dieseldiva
Veteran Expediter
That would matter if you insure your truck through them. We don't. No waiver needed.
Might be a good thing to know what the requirements are at the insurance company you're with, just in case.
That would matter if you insure your truck through them. We don't. No waiver needed.
Stupidy abounds!
Fedex, (and in it's early years Roberts also) has a problem with adult solutions!
I was towed across the Ambassador Bridge out to Grand Rapids when I lost a tranny ....
See why I don't ever want to hear from them again ...
Might be a good thing to know what the requirements are at the insurance company you're with, just in case.
We do. That's why I posted what I did.
In the interest of fairness I am the one who chose the Walmart as it was only 2.5 miles from the receiver and I only had 24 minutes left on my clock.
Posted with my Droid EO Forum App
Solutions to screw-ups like this ought not come from drivers who, meaning well and trying to help, might produce creative work-arounds that put the burden on them and may strain legal limits.
Screw-ups like this should be prevented by untangling the dysfunctional web of corporate priorities, myopic dispatcher performance standards and pumped-up HOS rules interpretations that lead dispatchers to not only contemplate but actually formulate and try to implement truly crazy plans; like a plan to twice tow a perfectly running truck, and then drop it unannounced on private property, leaving the driver to explain to the Walmart manager, whose attention will be gained when the 40-foot truck is towed onto the lot by an even bigger truck, that FedEx policy prohibits him from moving the truck under its own power for 10 hours, and then sticking the driver with the bill for the tow to Walmart.
I've never used the personal conveyance, but...could he not have waited to be unloaded, then logged personal conveyance from the reciever to a parking spot? He would have been empty at that point and not on duty.
Nope. FedEx only allows you to use personal conveyance if you are not under a load and you have the legal hours to drive.
My 14 hour clock had run out, which means I could not move without violating HOS.
These are the types of problems many of us will have with EOBR's in solo driven trucks. There are a LOT of small little problems like this that will come out. It will be a nightmare until the bugs are worked out...IF they are worked out.
After reading all of this, I have to ask why did you take a 569 loaded mile run in the first place without demanding that it was split?
I would have refused it, as I do refuse a lot of 500 plus mile straight through offers that I get because I want that two hours of latitude.
If I was to do this and ended up in the same situation ... and if I arrived at 2:20, and the guard said I can sit there, I would have parked in the dock where I was going to unload for 8 hours and then that would have been a split berth time to get me out of there come 10 am - with an unload time after 10