The Shoulder
The Shoulder
70
cool-marmot-418

Bungee straps and prayer aren't a cargo plan — learned that the hard way

So this happened about three weeks ago and I'm still kind of processing it.

I drive regionally for a flatbed outfit and we picked up a load of landscaping stone at a supplier we don't usually work with. When I got there, the forklift operator was rushing — I could tell immediately. Pallets were uneven, shrink wrap was basically decorative, and the weight distribution looked off to me from the jump.

I flagged it to the dock supervisor and he waved me off. Said the load was "fine" and they do it like that "all the time." I had my own ratchet straps plus some extra edge protectors in the cab and I spent an extra 45 minutes re-securing everything before I pulled out. My dispatcher gave me a little grief about the delay.

About 80 miles down the highway, I hit a patchy stretch of road and felt the trailer shift. Not catastrophic — but enough. When I pulled over to check, half the rear pallet had migrated maybe 14 inches to the left. If I hadn't added those extra points of contact before leaving, I genuinely think product would have gone off the side.

No accident, no injuries, thank god. But we had to call it in, wait for a crew, and the shipper ended up eating a partial loss claim over improper loading on their end.

My whole point in posting this: do not let anyone rush you away from the dock before you're satisfied with your load. You are the one behind the wheel. You are the one who gets the call at 2am if something goes wrong on the road.

Has anyone else dealt with shippers who cut corners and then tried to pin it on the driver afterward? Curious how that went for you legally or with your company.

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15 replies

  • 14
    sharp-seal-160

    This hits close to home. I had almost the exact situation two years ago — different commodity, same story of a rushed dock crew and a supervisor acting like I was being dramatic. I didn't take the extra time to re-secure and I ended up with a minor load shift that crossed into the oncoming shoulder. Nobody hurt but I had a police report, a carrier incident on my record, and months of back-and-forth. You did the right thing taking that extra time. Seriously.

  • 16
    tidy-newt-551

    Rule one: the truck doesn't move until YOU are satisfied. Doesn't matter if the dock guy is annoyed, doesn't matter if dispatch is texting you. The moment you sign that BOL and pull out, that load is yours. Period. You clearly already knew this — just glad it didn't end worse.

    • 18
      bright-elk-567

      Just glad you're okay and posting this instead of recovering somewhere. The scenarios where cargo comes off a flatbed on a busy highway are genuinely horrific — I've seen the outcomes in a trauma setting and it's not something I can unsee. You taking that extra 45 minutes probably mattered more than you'll ever fully know.

    • 2
      steady-driver713

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 22
    brave-kestrel-778

    Here's what I'd watch for going forward: if any kind of claim comes out of this — even a cargo claim on the shipper's side — insurance people love to work backward and find something to pin on the driver. Keep every piece of documentation you have. Photos from when you arrived, photos after you re-secured, timestamps if your phone logged them. Don't assume that because your company backed you now that it stays that way once a claims adjuster gets involved.

    • 4
      gentle-driver341

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 12
    clever-heron-931

    Not giving you legal advice here, just sharing what I've seen working adjacent to trucking cases. Carrier liability and shipper liability can get genuinely complicated when a load was improperly staged at origin. The fact that you documented the issue at the dock — did you get anything in writing from the supervisor, or was it all verbal? Even a text to your dispatcher at the time noting your concerns could matter if this ever turns into something more formal. Worth keeping in a folder just in case.

    • 15
      plain-vole-080

      I don't know anything about trucking but reading this made my stomach drop. You were basically alone out there making a judgment call that kept people safe and you got grief for taking your time?? That's so backwards. Really glad it worked out.

    • 7
      level-overpass571

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 10
    brave-fox-471

    Worked cargo claims for years. The shipper's team waving you off and saying they "always do it this way" is actually a really common setup — and when something goes wrong, the first thing the shipper's insurer does is pull the driver's inspection record and look for any prior incidents. What works in your favor here is that you pushed back verbally and took corrective action before leaving. That kind of proactive behavior is documented in your own actions even if nobody wrote it down at the dock. You protected yourself without even knowing it.

  • 13
    calm-crow-733

    Genuine question — when you say the pallet shifted 14 inches, was that measured or an estimate? And was there any damage to the cargo itself or just the position? Asking because if there's a claim involved, "the load shifted" is going to mean different things to different people and the details matter a lot.

    • 2
      tired-traveler568

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

    • 4
      grounded-mile-marker382

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 15
    candid-sparrow-026

    Honestly the fact that you're posting this as a cautionary tale rather than an accident report is the win. And now your dispatcher probably thinks twice before giving you grief about a safety delay. Sometimes the near-miss is the thing that actually changes how a whole operation behaves.

    • 0
      kind-optimist767

      How long did it end up taking in your case?