I hate to point out the obvious but here it goes again. This is why brokers and carriers get involved in the whine-fest.
-The shipper is probably US based and does not know, nor care, what the consignee in Canada does with their paperwork. They do not want to incur costs or time, however small we feel it is, to do anything with it. They believe it is the Canadian who should take care of it. Maybe call the Canadian consignee to see if they can obtain a copy.
-The freight broker does not want to rock the boat and ask the customer to do something that seems petty. They, both the broker and customer, don't understand the problems that it would solve and feel that if the customer or shipper is unwilling, they probably have their reasons for it. There is no value in it for the freight broker to pursue this interest - there is no money in it for them. The same thing goes for accessorial charges, they would much rather take it out of their end rather than ask the customer. That is why accessorial charges are so low compared to the value they are getting ($35/hr detention after waiting for two hours for a truck/trailer/driver...really?)
-The carrier gets stuck on all these issues because s&$t really does flow downhill. The carrier is the one that needs the paperwork to continue. Their driver gets paid by the mile so he needs to keep going so he faxes it. Whatever the issue may be, the carrier will soak it up one way or another because time is not on their side to sit and argue or wait for someone else to do it.
Right now, and for the past number of years, there are more trucks than freight. We stumble and whine when we use companies like TQL for one-offs to fill in the gaps by the imbalance. These issues, and faxing is a small one, will continue to be solved, and paid for, by the carrier because like TQL said; 'there are lots of trucks that will do it'. The only way it will get fixed is for pricing to increase, trucks to decrease and, like
@busterknoxville said, charge for the small stuff and customer will find ways to get the shipper to send it. Then brokers/carriers will find ways to eliminate the wasted time that we all want to charge via accessorial charges but have a hard time being successful with; shipper sending paperwork, importer of record manages their customs brokerage transactions, waiting time at shipper/receiver, poor appointment scheduling, sweeping of the trailers, poor/missing information on confirmations, horrible shipper/receiving hours, paying for lumper......the list goes on and on.
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