Yep, hauling steel. Theres a couple places in buffalo that haul steel that will give the best ltls a run for their money.
Everyone is alway afraid of percentage, and its always ppl who run for scumbag companies . Im union though, and if something doesnt add up i can call them on it.
How important is cpm?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by asphaltreptile311, Jul 4, 2018.
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Ahhh yes the Union companies have usually paid better. I'm glad you are with a good one. I live in the midsouth and could never imagine wanting to handle the northern frozen roads on a regular basis. The only ones I've heard that do % in my area are Royal and P&S.
already gone Thanks this. -
Cpm and home time is most important. 100k miles a year at .50cpm there you go, 50k/year home hopefully every night, at least on weekends.
FlaSwampRat Thanks this. -
GhentSaintPeters Thanks this.
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What do you mean by activity/accessorial pay? What are those things?
By activity pay, are there actually OTR companies that pay you every time you drop a trailer or bump a dock? Is that what it means? -
CPM might make sense if you are with a company that has coast to coast runs. Hourly obviously is the best choice for local work. I get a kick out of sharing in the upside if I am working for a company that hauls high tarrif freight, like oil field equipment or military.
I got off the cpm thing over four years ago. Went to a percentage and never looked back. Some days I might only run 400 miles, but get paid over a dollar a mile. Those are days when I haul oversized, overweight, and/or hazmat.FlaSwampRat and Linte_Loco Thank this. -
I've never worked for a company that didn't pay some or all of those activities.
I would not work for a company that didn't have at least a few of those.GhentSaintPeters and FlaSwampRat Thank this. -
What has really been killing me is that it seems 80% of the loads I get are live loads and live unloads. We only get detention pay after the first 3 hours, and wouldn't you know it, it seems the majority of these places get it done in 2-3 hours!FlaSwampRat, Chinatown, Lepton1 and 1 other person Thank this. -
Each company make their own policies concerning activity/accessorial pay. Websites have some of it listed, but sometimes there's more that's not listed, so you have to ask.GhentSaintPeters, Lepton1 and FlaSwampRat Thank this. -
Can make pretty good money selling pallets. $2.50 - $3.00 or more for each one.
Sometimes print neatly, "pallet exchange" on the BOL, then act like you're doing the warehouse a favor by letting them get rid of 25 or 30 pallets. That's $150 for 30 old ragged pallets. There's two weeks of meals paid for. Some places buy those blue CHEP pallets for the same price. They walk around the stack with a paint sprayer, spraying flat black paint and make a good profit reselling them.GhentSaintPeters, Lepton1 and FlaSwampRat Thank this.
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