You could go on and one right down to the tires and axle grease that they didn't pay for but are charging the customer for, and it wouldn't make any difference. When we lease on to a carrier we are providing things like pallet jacks, reefers, trucks, tires, fuel injectors (you get my point) in order to provide a service, and we in effect pay the carrier to find us loads, deal with collections, insurance and authority. A pallet jack is primarily to make your job easier. A reefer is primarily to help you get more and higher paying loads. If you had your own authority you'd be charing extra for pallet jack service and reefer service. Same with labor. The carrier is able to charge the customer an extra fee for your labor, and in exchange for them brokering the transaction, you give them part of your labor fee.Well Cheri there is a problem with other things;
using my pallet jack...
using my reefer...
using my labor...
Should I go on?
I have actually negotiated labor fees myself, on the spot, and got paid, on the spot. Not very often, since it's usually easiest to just let the carrier and the customer work that out, especially when it comes to collections. That's what I pay them for. But there have been a few unusual circumstances where the carrier wasn't the best one to negotiate something like that. There was also one case where the shipper wanted me to do something above and beyond, and after I did it they mailed me a check. The carrier wasn't involved, nor did they need to be.
But generally speaking, labor rates are negotiated with the paying customer by the carrier (or the broker) and as such they should be paid for that. Granted, they take more than they should, but they do that with the Qualcomm, too.
Fuel and the FSC is altogether different, especially for carriers that have contracted rates with certain shippers. I, nor very many others, would run loads for those reduced contracted rates in light of the increased costs without additional bonus money of some kind, be it FSC or whatever. If they can collect 30 cents and give me 20 cents, that's fine, or they can just collect the 20 cents that I need and pass it along.
Yup. Just recently I was offered a load at my regular rate, but with an 8 cent FSC. I asked why the low FSC, and they said they gave the customer a discount. I corrected them in that they had ME give the customer a discount, and did so without consulting me. I told them that if they wanted to give the customer a discount, that they could take it out of their end, not mine. I refused the load. I was later offered the load with a bonus that made up for the missing FSC.Just like the rip off of flat rate FSC or in some cases the BS line "well they are a good customer, so we won't charge them a FSC", it comes down to a lot of people would be better just to be truly independent.
Hard to say. They already think a flat FSC is OK because they get it on deadhead miles.I wonder about something though, how many of the cheerleaders would not be happy if they really had to deal with no relocation supplements or FSC for all authorized miles?