Truck Driver Settlement Sheet
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Failure to pay your trucker per diem is significantly more problematic for your trucker than simply not getting paid for a crop. Producers of grain may deduct the amount an employee receives for per diem from the amount they owe their trucker. Producers of other types of crops commonly deduct comparable amounts.
Another complication is that truckers are usually paid bi-weekly. If a trucker is working short week days, he may not be paid at all and, if he is paid, he may not receive the money for the next two weeks. These mis-payments are the norm for truckers who perform on short term trucking contracts.
When a producer pays truckers and farmers knows that the trucker or farmer is not receiving the money, it creates a huge problem. When the producer’s account has a credit balance, truckers and farmers tend to believe truckers and farmers will make good on all their bills.
In many cases truckers and farmers assume producers are paying them because they are probably being paid for the work they are doing. Trucker’s are good at defending their bills so they usually are able to collect about 80 – 95 percent of what is due. This makes them professional contractors, specialising in one particular mode of transport. Truckers are problem solvers when it comes to farming equipment and road conditions, but they are not at all problem solvers when it comes to the short term nature of trucking contracts. d2c66b5586