Truckers' Trucking Forum | Message Board | Discussion - The Premier Truck Drivers Forum!  

Trucker MySpace - Truckers Making Friends. Chicken Truckers Come Meet Other Truckers!

Good Trucking Jobs - Forget Those CRAP Trucking Jobs & Find A Good Trucking Job!




Go Back   Truckers' Trucking Forum | Message Board | Discussion > Truckers & The Trucking Industry > Shippers & Receivers - Good or Bad

Truckers' Trucking Forum/Message Board - The Premiere Truck Driver Forum
Sponsored Links

Important Truckers Forum Notice!

Shippers & Receivers - Good or Bad Load O' Freight That Just Can't Wait. Had a good or bad experience with a shipper or receiver? Discuss grocery warehouses, lumpers, and anything dealing with pickups or deliveries here. Does that shipper let you park and sleep? Does the receiver FORCE you to get a lumper? Trucker Directions

Reply
 
Thread Tools Rate Thread Display Modes
  ^ Top   #31  
Old 12.25.2006
littlebit's Avatar
MIA (Banned or Retired)
 
Last Seen: 08.13.2007 09.53 AM
Member Since: May 2006
Posts: 289
My Trucking Photos: 0

Thanks: 0
Thanked: 0 Times
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sullyman View Post

I am just a little curious, what would happen if you were out of hours and the shipper, or receiver was still requesting that you move along. Are you by law required to move, or can you decline because you are out of hours?

You can tell them you out of hours all you want. They will still make you move.
Reply With Quote
Remove This Ad By Registering. Join Our Truck Forum and Trucking Community For Free. Sponsored Links:

  ^ Top   #32  
Old 12.25.2006
Bobtail Member
 
Last Seen: 11.21.2008 07.04 PM
Member Since: Nov 2006
Location: Pittsburgh, Pa
Age: 29
Posts: 26
My Trucking Photos: 0

Thanks: 0
Thanked: 0 Times
What if you refused?
Reply With Quote
  ^ Top   #33  
Old 12.27.2006
MACK E-6's Avatar
Trucker Forum STAFF
 
Last Seen: 2 Days Ago 09.15 PM
Member Since: Sep 2005
Location: Baltimore, MD
Trucker? 7 Years
Age: 33
Posts: 2,843
My Trucking Photos: 0

Thanks: 194
Thanked: 116 Times
When you run out of hours, you are not entirely prohibited from driving. You are only prohibited from driving out of the municipality you are in. This creates problems like those mentioned in this thread such as when you are told to leave private property. You can drive clear across town to find a place to park if necessary, as long as you don't leave town. Also you would still have to log hunting for a place to park on line 4, regardless of how long it takes.

As for refusing to leave private property when ordered to, refusal to leave on your own may result in a citation for trespassing from the local police, or you may leave on a hook at your expense.
__________________
Z-Lady's devoted hubby.

Truckers
Reply With Quote
  ^ Top   #34  
Old 12.28.2006
LogsRus's Avatar
"Log it Legal"
 
Last Seen: 2 Days Ago 06.55 PM
Member Since: Nov 2006
Location: Indianapolis, Indiana
Trucker? Trucking Industry
Age: 38
Posts: 2,394
My Trucking Photos: 0

Thanks: 2
Thanked: 103 Times
Leaving the customer

Quote:
Originally Posted by MACK E-6 View Post
When you run out of hours, you are not entirely prohibited from driving. You are only prohibited from driving out of the municipality you are in. This creates problems like those mentioned in this thread such as when you are told to leave private property. You can drive clear across town to find a place to park if necessary, as long as you don't leave town. Also you would still have to log hunting for a place to park on line 4, regardless of how long it takes.

As for refusing to leave private property when ordered to, refusal to leave on your own may result in a citation for trespassing from the local police, or you may leave on a hook at your expense.

Mack: I don't believe this is true about running all over the municipality to find a place to park. Once you are out of hours you can not drive that truck. I e-mailed Indianapolis Federal DOT and asked this very question and why I did that is because in the Canada Regulations it does state in their Q&A the shipper/consignee must let the driver stay there, and I wanted to see what the Federal DOT regs was on this. Now you might get by with running around town and no one ever finding out, but there is the chance of getting busted! I believe it should be a regulation if a customer takes longer and that puts the driver out of hours it should be a state law to allow the driver to stay there. Only under them circumstances though. Below is the question and answer from DOT.


