📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
On Wednesday, June 24, 2026, the domestic spot market shows robust mid-week activity with total available loads climbing to 165,349, representing a 1.4% increase compared to yesterday's volume of 163,100. The market average rate has firmed to $3.05/mile, supported by a rigid cost floor established by the verified AAA national diesel average of $4.98/gallon. Peak summer produce harvests in the Southeast and West Coast are driving intense temperature-controlled demand, with reefer paid rates averaging $3.41/mile. Meanwhile, severe weather—including flash flood warnings in the South (Arkansas, Louisiana) and river flooding in the Midwest—is disrupting key transit corridors like I-10, I-30, and I-74, tightening regional capacity and creating high-margin arbitrage opportunities for proactive brokers.
Insight
Today's disruption is most acute on first and second shift freight
Heavy rain over southwest Arkansas and northern Louisiana is concentrated through midday and into the afternoon, making the sharpest service risk today on freight touching Texarkana, Shreveport, and Jackson via I-30 and I-20. Conditions turn hotter and generally drier behind it, so the bigger issue by Thursday is not widespread closure risk but a short-lived capacity vacuum from missed appointments, late arrivals, and trucks repositioning out of flood-affected pockets.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Flash Flooding in the South (Southwest Arkansas and Northern Louisiana (AR, LA)): Heavy rain and flash flooding may disrupt transit along the I-30 corridor, delaying shipments and tightening local capacity.
- River Flooding in the South (Gulf Coast and Southeast States (MS, LA, AL, FL, GA)): Minor to moderate river flooding along the Pearl River and other waterways is impacting local routes and could delay freight along the I-10 and I-20 corridors.
- River Flooding in the Midwest (Midwest River Valleys (IL, IN, MO, KS)): Ongoing flooding along the Illinois River and other tributaries is trapping open-deck capacity and forcing detours on major corridors like I-74, I-80, and I-39.
- Extreme Heat in the Southwest (Imperial Valley and Southwest Desert (CA, AZ)): Dangerously hot conditions with temperatures up to 114°F pose risks to driver safety and equipment, potentially delaying loading/unloading operations and increasing reefer fuel consumption.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Central Illinois remains an open-deck trouble spot into Friday
Central Illinois gets another round of storms late today, followed by heavier rain on Friday, which increases the odds that river-related detours around the Illinois River corridor linger longer than a one-day event. For flatbed and heavy-haul freight moving across I-74, I-80, or adjacent secondary routes, transit buffers and per mit timing need to be priced through the end of the workweek rather than only for today's dispatches.
- Eastbound reloads out of Missouri and Kansas should tighten if trucks lose a half day in Illinois.
- Oversize moves need alternate routing identified before booking; same-day changes are more likely than formal closures.
Weather Insight
Desert heat will push California produce toward off-peak loading windows
Extreme heat across the Imperial Valley and desert Southwest is likely to shift the best-per forming produce pickups into late-night and early-morning windows as docks and drivers avoid the worst afternoon temperatures. That matters for Southeast-bound reefer freight: higher reefer fuel burn and slower daytime turns can turn a cheap posted California load into a materially higher paid rate once pickup timing slips.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel prices remain elevated at $4.98/gallon, maintaining high operational pressure on owner-operators and small fleets, which limits their willingness to negotiate on linehaul rates.
- Carrier Financial Health: High fuel costs and regulatory compliance pressures are squeezing margins for smaller carriers, accelerating market consolidation and pushing more capacity toward larger, well-capitalized fleets.
- Economic Indicators: Peak summer retail inventory replenishment and agricultural harvests are driving strong spot market demand, offsetting broader macroeconomic headwinds.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Spot Rates Driven by Regional Volume Squeezes Rather Than Simple Fuel Costs 🔗:
While high diesel prices ($4.98/gal) establish a rigid cost floor, linehaul pricing is ultimately dictated by regional volume imbalances and seasonal demand. Brokers should focus on high-volume corridors where capacity is tightest to secure better margins, rather than assuming rates will drop with minor fuel price decreases.
-
Mobile Load Board Updates Enhance Carrier Sourcing and Document Flow 🔗:
The release of Trucker Path 4.2.4, featuring instant document scanning and in-app load confirmations, streamlines the booking-to-billing cycle. Brokers can leverage these mobile-first features to accelerate carrier onboarding and reduce administrative friction, especially when securing spot capacity in tight markets.
