Predatory Towing: What Every Truck Driver Must Know

Predatory Towing: What Every Truck Driver Must Know
Released 06/10/2026
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Episode description

Your truck gets towed and you did not see it coming. The bill is outrageous, the situation is stressful, and you are hundreds of miles from home trying to figure out what just happened. Predatory towing schemes, cargo theft, and parking scams are targeting commercial drivers at an alarming rate and most drivers do not find out about them until it is too late. In Episode 23 of the Cypress Truck Lines Podcast, Cypress drivers Devon Sonson and D'onte Pitmon sit down with Marcus to share their real firsthand experiences with towing situations that could have gone a whole lot worse. Both drivers made mistakes, both drivers owned them, and both drivers worked with Cypress dispatch to get the situation handled with minimal damage. What comes out of this conversation is not just a cautionary tale. It is a masterclass in how the right company culture handles a bad situation. We also dig into the stats on predatory towing, cargo theft, truck stop scams, and what every OTR, regional, and local driver needs to know before their next load. New episodes drop every Wednesday. Subscribe now and do not learn this the hard way.

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Show Highlights

Key moments and takeaways from this episode.

About This Episode

You wake up in the middle of the night and instantly know something is wrong. Not because of a noise. Not because of a phone call. Because the truck moved. Or worse, you walk outside and the truck is just gone, not stolen, towed, and before you can fully wake up somebody is demanding thousands of dollars just to put it back on the ground. Predatory towing complaints are exploding across the trucking industry, cargo theft is skyrocketing, and organized scams are targeting commercial drivers because criminals know one thing better than anybody, a tired driver under pressure is vulnerable. In Episode 23 of the Cypress Truck Lines Podcast, Marcus sits down with two Cypress drivers who lived through towing situations firsthand, owned their mistakes, worked with dispatch to get the situations handled, and came out the other side with lessons that could save another driver a whole lot of money, stress, and sleepless nights.

New episodes drop every Wednesday at podcast.cypresstruck.com

Episode Highlights

Predatory towing is not rare anymore: Marcus opens the episode with statistics that set the stakes immediately. Predatory towing complaints are growing at an alarming rate across the trucking industry. Tow bills can start at $3,500 just to set a truck back on the ground and can skyrocket into five figure territory when multiple axles are involved, recovery equipment is used, storage fees accumulate, or law enforcement requests special handling. This is not a fringe issue. It is an industry-wide problem and it is getting worse.

The cargo theft numbers are staggering: Marcus digs into cargo theft statistics that will make any driver rethink how they park and where. Theft crews specifically target weekends and holiday periods when loads sit longer and communication slows down. Organized rings have been known to follow trucks leaving distribution centers and wait for drivers to stop within the first 200 miles of a trip knowing the load is at its fullest value at that point. Some crews use GPS jammers and signal blockers to temporarily disable trailer tracking systems. These are not opportunistic criminals. They are organized, patient, and specifically targeting commercial drivers.

Treat it like a criminal proceeding: Devon's single most important piece of advice for any driver who finds themselves in a towing situation is this: treat it like a criminal proceeding. Do not volunteer information. Do not argue. Do not try to negotiate on the spot. Anything you say or do in that moment can be used against you and make the situation harder to resolve. Clam up. Get dispatch on the phone immediately. Let the professionals handle the conversation from there. Marcus says in the outro that this advice belongs on a wall somewhere at Cypress.

Dispatch is your biggest advocate: Both Devon and D'onte credit dispatch with being the reason their situations are resolved with minimal damage. The Cypress driver and dispatch relationship that Marcus has talked about throughout the entire run of this podcast shows up again in Episode 23 in the most practical and high-stakes way possible. When a towing situation escalates the driver is not alone. Dispatch has the resources, the relationships, and the experience to navigate these situations in ways a tired driver on the side of a road at two in the morning simply cannot. Calling dispatch is not admitting defeat. It is making the smartest move available.

If it does not feel right do not park there: One of the most practical and memorable lines of the episode came from both Devon and D'onte independently before they piggybacked off each other. If it does not feel right do not park there. Marcus emphasizes this in the outro as one of the most important instincts a driver can develop. New drivers may not have those instincts yet but they will come with time and experience. In the meantime, listening to stories like Devon and D'onte's is exactly how you build them before you need them.

Your license is your career: Devon said it cleanly and Marcus repeated it in the outro because it deserves to be repeated. Your license is now officially your career. The CDL that lets you make a living for your family is the same license attached to everything you do behind any wheel. Every decision on the road carries that weight and every driver needs to carry that awareness with them every single day.

We are not hauling body parts: Marcus closes the episode by returning to one of the core Cypress philosophies that he first heard in his very first meeting with management before the podcast ever existed. We are not hauling body parts. The load matters. But the driver in the seat matters more. Getting there safely and getting home safely is the whole job. Everything else including predatory towing, cargo theft, and all the pressure that comes with this career is manageable as long as you slow down, stay aware, and remember what you are actually hauling.

From The Host

“I was a random dude trying to get in touch with these guys last week and here they were delivering a grand slam. That is exactly how this show works and it never gets old. Devon and D'onte came in, told the truth about situations that a lot of drivers would be embarrassed to talk about on a podcast, and turned those situations into lessons that could genuinely save another driver real money and real stress. The line that I keep coming back to is a simple one. A tired driver under pressure is vulnerable. That is just the reality of this job. What Devon and D'onte showed us is that the right response to that vulnerability is not to pretend it does not exist. It is to know what to do before it ever happens. Call dispatch. Trust your instincts. Slow down. Take your time. Do the job right.” — Marcus Bridges, Host

