Percentage pay?
Discussion in 'Intermodal Trucking Forum' started by Roadrnnr, Oct 4, 2015.
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Exactly, not to mention the wait times to get a flip... I've waited a good 4 hours on different occasions just to have the container flipped around -
Always gross, 99% of local co. Are 1099....
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your very wrong
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Ok, care to elaborate? -
99% of local companies are on a 1099? How do you figure? The company you work for is owned by a foreign guy which most companies that are owned by foreigners are.
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I worked for two companies owned by, what I suppose, you'd call Americans and they paid 1099 to their drivers as well. One of them happens to be the biggest locally owned cartage operation in Chicago. But yes, there are, I suppose companies that don't pay 1099 to their employees in Chicago Intermodal....
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Ok I didn't realize you are talking about intermodal companies only... I was think you meant "local" in general... So you possibly could be right... Who is the biggest cartage player in Chicago area?
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Patella and their companies (Pacella, Cushing, Accell, Allecap) all owned by same family....
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I'm paid on a split of percentage and hourly, as a company driver. Our O/O's are paid solely on commission. Anything I do within 100 air mile radius of Denver is hourly, beyond that is percentage, my current rate is 30% (I'm topped out) percentage and $21.50/hourly. AS to whether or not it pays more depends on the load, the destination, whether or not there is detention involved, the broker and the customer. As a rule, I will make more doing percentage loads than I will doing hourly loads. When, IF, bean season hits this year, my typical day will be start at 4 am, on the road by 4:30, at the customer by 7:45, on the road by 9:45, can off at the ramp about 1:15 pm, then 3 to 3.5 hours of local. The percentage loads pay about $250 to $260 gross for a 8.5 hr day.
AS an O/O, I'd want at least 85% to the truck, but, that would typically mean you're an Indy and using the trucking company as a broker, so on a $1,000 load, you'd get $850, they would keep $150 as their "fee". I know O/O's that are getting 90% to 95% to the truck, and lease operators that are getting 75% to the truck, so it depends on the company.rabbiporkchop and Roadrnnr Thank this.
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