Interesting..........
OK, let's look at this scenario.
Can this scenario happen? Sure. Has it been happening to drivers? Don't know.
3 runs in a week like that is very rare, and it would be even more rare to have that happen 3 weeks in a row. But sure, it could happen, and Dallas is a place it could very well happen, since there is so much LTL freight coming in that gets expedited out for shorter distances. Los Angeles and Salt Lake City are also a couple of other places that it could happen. It's not as likely in Dallas, however, because of the relatively large numbers of vans and trucks that are constantly entering that area. But in some place like Los Angeles, when there are maybe one or two other trucks in the area, you could very well be offered a lot of short loads in a row.
The thing is, if you start turning those down from the very beginning, you get no sympathy from Dispatch. On the other hand, if you take a couple or three of those, and then when the next one comes in you tell dispatch, "These shorts loads are all I've been running, and I need a longer one," and then turn it down, they will usually realize you are trying to help, particularly if you let them know that you understand all they can do is book what comes in and they can't manufacture loads for you. They will either try and find you a longer one or pony up some extra money for the short ones. It's all in how you handle it.
In any case, if you've taken three short runs like that and then turn down a load or two, it's not likely to negatively affect your acceptance rate to the point of putting you down below 67%. If it does, it's not because you've been getting crappy load after crappy load. More likely it's because you've been turning down a lot of non-crappy-but-not-primo loads recently, or if you've miscalculated how the math gets done and you're turning down these loads at the wrong time of the month.
On the other hand, those who like to stick close to the "freight lanes" in the Midwest because they are closer to home, they are likely to be offered a lot of crappy loads for short miles and low FSC, because that's what rules in what I lovingly refer to as "Midwest Hеll". But that's what this business is, and it's even more true of the Midwest, where it can get old criss-crossing the state from Wooster to Chilicothe to Van Wert to Warren to Grand Rapids, and finding yourself at each delivery at #9 on a 3-a-day board.
Why hold it against that driver when he finally starts saying "NO" to these short sporadic runs that dispatch has been only offering him on a "non force" dispatch system and starts to only accept offers of higher mileage runs that pay better for both his time and vehicle usage?
Because the customer could care less how many miles the driver gets, and the carrier is in business to service the customer. The driver is supposed to be in the same business. The carrier accepts loads that don't make them big bucks, because it's part and parcel of the business. If the driver can't balance the business of great loads, good loads and not-so-good loads, they don't belong in the business, because they don't understand it.
But there's more than one way to try and understand what ones motive may be when it comes to loads they will accept, have been accepting, and have been refusing.
Absolutely
To have a "Points System" in play that effects a so-called "Small Business Owner" that can only offer his services to one dispatch service due to a binding contract is a "Forced" Dispatch system, even when the driver agrees to it being a "Non Force" dispatch system as stated in said contract.
No, not really. While there can be many interpretations of what constitutes "Forced Dispatch," a carrier keeping track of your rate of acceptance isn't one of them, especially when the point system is clear-cut and transparent. It is part of the cooperative agreement between you can the carrier, where you agree to lease you and your equipment to the carrier for their use. If it turns out that you get offered a lot of less-than-desirable loads, what with that sometimes being the nature of the industry, and you continuously resist that nature to the point of no longer being reliable to the carrier who relies on you and your equipment to conduct business, then it's your decision to get to that point.
The carrier instead could
not have a transparent point system, and just simply dispatch around you, never saying a word to you about it. Is that forced dispatch?
Keeping track of your acceptance rate may very well be considered "forced dispatch", but it's a stretch and is without a doubt the most benign form of it I know, since for the most part it is within your control. A more sever form would be dropping to the bottom of the board with each refusal, or being placed OOS for a time because of a refusal, or having your contract voided for a refusal. Those who like to cherry pick will certainly see things differently, I'm sure.
Am I reading this wrong or have I touched a subject that is right there on the slippery slope???
Both.
There are some carriers who say there's no forced dispatch, and then promptly punish you when you refuse a load. Those are the ones on a slippery slope, since all it would take is for someone with a little time and money on their hands to push the issue. In court cases where the issue has been pushed (usually in worker's compensation cases), independent contractor status gets changed to employee status, or the forced dispatch suddenly disappears.
Bottom line is, if you don't want any responsibility whatsoever of acceptance and reliability to a carrier, then you need to have your own authority, where the only people who will keep track of your acceptance rate and reliability are you and the paying customer. Or your broker, of course.