Have a story to tell or want to be a guest? Email us at podcast.cypresstruck.com

Transcript

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1 00:00:01,440 --> 00:00:06,479 Do you ever wake up in the middle of the night and instantly know something's wrong? Not because 2 00:00:06,480 --> 00:00:13,400 of a noise, not because of a phone call, but because the truck moved. That's 3 00:00:13,400 --> 00:00:18,200 how this starts for a lot of drivers. Maybe you've been driving all day. Maybe you've been hunting 4 00:00:18,200 --> 00:00:23,239 parking for two hours. Maybe you finally found a spot that looks safe enough to shut your eyes for 5 00:00:23,240 --> 00:00:30,080 a few hours before sunrise, and then suddenly you feel your truck lurch. Or worse, you walk 6 00:00:30,080 --> 00:00:36,880 outside from where you're sleeping that night and the truck is just gone. Not stolen, 7 00:00:37,360 --> 00:00:43,240 towed. And before you can even fully wake up somebody demanding thousands of dollars just to 8 00:00:43,240 --> 00:00:50,000 put your truck back on the ground. The scary part is that this isn't rare anymore. Predatory 9 00:00:50,040 --> 00:00:55,640 towing complaints are exploding across the trucking industry. Cargo theft is skyrocketing. 10 00:00:55,680 --> 00:01:00,840 Organized scams are targeting truck drivers because criminals know one thing better than 11 00:01:00,840 --> 00:01:07,560 anybody. A tired driver under pressure is vulnerable. Today we're 12 00:01:07,560 --> 00:01:13,599 talking to two Cypress drivers who lived through it firsthand. No internet rumors, no friend of a 13 00:01:13,600 --> 00:01:20,280 friend. Stories, real experiences, real consequences, and some lessons that might save 14 00:01:20,280 --> 00:01:27,040 another driver. A whole lot of money, stress and sleepless nights. This is the Cypress Truck 15 00:01:27,040 --> 00:01:29,600 Lines podcast. Let's get into it. 16 00:01:34,680 --> 00:01:39,240 Countdown to the Cypress Truck Lines podcast starts now. 17 00:01:41,600 --> 00:01:48,480 Your number one professional flatbed podcast here to deliver stories, safety updates and company 18 00:01:48,480 --> 00:01:53,240 news directly to your ears. Let's get down to business. 19 00:01:58,760 --> 00:02:03,960 How's the weather out there? Cypress and Sunbelt. Welcome into another episode of the Cypress Truck 20 00:02:03,960 --> 00:02:10,080 Lines podcast. I'm your host, Marcus. Thank you all so much for joining me here today. Uh, you really 21 00:02:10,080 --> 00:02:16,679 do have no idea the impact that just clicking play on an episode has on me every day. 22 00:02:16,679 --> 00:02:21,560 Personally, I get to see the numbers. I get to see that you guys are listening means the absolute 23 00:02:21,560 --> 00:02:27,840 world to me. So if you click download today, you're listening to this right now. Big ups to you. Hats 24 00:02:27,880 --> 00:02:33,280 off to you. Thank you so much for supporting the show. That's exactly what we look for. And the 25 00:02:33,280 --> 00:02:39,240 other way you can support the show is to run over to our website, podcast.cypresstruck.com. 26 00:02:39,360 --> 00:02:44,000 Everything that has to do with this podcast is up there. The episodes, all the information about what 27 00:02:44,000 --> 00:02:50,879 we're talking about and who we're talking to. Uh, my guy Tyler doing home run, I the hell with home 28 00:02:50,880 --> 00:02:56,920 runs. He's doing grand slam type work, uh, on the website all the time and we greatly appreciate 29 00:02:56,920 --> 00:03:03,039 him for it. We appreciate all you being here today. Already said that there's one more way that you 30 00:03:03,039 --> 00:03:09,960 can support the show, and that is when you're there at the website podcast.cypresstruck.com, you click that 31 00:03:09,960 --> 00:03:14,480 get in touch with me button. I'm not even sure what it says, but there's a button up there that 32 00:03:14,480 --> 00:03:19,039 you can click and you can hit me right in the pocket. You can send me a direct email if you want 33 00:03:19,039 --> 00:03:22,920 to be a part of the show, or you just have something that you would like to hear about on 34 00:03:22,920 --> 00:03:27,880 the show, you, there's a lot of people that that that contribute to this show that don't actually 35 00:03:27,880 --> 00:03:33,679 want to be on it. And I'm down for that type of contribution, too. I get it. Not everybody's a chin 36 00:03:33,679 --> 00:03:38,879 swagger like I am. Okay, not everybody wants to come on and talk on the record, and I totally 37 00:03:38,880 --> 00:03:43,599 understand and respect that. If you've got an idea for the show, something you might want to hear an 38 00:03:43,600 --> 00:03:48,399 episode about, send it to me. If you want to be involved on the show and you don't care what 39 00:03:48,400 --> 00:03:53,760 we're there to talk about, just let me know and I will make sure to get you on an episode sooner 40 00:03:53,760 --> 00:03:58,880 rather than later. It's a pretty streamlined deal here, and we're getting pretty good at it. And, uh, 41 00:03:58,880 --> 00:04:04,439 one thing that we notice is every time we get new drivers on or new employees on from Cypress and 42 00:04:04,440 --> 00:04:09,879 Sun Belt, uh, they're they're amazing. You guys are all so good at this. I'm not convinced that most 43 00:04:09,880 --> 00:04:15,999 of you aren't closet broadcasters to begin with. Uh, and today's interview is no exception to that. 44 00:04:16,000 --> 00:04:22,879 I mean, the the the clarity and the way that these guys talk through their situations 45 00:04:22,880 --> 00:04:28,759 and let you know what's going on in their head while they were experiencing this is I mean, 46 00:04:28,760 --> 00:04:33,279 listen, it's not foreign. It's not that people don't understand how to do it. It's that doing it 47 00:04:33,280 --> 00:04:38,480 in a precise way and and kind of walking through the story chronologically without finding a bunch 48 00:04:38,480 --> 00:04:44,880 of tangents or finding a bunch of rabbit holes, uh, can sometimes be a sort of a practiced skill. And 49 00:04:44,880 --> 00:04:49,839 one thing I noticed with you guys, you all must be talkers out there, because everybody from Cypress 50 00:04:49,840 --> 00:04:55,889 and Sun Belt that comes on this podcast delivers a great episode, just a banger of an episode. And 51 00:04:55,890 --> 00:05:01,729 we've got another one here for you today. Uh, so that's enough of the homework. Let's start to look 52 00:05:01,730 --> 00:05:08,410 forward into what we're talking about today. And it's really something that when I say the two 53 00:05:08,410 --> 00:05:13,489 words that I'm about to say, everybody in the trucking industry goes, oh, yeah, I know, I've heard 54 00:05:13,489 --> 00:05:19,329 about it, I've experienced it, I've been there. Uh, and that is those two words are, excuse me, 55 00:05:19,369 --> 00:05:26,329 predatory towing. Um, now, this is not to get confused with you parked in a fire lane, and you 56 00:05:26,329 --> 00:05:31,529 need to get towed so that those emergency services are available. This is maybe you parked 57 00:05:31,530 --> 00:05:36,849 in a spot that it's questionable as to whether or not you're allowed to park there. Maybe it's not 58 00:05:36,849 --> 00:05:43,089 listed right out in front in plain English that, hey, you can't park here. Uh, or maybe you are 59 00:05:43,089 --> 00:05:48,529 allowed to park there, but somebody has decided they are going to try to prey on a vulnerable and 60 00:05:48,529 --> 00:05:54,689 tired truck driver. It happens. In fact, some numbers that we will get to once we actually open 61 00:05:54,689 --> 00:06:01,569 the interview segment here are going to blow your mind as far as the growth of 62 00:06:01,569 --> 00:06:08,249 crime in this area. Now, of course, some of these stats that I'm going to give you both here 63 00:06:08,250 --> 00:06:15,169 and at the end of the show encompass not only predatory towing but load theft, uh, cyber scams, 64 00:06:15,170 --> 00:06:21,129 all the different types of scams, double brokering. There's so many things that that criminals try to 65 00:06:21,130 --> 00:06:26,289 do to prey on truck drivers and trucking companies out there. Uh, that it all sort of gets 66 00:06:26,289 --> 00:06:31,450 wrapped into one major thing and that's, you know, defrauding trucking companies or defrauding 67 00:06:31,489 --> 00:06:37,729 truckers. Um, but the American Transportation Research Institute estimates truck parking 68 00:06:37,730 --> 00:06:44,529 shortages cost drivers nearly 56 minutes per day, searching for safe parking. That equals 69 00:06:44,529 --> 00:06:51,489 roughly $6,800 in lost compensation annually per driver. The desperation to find parking is 70 00:06:51,489 --> 00:06:57,768 one of the biggest contributors to drivers parking in questionable areas. Fmcsa has 71 00:06:57,769 --> 00:07:03,569 estimated that there is only one truck parking space available for every 11 truck drivers 72 00:07:03,569 --> 00:07:10,529 nationwide. That statistic alone explains why drivers end up parking in risky spots late at 73 00:07:10,529 --> 00:07:17,369 night. Now, some towing companies charge storage fees by the hour instead of by the 74 00:07:17,370 --> 00:07:23,889 day. Once a commercial vehicle is impounded, causing bills to snowball extremely fast in 75 00:07:23,890 --> 00:07:29,609 several states. Towing disputes involving commercial vehicles have become so common that 76 00:07:29,609 --> 00:07:36,129 legislatures have debated predatory towing reform bills, specifically targeting heavy 77 00:07:36,170 --> 00:07:42,970 duty towing practices. Drivers have reported being charged administrative fees, gate fees after 78 00:07:43,009 --> 00:07:49,889 our release fees. Environmental cleanup fees. Hook up fees all stacked on top of one another before 79 00:07:49,889 --> 00:07:56,369 the truck even leaves the tow yard. And you're going to hear about it firsthand from a driver 80 00:07:56,410 --> 00:08:03,049 who's going to give you a number that he was quoted and what that number relates to. I can't 81 00:08:03,049 --> 00:08:09,249 spoil it for you because it's just it's in what we're talking about here. It's too good with 82 00:08:09,249 --> 00:08:15,450 respect to what we're talking about. It's really bad. Okay. It's a bad thing, but it's like you can't 83 00:08:15,450 --> 00:08:20,889 write it. You couldn't put Hollywood movie writers on this and have them come up with what one of 84 00:08:20,890 --> 00:08:26,729 our drivers it's about to join us is about to tell you, and that is just scratching the surface. 