The System that Keeps on Giving

The End of Over/Under Allowed

I never thought I'd see the day where UPS has thrown the idea of Over/Under Allowed performance in the trash, but it's happening with Telematics. Telematics is becoming a story of unintended consequences. With the company's disdain for it's employees, and their attitude that the drivers are all ripping off the company for time, they have come up with what they thought was a foolproof system to keeping everyone in line, and doing exactly what they are supposed to be doing. What has really happened is they have taken a driver's You Drivers are Ripping Us Offability to hurry up away. The concept really never came to mind until I received a message the other day from my dispatch supervisor telling me he had dispatched me near an 8 hour day, and that I should, "be in somewhere near 8 hours". It suddenly dawned on me that with Telematics it would take as long as it took, and that I had no control over time, space, and safety. I began to think about what Telematics doesn't see. It doesn't see the bunch of kids riding their bikes in a neighborhood. It doesn't see the semi blocking the dock you need to get into to make a bulk stop. It doesn't see the shiny road from an afternoon shower. All it can see is a bunch of numbers, and where you are at any given time. The new response from the driver to management will become
             "That's how long it took!"
There will be no other answer. They will already have any information regarding the delivery. They will know how long you were there, (of course they won't know why), they will know how fast you were driving, where you were before, where you went after, and how much time elapsed, but they will not know why. They will not know about the customer that is pissed about a mis-delivery, or a missing package. They will not know about the receiving clerk that has disappeared into the bathroom with a comic book while you need a signature for a hundred boxes. They will not know about the driveway you had to walk because the customer always parks in the turnaround. They will not know about the drunk going twenty in a fifty mile an hour zone or the lady on the cell phone blocking the right turn lane talking to her mother about her cheating husband. The fact is all of these things and so many others go on in a driver's day to day life. Telematics cannot see any of these things. Of course in the "Olden' Days" a driver could, and usually would, hurry up to make up the time these, and many more issues cost them. No longer! Hurrying up would mean driving faster, (not allowed). Hurrying up would mean running up the sidewalk instead of walking, (not allowed). Hurrying up would mean leaving the bulkhead door open for a few stops, (cardinal sin). Nowadays the driver can never look back. If they lose time, it's lost forever. Management will see, and discipline, for any infractions that show up on Telematics. There will be no knowledge of why, just that it happened. Therefore there will be only one answer from any driver for anything!
                  "That's how long it took!"     

 

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Comments

  • 5/8/2009 8:30 AM Franklin Banker wrote:
    Amazing to realize that drivers are not able any longer to do the old "Kick it high gear and Bust em off" mode. Gone forever with telematics.

    Just reading this makes me think of the last time I asked for help and received the message "no one available, will there be any missed?". I replied "yes there will be missed", and about 2 hours later a driver showed up to help me with the split that was all commercial office, closing at 5:00.

    Now there is no way for a driver to make up time. They have the attitude of a true professional. They simply say "that's how long it took". They are no longer allowed to run, speed, leave bulkhead door open, bust em off, or any of that stuff.

    I am wondering why they will even need the IE people any longer? Why will there be any need for numbers evaluation in the morning to dispatch centers? Now the computer can do that job!

    Telematics as you have noted, could have unintended consequences for management. Why do they even need 2 or 3 supervisors in each center? Just a few more drivers would do the trick, and the manager can simply be standing by to do accident investigations.

    The "Robot" is telematics. The computer is the supervisor and the only need for the afternoons will be one OMS to make dispatch calls and field messages. As I have said before, one cool aspect of this new total control system is the eventuality of hiring more drivers.

    Could Telematics really be the new path to more Teamster Members? Seems it will have to go that way at some point. The unintended consequence will be less management, and more workers.
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