Terminology
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Bill
of Lading |
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The receipt for your
goods and the contract for their transportation.
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Carrier
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The mover transporting
your household goods. |
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Cash
on Delivery (COD) |
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This means payment
is required at the time of delivery at the destination
residence (or warehouse). |
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Certified
Scale |
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Any scale designed
for weighing motor vehicles, including trailers
or semitrailers not attached to a tractor, and
certified by an authorized scale inspection and
licensing authority. A certified scale may also
be a platform or warehouse type scale that is
properly inspected and certified. |
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Estimate,
Binding |
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This is a written
agreement made in advance with your mover. It
guarantees the total cost of the move based upon
the quantities and services shown on the estimate.
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Estimate,
Non-Binding |
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This is what your
mover believes the cost will be, based upon the
estimated weight of the shipment and the accessorial
services requested. A non-binding estimate is
not binding on the mover. The final charges will
be based upon the actual weight of your shipment,
the services provided, and the tariff provisions
in effect. |
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Expedited
Service |
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This is an agreement
with the mover to perform transportation by a
set date in exchange for charges based upon a
higher minimum weight. |
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Guaranteed
Pickup and Delivery Service |
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An additional level
of service featuring guaranteed dates of service.
Your mover will provide reimbursement to you for
delays. This premium service is often subject
to minimum weight requirements. |
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High-Value
Article |
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These are items included
in a shipment valued at more than $100 per pound
($220 per kilogram). |
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Household
Goods |
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As used in connection
with transportation, means the personal effects
or property used, or to be used, in a dwelling,
when part of the equipment or supplies of the
dwelling. Transporting of household goods must
be arranged for and paid by you or another individual
on your behalf. This may include items moving
from a factory or store when you purchase them
to use in your dwelling. You must request that
these items be transported, and you (or another
individual on your behalf) must pay the transportation
charges to the mover. |
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Household
Goods Motor Carrier |
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means a motor carrier
that, in the ordinary course of its business of
providing transportation of household goods, offers
some or all of the following additional services:
(1) Binding and non-binding estimates, (2) Inventory,
(3) Protective packing and unpacking of individual
items at personal residences, and (4) Loading
and unloading at personal residences. The term
does not include a motor carrier when the motor
carrier provides transportation of household goods
in containers or trailers that are entirely loaded
and unloaded by an individual (other than an employee
or agent of the motor carrier).
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Individual
Shipper |
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Any person who:
1. is the shipper, consignor, or consignee of
a household goods shipment;
2. is identified as the shipper, consignor, or
consignee on the face of the bill of lading;
3. owns the goods being transported; and
pays his or her own tariff transportation charges.
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Impracticable
Operations |
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Generally refer to
services required when operating conditions make
it physically impossible for the carrier to perform
pickup or delivery with its normally assigned
road-haul equipment; requires the use of smaller
equipment and/or additional labor to complete
pickup or delivery of a shipment. A mover may
require payment of additional charges for impracticable
operations, even if you do not request these services.
The specific services considered to be impracticable
operations by your mover are defined in your mover's
tariff. |
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Inventory |
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The detailed descriptive
list of your household goods showing the number
and condition of each item. |
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Line-Haul
Charges |
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The charges for the
vehicle transportation portion of your move. These
charges, if separately stated, apply in addition
to the accessorial service charges. |
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May |
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An option. You or
your mover may do something, but it is not a requirement.
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Mover |
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A motor carrier engaged
in the transportation of household goods and its
household goods agents. |
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Must |
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A legal obligation.
You or your mover must do something. |
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Order
for Service |
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The document authorizing
the mover to transport your household goods. |
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Order
(Bill of Lading) Number |
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The number used to
identify and track your shipment. |
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Pickup
and Delivery Charges |
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Separate transportation
charges applicable for transporting your shipment
between the storage-in-transit warehouse and your
residence. |
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Reasonable
Dispatch |
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The performance of
transportation on the dates, or during the period
of time, agreed upon by you and your mover and
shown on the Order for Service/Bill of Lading.
For example, if your mover deliberately withholds
any shipment from delivery after you offer to
pay the binding estimate, or 110 percent of a
non-binding estimate, plus any charges for additional
services you requested, or permissible charges
for impracticable operations that were not included
in the estimate, your mover has not transported
the goods with reasonable dispatch. The term ''reasonable
dispatch'' excludes transportation provided under
your mover's tariff provisions requiring guaranteed
service dates. Your mover will have the defense
of force majeure, i.e. , the contract cannot be
performed owing to causes that are outside the
control of the parties and that could not be avoided
by exercise of due care. |
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| Chicago moving company
Local Chicagoland movers providing commercial and residential moving services. |
Shuttle
Service |
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The use of a smaller
vehicle to provide service to residences not accessible
to the mover's normal line-haul vehicles. |
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Storage-In-Transit
(SIT) |
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The temporary warehouse
storage of your shipment, pending further transportation,
with or without notification to you. If you (or
someone representing you) cannot accept delivery
on the agreed-upon date or within the agreed upon
time period (for example, because your home is
not quite ready to occupy), your mover may place
your shipment into SIT without notifying you.
In those circumstances, you will be responsible
for the added charges for SIT service, as well
as the warehouse handling and final delivery charges.
However, your mover also may place your shipment
into SIT if your mover was able to make delivery
before the agreed-upon date (or before the first
day of the agreed-upon delivery period), but you
did not concur with early delivery. In those circumstances,
your mover must notify you immediately of the
SIT, and your mover is fully responsible for redelivery
charges, handling charges, and storage charges.
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Surface
Transportaion Board |
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An agency within
the U.S. Department of Transportation that regulates
household goods carrier tariffs, among other responsibilities.
The Surface Transportation Board's address is
1925 K Street, NW, Washington, DC 20423-0001,
Telephone 202-565-1674. |
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Tariff |
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An issuance (in whole
or in part) containing rates, rules, regulations,
classifications, or other provisions. The Surface
Transportation Board requires that a tariff contain
three specific items. First, an accurate description
of the services the mover offers to the public.
Second, the specific applicable rates (or the
basis for calculating the specific applicable
rates) and service terms for services offered
to the public. Third, the mover's tariff must
be arranged in a way that allows you to determine
the exact rate(s) and service terms applicable
to your shipment. |
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Valuation |
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The degree of worth
of the shipment. The valuation charge compensates
the mover for assuming a greater degree of liability
than is provided for in its base transportation
charges. |
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Warehouse
Handling |
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A charge may be applicable
each time SIT service is provided. Charges for
these services may be in addition to the line-haul
charges. This charge compensates the mover for
the physical placement and removal of items within
the warehouse. |
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Warehouse
Handling - We, Us, and Our |
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Redline Moving, Inc |
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You
and Your |
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You are an individual
shipper of household goods. You are a consignor
or consignee of a household goods shipment and
your mover identifies you as such in the bill
of lading contract. You own the goods being transported
and pay the transportation charges to the mover.
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