Quote:
Originally Posted by madpuppy
:twisted: You got some splaining to do Lucy, Just what are You asking? :idea:
Quote:
Originally Posted by kreeper01
I might as well get this off my chest.
Yes, i did have an accident in a C.R. England Truck, it happened up in Ogden, Utah. on 10/28/2003. I left the company as of 11/07/2003. The b***ards had the gaul to slap it on my DAC on 10/18/2004, almost 1 year after i left the company.
In my honest opinion, that is a major screw job if i ever saw one. According to section 391.15 of the Safety Regulations handbook, i am suppose to spend exactly 365 days off the road from the time of the accident is reported to the company and or the police. This is my first and only CDL driving offense, my MVR is clean as a whistle, my DAC isn't so clean. However, this accident happened at the Pilot there in Ogden, Utah. which has an L shaped parking lot to the left after you come out of the fuel island. It was a small lot and i took it as wide as the lot would allow me to make that left hander. Someone PLEASE explain me why i have to wait 2 years to get another driving job for a 1 year offense :?:
I'm no expert but it looks like he's looking for a job and is upset because he can't get hired.
He may not be getting hired because if his income is $0, he can't afford things like soap, hot water and shampoo. The poor man hasn't had a shower since November of 2006, although he did get caught outside during a brief rainstorm in February of this year which helped get the top layer of grime off of him.
I'd bet that there's a conspiracy against smelly people in the trucking industry! There is a blacklist that the companies and recruiters pass amongst themselves listing all the people with overwhelming body odor. When he calls them, their sophisticated phone systems forward his call to a specially trained operative who comes up with some other reason why he's not an appropriate candidate for them. They don't tell him the real reason, because they don't want to hurt his feelings, and as everyone knows, the trucking industry is all about love, kindness and kittens.