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@jonny-chicken ... when it comes to e-logs, there are two types of drivers ... those that like them and those that hate them. If you were to research those driver's records you would find that the ones that like e-logs are the ones that run by the law ... no speeding tickets, no log book violations, no safety infractions. E-logs actually make time for drivers that have always run legal. On the other hand, drivers that have endless violations (either actual tickets or in your own audits), speeding tickets, etc, etc are the ones that hate e-logs ... simple reason is that they can't do as they please when they please. They can't lie to you or dispatch anymore. They can't spend that extra couple hours with the waitress at the truck stop and make up for it later on ... later on when they run into the back of that school bus.
@Rob ... The e-log is the great equalizer. Fly-by-Night Trucking Inc can no longer scoop your freight by promising 100 mile an hour delivery service. Every trucking company on the road now has to play by the same rules. Cost efficiency, or expense management, is your ball to manage. I buy tires, you buy tires, jonny-chicken buys tires ... why can't you, me, and jonny buy the same tires from the same guy and get a volume deal ??? Think outside the box ... it's going to be required if you're going to survive.
Kids, don't just look at how this affects you in a negative manner. Look at the affect across the industry. Look for ways you can take advantage of it. Rob, right off the bat you're in the catbird seat where you are located. As an example, you can line haul right out of your yard. Line haul drivers can go to Chicago, and local drivers can load and unload in Toronto. Your line haul guys get to spend every other night at home, and your local guys are home every night.
As for lost business ... Canadian Fruit out of Mississauga refused to load me off the docks last week because we refused to break the law and run in contravention of HoS rules.
I'm sure a number of you have already experienced this in one form or another, and if you haven't, you will soon.
Got this from a Landstar exec ... if a shipper or receiver tries to get a Landstar driver to break the rules, the driver is to not move his truck and to call in to Landstar immediately. Landstar Compliance Office will take the ball from there. They call the local police, the state troopers, and the DOT, and have them all attend the offender's business, whereupon the offender will be schooled in the way of all things HoS ... and then he'll be charged with coercion ... Landstar insists on it.
@Rob ... The e-log is the great equalizer. Fly-by-Night Trucking Inc can no longer scoop your freight by promising 100 mile an hour delivery service. Every trucking company on the road now has to play by the same rules. Cost efficiency, or expense management, is your ball to manage. I buy tires, you buy tires, jonny-chicken buys tires ... why can't you, me, and jonny buy the same tires from the same guy and get a volume deal ??? Think outside the box ... it's going to be required if you're going to survive.
Kids, don't just look at how this affects you in a negative manner. Look at the affect across the industry. Look for ways you can take advantage of it. Rob, right off the bat you're in the catbird seat where you are located. As an example, you can line haul right out of your yard. Line haul drivers can go to Chicago, and local drivers can load and unload in Toronto. Your line haul guys get to spend every other night at home, and your local guys are home every night.
As for lost business ... Canadian Fruit out of Mississauga refused to load me off the docks last week because we refused to break the law and run in contravention of HoS rules.
I'm sure a number of you have already experienced this in one form or another, and if you haven't, you will soon.
Got this from a Landstar exec ... if a shipper or receiver tries to get a Landstar driver to break the rules, the driver is to not move his truck and to call in to Landstar immediately. Landstar Compliance Office will take the ball from there. They call the local police, the state troopers, and the DOT, and have them all attend the offender's business, whereupon the offender will be schooled in the way of all things HoS ... and then he'll be charged with coercion ... Landstar insists on it.