Moderator: Community Team
Are you positive you were nice about asking, or did you demand the use of THEIR phone like this sounds?Dukasaur wrote: Yeah, that's the bottom line. Regardless of the phone situation in general, when you have a land line, and someone asks you to use it to call a toll-free number, it's pure blatant offense to refuse.

I wasn't exceptionally nice, but I wasn't particularly un-nice, either. Normally, I get top marks for diplomacy. Companies generally love me because I can keep my cool and a smile under fire. This isn't idle braggartry; I know it for a fact because I know dispatchers have specifically sent me into hostile situations where a previous driver pissed someone off, and asked me to use my diplomatic skills to smooth things over.stahrgazer wrote:Are you positive you were nice about asking, or did you demand the use of THEIR phone like this sounds?Dukasaur wrote: Yeah, that's the bottom line. Regardless of the phone situation in general, when you have a land line, and someone asks you to use it to call a toll-free number, it's pure blatant offense to refuse.
I wasn't able to tell the office to tell them that I'm empty and to get my next load. If I had, I could have driven to the next customer during the night and been there when they opened Thursday morning. Instead I had to wait until Thursday morning to call the office and get my next load, so I didn't arrive there until about 11:00 am on Thursday. On the road, when you lose time like that, you never get it back. I just got home now, just before midnight. If I hadn't lost those hours on Thursday morning, I would have been home today by suppertime.Shape wrote:Wait, so what exactly was the consequence of not calling on time? I don't quite understand
LOL.maxfaraday wrote:[quote="Dukasaur"I've now seen plazas, highway rest areas, and even major truck stops without a pay phone. I'm at one right now, the Love's in Richmond, Kentucky. No pay phone, not even one.]

riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.