What does he do with the load when he gets to receiving five minutes after they close the doors?
Part of the job is that sometimes the schedule doesn't work out, but if you can't get to a destination at least 30-60 minutes before they close, chances are you're not getting unloaded (unless you only have a few skids that they are desperately waiting for), so you find somewhere to park and call it a night.
I used to actually like it sometimes when this would happen to me when I was running long haul. It was an opportunity to actually stop and regroup. Have an actual sit down dinner somewhere. Have a decent shower. Do some laundry perhaps. Then head back to the bunk, maybe watch a bit of TV, and then get a good solid 8-10 hours sleep which was always appreciated.
Don't ticket someone who runs a red light because there's a dump truck 5 metres behind their bumper, that isn't going to be able to stop.
This comes back to spatial awareness. If I see a stale green and there's a truck 6 feet off my rear bumper, I'm slowing down well in advance in order to stay in control of the situation, not speeding up because of some feeling of "being pushed". This is all in peoples heads. Just don't go faster or rush......been doing it this way since I got my drivers licence, and every mile I've ever driven with a trailer behind me. I have never once had anyone run into the back of me yet. Funny how that works when a lot of people would have you believe that you'll get flattened if you don't go faster to keep someone off your bumper.