The Ministry of Transportation said the trucking companies involved are Ryanson Transport and Prime Flatbed Ltd., both based in Alberta.Just make sure it isnt overize, these guys hit an overpass yesterday in BC
It says they were carrying identical loads from the same shipper.The Ministry of Transportation said the trucking companies involved are Ryanson Transport and Prime Flatbed Ltd., both based in Alberta.
The video stated the carriers had the proper permits, so they must've known that it was over height and the shipper/broker must've conveyed this properly. The drivers were either unaware of the height, because the carriers didn't convey to the drivers properly what was required, or the drivers just didn't care or have the experience to measure their height.It says they were carrying identical loads from the same shipper.
At what point does the shipper become some what responsible for the supplier they choose to haul their freight?
Option 3 they could not read the permits and not enough basic understanding of the English ( or French) language to comprehend signage etc. We get at least a driver a week in here showing us their phone and all they can say is pick up.The video stated the carriers had the proper permits, so they must've known that it was over height and the shipper/broker must've conveyed this properly. The drivers were either unaware of the height, because the carriers didn't convey to the drivers properly what was required, or the drivers just didn't care or have the experience to measure their height.
They had everything they needed. Permit states to ramp #3 road and one driver went under it instead. The other driver decided he would go his route instead of the route on his permit and hooked and tore down a communications cable. You cannot fix stupid!!!This happened because there was complacency on all levels. A piece of freight (x2) that required specialized equipment should have had more checks and balances all the way through. The unfortunate part is that the guy behind the wheel was the last opportunity to catch this problem, and it wasn't caught. We now point fingers.
I have said this numerous times to some of my customers. As a carrier we get trucks and trailers loaded, receive paperwork from shippers, drive trucks down the road, cross borders, give paperwork to receivers and receive paperwork back from the receiver. Every customer requires something different and there is very little conformity or standardization in our industry. The industry has an extreme long-term over-supply of service providers which has kept downward pressure on rates and in turn filters down to low pay for the driver and skinny back-office support staff. This causes driver shortages, and the industry is left picking low hanging fruit to fill their trucks. These drivers are the individuals that get your freight picked up and delivered, left to fend for themselves to get loaded at shippers and unloaded at receivers, demanded to get paperwork and provide paperwork, ensure that paperwork is complete and accurate, expect to hand in this paperwork, stay compliant for every jurisdiction they drive through, be responsible for very expensive equipment and precious cargo, manage traffic and still be on time safely for everything. The very least the customer can do is assist by making sure that the driver has everything possible to make that happen.