85 00:08:26,730 --> 00:08:33,529 Okay. These bills line up like you cannot believe, and sometimes it's not even a toll. 86 00:08:33,530 --> 00:08:38,849 Sometimes it's somebody that got Ahold of a boot that's big enough to put it on a semi truck, and 87 00:08:38,849 --> 00:08:43,288 they just take it upon themselves to say, this person's not supposed to be parked here. I might 88 00:08:43,289 --> 00:08:48,889 not be the enforcement arm of this parking lot, but I have a boot in the back of my van, and I'm 89 00:08:48,890 --> 00:08:54,969 going to put it on this truck, and he's gonna pay me the driver. He she they they're going to pay me 90 00:08:54,969 --> 00:09:00,488 to get this thing off of there. That's predatory towing in a nutshell. Right there. They didn't take 91 00:09:00,489 --> 00:09:06,049 your truck anywhere. They just bled you or the company dry of however many thousands of dollars 92 00:09:06,049 --> 00:09:12,449 they decided to ask for and turn the key on a lock. It's not. It's not novel. It's not something 93 00:09:12,449 --> 00:09:19,129 that any, uh, any average Joe couldn't do. It's just that most people aren't giant dirtbags. Most 94 00:09:19,130 --> 00:09:25,289 people don't prey on the very people that it takes to make our world run here in the United 95 00:09:25,289 --> 00:09:32,249 States. And most people aren't going to go out and look at that number one parking spot for every 96 00:09:32,289 --> 00:09:38,689 11 drivers and see an opportunity. Most people like myself and like everybody that joins me on 97 00:09:38,689 --> 00:09:44,209 this show are going to see a huge problem there and then kind of connect the dots as to why 98 00:09:44,449 --> 00:09:49,409 drivers might end up parking in places that are a little bit sketchy. Okay. And we haven't even 99 00:09:49,409 --> 00:09:53,329 really talked about load theft yet, and we're not going to get into it a lot on this podcast today 100 00:09:53,330 --> 00:09:59,288 we're mostly talking about towing. Uh, but let's face it, places out there, uh, in the, in the Midwest 101 00:09:59,289 --> 00:10:05,530 and, um, headed out east a little bit, you know, Memphis is a hot spot for it right now. And, uh, you 102 00:10:05,530 --> 00:10:10,729 guys aren't going to believe these stories, man. They're kind of crazy. Uh, but we look back at them 103 00:10:10,729 --> 00:10:16,049 and the lessons that were learned from these two drivers that are about to join us. This is a huge 104 00:10:16,049 --> 00:10:22,809 episode, especially for drivers that don't have a ton of trucking experience. If you're new to the 105 00:10:22,810 --> 00:10:28,330 gig. This episode is really going to open your eyes to some things that you should be watching 106 00:10:28,330 --> 00:10:34,608 out for. You gotta trust your instincts and you gotta know dispatch is on your side. Uh, so 107 00:10:35,169 --> 00:10:40,249 I don't want to spoil anything further out of this interview because it's such a good one. Uh, 108 00:10:40,289 --> 00:10:45,769 got to get our drivers in here right now. I'm done flapping my gums. It's time to listen to some real 109 00:10:45,770 --> 00:10:48,929 stories and get some real lessons on the back end of it. 110 00:10:56,729 --> 00:11:01,929 All right. Welcome back into the Cypress Truck Lines podcast. Very excited to get our next couple 111 00:11:01,969 --> 00:11:08,009 of drivers in here for today's show. Uh, talking about a problem within the industry that if 112 00:11:08,010 --> 00:11:13,489 you're a driver, it hasn't happened to you. You probably know somebody, that it has happened to 113 00:11:13,489 --> 00:11:18,009 you. Let me hit you with a couple of stats before we bring these guys in here, just to set this up. 114 00:11:18,130 --> 00:11:24,089 Um, the National Insurance Crime Bureau reports that predatory towing claims increased 115 00:11:24,090 --> 00:11:30,809 89% nationwide between 2022 and 2024. That is a 116 00:11:30,810 --> 00:11:37,289 wild number. Cargo theft has increased 1,500% since 117 00:11:37,450 --> 00:11:44,169 2021, and cargo theft is now estimated to cost the supply chain up to $35 118 00:11:44,169 --> 00:11:50,049 billion annually. These are big problems across the transportation industry, and we've got a 119 00:11:50,049 --> 00:11:55,209 couple of guys here joining us today that have experience with it, and we're going to talk about 120 00:11:55,210 --> 00:12:00,449 it. So let's welcome them in here first. Uh, joining us today we've got Devon Sonson on the phone. 121 00:12:00,449 --> 00:12:05,690 Devon, thank you so much for being here man. Of course man. Thanks for having me. Now, how long have 122 00:12:05,690 --> 00:12:12,330 you been driving for Cypress? Um, Cypress is actually my first job in my trucking career, so 123 00:12:12,330 --> 00:12:16,849 I've been with them for about a year now. Okay. And how are you liking it so far? Is the first job in 124 00:12:16,849 --> 00:12:22,929 your trucking career? I love it, I love it, I love the physical aspect. Um, driving wasn't really cut 125 00:12:22,929 --> 00:12:27,650 out for me, so I'm really glad I took the flatbed route. Um, I've learned a lot with you guys, so I 126 00:12:27,650 --> 00:12:32,609 really helped out. That's awesome. Well, we got some great trainers here at this company, so it makes 127 00:12:32,609 --> 00:12:37,889 sense that you learn a lot. Uh, I'm sure that your experience at Orientation with Randy and the guys 128 00:12:37,889 --> 00:12:43,408 was, uh, was a real eye opener. Did you go through CTC or did you already have your, uh, your CDL 129 00:12:43,450 --> 00:12:49,650 before you got here? I got my CDL before I came to you guys. Okay. All right. So you got a little bit 130 00:12:49,650 --> 00:12:56,129 of the CTC taste, but not the not the full meal deal. Exactly. Got it, got it. Well, Ken runs a tight 131 00:12:56,129 --> 00:13:01,889 ship out there, man. Uh, I I, I understand how it's possible to kind of soak it all up in that first 132 00:13:01,889 --> 00:13:07,249 year and learn so much. Uh, Devon, thank you so much for being here today. Let's welcome our other 133 00:13:07,250 --> 00:13:12,848 driver in here. We've got D'onte Pittman joining us today. D'onte, thank you for the time my friend. 134 00:13:12,849 --> 00:13:17,929 How are you doing out there. Thank you. Thank you. It's a pleasure I'm doing well. Great. Great. Now, uh, 135 00:13:17,929 --> 00:13:23,129 actually, one question that I forgot to ask you. Devon, before we get into it, before I let you 136 00:13:23,130 --> 00:13:29,209 go here. What, uh, what terminal are you based out of? That's very important here. I'm based out of 137 00:13:29,210 --> 00:13:33,529 the Jacksonville terminal. Based out of the Jacksonville terminal. Okay. And, uh, D'onte, now 138 00:13:33,530 --> 00:13:38,809 getting on to you. How long have you been driving for Cypress? I've been driving for Cypress for two 139 00:13:38,810 --> 00:13:45,649 years now. Trucking has been a part of me for 12 years, since 2013. But getting into the flatbed 140 00:13:45,650 --> 00:13:51,169 game, uh, I've been a part of the Cypress team for two years now. Okay. I'm also a trainer for Cypress 141 00:13:51,169 --> 00:13:55,489 as well. Oh, perfect. Awesome. Well, there you go. We gave you some flowers. Already mentioned how many 142 00:13:55,489 --> 00:14:00,330 great trainers we've got out there. You're one of them. There it is. I appreciate that. Of course. Man. 143 00:14:00,330 --> 00:14:05,809 Now. Uh, were you in the. You. You said the flat betting game is something that you got into when 144 00:14:05,810 --> 00:14:11,210 you got with Cypress. So you weren't a flat bettor before? Absolutely. So this is, uh. It was new to me. 145 00:14:11,210 --> 00:14:15,969 Yeah. I wasn't doing flat bed before. I was just doing a regular drive in, um, during food service, 146 00:14:15,969 --> 00:14:21,049 mostly to the metro Atlanta area. I'm coming from, uh, actually, I'm coming out of the Smyrna sermon, 147 00:14:21,210 --> 00:14:25,569 and, um, like I said, I was dealing with driving before I switched over and came to the flat bed 148 00:14:25,569 --> 00:14:31,569 game. Okay. Gotcha, gotcha. Uh, you like the physical aspect of the the flat betting? Absolutely. Yeah, 149 00:14:31,609 --> 00:14:35,899 absolutely. Keep it. Keep you on your feet. I tell guys all the time. It's your permit, the gym, every 150 00:14:35,940 --> 00:14:41,618 day. Especially if you give it the dedication that you have to give. Mhm. Yes, sir. Yes, sir. I you know, I 151 00:14:41,619 --> 00:14:45,899 noticed that you flatbed drivers are in pretty good shape when you start to really look at you 152 00:14:45,899 --> 00:14:51,619 as a group