@drdoggie00 wrote:
If you make agreements with schedulers via email about bonuses, date changes, rotation breaks, etc., keep those emails until after you're paid for the shop. CYA.
Sorry to sound cynical, but I'm dealing with one of those situations right now.
Welcome aboard! What else is in your portfolio of 1099 work?
@hamptonroadsva wrote:
@drdoggie00 wrote:
If you make agreements with schedulers via email about bonuses, date changes, rotation breaks, etc., keep those emails until after you're paid for the shop. CYA.
Sorry to sound cynical, but I'm dealing with one of those situations right now.
Welcome aboard! What else is in your portfolio of 1099 work?
If you don't mind me chiming in about 1099 work, I'll share my other IC work, and that's being a medical/tech courier. Most courier jobs are IC work, and I have been doing this on and off for 20+ years. The average pay is 70 cents to $1 per loaded mile, and since I get deliveries to rural areas, I'm able to pick up some nicely bonused shops in hard-to-cover areas. Best thing about it, there are no food deliveries and you don't have to pick up strangers like you do as an Uber driver. I've had a few other 1099 gigs, but this is the most profitable.
@drdoggie00 wrote:
Of course not, Hamp. -smiles- That's interesting; what types of medical things do you deliver? Or are you not privy to that information?
I've never been a food or person courier/driver, but I don't think I'd like it too much. Delivering documents or specimens would probably be much more my speed.