MY QUESTION:

In Canada's regulations book it states the below comment:
No motor carrier, shipper, consignee or other person shall request,
require or allow a driver to drive and no driver shall drive if

A) the driver's faculties are impaired to the point where it is
unsafe for the driver to drive;
B) driving would jeopardize or be likely to jeopardize the safety
or health of the public, the driver or the employees of the motor
carrier;
C) the driver is subject of an out-of-service declaration; or
D) the driver, in doing so, would not be in compliance with these
Regulations

The way I read this is, if a driver is at a shipper/consignee and he
will be violating his 11,14 or 70 hr the Shipper/Consignee has to let
the driver stay on the property until the driver is in compliance.

Is this true in the United States?

If so:

How does a driver handle a customer who says I will call the police and
have you removed



HIS ANSWER
I am not familiar with Canadian CMV safety regulations. However,
in the United States, if a driver is at a shipper/ consignee he or she
may not operate the vehicle until they have enough hours.

The U.S. DOT has no jurisdiction over shipper's other than the Hazardous
Material regulations. If the shipper or consignee wants a driver or
vehicle off of their property, appropriate state laws would apply.

Let's say the consignee wants the vehicle off the property and your
driver has no hours. You have four options; you could supply another
driver with hours, you could wrecker the vehicle off the property, you
could take no action or you could order the driver to move the vehicle.

If you choose option three and take no action, the shipper/consignee
could possibly file an action against the driver or the carrier
according to the appropriate state laws. If you choose option four and
tell the driver, who is out of hours, to move the vehicle, the FMCSA
regulations would allow you to be charged with aiding or abetting.
Options one or two are the way to go!
Reply With Quote
  ^ Top   #35  
Old 12.28.2006
Brickman's Avatar
Trucker Forum STAFF
 
Member Since: Sep 2006
Location: WY
Trucker? 5 Years
Age: 34
Posts: 9,894
My Trucking Photos: 7

Thanks: 2,244
Thanked: 1,116 Times
Quote:
Originally Posted by DigiTrucker View Post
Setting aside the issue of parking at a Wal-Mart facility, the bigger issue is the DOT Hours of Service.

I'm 13 years in the trucking industry and the days when being behind on your log for even a few hours (much less a day or more) are gone. We, as an industry, need to realize that we are collectively headed for the day of the ON BOARD RECORDING DEVICE as mandated by the DOT. It's not just PATT and CRASH that are advocating these things and they are but a tiny part of the full equation. We have years of driver violations that are finally being enforced (and in some cases perhaps a bit too enthusiastically by some jurisdictions) while at the same time many municipalities are outright banning trucks much less overnight parking or idling within community limits.

One thing drivers attempting to comply with the myriad of malarkey regulations, stipulations, and postulations placed on our "ilk" need to remember is federal regulations will ultimately reign supreme if you have to take a stand. That is, federal regulations supercede municipal no parking ordinances. If faced with this type of situation a driver's best recourse is to have the "ducks in a row" so to speak. Make sure you're legally at or beyond your 11th or 14th hour. If not, you cannot prevail; you can only comply (referring back to the original post on this thread as the safety or dispatch team suggested rechecking his/her log and going from there). Having attained 11 or 14, then a driver needs the support of the carrier and especially the safety department. Many local police or sheriff's departments aren't familiar with federal regulations concerning trucking--they are local for a reason. Keep in mind that you can always request any officer brought on scene in such an instance to call out his watch commander or immediate superior. They do not like this request as it makes them look somewhat inept higher up their food chain. BUT!!! Make sure you're uber-polite. Losing your temper with an officer will result in more problems. State your position clearly and carry with you a copy of the FMCSR as updated as you can get. Call your carrier and get them involved immediately. Once the superior is on scene request a DOT certified state trooper. Each time they must call the next level out or face a very serious issue should you be illegally "coerced" (this is a legal term referring to forcing someone to perform an act they are legally prohibited from performing or vice-a-versa--it applies both ways) and later file a lawsuit in the situation. Also, it's a very good idea to turn on a recording device of some kind, audio tape, video tape, etc, to get your record of events--and make it KNOWN that you are recording everything you can get.