-
On-Site Compliance Testing Highlights Growing Regulatory Focus on Fleet Safety 🔗:
While focused on waste fleets, the emphasis on early-morning, on-site DOT drug testing underscores the broader regulatory scrutiny on CDL drivers. Brokers must maintain rigorous carrier vetting protocols to ensure compliance and mitigate negligent hiring risks, especially as capacity tightens during peak season.
News Insight
Faster mobile onboarding is now a margin tool in tight spot pockets
When reefer and open-deck rates are moving intraday, the broker who can validate documents and confirm a load from the driver's phone often wins capacity before the market reprices. The payoff is highest on short-notice Southeast produce and weather-disrupted freight, but only when speed is paired with disciplined carrier vetting so admin efficiency does not become a claims or compliance problem.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast remains the most lucrative region for freight brokers today, driven by the convergence of peak summer produce harvests (peaches, watermelons, blueberries) and severe regional flooding. This combination has severely constrained reefer and flatbed capacity, driving spot rates up and creating significant arbitrage opportunities. Savannah port import volumes also remain strong, adding to the outbound freight pressure.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL: This lane is experiencing intense seasonal pressure as Florida's inbound demand for consumer goods and fresh produce remains high. Reefer capacity is exceptionally tight in Atlanta as carriers prioritize high-paying outbound agricultural loads from South Georgia and South Carolina. Dry van capacity is more balanced but rates are firming due to high fuel costs.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: Savannah's port activity is driving massive outbound container and flatbed volume. Capacity is tight along the I-95 and I-77 corridors, exacerbated by regional flooding that has forced minor detours. Flatbed paid rates are averaging $3.63/mile nationally, and this lane is seeing similar upward pressure.
Regional Insight
Atlanta–Orlando trucks are being bought on the next load, not just this one
Southbound pricing is being supported by carriers positioning for the higher-yield produce reload out of Florida and South Georgia, which means late-day Atlanta tenders can reprice quickly once a truck commits to a two-load sequence. The cleanest booking window is Thursday before Friday thunderstorms in Georgia interfere with loading and push more weekend spillover into reefer scheduling.
- Present round-trip economics up front; quoting the southbound leg alone leaves room for afternoon rate creep.
- Morning pickup appointments will source easier than afternoon tenders as drivers protect their next-day produce slot.
Regional Insight
Savannah short-haul capacity will favor fast-turn freight
With diesel near $5 and port volume still active, local trucks around Savannah are prioritizing loads that can clear paperwork quickly and still leave room for a second turn. On Savannah-to-Charlotte freight, appointment reliability and gate-ready documentation are now as important as linehaul rate; container moves that miss the early loading window are more likely to face detention objections and a late-day premium.
🚛 Reefer Spotlight: Peak Produce Collides with High Fuel Costs
The temperature-controlled sector is currently the most volatile and lucrative segment of the domestic freight market. Today's load board data shows reefer available loads climbing to 8,467, a 4.3% increase from yesterday. More importantly, the spread between posted and paid rates has widened significantly, with average posted rates at $3.16/mile and average paid rates at $3.41/mile—representing a substantial $0.25/mile carrier premium. This premium is driven by the peak summer produce season, with high-value, time-sensitive commodities like blueberries, peaches, and watermelons moving out of the Southeast and West Coast.
Carriers are leveraging this intense demand to offset high operating costs, particularly the AAA verified diesel price of $4.98/gallon. Because reefers require additional fuel to run the cooling units, carriers are extremely sensitive to fuel overhead and are refusing to accept loads that do not cover these variable costs. This has created a highly competitive sourcing environment where brokers must act quickly and be prepared to pay the market rate to secure reliable, pre-cooled equipment.
Geographically, the tightest capacity is concentrated in Georgia, South Carolina, and California. Brokers who can secure capacity in these origin states can command high rates from shippers who cannot afford delays on perishable cargo. Conversely, inbound lanes to these agricultural hubs are seeing increased carrier interest as drivers look to reposition themselves for high-paying outbound produce runs, offering brokers an opportunity to negotiate favorable rates on inbound dry van and reefer freight.
