Hurry Up And Wait!
That title for this post is a game that is played by just about all truck drivers. There are many frustrations that can manifest themselves in this job and that is probably the one that kills many a new truck driver's career the quickest. Oh, it's not the fact that they have to hurry up and wait (although many of them would differ with my opinion on this) it is the fact that they came into this business unawares, and unprepared, to deal with the issues like this that hinder their chance at making a decent income.
- I woke this morning in Pearl Mississippi with the first morning
light of the sunrise trying to weasel it's way around my curtains,
and into my cab, in a crowded Flying J truck stop parking lot. I am
on my way back to Delhi, Louisiana from Massachusetts, but I was
dispatched a stop in Cressona, Pennsylvania to pick up a load of
aluminum for the Utility Trailer manufacturing plant in Atkins,
Virginia – this was my back haul load to help pay my expenses on
the way back to Delhi. If you remember my dispatcher was very pleased
with my strategy of taking a 34 hour break there at Cressona because
of the unknown wait time I would be enduring at that plant. Well,
it was a wise decision, but my thirty four hour rest would end at 5
am, and I fully expected to have my load ready and hooked to my
truck by then so that I could roll.
- You know what they say about those “best laid plans”... It just
so happened that they had a brand new security guard on duty that
night who just didn't have a clue yet as to how things worked over
there. At midnight, five hours before my thirty four hour break
would have been completed, I went to see him about getting
permission to go in and get my load secured and tarped. I was told
by dispatch that the people at the plant said my load would be ready
at 11 pm. I waited till midnight because my experience at this
plant is that they are almost always a little later than they tell
you. He tells me that my load is not ready, and I should just keep
checking back in with him every hour, and hopefully they will send
him an e-mail indicating when it is ready. Finally after several
futile attempts, I gave up, went back to sleep and set my alarm for
seven so that I could check with the next guard after the shift
change. I was very suspicious that I was getting bad information,
but there was nothing I could do. You can't get in the gate without
the guard's permission, and I was clearly getting nowhere with this
poor fellow who's looks of consternation, which were designed to
elicit sympathy from me for his poor plight of unpreparedness by his
trainers, were not helping me gain access to my loaded trailer at
all.
- Fast forward to seven am... I get up, make one final trudge through
the bitterly cold weather up here to see the new security guard who
is apologizing profusely to me as she informs me that my load had
been ready all night! Now the plant is bottle necked with truck
drivers who are trying to get their trailers ready to go just like I
am. They have strict safety procedures you must obey here, and one
of those is that you must back your trailer in between these safety
platforms that are designed to catch you if you fall off your
trailer while putting your tarps on the load. Well... there are
only three of those safety bays, and about ten angry (I wasn't
angry) truck drivers jockeying around to try and get in position to
get their trailers backed in ahead of the next guy. Bottom line
is... I was finally ready to go at 10:30 am.
- Fortunately the plant that I'm delivering to in Atkins keeps
receiving freight up until midnight, but you must have an
appointment. So as soon as I can get rolling I calculate how long
it will take me to get there and then I call to see if I can get an
appointment for later that night. The helpful gentleman on the
phone tells me that they are booked up for the night, and I will
have to wait until the following morning to deliver. That will just
have to be okay, even though I was hoping to get unloaded that
night. Before we ended the phone call he asks me if my paper work
shows me which purchase order of theirs was used for this load. As
I'm flipping through about six pages of papers that they gave me, I
come across his purchase order number and repeat it back to him,
which elicits a quickening in his voice wherein he explains that
this is some product that they need right away. “Can you be here
by seven tonight?”, he inquires, but I have to tell him that it
will be more like eight if I really push it. He then says okay, I'm
putting you down for seven o'clock, if you have any trouble when you
arrive with getting unloaded call me at this cell number and I will
make sure they unload you tonight. I replied again, “Sir, I can't
be there at seven,” but he simply said he had to put me in at
seven because that was the only spot the computer would allow him to
schedule me due to the other bookings already in place. I somehow
managed to roll in their gate at seven thirty and was directed by a
fork lift operator where to park, and by 10:30 with all my tarps and
straps folded up and put away I pulled my empty trailer down the
road about thirty miles to a truck stop to stop for a well deserved
nights repose.
- The next day I drove about six hundred miles to my present location
(Pearl Mississippi) where I am once again playing the waiting game.
My load at Delhi is not ready yet, so if I get started from here and
drive over there it will start my fourteen hour clock which cannot
be stopped once I log on duty. But, if I wait patiently here until I
know they have got me ready to go, it will conserve my available
working hours so that I can start moving that load as far as
possible today, or tonight, whichever it turns out to be. Want to
take a guess where my destination is? Well, I'm supposed to arrive
there on Monday, which is going to be a real challenge in itself,
and which is the reason I'm playing this waiting game so that I can
hopefully and legally outsmart these crazy regulatory guidelines
that are tied to us like a ball and chain.
- I'm heading right back up to Connecticut! I'll do my best, but I
told my dispatcher that there is only so much I can do and still be
legal and safe about it. He knows that they are pressing this one
almost to the point of being impossible to accomplish, but according
to him it is also the unfortunate (my word, not his) reason they
have asked me to do it. He gave it a very positive spin as to why I
was honored with this load, but I tried to cool him down as best I
could, because there really is only so much that you can do. I
appreciate their confidence, and I have willingly done everything I
could to gain it, but miracles are not commonplace everyday
happenings in this business, and when they are you are usually
operating in an unsafe manner. I made it clear and firm that I
would do my best, just as I always do, but I was not going to break
the law or my neck just to get this done in an unrealistic time
frame.
- If they can get their end done so that I'm not waiting too long it
just might all work out, but in the mean time I'm playing the
waiting game, and as far as I can I will play it to win, but I'm not
going to cheat. This waiting here this morning did give me a chance
to get a nice hot shower, and the showers here at Pearl have got
enough water pressure to almost make it painful – but it is the
kind of pain that makes you want to say “stop it some more!” It
was very refreshing, and I smell really good while I'm sitting here
on hold.
No comments:
Post a Comment