I had a similar situation arise at a receiver just after the 2004 version of the new HOS came out. Signs on the customer's receiving window indicated no parking on the facility. I mentioned their policy directly to the receiving clerk and explained that I would be out of drivable time in 3 hours and politely requested to be unloaded and released in sufficient time to move off--even explaining that I intended to do exactly as they requested. Their receiving personnel, however, saw one more instance of a "smart-assed" truck driver trying to hurry them up in unloading dry grocery product. We spent four hours--with me ON THE DOCK observing the unloading and logging line four as required. Once finished, they released me and I requested a space be made available to park, only to be told they do not allow parking by the same clerk to whom I had earlier explained my predicament regarding hours. I pulled away from the door and to the back of the lot. Eventually security came around and told me to leave or they would call the local police--which they had already done. The local officer arrived on the scene and immediately my digital voice recorder clicked on and went in my shirt pocket. I was told by the officer to move on or face arrest for "criminal trespass." I explained that I was recording and out of hours as per federal DOT hours of service--and I called my company (which at the time was having issues with the new HOS and wasn't sure about compliance so I was left flapping in the breeze by the safety department--small company and no one likes 3 A.M. wake up calls for this kind of thing). I requested the officer call out his watch commander and a DOT officer--he refused saying something along the line of we don't really need to go that far with this (sic). Then I suggested he should sign off on my log book indicating he ordered me off the property in violation of the DOT HOS. He flatly refused. But I did get him to give me his badge number, name, and post phone number. At this point I did the last and only thing I could: complied and left but logged every moment of the 45 minutes it took to get to another safe/legal parking area (read: truck stop) and turned in the log page to safety--only to be called in and told "we will not tolerate drivers falsifying their logs this way" and I needed to "fix it" or face getting a written warning. I played back the digial recording the conversation with the officer and reminded the safety manager (whom I had spoken with at the time) he did not back my compliance with the HOS and therefore I would neither falsify my log as ordered by him nor would I sign an acknowledgement of a warning for falsification when I did not falsify the record of duty status. The matter was subsequently dropped by the safety department of the company but they have been much easier to deal with in these instances since.

Another thing that correlates to this kind of situation: when you run 100% compliant, such issues as these WILL cause a late delivery but when carriers are forced into a situation where they must explain why to the customer their cargo is late and that it is due solely to the customer's behavior--and the driver has all the proof--things will change in the industry. Those who capitulate to the abuse of carriers and customers in such situations and "fix" their logs then go without the proper rest (as defined by DOT HOS) are two things: #1: part of the problem and not the solution to our industry's internal growing pains and #2 (and in no way least) a physical threat to the public's safety at large.

Time marches on, folks, and with each second ticking away at the clock we get one second closer to mandated on-board recording devices. The more WE comply to the HOS the better our position--and the less likely we are to face criminal charges in the untimely (not unlikely) event of a major crash. When carriers wake to the reality of better compliance and better utilization of available hours things will DEFINITELY change for the better in our universe.

Be safe!






Your post outlines one of the major problems with the On Board Recorders. When you are out of hours shippers/recievers will be forced to allow you to stay parked when its their screw up. Also those that support the recorders have failed to realize that trucking IS NOT an exact science. And cannot be treated as such.
Reply With Quote
  ^ Top   #36  
Old 12.28.2006
Medium Load Member
 
Last Seen: 1 Hour Ago 07.25 PM
Member Since: Dec 2006
Location: Helena, Mt.
Trucker? 18 Years
Posts: 309
My Trucking Photos: 0

Thanks: 4
Thanked: 66 Times
Quote:
Originally Posted by pro1driver View Post
i didn't bother to copy your entire posting as it would serve no purpose for my response to you. you can have all the recording devices you want (you mentioned that you did), you can explain all you want to the local police (which you said you did), you can tell the shipper or reciever your hours of service rules (which you did), but in the end, you still gotta get off the property, so what good did it actually do you to do all of that...??

nothing, not a blessed darn thing did it accomplish. as i stated in my posting above, as a driver myself, now a yardman, i truely felt badly for the driver i had to tell to get off the property even though he was told it was a 24/7 operation, (which it absolutey isn't). i wish i could have "hidden him" in a back corner so he could get some sleep. but, the neighbors would have called the police, and reported it.

so why should i risk getting myself into trouble for anyone...?? why should i risk my employer to get his butt chewed out from the customer, when the customer reports my actions to my employer...??

in the end, as a driver, you just gotta follow the rules.....of the CUSTOMER.......PERIOD........or risk losing future work from them. then, your employer would have every reason to fire you, as the customer would definately call your employer and report you...........

afterall, you are the first and perhaps the only representative a customer actually see's in person, as everyone else from your company probably just phones the customer for work, etc.

the best thing anyone can do is simply get off the property, comply with THE CUSTOMER, as no one really knows all the reasons why you can't stay on the property, and frankly, we are drivers, not the CEO or some other "important person" that needs a reason............you do as you are TOLD........

and voice recording machines, talking with an officer, asking for a "signature", etc,etc, is all wasted time you'll never, ever get back.......