you think man. Right. These guys got some shoulders on them man. Yeah absolutely. Yeah. 153 00:14:51,659 --> 00:14:56,179 And I definitely get those triceps and things of that nature together. Yes, absolutely. Well that's 154 00:14:56,180 --> 00:15:02,098 awesome. Uh, glad to hear that. You're you're liking it so far. Um, and and, fellas, I know that this 155 00:15:02,099 --> 00:15:07,499 probably isn't the most fun topic to talk about here, but this predatory towing thing that's kind 156 00:15:07,500 --> 00:15:13,139 of plaguing the industry. You heard the stats that I opened the segment with. It's pretty wild out 157 00:15:13,140 --> 00:15:18,579 there, and I know that both of you guys have a story to tell. So I just kind of want to jump in 158 00:15:18,580 --> 00:15:24,660 and let you tell your story. Uh, Devon will start with you. Uh, walk me through that day, man. 159 00:15:24,660 --> 00:15:30,300 What happened? I know the truck got towed, but talk to me about all the circumstances that that built 160 00:15:30,300 --> 00:15:36,979 that story. Oh, man. Okay. It's funny. It's funny. Now, it was the question at the time. Yeah, 161 00:15:37,179 --> 00:15:42,419 I had I just got a load to pick up out of Mount Holly. Um, I used to service up there a lot, for 162 00:15:42,419 --> 00:15:49,299 whatever reason. And, um, I wasn't aware because I was new that you can sleep at Mount Holly. You 163 00:15:49,300 --> 00:15:54,539 stay there overnight. So by the time I got down to secure my load, uh, I was trying to find the 164 00:15:54,539 --> 00:16:01,539 nearest lugs. And at that point, it was, I want to say, at least 45 minutes away 165 00:16:01,580 --> 00:16:07,099 to an hour. Probably tops from the direction that I had to go in. Uh, so. And I already was close on 166 00:16:07,100 --> 00:16:13,219 time for running out of time. So I made it to the first love I got there. They had zero parking 167 00:16:13,219 --> 00:16:17,859 because by the time I got done, securing that load was around 6:00 in the afternoon. Yeah, you got no 168 00:16:17,859 --> 00:16:22,699 chance. You got no chance. That one. I already knew I was pushing it. I already knew I was pushing it. 169 00:16:22,700 --> 00:16:27,500 I've serviced Georgia, Georgia and North Carolina to me are one of those things where you get if 170 00:16:27,539 --> 00:16:34,340 you're trying to get parking after 4 p.m. your it's a tough one for you. But anyway, I 171 00:16:34,659 --> 00:16:38,659 was getting to that Lowe's. They had no parking so I had to go to the next one which is 30 minutes 172 00:16:38,659 --> 00:16:44,938 away. I got to that one. That one didn't have parking as well, but then right in front of the 173 00:16:44,939 --> 00:16:51,659 actual entrance of that love, there was a line of semi-trucks parked up along the edge. It 174 00:16:51,659 --> 00:16:58,619 occurred. Now this is where this is 100% on me. And I took and I've always taken full responsibility 175 00:16:58,620 --> 00:17:03,819 for this, where my parents always told me, don't follow people like that's something you don't 176 00:17:03,819 --> 00:17:09,019 want to do, especially if you don't know. So what I did was I saw a line of trucks. I thought it was 177 00:17:09,020 --> 00:17:13,899 allowed because I thought over, like when it's overflowed. This is typically what the the setup 178 00:17:13,900 --> 00:17:19,339 is. Some loves will allow you to do it. I've seen it at other locations. They don't care. But what 179 00:17:19,339 --> 00:17:24,699 happened was in my specific situation, there was a long line of trucks that flowed into an 180 00:17:24,699 --> 00:17:29,300 industrial commerce center. So there was a lot of I think there was a UPS warehouse back there, 181 00:17:29,300 --> 00:17:35,979 everything. The road that I was parked on. Apparently there was a sign about 182 00:17:35,979 --> 00:17:42,979 30 to 40ft on the left hand side that started the private property of that area 183 00:17:42,979 --> 00:17:48,499 that I was parking, and I wasn't aware of that. Um, so I had parked up behind another trailer. Not 184 00:17:48,499 --> 00:17:54,139 even an hour later, my lights were still on. I was my I had everything running. Still, not even an 185 00:17:54,140 --> 00:17:59,818 hour later, I was sleeping and literally about an hour into it and I feel my truck buckled. So I'm 186 00:17:59,819 --> 00:18:06,219 like, what's going on? You know? So I opened up my curtains and I see that there's a tow truck in 187 00:18:06,219 --> 00:18:12,539 front of me. So I get out, he knocks on the door and I get out, and he was like, hey, you can't park 188 00:18:12,540 --> 00:18:17,739 here. Pretty much. Um, we gotta tell you. And I was confused. Um, I was really confused because there 189 00:18:17,739 --> 00:18:22,619 was a whole lot of trucks. And then by the time I looked out, all of the trucks were gone. Oh, it was 190 00:18:22,619 --> 00:18:27,380 probably one other truck in front of me. And then there was one other truck behind me. But either 191 00:18:27,380 --> 00:18:34,219 they got them before they got me, or they were fully aware of how that area runs. So literally he 192 00:18:34,219 --> 00:18:38,619 told me, hey, if you want us to drop you, we have you hooked up right now, but if you want us to 193 00:18:38,619 --> 00:18:45,539 drop you your $3,500. $3,500 to put you back on the ground. Just to put me 194 00:18:45,540 --> 00:18:48,619 back on the ground, not even to tell me just to drop me from off there thing they said. 195 00:18:48,620 --> 00:18:53,379 Technically, they hooked up to me. Now they have to told me, and mind you, when they hooked up to me, 196 00:18:53,379 --> 00:18:57,219 they don't secure anything down. They literally just lift your truck up so you can't move. So they 197 00:18:57,260 --> 00:19:00,739 still, even if they were and told me they still have to go through the whole process of towing. So 198 00:19:00,739 --> 00:19:06,258 they have. Told. They haven't earned that $3,500. They just want it from you, is what you're saying? 199 00:19:06,300 --> 00:19:12,979 Exactly, exactly. So that's how that went down. I went through a whole spiel, 200 00:19:13,380 --> 00:19:18,019 um, with night dispatch at that time, trying to get everything situated. We had to go back and forth, 201 00:19:18,060 --> 00:19:23,938 but at that point, it was the middle of the winter, too. It was freezing. The whole process, I want to 202 00:19:23,939 --> 00:19:29,619 say took about a little over an hour. Just going back and forth. Um, he had to wake up the big boss 203 00:19:29,619 --> 00:19:34,579 at the time. So at that point I put everyone in an inconvenience. So it was just a matter for my 204 00:19:34,579 --> 00:19:40,099 situation. It was really just a matter of not being aware of my surroundings. But at the end of 205 00:19:40,099 --> 00:19:46,698 the day, for you to say you're charged me $3,500 just to put my truck down when I was already in 206 00:19:46,699 --> 00:19:52,619 the truck. Yeah, that that kind of seems like that's the, uh, you know, the predatory part of this 207 00:19:52,620 --> 00:19:58,179 whole thing. And I hear a lot about that, uh, Devon from a lot of other drivers where it's 208 00:19:58,180 --> 00:20:03,419 like, look, it's not necessarily the fact that I'm getting towed or that they want to tow me. I 209 00:20:03,420 --> 00:20:10,338 understand if I broke a rule that that's that's on me, but these crazy fees that you're trying to 210 00:20:10,379 --> 00:20:15,539 charge people. I mean, that's a, you know, that's a if you that comes out of your pocket, that's a 211 00:20:15,540 --> 00:20:21,299 huge chunk of the monthly income. Uh, I would imagine more than you can swing, more than most 212 00:20:21,339 --> 00:20:28,060 people can swing, right? Exactly. Exactly. So how did, uh how did dispatch handle it? Because you said, 213 00:20:28,099 --> 00:20:32,458 obviously, you you know, in these situations, the first call that a driver is going to make is 214 00:20:32,459 --> 00:20:37,779 almost always to dispatch, right? Correct. And and how did dispatch handle it? I know it's the middle 215 00:20:37,780 --> 00:20:44,338 of the night in the winter. Um, but obviously they're there for you. Exactly. So, I mean, dispatch 216 00:20:44,339 --> 00:20:49,819 did a great job handling it. Um, of course, it was a stressful situation for everyone involved. Um, 217 00:20:49,900 --> 00:20:54,939 minus the towing company. I feel like dispatch did everything they could have done correctly. It was 218 00:20:54,939 --> 00:20:58,899 a smooth process. I was able to get in contact with him right away. He was able to. He was pretty 219 00:20:58,900 --> 00:21:02,819 much the mediator, the situation. So he was delegating with the big boss. Then he'll get in 220 00:21:02,819 --> 00:21:08,060 contact with me. He'll tell me what I need to do. Um, he made sure to make the process smooth 221 00:21:08,060 --> 00:21:12,219 because he was weird. Like it was a terrible situation to be a part of regardless, you know? So 222 00:21:12,259 --> 00:21:17,099 he wasn't also trying to beat on me about it because he knew as well that it was on me, you 223 00:21:17,099 --> 00:21:22,019 know, just my lack of awareness in that situation. but he made sure to not pretty much say, hey, like 224 00:21:22,060 --> 00:21:25,699 you messed up, blah blah blah. He was very understanding of the situation and like, he 225 00:21:25,699 --> 00:21:29,819 understood. Okay. Like, right now I'm in this state of mind. So let me just make sure everything is 226 00:21:29,819 --> 00:21:34,380 handled smoothly. We can get you at least back to sleep. Um, he told me to go back to Mount Holly. He. 