📈 Rate Velocity: Spot Market Firming as Volume Stabilizes
National spot rates are showing strong upward momentum, with the market average rate climbing to $3.05/mile today, up from $3.02/mile yesterday and $2.99/mile two days ago. This steady increase indicates that the market is absorbing capacity, driven by mid-week shipping volumes and seasonal demand. Total available loads stand at 165,349, a 1.4% increase over yesterday's 163,100, confirming that freight demand remains robust.
An analysis of the posted-vs-paid rate spreads across equipment types reveals where the fastest rate velocity is occurring. Flatbed paid rates are averaging $3.63/mile against a posted rate of $3.50/mile, showing a $0.13/mile carrier premium. Heavy haul is also seeing a $0.12/mile premium ($3.78 paid vs $3.66 posted). These open-deck premiums suggest that industrial and construction demand, coupled with weather-related routing disruptions, is forcing shippers to pay more than initially posted to move their freight.
In contrast, the dry van sector remains highly stable but slightly favors brokers, with paid rates averaging $2.76/mile against a posted rate of $2.78/mile. This minor $0.02/mile broker advantage suggests that while van capacity is readily available, the high cost of diesel ($4.98/gallon) is preventing rates from falling further. Brokers should monitor these spreads closely; as end-of-quarter shipping approaches next week, we expect van rates to firm and potentially flip back to a carrier premium.
🌐 Macro Pulse: Fuel Costs and Import Surges Shape Summer Capacity
The broader macroeconomic landscape is exerting a powerful influence on domestic freight capacity and rates. The AAA national average diesel price of $4.98/gallon remains a critical factor, establishing a high cost floor for carriers. As noted in recent industry discussions, while linehaul rates are ultimately dictated by regional volume imbalances rather than simple fuel costs, high fuel overhead severely limits carrier flexibility. Owner-operators, in particular, are avoiding long deadhead miles and are highly selective about the lanes they accept, which concentrates capacity around major freight hubs and exacerbates regional tightness.
Simultaneously, import volumes remain strong as shippers continue to pull cargo forward to preempt potential tariff changes and rising international transport costs. This front-loading of inventory is keeping port-adjacent markets, such as Savannah and Southern California, highly active. The influx of containerized freight is driving strong demand for local drayage, transloading, and outbound one-way truckload capacity, further tightening the regional driver pool.
For freight brokers, these macro trends mean that capacity sourcing must be highly strategic. Relying on historical rate averages is risky in a market where fuel costs are high and regional demand is volatile. Brokers must use real-time load board data to price freight accurately and communicate clearly with shippers about the necessity of meeting market rates to secure reliable capacity, especially on lanes originating near major ports or agricultural centers.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Push urgent South and lower Mid-South freight onto early booking windows today; the same load will likely cost more after missed afternoon appointments stack up.
- Quote flatbed and heavy-haul through Illinois with Friday rain risk still embedded, including detour time and per mit slippage.
- Package Southeast reefer as round-trip or next-load opportunities; carriers are choosing network yield over single-leg rate.
- On Savannah freight, reducing gate and dock friction can protect margin more effectively than shaving a few cents per mile.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a selective tightening market, not a blanket rate-up market.
- Total available loads are 165,349, up from 163,100.
- National average rate is $3.05/mile, up from $3.02/mile yesterday and $2.99/mile two days ago.
- The firming is real, but it is coming from reefer and open-deck much more than dry van.
The headline average is being skewed by equipment mix.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized total 122,971 loads, which is about 74.4% of all available loads.
- That means the $3.05/mile national average is not a clean pricing anchor for ordinary van freight.
- Brokers who quote dry van off the national average will overbuy van and still underquote reefer/open-deck replacement risk.
Reefer is the clearest urgency-buy segment on the board.
- Reefer paid is $3.41/mile vs. $3.16/mile posted, a $0.25/mile carrier premium.
- With produce season peaking in California, Georgia, South Carolina, Texas, and New Jersey, carriers are pricing equipment readiness, fuel burn, and next-load value, not just mileage.
Dry van is still tradable, but only if you stay disciplined.
- Van posted is $2.78/mile vs. $2.76/mile paid, a $0.02/mile broker advantage.