But if the driver left and got in an accident he could turn around and sue you and your company and win.............................
Reply With Quote
Remove This Ad By Registering. Join Our Truck Forum and Trucking Community For Free. Sponsored Links:

  ^ Top   #37  
Old 12.28.2006
LogsRus's Avatar
"Log it Legal"
 
Last Seen: 2 Days Ago 06.55 PM
Member Since: Nov 2006
Location: Indianapolis, Indiana
Trucker? Trucking Industry
Age: 38
Posts: 2,394
My Trucking Photos: 0

Thanks: 2
Thanked: 103 Times
I think this would be somewhat of a good thread to start, it would answer many of my questions and probably many others!

Has anyone been in an accident after leaving a shipper/consignee after telling the customer they really needed to stay to get legal on their logs?
If so did you sue anyone?


I am curious? Should I start a post something along this line or anyone who would like to?
Reply With Quote
  ^ Top   #38  
Old 12.28.2006
LogsRus's Avatar
"Log it Legal"
 
Last Seen: 2 Days Ago 06.55 PM
Member Since: Nov 2006
Location: Indianapolis, Indiana
Trucker? Trucking Industry
Age: 38
Posts: 2,394
My Trucking Photos: 0

Thanks: 2
Thanked: 103 Times
On board recording device

Actually I think eventually (really soon) all major companies will be required to have the on board devices. I believe it does help drivers stay legal (although to legal) and it eliminates fines for the companies.
I wonder also how many accidents or fines Werner has yearly since they are the only one with the on-board (well major one that I know of)

So many thoughts go through my head, to figure out what is the best way to log or audit logs? That is just me though ok!
Reply With Quote
  ^ Top   #39  
Old 12.28.2006
Brickman's Avatar
Trucker Forum STAFF
 
Member Since: Sep 2006
Location: WY
Trucker? 5 Years
Age: 34
Posts: 9,894
My Trucking Photos: 7

Thanks: 2,244
Thanked: 1,116 Times
Quote:
Originally Posted by LogsRus View Post
Actually I think eventually (really soon) all major companies will be required to have the on board devices. I believe it does help drivers stay legal (although to legal) and it eliminates fines for the companies.
I wonder also how many accidents or fines Werner has yearly since they are the only one with the on-board (well major one that I know of)

So many thoughts go through my head, to figure out what is the best way to log or audit logs? That is just me though ok!


So the rumors go that Werner's saftey score isn't really all that good.

I'm leased to Landstar Ranger and have not paid one red cent to the gooberment fund raising efforts in 2006. I feel good about that.
Reply With Quote
  ^ Top   #40  
Old 12.29.2006
MIA (Banned or Retired)
 
Last Seen: 01.14.2007 10.24 AM
Member Since: Nov 2006
Posts: 82
My Trucking Photos: 0

Thanks: 0
Thanked: 0 Times
. .

Last edited by the-waco-kid; 01.14.2007 at 09.51 AM.
Reply With Quote
Reply

Truckers Forum Bookmarks - Like This Thread? Tell The World!

Truckers' Trucking Forum/Message Board
Truckers Accessories


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Trucker Forum Replies Last Post
sleep apnea babytar Drivers' Health Corner 46 3 Weeks Ago 09.02 PM
Hello! How do you sleep? FreightlinerGuy Questions From New Drivers 6 04.25.2008 01.10 PM
Where do you usually sleep OTR? Hopfrog Questions From New Drivers 16 11.12.2007 09.49 PM
Sleep Apena sturgis Questions From New Drivers 3 07.01.2007 05.18 PM
Sleep speed_man13 Questions From New Drivers 7 02.22.2007 12.11 PM


.


vBulletin Forum Software, Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.
Copyright © The Truckers Report - Trucking Forum & Message Board - Truck Driver Discussion - Truck Forum

Trucker Forum Disclaimer: All content, information and opinions (collectively, the "Material") presented on Our Trucker Forum Discussion Board at TheTruckersReport.com are those of the authors of posts and messages (collectively, the "participants") and not The Truckers Report. The Truckers Report does not guarantee the reliability, completeness, accuracy, timeliness or up-to-date-ness of the material presented on the Truck Driver Forum. The material is published "as is," and does not represent the official views and opinions of The Truckers Report or any company. Any reliance upon the Material presented on these forums shall be at User's own risk. The Truckers Report does not review the substance of the content posted by users on these forums and is therefore not responsible for any of such content. The Truckers Forum merely provides a space for its users to express and exchange their own opinions.


Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO