Well, I mean this assumes you're not there way ahead of time or get there very very late. When I get there 4 hours early I don't really watch trucks coming in. I'm talking about when I have an appointment at 7am and get there at 630am and watch someone who arrives at 9am leave at 10am and I'm still there at 11am. If you get there early or late that can screw everything up. This all assumes you're there on time. And actually, really is targeted more toward when you are given a window to get loaded and you're there right at the start of the window and watch 5 trucks come and go and you're still sitting there. That's when I really get mad. I've told them before "If you're not ready to load me at the beginning of my window then don't give that as the window."
How much do you pay attention to trucks order of arrival?
Discussion in 'Shippers & Receivers - Good or Bad' started by drivingmissdaisy, Feb 13, 2024.
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I can see this is a problem for N. American drivers who are paid by the mile, a practice long made illegal in the UK at least, and thus are not getting paid to hang around waiting. But when you are paid by the hour it makes no difference other than if you have a timed booking for your next collection or were banking on getting back home that day before your hours run out.
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I'm just pointing out, how it is very common for drivers to decide to arrive very early, and be shocked they aren't taken first despite having a time later in the day. -
Different trucks different payloads......your truck with 18 light pallets VS the other guys truck with 3000 cs on the floor.
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If picking up or delivering at a union warehouse, you also will notice when a union driven truck arrives, they most always go to the head of the line, before all the "scab" non-union trucks.
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Blimey, back in the last century when most places in the UK were union closed shops, you wouldn't get unloaded at all if you weren't in the union. That all came to an end with the miners' strike of '84 and Maggie Thatcher. Not sure because I don't live there anymore, but I doubt there are many union drivers there these days.
When I came here to live and work in France, there were 2 unions and 2 reps in the company I worked for. Both of them were really helpful with advice from time to time but not once in all the time I drove there, did either of them pressure me into joining a union. Never was asked for a card or refused unloading in all the countries I drove to. France, of course, Belgium, Netherlands, Italy and England.bryan21384 Thanks this. -
One of the lumber mills we haul out of has a couple of shuttle trucks that haul across town to an export yard. They might make six or eight loads a day. When they come into the mill they go to the head of the line.
You should hear the screaming and yelling...in several languages. Too bad.
There are signs posted...'Shuttle trucks have loading priority' but they're only in English. If they started posting in every language that represents the drivers involved we'd need a lot more signs.Kyle G., bryan21384, Magoo1968 and 1 other person Thank this. -
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It's just the nature of the beast man. Sometimes trucks come in after you and get loaded before you. If it's a Walmart load, more often than not, those will get loaded first, because of the powerhouse that Walmart is. It depends a lot on how important the load is, as alluded to earlier. I just take it in stride. -
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