- That is a healthy reminder that not every lane deserves a panic buy, even in a firmer overall market.
Weather is a productivity event first and a closure event second.
- The biggest near-term risk is missed appointments, late arrivals, local access friction, and reload disruption around Ark-La-Tex and central Illinois.
- The sharpest same-day service risk sits on first- and second-shift freight touching I-30, I-20, I-10, I-74, and adjacent local roads.
Diesel at $4.98/gallon keeps trucks local and punishes deadhead assumptions.
- The nearest executable truck is still often cheaper than the cheapest posted truck once you factor in deadhead, dwell, and missed reload risk.
📈 What The Board Is Really Saying
The market is firmer than Monday, but not in breakout mode.
- 165,349 total loads is stronger than 144,502 two days ago.
- But it is still below 171,007 from one week ago.
- Interpretation: this is a healthy summer opportunity market, not a universal scarcity event.
Rate velocity is positive, but mode-specific.
- National average rate: $3.05/mile
- Yesterday: $3.02/mile
- Two days ago: $2.99/mile
- That gradual climb tells you the market is absorbing capacity, but the spread structure tells you where it is truly urgent.
The mode spreads matter more than the average.
- Reefer: +$0.25/mile carrier premium
- Flatbed: +$0.13/mile carrier premium
- Heavy haul: +$0.12/mile carrier premium
- Van: -$0.02/mile broker advantage
- Specialized: -$0.01/mile broker advantage
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload/Partial): -$0.13/mile broker advantage
That spread structure gives a simple desk-level truth:
- Buy reefer early
- Scope open-deck tightly
- Stay disciplined on van
- Use partials as a margin-defense tool
🚚 Mode-by-Mode Broker Playbook
🧊 Reefer: Buy before the market buys you
🪵 Flatbed: Strong demand, but execution determines margin
Board facts
- 70,528 available loads
- Posted: $3.50/mile
- Paid: $3.63/mile
- Loads moved today: 27,092
What it means
- Flatbed is still one of the market’s true power centers.
- Summer construction, industrial demand, and flood detours are reducing truck productivity even where freight is still moving.
Best broker moves today
- Quote routed miles, not optimistic map miles.
- Separate linehaul from accessorial exposure:
- tarp
- detention
- layover
- stop-offs
- detours
- securement complexity
- Verify yard conditions and loading equipment before posting.
- Pre-book trusted open-deck carriers on weather-exposed freight rather than shopping late.
Margin warning
- Flatbed margin is rarely lost on the posted rate.
- It is lost on:
- wet yards
- loading delays
- undiscussed tarping
- inaccessible jobsites
- local detours
- bad first-mile information
🏗️ Heavy Haul: Quote it like a project, not a truckload
Board facts
- 33,179 available loads
- Posted: $3.66/mile
- Paid: $3.78/mile
- Loads moved today: 12,895
What it means
- Heavy haul remains tight, but the real choke point is routing and permitting, not just truck count.
- Flood issues in Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, and the broader river corridors increase the odds of same-day route revision even without major interstate shutdowns.
Best broker moves today
- Do not hard-quote without exact dimensions, axle profile, and access notes.
- Build in permit slippage and alternate routing before booking.
- Use known heavy-haul partners only on time-sensitive or flood-adjacent moves.
- Confirm first-mile and final-mile road conditions, not just interstate availability.
Commercial rule
- If the customer wants a “fast number” without exact specs, they are transferring risk to your desk.
- Push back early or pay for it later.
🚛 Dry Van: Tradable market, but lane-specific discipline matters
Board facts
- 24,112 available loads
- Posted: $2.78/mile
- Paid: $2.76/mile
- Loads moved today: 5,566
What it means
- Van is the least urgent mode nationally.
- But high diesel and strong pull from produce and port markets mean regional van pockets can still tighten fast, especially in the Southeast, Savannah orbit, and reload-sensitive manufacturing lanes.
Best broker moves today
- Hold the line on ordinary van freight.
- Buy early only on van lanes competing with produce or port turns.
- Favor local/regional carriers over cheap out-of-position trucks.
- Use morning tenders when possible before carriers commit to better-yield afternoon reloads.
Big mistake
- Letting the firmer national average trick you into paying reefer-style urgency on clean, ordinary van freight.