227 00:21:34,380 --> 00:21:38,219 That's when he informed me that you can sleep in Mount Holly. So then he told me to go back there 228 00:21:38,219 --> 00:21:42,139 when I was done. But the whole process that he did everything with, he handled everything very 229 00:21:42,140 --> 00:21:47,300 smoothly. So at the end of the night, were you able to. Did they actually tow your truck, or were you 230 00:21:47,300 --> 00:21:51,619 able to get back in your truck and get it on the ground so that you could get back to Mount Holly 231 00:21:51,619 --> 00:21:56,579 and get back to sleep? Because that's a very important part of this whole story, too. They woke 232 00:21:56,619 --> 00:22:02,659 you up during your federally mandated break, and, uh, you got to get back on that break to get that 233 00:22:02,660 --> 00:22:09,579 clock reset, right? Correct. Yep. So, yeah, I had to, um, I had to, uh, wake up and 234 00:22:09,579 --> 00:22:14,339 they pretty much told me I had to go go back to Mount Holly. So I think I had to drive another 45 235 00:22:14,339 --> 00:22:20,059 minutes back to where I came from, in the opposite direction. Um, just to say I'm going to speak for 236 00:22:20,060 --> 00:22:26,259 that night. Wow. And so how did they handle. But they never told. They never told you? Okay, so. They 237 00:22:26,259 --> 00:22:31,899 never told me? No. How did, uh, when you when you got in touch with dispatch and everything was, did 238 00:22:31,900 --> 00:22:36,099 they end up having to pay that 3500 bucks to put you back down on the ground, or was there any 239 00:22:36,099 --> 00:22:41,300 negotiation? Did you feel like you had any options at all, or that was just cut and dry, how it was 240 00:22:41,300 --> 00:22:46,259 going to be? So with the tone company, it was cut and dry like I knew there was going to be a fee 241 00:22:46,260 --> 00:22:52,219 no matter what. Just based on the demeanor of and the way the conversation was going. But the 242 00:22:52,300 --> 00:22:57,299 snipers actually took care of the bill. They put into $3,400 upfront so I can get the truck down. 243 00:22:57,499 --> 00:23:02,500 Um, and then we worked out, actually, they were able to work with me because at that time I was Uber. I 244 00:23:02,500 --> 00:23:07,139 think I only had about five months experience at that time. It worked with me actually, to reduce 245 00:23:07,300 --> 00:23:13,099 that bill, so I didn't even have to pay the $3,500. Um, so they allowed me to pay a minimum of $50 a 246 00:23:13,099 --> 00:23:18,509 month to actually say that I'm paying. I think they allowed me to pay $1,000 tops, which was like 247 00:23:18,509 --> 00:23:22,550 I said, I was never going to fight that because at the end of the day, it was my fault. And I actually 248 00:23:22,550 --> 00:23:27,389 expected to pay $1,500 just to go on a payment plan or something. But they negotiated with me. 249 00:23:27,390 --> 00:23:33,029 They talked to me, I talked to safety. Uh, they they worked their magic, and they they tried to get the 250 00:23:33,029 --> 00:23:36,469 numbers down and helped me out as best as possible. So they did their due diligence as far 251 00:23:36,470 --> 00:23:42,749 as making sure that I was, of course, still being held responsible for my actions, but not giving me 252 00:23:42,750 --> 00:23:49,389 the full brunt of the consequences. So I do greatly appreciate that. But yeah, so they pretty 253 00:23:49,390 --> 00:23:54,709 much had me on a plan. Um, they made me pay about a thousand bucks for the whole thing, and they were 254 00:23:54,709 --> 00:24:00,309 taking it out of my check automatically. Uh, every, every check is so. So it worked out in the long 255 00:24:00,310 --> 00:24:06,909 run. They did a great job as far as communicating what to do, what not to do. Um, for future reference. 256 00:24:06,910 --> 00:24:12,709 And just making sure the whole process overall was smooth. That's great man. I love to hear that 257 00:24:12,709 --> 00:24:17,749 because, look, it's a lesson that you got to learn. And it turned out to be an expensive one, but not 258 00:24:17,750 --> 00:24:23,629 as expensive as it could have been. Right. Uh, correct. And to to hear that, you know, they're 259 00:24:23,630 --> 00:24:27,949 willing to work with you, a driver that's only been there for five months. You're just getting 260 00:24:27,949 --> 00:24:33,109 started. This is your first job in trucking. You're starting to learn the ropes and do really well. At 261 00:24:33,150 --> 00:24:37,989 that point, I imagine starting to really kind of hit your stride. And then a speed bump like this 262 00:24:37,989 --> 00:24:42,589 comes in. There's two different ways a company can take it. They can really berate you and they can 263 00:24:42,590 --> 00:24:48,189 get all over you for making the mistake, or they can work with you to rectify it. And, uh, based on 264 00:24:48,189 --> 00:24:53,150 what I've heard just in the short, you know, 20 some episodes we've done for this podcast, it 265 00:24:53,150 --> 00:24:56,709 seems like Cypress is always on the side of the coin where they're going to work with you and try 266 00:24:56,749 --> 00:25:01,469 to figure this out. They're not going to jump all over you and make you feel bad for making a 267 00:25:01,470 --> 00:25:06,909 mistake. Correct? I agree, that's that's exactly how I felt through the whole situation. That's great 268 00:25:06,910 --> 00:25:11,469 man. So now I gotta ask you on the back end of this whole thing, how sharp are your senses when 269 00:25:11,469 --> 00:25:18,230 it comes to finding an unconventional parking spot these days. Oh, man. Listen, I check every 270 00:25:18,230 --> 00:25:24,269 single sign. I make sure I go out within a 30 foot radius around me. I no longer follow people. If I 271 00:25:24,269 --> 00:25:30,749 need to know if I can stay at a specific, um, shipper, I call ahead first just to make sure, like, 272 00:25:30,749 --> 00:25:36,829 hey, can we stay here? Is this okay? Blah blah blah blah if it is cool. But ever since then, I cross my 273 00:25:36,829 --> 00:25:42,030 T's and out of my eyes. Yes, sir. Yes, sir. It's one of those lumps that, uh, a lot of drivers have 274 00:25:42,030 --> 00:25:47,269 taken in their first year or their first couple of years. Just figuring out the ropes here. And, um, 275 00:25:47,310 --> 00:25:52,029 you know, my you said you said that your parents told you that never to follow people. What my mom 276 00:25:52,030 --> 00:25:56,670 would have said in that situation is if that driver jumped off a bridge, would you jump off a 277 00:25:56,670 --> 00:26:03,029 bridge, too? Exactly right. We've all heard that one growing up, right? Yes, sir. Absolutely, 278 00:26:03,069 --> 00:26:07,989 absolutely. Well, uh, D'onte, you've been sitting here. Uh, thank you for your patience. You've just 279 00:26:07,989 --> 00:26:13,709 been listening to Devon's story there. How similar was your story? Because you've got one to tell. Two 280 00:26:13,749 --> 00:26:18,789 here, and I imagine there's some similarities there. Absolutely. Just to piggyback. Off of Devon. 281 00:26:18,829 --> 00:26:23,069 Um, it's a situation that I can look back and laugh at at the moment, but it's definitely was a 282 00:26:23,069 --> 00:26:27,310 learning experience. Um, so mine was kind of different. Um, like I said, I'd say in the Atlanta 283 00:26:27,310 --> 00:26:32,829 metro area, and we all know how Atlanta metro area could be busy and there's a lot of less parks for 284 00:26:32,829 --> 00:26:37,709 trucks. Yeah. But this particular afternoon when I was coming in and I actually have a terminal in 285 00:26:37,709 --> 00:26:44,069 my, um, area, but I was just trying to bend time and get around traffic, and I bypassed my 286 00:26:44,069 --> 00:26:48,749 terminal, and I actually wanted to park closer to home to take a ten hour break just to regroup, 287 00:26:48,790 --> 00:26:55,389 shower, laundry, things of that, um, etc., things of that nature. So like I said, I had a long work day, 288 00:26:55,790 --> 00:27:01,349 and it's an industrial and industrial spot that's located next to my home, and that's a lot of 289 00:27:01,349 --> 00:27:05,269 trucks that's always parked there. They're busy, they're in and out. People are waiting for loads. 