have the hours reset?
Ah! The first hint of what it actually means! Chalk one up for the Vivid Expediter Imagination Hypothesis Method of Drawing Conclusions. (I learned that at Panther, by the way).
I don't know that is was any easier, per se, but it was certainly a lot more comprehensible. .
Using my highly developed Vivid Expediter Imagination Hypothesis Method, I can conclude that it is, in fact, a percentage, and not a flat rate. For example, using the "formula" (m/p) x 100 = BR where m= minimum threshold rate in whole cents rate, p= contract percentage, and BR= Bid Rate, and using the 100 multiplier to correctly place the decimal point...
Cargo van/ Sprinter: (60 / 70) x 100 = $.857, so those bidding on loads would be bidding 86 cents, plus FSC.
For straight trucks: (105 / 70) x 100 = $1.50 for the board bid, plus FSC.
I am on the ten year plant to de-Pantherize turtle. It is a 20 step program. . Bear with us. Work in progress! Love the turtle!
Update. As I was pretty much throwing in the towel I decided to call dispatch and see what/if anything was going on in the area that I was in. Now I must let everyone know that I don't call dispatch every time for something and I try not to call during 8am to 5pm.Thinking of throwing in the towel were I'm at and heading home.