⚙️ Specialized: More workable than it looks, if you know the carrier
Board facts
- 19,264 available loads
- Posted: $3.28/mile
- Paid: $3.27/mile
- Loads moved today: 6,827
What it means
- Specialized is competitive, but the slight broker edge says it is not in runaway mode.
- This is a good place to win if your team has niche carrier relationships and clean load scope.
Best broker moves today
- Quote only after confirming exact equipment fit.
- Lead with relationship carriers before load-board shopping.
- Use planning lead time as a sales tool for customers who want cost control.
- Avoid vague all-in pricing on project freight.
📦 LTL/Partial: Best visible broker leverage on the board
Board facts
- 9,799 available loads
- Posted: $1.77/mile
- Paid: $1.64/mile
- Loads moved today: 3,542
What it means
- This is the cleanest current broker advantage.
- In a market where full truckload repricing is getting harder for some accounts, partials are a defensive margin tool and a customer-retention tool.
Best broker moves today
- Convert flexible truckload shipments into partials where timing allows.
- Bundle compatible freight to improve truck utilization.
- Target shippers with 4–16 pallets that do not truly need dedicated full truckload.
- Use partial options to protect strategic accounts resisting truckload increases.
🌦️ Weather-Adjusted Risk Map
🌧️ Ark-La-Tex / Lower Mid-South: Today’s biggest same-day service threat
Operational reality
- Flash flooding in southwest Arkansas and northern Louisiana is the most acute same-day risk.
- The issue is not only road closure headlines. It is:
- late truck arrivals
- local access trouble
- missed ship times
- afternoon rebooking
- trucks repositioning away from disruption pockets
Broker actions
- Move urgent South and lower Mid-South freight into early booking windows immediately.
- Call for exact shipper access conditions, not just linehaul ETA.
- Notify customers before appointments fail, not after.
- Price afternoon rescue freight higher, because replacement cost will rise once missed appointments stack up.
🌊 Central Illinois / Illinois River Corridor: Sticky open-deck problem into Friday
Operational reality
- Flood warnings around Peoria, La Salle, Tazewell, Woodford, Bureau, Putnam, and nearby river zones create lingering friction for flatbed and heavy haul.
- Even where the mainline is passable, secondary roads, staging areas, and industrial access points can remain problematic.
Broker actions
- Price detour time and permit slippage through the end of the workweek, not just today.
- Expect eastbound reload tightening out of Missouri and Kansas if trucks lose time in Illinois.
- Require alternate routing discussion before you book oversize freight.
🌡️ Imperial Valley / Southwest Heat: Hidden reefer cost inflation
Operational reality
- Extreme heat raises:
- reefer fuel consumption
- risk of delayed loading/unloading
- driver fatigue
- equipment strain
- Cheap-looking California reefer loads can become expensive paid loads once pickup timing moves into hotter dayparts.
Broker actions
- Favor late-night and early-morning loading windows when available.
- Verify reefer maintenance status and fuel level before dispatch.
- Pad service promises on long-haul California produce if dwell risk exists.
🗺️ Lane Tactics That Can Make Money Today
🍑 Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL: This lane is being bought on the reload
What is happening
- Carriers are not pricing the southbound leg in isolation.
- They are pricing what that truck can do next in Florida and South Georgia produce markets.
Broker tactics
- Sell the round-trip economics up front.
- Target morning pickup appointments, because afternoon tenders have a higher chance of repricing.
- Use Florida-committed carriers who already understand return options.
- Charge for tighter delivery performance, especially morning windows.
Why this matters
- If you buy Atlanta-to-Orlando as a one-leg commodity move, you will usually lose the truck to a broker who sells the driver a network plan.
⚓ Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: Fast turns beat small rate bumps
What is happening
- With diesel at $4.98/gallon and port activity still active, local trucks care deeply about turn quality.
- The carrier’s question is not “What does this load pay?”
It is “Can I clear the port, move this cleanly, and still get my next turn?”
Broker tactics
- Pre-clear gate and document requirements before posting.
- Use carriers familiar with Savannah port operations.
- Sell appointment reliability and paperwork readiness as a capacity advantage.
- Protect margin by reducing friction, not by trying to be the highest rate every time.
