There should search for the root cause. I say they share responsibility and should both take a hit (not financially) but a service failure. The driver should have done his communication with day time ops and not dumped his problems on nights. IF he did then the daytime guy should take the hit because the driver said he couldn't do it. There should be plenty of communication from the driver to state his case, starting with a non-commit. Then there should be a series of messages back and forth stating why he can't do it, and the DM(FM/dispatcher). If that wasn't done, then it's on the driver.
So I can see this going either way, but if there is a breakdown in communication it goes on both of them.
It's very hard to say because we have no information stating what happened earlier in the day. We don't know delivery appointments, or windows.
Dispatcher tries to force driver to drive tired. *MUST SEE*
Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by K9OTR, Feb 28, 2014.
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I had a driver that called in saying he was sick and wasn't sure he could make the consignee. So I told him, don't worry about it, just do the best you can.
I got reprimanded for saying "do the best you can" because that implied I wanted him to deliver. They played back the call and I told them you can take one line out of a conversation and change the implication of it, but it didn't matter. Verbal warning for pushing a driver. -
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