I got stuck waiting for a load just last week for over a day. Dispatcher went above and beyond getting me a nice chunk of detention pay. Agree with MTownZ, and it's a good rule of thumb all around: don't be a PITA for your dispatcher. Try to understand he's got a ton of other drivers, and you're not special. Give him the info he needs and get the freight delivered on time.
As for hours under a trainer, it depends on the trainer and his comfort level with you. My trainer drove for two hours after I hopped in his truck, after which I did ALL the driving, save for a couple times when he would take over after my 11 was up so we could stay ahead of the freight. Another student I talked to said his trainer ONLY allowed him to drive 4 hours a day.
Millis chat room
Discussion in 'Millis' started by Sully72, Feb 20, 2011.
Page 368 of 452
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I understand all that. Not trying to give a victim mentality. Though I would possible want to drive more than 4 hours and not every day will be the same. Just would hate to loose pay while in training only due to something like that. I normally have a good attitude, just can't stand my paycheck being disrupted by no fault of my own.
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In trucking dumb ish is gonna happen and there will be days you lose a day of driving to no fault of your own. Be it from a shipper/receiver taking all day, to a 9 hr road closure that you hit the front end of and can't get a detour, or any other off the wall stupid thing that you think is only happening to you. I have lost an entire weekend of driving before because a customer (quad) took 10 hrs to load me, which meant I couldn't make my friday morning appt and the the receiver (usps in atl) refused to let me come in late so rescheduled for monday.
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yeah, its the nature of the beast at times
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Just to be clear. You are basically paid a flat salary while out with a trainer. I know they've made some changes since I went thru the program. It used to be you had to work a full 7 days before the trainer turned your payroll. Now I think trainee get paid every week as long as they are on duty at least 4 hours per day. So if your trainer goes home for 2 days then you get a pro-rated check for 5 days. Before if trainer went home you had to wait for him to come back out to complete the 7 day cycle. So technically you could be out for a couple weeks and never get a check. But like I said now you get paid every week. It's kinda confusing I know but as long as your on duty for at least 4 hours you are paid for that day. Hopefully this makes a little more sense.
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So its on duty and not necessarily driving then? -
No, students are paid for 4 hrs drive time, not including any on duty time.
MTownZ Thanks this. -
ok, thought so. Previous post sounded the other way. Just wanted to be clear. Thanks.
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That must be one of the things that changed since I went thru training. Basically what I was getting at is if you sit at a dock most of the day as long as you got the 4 hours in you still get paid for that day.
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That has changed. Also used to be just 5 and a half weekswith your trainer now it's a minimum of 15000 miles logged.
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