Im a pm swing but I come in(by choice) around 8am 3-5days a week to help on AMs
So they gave me an absurd amount of deliveries (~60, they usually just give me p1s, i take a break then I come back and grab missorts if I need to b4 my route but whatever) and we left about an hour and a half late(it was about 930), and I had to be back at 1230 to get the deliveries the usual guy does(like 30)for a route I dont know...and yeah I didnt take any break because I got done around 1 maybe later and then was running late on everything because I didnt leave the building till about 2..and I got back at about 845pm, offloaded my truck and went on break shortly after to avoid hours violation which would be at 10
I told her this and shes like I dont care!
I couldnt even tell her that night because well, shes a "mid day manager" so she leaves at 4 and my old one runs pretty much everything
I could have taken my hour break,been back an hour later and thened up everything because the sort ends before 9 but apparently I didnt make the right call here
10 OLCC? Are you doing anything right?I have had "managers" that manage by OLCC, write us up every chance they can For stupid stuff. After one or two in a short period of time I just tell them, every OLCC you write me, I drop one SFA question from Strongly Agree to agree, after 10 OLCC's we start over and go from Agree so Sometimes agree/Sometimes disagree and so on. Every Warning Letter, every question goes right to Strongly Disagree! A few couriers started doing that too so it came up during the next SFA meeting and we reminded them about all of the OLCC's........That most allways puts the "managers" in check and they mellow out.
Im a pm swing but I come in(by choice) around 8am 3-5days a week to help on AMs
So they gave me an absurd amount of deliveries (~60, they usually just give me p1s, i take a break then I come back and grab missorts if I need to b4 my route but whatever) and we left about an hour and a half late(it was about 930), and I had to be back at 1230 to get the deliveries the usual guy does(like 30)for a route I dont know...and yeah I didnt take any break because I got done around 1 maybe later and then was running late on everything because I didnt leave the building till about 2..and I got back at about 845pm, offloaded my truck and went on break shortly after to avoid hours violation which would be at 10
I told her this and shes like I dont care!
I couldnt even tell her that night because well, shes a "mid day manager" so she leaves at 4 and my old one runs pretty much everything
I could have taken my hour break,been back an hour later and thened up everything because the sort ends before 9 but apparently I didnt make the right call here
Have you ever dealt with dispatch? That message would get you nowhere with most of them. Kind of like telling dispatch you need P1 help. If your manager won't solve the problem, dispatch sure isn't. Are you sure you ever worked at Express? Some of your opinions are so far off it seems like you MIGHT have worked in the Hub. There is no way you have station experience.That's why you send a message to dispatch earlier telling them that you left the building late, are heavy on deliveries, and need to take a proper break to avoid a violation and to please advise. It's up to dispatch and/or your manager to figure out how it should be handled.
I always leave those kind of decisions to management. That’s why they get paid the big bucks. Lol.That's why you send a message to dispatch earlier telling them that you left the building late, are heavy on deliveries, and need to take a proper break to avoid a violation and to please advise. It's up to dispatch and/or your manager to figure out how it should be handled.
OF, you know better than that. You send the message, AKA 'covering your butt' and if you don't get help....oh well, you told them.Have you ever dealt with dispatch? That message would get you nowhere with most of them. Kind of like telling dispatch you need P1 help. If your manager won't solve the problem, dispatch sure isn't. Are you sure you ever worked at Express? Some of your opinions are so far off it seems like you MIGHT have worked in the Hub. There is no way you have station experience.
Have you ever dealt with dispatch? That message would get you nowhere with most of them. Kind of like telling dispatch you need P1 help. If your manager won't solve the problem, dispatch sure isn't. Are you sure you ever worked at Express? Some of your opinions are so far off it seems like you MIGHT have worked in the Hub. There is no way you have station experience.
1st thing our dispatcher ask is did we tell a manager. If you notified a manager of your situation and they didn't act, our dispatcher are not gonna step on the managers toes. If the original poster knew he would either have a break violation or service failures, he should have taken his break and let the manager eat the lates. Once he told a manager it was gonna be an problem, he has covered his butt. I have NEVER gotten an OLCC for having lates. Having a break violation is a good way to receive one.It's the courier's obligation to notify dispatch of the circumstances and the obligation of dispatch/management to come up with a way to handle them. If they don't, he's done his part and he's going to play it by ear.
The fact that you found dispatch unresponsive probably has more to do with you than with them.
I already covered my butt. I told my manager and he decided to do nothing. The lates are on him. If I were to send dispatch a msg, I would include that I told my manager of the problem. I would not expect dispatch to over ride the managers decision. Most managers do not like hourly employees going against their decisions. Dispatchers know that.OF, you know better than that. You send the message, AKA 'covering your butt' and if you don't get help....oh well, you told them.
I would keep delivering and take my break after telling dispatch I'll be late getting to my PM and need help with the pickups. If you left late with to many deliveries to make the PM and didn't say anything while still in the station, who's fault is that?
Correct me if I don’t understand a dispatcher’s job, but aren’t they there to move resources around during the day to solve problems?I already covered my butt. I told my manager and he decided to do nothing. The lates are on him. If I were to send dispatch a msg, I would include that I told my manager of the problem. I would not expect dispatch to over ride the managers decision. Most managers do not like hourly employees going against their decisions. Dispatchers know that.
If your manager instructed you to do a job despite you telling them you would either have a break violation or service failures, do you expect a dispatcher to go against a managers instruction? I have had dispatchers tell me I had to cover an open p/u route. Once I called my manager and we discussed it, my manager told me I did not have to cover the route. Do you actually think a dispatcher is gonna instruct me to cover that route despite what the manager said?Correct me if I don’t understand a dispatcher’s job, but aren’t they there to move resources around during the day to solve problems?
You are correct, however, in the current environment at FedEx dispatchers are more than happy to let managers solve the problems, just as managers are more than happy to let dispatchers solve the problems.Correct me if I don’t understand a dispatcher’s job, but aren’t they there to move resources around during the day to solve problems?
That's where all I say is alright and leave. When I come back and am questioned about lates, I just say I told you I would need help.in a perfect world, yes. However, management will come down on dispatch for making 'incorrect' decisions about sending resources. By 'incorrect' I mean kills profit and hurts on road to save service.
I've had instances where I've been completely boned due to bad luck with trains and incompetent management not grasping the concept that 50 stops one day could be cake and the other day could be hell depending on where they fall on the map. "No help available" is a phrase I've heard wayy to often from dispatch. Oh, and bring this up with this manager during the sort "Oh, it's only 50 stops, you will be fine, I'm not giving you any help."
PSP, my ass.
In my experience, managers think once you're out the door, you're not their problem.You are correct, however, in the current environment at FedEx dispatchers are more than happy to let managers solve the problems, just as managers are more than happy to let dispatchers solve the problems.
They still have to answer to their boss about service, SPH and HOS violations.That's where all I say is alright and leave. When I come back and am questioned about lates, I just say I told you I would need help.
In my experience, managers think once you're out the door, you're not their problem.
Yep, it’s not about the customers anymore.A manger once told me that he would rather me roll freight than not get at least a 20 minute break in.
This is Fedex