290 00:27:05,270 --> 00:27:10,629 People are staying overnight. Um, it's kind of like in a cul de sac area. So you have like a Coca-Cola 291 00:27:10,629 --> 00:27:16,349 distribution, you have a sales distribution, you have, um, what is that Costco distribution? So long 292 00:27:16,349 --> 00:27:21,829 story short, I was parked in spot. Um, it looked normal to be, uh, a normal place to shut down for a 293 00:27:21,829 --> 00:27:28,629 bit. Uh, nothing really seen by the ordinary. Once I arrived, I had the mindset that I'd be safe, and I 294 00:27:28,629 --> 00:27:33,349 wasn't really familiar, but I just knew it was close to where I lived. So when I came back to the 295 00:27:33,349 --> 00:27:38,309 truck and I realized that my truck had been torn, at first I was frustrated, but I didn't think that 296 00:27:38,310 --> 00:27:43,909 I was doing anything wrong. But after I calmed down and looked into it, I understood that even in 297 00:27:43,909 --> 00:27:48,629 industrial areas, there are strict rules. In some spots like parking were actually restricted or 298 00:27:48,630 --> 00:27:53,429 monitored. So it doesn't mean. So what I learned from it, it doesn't really matter how close that I 299 00:27:53,430 --> 00:27:59,629 was from home and safe that it feels the signs and local rules still apply. Yes, sir. So what 300 00:27:59,630 --> 00:28:04,309 really stood out to me is how quickly something that small choosing the wrong parking spot can 301 00:28:04,310 --> 00:28:09,189 turn into a bigger issue this week on the behalf of lost time stress, the inconvenience that I. That 302 00:28:09,189 --> 00:28:13,469 could have been avoided. And it definitely taught me how to slow down and just pay closer attention 303 00:28:13,470 --> 00:28:18,469 and never assume a spot is okay. Just the part because other people may be parked there, or it's 304 00:28:18,469 --> 00:28:23,149 just a familiar territory that I have passed numerous times and seen commercial vehicles 305 00:28:23,310 --> 00:28:27,869 clustered in that area. Um, and just like I said, just to piggyback off of divine. Once again, man, I 306 00:28:27,870 --> 00:28:33,310 just double check everything before I shut down signs restrictions, even before I'm 100% sure. You 307 00:28:33,310 --> 00:28:38,430 know, I just, uh, being more responsible and staying ahead of problems before they happen. Once I 308 00:28:38,430 --> 00:28:43,069 arrived back, I just. First thing I thought, hey, somebody stole my truck. Um, I call home, got on the 309 00:28:43,069 --> 00:28:47,390 phone with my fiancee at the time, and I'm just like, hey, somebody stole the truck. I mean, I got a 310 00:28:47,390 --> 00:28:52,069 full load on my back, and she's like, what? Uh, this is probably. I'm leaving out three wee hours in 311 00:28:52,069 --> 00:28:57,869 the morning, so I'm already just lost, like, okay, it's 3:00 in the morning. Where is the truck? I 312 00:28:58,270 --> 00:29:03,190 actually left a note in the door. This is the funny part. I left a note in the window explaining 313 00:29:03,190 --> 00:29:07,149 that I was on a ten hour break. I stay in the neighborhood across the street. If there's any 314 00:29:07,150 --> 00:29:12,789 conveyance that I need to move, please feel. Please feel free to call me. So they're choking on that. 315 00:29:12,870 --> 00:29:18,468 For the record, called me three times. I was sleeping that hard. I missed all three phone calls. 316 00:29:18,630 --> 00:29:23,549 So when I got up that next morning and I checked my phone after I stopped all the. Oh, somebody 317 00:29:23,550 --> 00:29:26,949 stole the truck. Somebody stole the truck. Something told me to check my call lock, and I 318 00:29:26,949 --> 00:29:31,310 checked it. So of course, when I tried to call the guy back, I never got a phone call back. I never 319 00:29:31,350 --> 00:29:35,950 got an answer. So at that time, I had to call my local police department. Um, I ended up having to 320 00:29:35,950 --> 00:29:40,189 give him the tag, uh, all the registration number like that. And the lady was like, oh, yeah, that 321 00:29:40,190 --> 00:29:45,789 truck is sold, and it's that stuff. But we need this information in order to get the truck. So 322 00:29:45,790 --> 00:29:50,829 that's of course, when I had to call, um, my night dispatch and get all that information processing 323 00:29:50,829 --> 00:29:55,708 to him and just like to say, man, everybody was helpful, but it just was an inconvenience. Um, one 324 00:29:55,709 --> 00:30:00,429 of my, one of the minor things that happened by being told they end up tearing the oil pan gasket 325 00:30:00,469 --> 00:30:06,069 up underneath my truck. So that caused more damage while getting cold. So my truck had to sit down in 326 00:30:06,069 --> 00:30:10,389 their shop to get repaired for an additional three days. So now I'm at the house fitting for 327 00:30:10,390 --> 00:30:15,189 about two days. Um, another driver had to recover the load. He had to go down there and get the load, 328 00:30:15,189 --> 00:30:19,349 and that's probably like 40, 50 minutes away from where I was towed from. So it's just a big 329 00:30:19,350 --> 00:30:24,869 inconvenience for everybody. But, um, the job definitely still by my side put me on a payment 330 00:30:24,869 --> 00:30:29,549 plan, and it was just a lesson learned. And, um, one thing that my mom always told me and my parents, 331 00:30:29,550 --> 00:30:33,829 if you're wrong, you're wrong and confessed. So just slap out the gate when I got on the phone 332 00:30:33,829 --> 00:30:37,789 with the dispatcher. Hey, I'm wrong, I'm wrong. I knew I wasn't supposed to be here, and that's how 333 00:30:37,790 --> 00:30:42,989 I started my conversation off and we went from that point. That type of humility is, uh, is a very 334 00:30:42,990 --> 00:30:49,789 good thing for a truck driver to have, especially in a situation like this. Uh, D'onte and I will say, 335 00:30:49,829 --> 00:30:54,068 hats off to both of you guys, because the one thing that neither one of you has said was, well, 336 00:30:54,069 --> 00:30:58,629 this wasn't placed right, or this sign was kind of obscured. No, both of you guys have taken this one 337 00:30:58,630 --> 00:31:05,270 right on the chin and said, look, I made the mistake and I want to rectify it. So hats off to 338 00:31:05,270 --> 00:31:10,829 you there for that mindset, because that's a big part of just being a positive person and being a 339 00:31:10,829 --> 00:31:17,349 good person, you know, taking responsibility. I do have to ask you though. Take me through what was 340 00:31:17,349 --> 00:31:23,269 going through your mind when you walk out there and you're expecting to see this huge truck with 341 00:31:23,269 --> 00:31:28,109 a flatbed fully loaded and you're getting ready for the day, and there's just nothing but air 342 00:31:28,229 --> 00:31:33,029 where it used to be. You told me you thought the thing got stolen. What? What was going on in your 343 00:31:33,030 --> 00:31:38,069 head? You ever heard that terminology that your heart goes down to your stomach? Yeah, that's 344 00:31:38,070 --> 00:31:43,390 exactly what. I. Told myself. I said I'm screwed. That was the first thing that came to my mind. 345 00:31:43,390 --> 00:31:48,909 Like, man, you screwed up big time. And like, the whole time, I never thought the truck was told it 346 00:31:48,910 --> 00:31:53,910 was still another truck out there. Maybe it has got in there after all this half this commotion 347 00:31:53,910 --> 00:32:00,229 has occurred, but it was just like, man, I just got this truck stolen. What am I going to say? That was 348 00:32:00,229 --> 00:32:05,749 my main thing going in my mind. Like, how can I present this to them? And um, man, I was devastated, 349 00:32:05,749 --> 00:32:12,429 man. Um, I take 100% pride in, you know, my work ethic. Uh, higher operate with Cypress and it. And I 350 00:32:12,430 --> 00:32:17,509 felt like I let myself down and to call that in, I was going to be letting the company down, but it 351 00:32:17,509 --> 00:32:23,429 was very understandable. Like I said, I stood up, took 100% the blame on it. And I'm just luckily, 352 00:32:23,430 --> 00:32:28,789 I'm glad the truck wasn't stolen. Yeah, yeah, well. And look, you'd have to be a pretty industrious 353 00:32:28,789 --> 00:32:35,789 thief with a really long list of of, uh, experience to be able to pull that off. But, hey, it's not 354 00:32:35,790 --> 00:32:41,669 something we don't see. We see a lot of load theft in the industry, right? Especially with Flatbeds. So, 355 00:32:41,950 --> 00:32:48,790 uh, it's not completely out of the question there, but man, I, I totally get that. I you think what? I 356 00:32:48,790 --> 00:32:52,069 think you said there was another truck parked there, I bet. And that guy was parked around the 357 00:32:52,069 --> 00:32:55,430 corner watching them tow you. And he said, well, they're not going to be back until they can deal 358 00:32:55,430 --> 00:33:00,959 with that. So I'm gonna go park. The same thing. I was doing the same thing and I'm just like, when I 359 00:33:00,959 --> 00:33:07,119 park. I know for a fact it was three different trucks there in that location. And, um, when I came 360 00:33:07,119 --> 00:33:11,880 back, I was like the only one pinpointed out there to remind you I had a at that time, I was in a 361 00:33:11,880 --> 00:33:16,439 bright orange truck when I own this truck that we have on the fleet. So it just spilled out. So, you 362 00:33:16,439 --> 00:33:21,760 know, when I turned the corner, I'm like, oh, man, where's the truck? Where's that big orange, uh, ray 363 00:33:21,760 --> 00:33:26,598 of sunlight, right. Oh, that's it, that's it. That's what I used to call I used to call a big orange. 