Any recourse for a carrier for Truck Not Used charge when absolutely not at fault? Hounding customers for a payment? Truck had to deadhead considerable distance too. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Not sure I agree with these comments all together. Let's say you need a truck in Orlando and I agree to send one down from Georgia somewhere. Truck gets there and the load cancels , so we get $50 - $250 ???? That's not right.I believe this topic has come up for discussion before. If my memory serves me, I think the consensus was $50-$250 for “truck ordered, not used”. The distance a truck had to travel to position themselves for the load doesn’t have any effect on the amount of money paid for the cancellation. The decision to accept the load and deadhead to pick it up lies with the carrier. Of course, depending on your relationship with whomever you got the load from, there maybe some room for negotiation to lessen your loss. Whether your truck was around the corner, across town, or on the other side of the state, the decision to go and get the load, was yours.
I believe that if you are in Georgia and sending a truck to Orlando, you should negotiate this ahead of time. And verify all the details including calling the shipper before you move the truck. If the broker has a problem with you calling the shipper yourself, you should not accept the load. Don't dead head a truck for a broker you do not have a good working relationship with, either!![]()
Not sure I agree with these comments all together. Let's say you need a truck in Orlando and I agree to send one down from Georgia somewhere. Truck gets there and the load cancels , so we get $50 - $250 ???? That's not right.
So, here's the difference between what load brokers do and what good carriers do ...
Yesterday I booked a truck with Jackhole to pick up a load for me. I asked him to move a truck from Southern Georgia to Northern Georgia to load, then bring the load into the GTA. I understood, without him telling me, that there would be a cost to acquiring said truck, and that he would also stop looking for freight since he had a bird-in-the-hand so to speak. The rate I proffered covered his requirements.
This morning, after all was committed, the load cancelled.
Had I needed to, I would have gladly paid him the full rate as agreed to in the first place. I asked him to do a job for me. It was not his fault the load cancelled. Neither was it mine. But, I asked him to do the job, so I owed him what was proffered, regardless of what my customer was doing for me.
Fortunately for me, Jackhole also understood my situation, and took that into account, and did not ask for the full rate. I still paid him his initial costs, plus his costs to move his truck to where he would have a load, which was 600 miles away, which all amounted to considerably more than a $50 to $250 "load broker" TONU. I do this for all the carriers that do work for me.
There are a number of reasons that I choose this way of conducting myself and my business, but the most important is that I respect, and value, the relationships that I build with partner carriers, and I am confident that these carriers (in this case I am sure) should the roles be reversed, would treat me with the same respect. I also know that when I have to call them again, they will happily take my loads.
For sure this does not happen to me often, and I am sure there are load brokers out there that are saying they simply can't afford those costs for as often as it happens, or that their customers will not pay for such cancellations, and so on, and so forth.
However, costs are costs, and they need to be compensated for. Why should a carrier be expected to absorb the costs of an inept broker, or a careless shipper? The bottom line is they shouldn't.
As a carrier, you should have a policy for such events and they should be clearly communicated to the brokers you deal with. If not, you have no room to complain.
As a broker, if you're not willing to compensate your carriers fairly in such eventualities, then you will be forever stuck with the bottom feeder carriers if even they will work for you. Let's face it, without carrier brokers simply become an unemployment statistic.
Maybe the only real answers are that inept brokers should simply die on the vine, and brokers that serve careless shippers should just find a better class of customer.
So, in other words in this example, be thankful the carrier was only 500 miles away, as opposed to 1000 miles away, and write the cheque? Hopefully the now pissed off carrier doesn’t decide to inflate his empty mile cost to some unreasonable amount. People sometimes do funny things when life throws them a curve ball.