I have let LDB's post remain in the FCC forum because he raises some questions that can be answered for the benefit of the FCC drivers and O/O.
Leo, Mark and ohers have suggested that Load Opportunities be presented to trucks in the dispatch queue in blocks of three at a time to minimize driver interuption for loads that they have no chance of getting. Here's what I do know:
The dispatchers will be ABLE to enter as many trucks as they deem necessary to cover a load. A dynamite load may only go to one or two trucks; a bummer load to several at once; a questionable dispatch to as many as a dispatchers history of knowledge dictates. Offers won't go to drivers who are out of hours, out of service, OOS for personal, or on Status 88, but may send the Opportunity message if the pickup will occur some time after the drivers' HOS allows. The dispatch agents are being briefed on this very issue and will be directed to minimize the disruption of sleeping or resting drivers. In any event, however, the dispatchers will send the Load Opportunities to all available trucks that can make the pickup on time in the same DVA order that they now send Load Offers.
The Load Opportunity telephone messages will contain a brief summary of the load detail and will have an option to hear the the remainder of all details now seen on the QualComm. Accept or decline options allow available on the telephone response, but no option for refusal comments will be available.
QualComm Load Opportunity messages will contain the same information as now seen but the refusal message, macro 12, will have a the same field for driver comments now available.
The first test region will be for surface expedite trucks only and will be as follows:
North Dakota - South Dakota - Nebraska - Kansas - Minnesota - Iowa - Missouri - Wisconsin - Illinois - Michigan - Indiana - Portions of Ohio. It also includes any load picking up in or delivering to Canada.