364 00:33:26,640 --> 00:33:32,359 Yeah. When I hit the corner there this year, I was devastated, man. I bet I bet, you know, I, I have to 365 00:33:32,359 --> 00:33:36,039 say this before I forget. There's something that you said right off the beginning of telling your 366 00:33:36,040 --> 00:33:41,838 story here, D'onte, where you said everybody knows that Atlanta metro can have some traffic. That is 367 00:33:41,839 --> 00:33:48,079 the lightest, most respectful way I've ever heard a truck driver talk about traffic in Atlanta. Um, 368 00:33:48,160 --> 00:33:53,679 you know what? I tell a lot of guys that I train or who I speak with, they're just so angry about 369 00:33:53,679 --> 00:33:58,959 traffic. But, uh, I've been in Atlanta for over 35 years now, and it's just like it's the norm to me. 370 00:33:59,000 --> 00:34:05,159 Yeah, so this is an everyday thing to me. So traffic I'm already expecting a 25 mile radius 371 00:34:05,160 --> 00:34:10,238 trip is the hour and 15 minutes to get up the street. So it's like I'm so used to it, man. Traffic 372 00:34:10,239 --> 00:34:15,799 is like secondary in Atlanta now. Oh, man, I, I think there's a lot of drivers listening to this that 373 00:34:15,800 --> 00:34:20,719 would love to get to where you're at in your head when it comes to traffic in Atlanta. I'm one of. 374 00:34:20,719 --> 00:34:26,959 Them. Yeah. Time and patience. Time and. Patience. Right. We don't get you there. We can tell you this. 375 00:34:26,959 --> 00:34:31,520 Devon, uh, check back with us in 34 years, and we'll let you know if you've developed the time 376 00:34:31,520 --> 00:34:38,399 and the patience for the Atlanta traffic. Okay. There it is, man. Uh, you know, uh, D'onte, one 377 00:34:38,399 --> 00:34:43,559 thing we didn't get from you. What was the number? You obviously didn't get to talk to the Wrecking 378 00:34:43,560 --> 00:34:50,439 Driver. Uh, like like Devon did, but what's, uh. So. Yeah. Go ahead. Invoice field. Invoice field that 379 00:34:50,439 --> 00:34:54,559 I was predicted. Um. And then I have to get. And I had to get back to safety. I think it was like 380 00:34:54,560 --> 00:35:00,039 $1,600 at the time, but they shaved half of that off and I think it dropped down to like 1200 381 00:35:00,040 --> 00:35:05,759 because they did do damage to our vehicle as well. So from them doing the damage by towing the truck, 382 00:35:05,800 --> 00:35:10,840 they repaired that. And I guess that's how that went. I'm not 100% for sure, so I don't want to be 383 00:35:10,840 --> 00:35:16,120 quoted on that. But um, it was 16 at first and then it came down to me and it was 1200 and then, um, 384 00:35:16,159 --> 00:35:20,439 payroll they got with me and they put me on a payment plan, um, a respectful payment plan, 385 00:35:20,520 --> 00:35:25,079 something that I can handle. And I seemed like, uh, divine. It was like $50 every pay period. And once 386 00:35:25,080 --> 00:35:30,520 I got that taken care of, it was off my back. Very good. I will say this, um, when that incident 387 00:35:30,520 --> 00:35:37,279 occurred with me, one thing safety informed me of was North Carolina, at least on the East Coast, is 388 00:35:37,280 --> 00:35:42,159 probably one of the worst places to get towed. Because if you just listening to what D'onte was 389 00:35:42,159 --> 00:35:48,559 speaking on with his mouth, he actually got towed. And his the $1,600, I just got picked up and I was 390 00:35:48,560 --> 00:35:54,639 $3,500 just to drop that line, so they inform you that if you're in North Carolina, be extremely 391 00:35:54,639 --> 00:35:59,239 careful, be extremely diligent, and take your time because they that's one of the ways that they've 392 00:35:59,239 --> 00:36:03,519 actually been a problem. And it's a more common issue in North Carolina to do that. A lot of 393 00:36:03,800 --> 00:36:08,839 companies would intentionally do that. Absolutely. Yeah. And then another thing just to fall back on 394 00:36:08,839 --> 00:36:14,559 him. Um, when you get to these shippers or you out of town, don't I mean, out of time. Don't panic. Just 395 00:36:14,560 --> 00:36:18,398 call in with dispatch. Make sure you can stay at the ship or. Or make sure you can stay at this 396 00:36:18,399 --> 00:36:21,959 receiver, because there's a lot of shipper and receiver that does have rules and regulations 397 00:36:21,959 --> 00:36:27,599 that they don't want commercial vehicles on their property, but 85% we can't stay there. And that's 398 00:36:27,600 --> 00:36:30,999 kind of ridiculous too. So we definitely appreciate the companies that let us do that on 399 00:36:30,999 --> 00:36:36,279 their yard. For sure. I mean, truck parking is is a whole problem that we could spend an entire 400 00:36:36,280 --> 00:36:41,559 episode talking about and telling the stories of you guys just, uh, you know, getting run ragged, 401 00:36:41,600 --> 00:36:46,119 trying to find spots. And and I know it's tough out there, man. It's something that every driver I 402 00:36:46,120 --> 00:36:52,438 talked to mentions at some point in time and, uh, you know to your point there, Devon. The North 403 00:36:52,439 --> 00:36:58,079 Carolina issue was made very apparent to me while we were planning this episode. Um, that was 404 00:36:58,080 --> 00:37:02,840 actually Charlotte was kind of eyed as like, hey, we need to get some drivers that are up in that 405 00:37:02,840 --> 00:37:08,840 area because that's where they're really dealing with it. And listen, I've, I've had some I had one 406 00:37:08,840 --> 00:37:13,919 driver on a different podcast tell me a story where, uh, he was parked at a Walmart, which, you 407 00:37:13,919 --> 00:37:19,479 know, they're kind of notoriously okay with, uh, their big, huge parking spots. Most of the Walmarts 408 00:37:19,480 --> 00:37:25,480 around my area out here in Oregon are just fine with trucks parking there. But when this guy woke 409 00:37:25,480 --> 00:37:31,919 up, he had a clam shell on his windshield. You guys know what those are? Those big suction cups. And he 410 00:37:31,919 --> 00:37:38,158 looked out the window and there was a guy holding a sign and the guy's face was obscured. Now, this 411 00:37:38,159 --> 00:37:44,079 is the crazy part. The guy was armed, had a gun on his hip that you could clearly see. And on the 412 00:37:44,080 --> 00:37:50,119 sign it said to remove this clam shell, call this number. And of course the driver called it and 413 00:37:50,120 --> 00:37:56,239 they wanted, I think it was $5,000 to take that thing off. And if you try to take those things off 414 00:37:56,280 --> 00:38:01,559 yourself, it will break the windshield and that'll put you out of service. So you're you're sitting 415 00:38:01,560 --> 00:38:07,479 here thinking, what am I going to do? This this particular incident was in Indiana, and he called 416 00:38:07,480 --> 00:38:11,519 the local. The dispatch told him, hey, get in touch with the local police, see if there's anything 417 00:38:11,520 --> 00:38:16,120 they can do. And the local police came out and stood right next to the guy who'd put the 418 00:38:16,120 --> 00:38:21,759 clamshell on the window and, you know, looked at his busted up minivan and said, look, there's not 419 00:38:21,760 --> 00:38:26,439 anything we can do about this right now because we don't know if he's contracted by somebody. We 420 00:38:26,439 --> 00:38:32,279 don't know who this guy is. Um, he's escalating the situation by even being here and holding a sign 421 00:38:32,280 --> 00:38:38,799 and being armed. So, uh, unfortunately, this driver had to call a different wrecker that they trusted 422 00:38:38,800 --> 00:38:43,398 and have his rig towed so that they could get this clamshell off. And they did end up breaking 423 00:38:43,399 --> 00:38:48,839 the windshield just to get this thing off. But what's crazy, fellas, is you can buy those 424 00:38:48,839 --> 00:38:55,679 clamshells online. You can just be a regular Tom, Dick and Harry and go on to your whatever, 425 00:38:55,840 --> 00:39:01,519 uh, you know, fly by night website it is, and buy one of those, and suddenly you are the predatory 426 00:39:01,560 --> 00:39:08,398 tour. Um, this is this is something that, like I said, I don't use the term plaguing the industry 427 00:39:08,399 --> 00:39:14,198 lightly. Um, but these are the these are the way that these tactics are employed, and it's really 428 00:39:14,199 --> 00:39:18,959 just looked at as trucking companies have a lot of money and these are big rigs and there's a lot 429 00:39:18,959 --> 00:39:23,359 of money changing hands. We're just going to come in and steal a large chunk of it and 430 00:39:23,360 --> 00:39:29,999 inconvenience the driver. And yeah, you know, it's it really sticks in my craw, fellas, is the way 431 00:39:30,000 --> 00:39:34,839 I'll put it. I, I hate that you guys have to deal with all the things that you have to deal with 432 00:39:34,879 --> 00:39:40,119 that the job entails on a good day. And then this is something that you guys have to look for at 433 00:39:40,120 --> 00:39:46,879 night. Uh um, you know Deontay being a trainer I wonder what type of of information you're giving 434 00:39:46,879 --> 00:39:53,120 to your trainees about this problem, and how are you kind of shaping them to watch out for it and 435 00:39:53,120 --> 00:39:59,600 protect themselves? Uh, for the, um. Hands off. Hands down. For the most part, I definitely identify the 436 00:39:59,600 --> 00:40:05,198 areas that we can park that far. As far as, uh, plants, uh, things that I have already been 437 00:40:05,199 --> 00:40:10,519 accustomed to and already know. So I give them that information hands down. Um, like I say, I tell 438 00:40:10,519 --> 00:40:14,239 them to do further research. Uh, Google the number. If you have to Google the numbers, see if you 439 00:40:14,239 --> 00:40:19,759 could park. Uh, let's as we pre-trip our trip planning. I mean, excuse me, not free trip. We do 440 00:40:19,800 --> 00:40:25,280 trip planning throughout the day. Before we start our journey, let's see what the parking area is 441 00:40:25,280 --> 00:40:28,878 around. If you're no, you're not going to be able to make it to a truck stop. And they can't take 442 00:40:28,879 --> 00:40:32,479 you at the time that you're trying to arrive. Let's see if this place has additional parking 443 00:40:32,480 --> 00:40:38,520 for commercial vehicles before you arrive. So you already know that at hand state. Um, so things of 444 00:40:38,560 --> 00:40:42,519 that nature. I just try to be up blunt and personal with them. Um, try trying not to scare 445 00:40:42,519 --> 00:40:46,959 them off because like I said, with the situation that I was in, I wouldn't want another one of my 446 00:40:46,960 --> 00:40:50,479 fellow travelers that happened to deal with that. Because like I say, it's it's time consuming and 447 00:40:50,479 --> 00:40:54,600 it's an inconvenience at the end of the day. Um, and then absolutely, you