Desk truth
- On short-haul port freight, execution quality can be worth more than $0.05–$0.10/mile of extra linehaul.
🧠 Customer And Carrier Psychology
Shippers are likely to anchor on the $3.05/mile national average.
- Your response should be:
- “That number is being pulled up by open-deck and reefer mix. Your lane is being priced by truck position, weather-adjusted productivity, and reload value.”
Carriers are rewarding certainty more than small rate tweaks.
- The loads that clear faster today will have:
- exact commodity
- correct appointments
- access notes
- detention expectations
- load/unload reality
- next-load visibility
The market will punish vague freight this afternoon.
- When rates are moving intraday, the broker who can:
- validate documents quickly
- confirm details cleanly
- dispatch from the driver’s phone
will often beat a slower desk before the market reprices.
Weather-clearing does not mean market-normalizing.
- Roads recover first.
- Schedules, empties, reload chains, and dock flow recover later.
- That lag is where many brokers either make margin or donate it.
💰 Where The Best Margin Is Hiding Today
📊 Probability-Weighted Outlook: Next 24–72 Hours
Base case — 60%
- Reefer stays firm
- Flatbed/heavy haul stay tight
- Dry van remains mostly balanced nationally
- Regional weather recovery is slower in schedules than on radar
Stress case — 25%
- More missed appointments pile up across Ark-La-Tex and lower Mid-South
- Illinois disruption keeps open-deck capacity sticky longer than expected
- Afternoon and Thursday replacement buys widen premiums on reefer and open-deck
Opportunity case — 15%
- Mainline conditions improve fast enough that brokers with pre-positioned carriers capture:
- inbound reefer repositioning
- Savannah short-turn freight
- dry van backhauls into produce regions
- partial conversions for margin defense
✅ Today’s Priority Stack
Buy reefer first
- Cover California and Southeast produce-related freight before noon.
Push weather-exposed South freight into early booking windows
- Especially loads touching I-30, I-20, and adjacent local routes.
Keep dry van pricing disciplined
- Use van data, not the national average, as your pricing anchor.
Quote open-deck with all friction priced in
- Build for detours, site delays, permit lag, and accessorial control.
Treat Savannah and Florida as turn-quality markets
- Capacity is being won by speed, certainty, and next-load visibility.
Convert rate-resistant accounts into partial solutions
- Best use case: customers who need service but cannot absorb full truckload repricing.
Tighten carrier-vetting speed
- Faster mobile onboarding matters today, but only if paired with disciplined compliance checks.
📋 What To Track By Noon
First-call acceptance rate
- reefer in Southeast
- flatbed in Illinois-adjacent corridors
- Savannah short-haul freight
Replacement-cost delta
- early covered vs. afternoon covered loads
Appointment revision count
- especially freight touching Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and central Illinois
Accessorial capture rate
- tarp
- detention
- layover
- detour-related extras
Return-load coverage rate
- Florida-bound and produce-linked reefer loads
Carrier fallout rate
- watch whether newer or marginal carriers are accepting loads they later cannot execute in weather-hit zones
🏁 Bottom Line
- The market is firmer, but the opportunity is selective.
- Reefer is urgent.
- Open-deck is controlling truck positioning.
- Dry van is still a discipline market.
- Diesel at $4.98/gallon keeps trucks local and punishes deadhead assumptions.
- Weather should be priced as productivity loss, not just closure risk.
- The best brokers today will win by buying early, quoting specifically, and selling the next load—not just this load.
💡 Tony's Tip
Please set up multi-factor authentication (MFA) on your ETA email account this week.
Visit
https://aka.ms/mfasetup to get started.
Text Tony at 205-876-3715 if you have any issues.
Also, please note, you should be using
https://freightmap.remote.etaagencyinc.com for google maps lookups so we dont get rate limited by Google.
You can check routes on the operations panel on the left via the red Check Route button.
📅 This Day in History
1779: American Revolutionary War: The Great Siege of Gibraltar begins.
2004: In New York, capital punishment is declared unconstitutional.
2010: At Wimbledon, John Isner of the United States defeats Nicolas Mahut of France, in the longest match in professional tennis history.
💭 Quote of the Day
"It's necessary to get the losers out of your life if you want to live your dream."
— Les Brown