I applaud FreightBroker for directly or indirectly educating his/her customers, shippers, consignees, etc. for being as organized as possible and ensuring that trucks are rolling rather than parked at their facility. Prevention makes much more sense than putting out small fires, it also causes less gray hair.
That being said, what other members are saying below is that it's a matter of accountability, contractor/worker agreements and flow of funds. The shipper/receiver has no real accountability to the carrier directly (beyond the legalities of the BOL). Does it make sense for a shipper (assuming they are the customer) to cut 2 cheques for a shipment (one for $25 for a half hour of waiting time)? I say no. There are independent agreements in place here (I've harped on this enough in other threads), one between shipper and receiver (include 3rd party importer here if you wish), one between the importer (typically) and the 3PL and a final one between the carrier and 3PL. All of them contain the basic and standard provisions, all too often some of the 'little details' (like waiting time) are left out. I see regularly agreements are designed to encompass 99% of the business between parties (for businesses that intend long, prosperous and mutually beneficial partnerships) and it is expected that when the other 1% happens that parties will act in an ethical manner to resolve the issues that come up. Everyone is entitled to their opinion absolutely, mine is that a 3PL is accountable to all parties for the others actions. We harvest and build strong relationships with the customer and carrier alike, the customer has a relationship with the shipper and consignee but as the carrier does not have the opportunity to do reference and credit checks on the shipper and receiver, they rely on the broker to educate, and collect additional charges. Likewise, severe service failures (not mechanical, act of God, etc) are the 3PL's responsibility as they chose the carrier. We are accountable for the carriers performance to our customers. I could be wrong (it happens sometimes), I'm still a rookie by most standards in the industry at approaching 11 years. I still learn something new every day.
Anyway, thankfully we're talking about the less than 1% here, right?
Keep well,
Mike