on this line on another thread
"My last month with Swift I was gone 34 days and I sat for 10 of them making no money."
Where exactly do you sit doing nothing and making no money waiting for a load or a truck or repairs or whatever, where exactly do you wait while on the road, at a motel? at an office at a truck?
and do you have to be immediately available? or do they give you set ammount of time to show up. if so how much time, that is OTR not at your home city..
I have heard first account horror stories of a local company that hires no exp truckers just as a reserve, and they have them at their office on call for 18 hours a day doing nothing just sitting and sleeping at the offices for weeks.
And also the doing nothing part is that only imposed by dispatchers on new drivers that don't hustle and run hard, or is it for everybody.
Thanks
Clarification on doing nothing OTR
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Aarrons, Sep 18, 2017.
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I never sat pulling reefers without being paid detention.
Lepton1 Thanks this. -
That said, if you are waiting for a load, you will be sitting in your truck. Unless you choose to put yourself in a hotel. But if you are not on scheduled home time, and you have hours to run, then you better be in your truck. If you are getting repairs that take more than a day, then company will likely either get you a spare truck or put you in a hotel. Most repair facilities will not allow you to sleep in the truck while they work on it, for insurance reasons. Many company terminals have bunk rooms for this reason.
As suggested by @Chinatown, you should never sit for days without getting paid detention. If you sit for ten days without getting paid, something is wrong. -
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There are times you sit between loads. It happens and it's boring. Usually a good company spots you layover day pay.
However, to take the original example, that Swift driver ran for 24 days. If he had to sit in order to set up good 600+ mile a day loads, he ran 14,000+ miles. Should make any driver happy for the month. If he didn't get good loads, might be time to move on.
Keep your eye on the big picture. -
Sometimes you might get unlucky and go from place to place that has little freight, and so sit a day before they can get you going again.
It happens sometimes.
It sounds like that driver just had a string of bad luck, or he wasn't doing his job very well and was let sit on purpose. -
When I started at the worst part of the recession Michigan and Florida were notorious for being places you'd go and not be able to get back from.
Florida is still something of a net importer. Food, construction materials, hard goods, material goes in. What comes out? Oranges? Most companies would make you sit in Jacksonville for a few days until they found a load in Alabama or Georgia worth the deadhead back up. -
I've had a Deadhead from South Florida to Arkansas, over 800 miles. Some companies may let their drivers sit, others will deadhead to where ever there is freight. I've never sat because of no loads.
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