Some folks just think that every minute at a customer property must be logged on duty. Now where they got that, I am not sure. I have a delivery in the morning at the customer I am at now. Gonna take a 10, and then get unloaded in the morning. No on duty is required to be logged waiting for an appointment delivery time. I do this quite frequently. I frequently will fit breaks in at customer location. When I got this load yesterday, I knocked out a chunk of the run, hours were coming to an end, so I pulled in and got the truck serviced and took a break. Ran the run over here, and will take a break tonight, get unloaded, and head to my next pickup with a fresh 11. When you plan things right, it can work. Not all customers are amiable to camping out on their property, but quite a few are. I guess limit hauling for those that want to be morons. But then, that is one of the advantages to bulk or production hauling. It isn't like grocery stores and big box stores.
Why CSA 2010 and E-Logs are a good thing.
Discussion in 'Trucking Industry Regulations' started by Theophilus, Nov 6, 2011.
Page 231 of 243
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Cowpie , I would add one thing. I will overlook some customer short comings for the right rate!
Meltom Thanks this. -
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Ghost Ryder Thanks this.
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DrtyDiesel Thanks this.
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NO thanks to the whole "document" thing.
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scottied67 Thanks this.
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