What I hear you're saying. And what I see happening, IS the problem.
Drivers that want a 9-5 job. Will become more flexible, or find another line of work.
I see ZERO reason for every tanker within 100 mile radius of a refinery showing up within a 3 hour window, every morning.
Market driven or not. Somebody needs to get a handle on this issue. Maybe the refineries will issue a guaranteed price for a brief period. To allow the scheduling of trucks within a workable window.
I know a jobber here in my area, that has his trucks rolling EVERY morning at 3am, meaning they ALL hit the refinery at the same time. He's one of the spot market buyers. Our fuel is still .20-.35 a gallon higher than stations just 40 miles away, in ANY direction.
LOGISTICS................ and someone willing to leave the house when needed. Not based on the drivers desire to be home at a certain time every day.
I guess the bulk industry is lagging behind the times in more ways than one. Aside from the recent drive toward E-logs. The rest of the industry is moving toward TEAMS, to offset the long hours. Maybe bulk should consider this as well.
Why CSA 2010 and E-Logs are a good thing.
Discussion in 'Trucking Industry Regulations' started by Theophilus, Nov 6, 2011.
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The fact IS there is just to few termials to get product(many trucks come from a 150 mile radius).
Changing the market guarntee will also change profit margins for suppliers and product brokers... Which will likely be passed on to fuel buyers to already high prices... again which will be passed on to consumers from everything from T.P. to ham sandwiches.
I see it having a huge domino effect on an already shakey economy.07-379Pete and volvodriver01 Thank this. -
Follow the yellow brick........um....money trail.volvodriver01 Thanks this. -
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Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
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