Sol Rosenburg
Active Member
That's just a rookie mistake. He must not have known those things are always recording.
Nah, I say he DID probably know, and at that point in his state of serious pisstoffness just plain DGAF...That's just a rookie mistake. He must not have known those things are always recording.
LOFL. Where's the helper for the over 70#? Probably should have just left it on the truck. Good stuff. At least he didn't set it on fire and leave it at the door. That's SOP for Ground.
A lot of that going 'round lately.And when you makeup you just look petty and stupid.
That's the entire point of the matter. The focus should not be the outburst but rather what he was confronted with. The reason Wayfair uses the way to ship their junk is because XG is OFFERING it to Wayfair.The focus of the gripe should have been why Wayfair wants to ship such items through X and why X peddles that freight on one man vehicles.
Exactly.Hey Fred, I hope you watched the video. Perfect example of “you get what you pay for.”
Or in this case, “You get what you DON’T pay for.”
Have Dano come on here and try to sugarcoat the situation.
Exactly.
The right truck. The right manpower deployment. The right material handing equipment = One trip. One offload ......Over and done with.
This is really bad for us UPS drivers. We don’t need Wayfair diverting more of that junk to us because of that guy. LOL
We’re already getting call tags for FedEx Ground delivered furniture. Had one today.Yep and the next day you get a call tag to pickup the stupid thing.
Isn’t that the contractors responsibility?Exactly.
The right truck. The right manpower deployment. The right material handing equipment = One trip. One offload ......Over and done with.
You got it. It is their responsibility but the rates that XG pays them is based one guy in one truck delivering x amount of stops per hour, traveling x amount of miles , payed x amount per hour, driving a truck the costs x amount per hour to operate. . What they're paid is measured right out to the penny but then again they're "independent contractors".Isn’t that the contractors responsibility?
But, didn’t the contractors sign a contract to deliver and pick up that freight?You got it. It is their responsibility but the rates that XG pays them is based one guy in one truck delivering x amount of stops per hour, traveling x amount of miles , payed x amount per hour, driving a truck the costs x amount per hour to operate. . What they're paid is measured right out to the penny but then again they're "independent contractors".
Express policy recently changed to anything over 50 lbs must get help. And I comply to the chagrin of many co-workers.I suppose FedEx don't have the "get help with over 70's" clause in their contract------------------never mind.
Gotcha, then the center can fire anybody asking for help.Express policy recently changed to anything over 50 lbs must get help. And I comply to the chagrin of many co-workers.
Yes, but one of the main gripes from contractor employed drivers is no help moving shipments with the same weight and dimensions that other carriers provide additional manpower to move. Most of the time it falls on deaf ears. It's one among many reasons why contractor turnover is high. I have also been informed by a number of UPS drivers that the kind of stuff you saw the guy in the video trying to move is business they don't like to get too involved with due to their labor contract that requires sending out help with moving that kind of stuff off the trucks.But, didn’t the contractors sign a contract to deliver and pick up that freight?
And the sooner the program fails, the sooner Express returns to full trucks.Yes, but one of the main gripes from contractor employed drivers is no help moving shipments with the same weight and dimensions that other carriers provide additional manpower to move. Most of the time it falls on deaf ears. It's one among many reasons why contractor turnover is high. I have also been informed by a number of UPS drivers that the kind of stuff you saw the guy in the video trying to move is business they don't like to get too involved with due to their labor contract that requires sending out help with moving that kind of stuff off the trucks.