Ok so here are the specifics of my situation:
I picked up a load yesterday afternoon, delivering at 0900 today. I pick it up and drive till my 14 are up, shut down and start the last 150m about 0430. Drop it at a walmart dc at about 0815.
Now dispatch is trying to get me to go to sleep in the middle of the day so that I can run all night on a load picking up at 2300. I cant just go to sleep like that, so I refused on the grounds that I will be too tired. They get that load pulled off me and the last 3 loads have been similar. Times requiring that I go to sleep now and drive all night.
What do you all think?
Am I being unreasonable?
Discussion in 'USA Truck' started by Sea0fgreen, Apr 10, 2012.
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I guess you have to take the good and the bad, for most people sleeping in the daytime is hard especially if you're not used to it. USA Truck could be testing you also just my 2 cents
Sea0fgreen Thanks this. -
Dispatchers at USA believe they can make drivers sleep just like flipping a light switch at times... I was in your situation and slept as much as i could before the load needed to be picked up. After I did that first night load I was running nights for the rest of the week.
One time when I was running nights it actually helped me get more miles for the week. I went down to Laredo on a Friday night/saturday morning (IF you know Laredo, going on the weekend means your stuck there till Monday afternoon). My dispatcher calls me Friday right after I started driving down to Laredo (was west of Houston), he said if I get down there before 8am central I don't have to deliver the load... just drop it and pickup this other load and head to Colorado. I was stuck driving the west coast at night for another week, but I did make quite a bit while running out there (total out that trip was 8 weeks).Sea0fgreen Thanks this. -
If you have trouble sleeping during the day and staying awake at night please don't get into the reefer business. Some of the grocery warehouses only receive late at night. Sometimes it's just how it is. You are not being unreasonable in wanting to do your driving during the day, but sometimes circumstances dictate otherwise. I suspect the load planners are getting the only available appointment slots, and both you and the company have to adjust your normal routines around these appointments. I would be cautious about refusing loads. Do it enough and you might be cleaning out your truck in some distant terminal with a nice negative writeup on your dak file.
Sea0fgreen and The Challenger Thank this. -
Sea0fgreen Thanks this.
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When I woke up, I open my curtains and all the trucks that were at the dock area were gone... I go inside and everyone there was gone... Luckily they had my paperwork within arms reach of the window, it had a note saying that they were unable to wake the driver. I signed it, left their copy and left. Got my 10+ hours in and was off to the consignee.
It is hard to wake me when I'm sleeping which is why I don't usually rest/sleep when I'm getting loaded/unloadedSea0fgreen Thanks this. -
Age old problem, no clear solution. If you could get sleepy and wreck a truck (and hurt some one), don't do night driving. If you can take the punishment and your body likes night driving, go for it.
Just don't drive sleepy, it's not worth the risk.Sea0fgreen Thanks this. -
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Not gonna do anymore loads like that I think. -
I unloaded at the Publix warehouse in Lakeland Florida last week. I got in the sleeper for what I thought was just a brief nap. I remember the shaking the forklift made. I finally heard a tap on my window, the supervisor of the lumpers handed me a receipt and said I could get my paperwork. I asked him with surprise (you got me unloaded that quick?) He laughed and said it was over 2 hours. I was in shock as I got my paperwork.
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