have to come up off the 448 00:40:54,600 --> 00:41:00,919 money, unfortunately. Right, right. And, and in your case, uh, the truck got damaged. The worst possible 449 00:41:00,920 --> 00:41:06,159 scenario there. Goddamnit. So I'm really reporting two things at one time. Hey, the truck is damaged 450 00:41:06,159 --> 00:41:10,039 and is towed, so I don't know which one I want to give. Do I want to say the truck is damaged, or do 451 00:41:10,039 --> 00:41:14,759 I want to say the old car first? So you know what I mean? I got two bad stories. No good story. So, 452 00:41:14,759 --> 00:41:20,199 yeah, that's how that last with me. Well, you know, it's one thing about it is I. I feel like we 453 00:41:20,199 --> 00:41:24,719 wouldn't be looking back on these stories and kind of laughing a little bit about it. Obviously 454 00:41:24,720 --> 00:41:30,119 it's a serious situation, but if if the company didn't handle it like they did, we probably 455 00:41:30,120 --> 00:41:34,479 wouldn't even be having this conversation because you guys would. You would have the more of the 456 00:41:34,479 --> 00:41:38,999 mindset of a whipped dog, like, why on earth would I want to bring that up again? Like, that was 457 00:41:38,999 --> 00:41:44,969 terrible. But we came to a positive outcome here. And that's one thing that, you know, the purpose of 458 00:41:44,970 --> 00:41:50,329 this episode is just to help other drivers if they ever see something like this or they deal 459 00:41:50,330 --> 00:41:54,729 with something like this, understand that first and foremost, you got to make that call to 460 00:41:54,729 --> 00:41:59,369 dispatch. You know, you both mentioned getting on the phone with your dispatcher even in the wee 461 00:41:59,370 --> 00:42:06,290 hours of the morning. And I think that that's a very important thing, would you say, and I'll go to 462 00:42:06,330 --> 00:42:11,369 you first. The most important thing you can do when something like this happens is get in touch 463 00:42:11,370 --> 00:42:17,169 with dispatch as soon as possible. Don't sign anything. Don't talk to anybody. Get in touch with 464 00:42:17,169 --> 00:42:23,329 dispatch. Is that accurate? I agree, I feel like I. You want it to me, you want to treat it like how 465 00:42:23,330 --> 00:42:27,689 they tell you to treat anything where it's legally involved. Um, where they say if you go to 466 00:42:27,689 --> 00:42:31,409 speak to a lawyer, just keep your mouth shut until you have a lawyer present. I feel like treated 467 00:42:31,409 --> 00:42:36,529 with that same regard. Where because anything you say can kind of incriminate you. Yeah. Um, if you 468 00:42:36,530 --> 00:42:40,289 say I didn't know about you Until now, the tow truck driver that you did something, you weren't 469 00:42:40,289 --> 00:42:44,769 supposed to borrow a block. So the first thing that you want to do is contact this person. They 470 00:42:44,769 --> 00:42:50,409 would walk you through what you can and shouldn't say what you can and shouldn't do, and they would 471 00:42:50,409 --> 00:42:54,449 just make sure the guy is going to right pastor that nothing further comes out of the predicament 472 00:42:54,449 --> 00:43:00,610 you're already in. Yeah, good advice there, D'onte. From your side, I do understand why you called 473 00:43:00,610 --> 00:43:05,449 your fiancee first, because you were looking at a load of sailboat fuel that was a fully loaded 474 00:43:05,449 --> 00:43:10,929 flatbed before you went to bed that night, so I get that part of it. But the next call, I. You know, 475 00:43:10,970 --> 00:43:16,169 there wasn't anybody out there for you to talk to. It was just you and and and the world. So, uh, 476 00:43:16,169 --> 00:43:20,289 you're called to dispatch came after that call to the fiancee, but it kind of sounds like that call 477 00:43:20,290 --> 00:43:25,369 to the fiancee might have calmed you down just a little bit. Absolutely, absolutely. So. And that's 478 00:43:25,370 --> 00:43:29,530 definitely what that call was mainly for. And, um, like I said, man, I got in touch with dispatch. 479 00:43:29,569 --> 00:43:33,769 Shout out to dispatch. Uh, by the way, awesome team work that they do down there. Yeah. Um, especially 480 00:43:33,770 --> 00:43:40,609 my dispatcher, Miss Katie. Uh, she's awesome, but, um, I called dispatch and they walked me through the 481 00:43:40,610 --> 00:43:45,449 process very thoroughly. Uh, told me what I needed to do. What was my first bet? What is my second 482 00:43:45,449 --> 00:43:49,850 step? And, um, like I said, it was a lift off my shoulder, because at the whole time, I just thought 483 00:43:49,850 --> 00:43:55,089 that I let everybody down. And, um, you know, I was told things like this happen, this what comes with 484 00:43:55,090 --> 00:43:59,649 trucking. So, you know, it was an eye opening for me. But like I said, they gave me everything that I 485 00:43:59,649 --> 00:44:04,449 needed to say, what not to say, how to contact, what information to grab for the truck. As far as 486 00:44:04,490 --> 00:44:09,409 numbers that the tow truck was handling, um, who they needed to talk to for my job to get all that 487 00:44:09,409 --> 00:44:13,729 information. So they definitely walked me through the process and it was very smooth sailing from 488 00:44:13,769 --> 00:44:18,329 that point. Well, shout out to Miss Katie. She joined the podcast here just a couple of weeks 489 00:44:18,330 --> 00:44:23,810 ago. Uh, absolutely. I told Dan she's awesome, man, hands down. She's so great. And let me tell you, we 490 00:44:23,810 --> 00:44:28,369 made a big fan out of her here on the podcast. She's coming back. She's going to be a regular for 491 00:44:28,370 --> 00:44:35,249 us for sure, so you'll get to hear from her again. But that's just one of an entire team across 492 00:44:35,249 --> 00:44:42,128 multiple terminals of great dispatchers that. That we have here at Cypress and I don't know. Devon, 493 00:44:42,129 --> 00:44:45,769 do you want to shout out your dispatcher too? I feel like we ought to give them their flowers as 494 00:44:45,769 --> 00:44:51,409 well. I want to shout out both of them. Um, because initially I was regional when I got hired on and 495 00:44:51,409 --> 00:44:56,849 I switched to local when I was regional, Scott did amazing with me. Um, he delegated with me. He helped 496 00:44:56,850 --> 00:45:01,049 me get the most mileage that I wanted when I had a certain schedule that I wanted to keep. He was 497 00:45:01,050 --> 00:45:06,449 able to tweak it and make sure that I. I ran what I wanted to run. Um, so he was there. Shout out to 498 00:45:06,450 --> 00:45:12,729 Scott. And then when I went local, uh, he paired me up with Jim. Jim is amazing. Real cool, eclectic guy. 499 00:45:12,850 --> 00:45:19,289 He knows the industry. He knows the game. And he did his very best to make sure my needs were met. 500 00:45:19,810 --> 00:45:25,849 That's awesome man. Shout out Jim. Shout out Scott. Shout out Miss Katie. Uh I love a good shout out 501 00:45:25,850 --> 00:45:30,289 on this podcast. In fact, if we did every single one of them that we could, we would just spend an 502 00:45:30,289 --> 00:45:36,610 hour doing shout outs. That's how good the team is here. Uh, so I love it, guys. Thank you for that 503 00:45:36,610 --> 00:45:42,929 because they deserve that recognition without, um, you know, we we like to say it. It takes a village 504 00:45:43,050 --> 00:45:48,929 to, to make this company run as such a well-oiled machine. And when you start to really talk to the 505 00:45:48,929 --> 00:45:54,929 actual people that are responsible for that, like yourselves, like the dispatchers, what you see is a 506 00:45:54,929 --> 00:46:00,530 lot of dedication to this company. And you don't get that by treating your employees like they're 507 00:46:00,530 --> 00:46:05,449 screw ups. You get that by having a lot of understanding, which it seems like in both your 508 00:46:05,450 --> 00:46:11,969 guys's situations, that was the order of the of the day, correct? Absolutely. Fellas, I wonder, um, 509 00:46:12,009 --> 00:46:17,809 have you ever experienced anything or seen or known a driver that has experienced any cargo 510 00:46:17,850 --> 00:46:22,649 theft? Obviously, uh, Deontay, we were real worried that the whole kit and caboodle was gone. 511 00:46:22,649 --> 00:46:29,009 Fortunately it wasn't. But, uh, do you guys hear or see anything about cargo theft out there on the 512 00:46:29,010 --> 00:46:35,729 road? Reason I ask is, uh, I mean, costing the the transportation industry $35 billion a year. 513 00:46:35,729 --> 00:46:42,329 That seems pretty prevalent to me. Uh, so, Devon, I'll start with you here. Uh, any anything that 514 00:46:42,330 --> 00:46:47,489 you've seen out there on the road that maybe you could caution drivers to look out for, or anything 515 00:46:47,489 --> 00:46:54,489 that just looks sketchy to you in your travels? So I personally haven't experienced it or seen 516 00:46:54,490 --> 00:46:59,849 it. However, there are things that I noticed when I used to park up that some other drivers for 517 00:46:59,850 --> 00:47:05,489 different companies of course would do. And I just think be very mindful of all the things you have, 518 00:47:05,529 --> 00:47:09,249 like a truck, keep a count of the stuff you have because some some drivers will keep things on the 519 00:47:09,249 --> 00:47:15,649 outside, probably like zip tie to it or secure with some bunches or something. And that opens up 520 00:47:15,649 --> 00:47:22,129 theft, the possibility of theft. Um, but one thing that a lot of my trainer shout out, Andy, he really 521 00:47:22,129 --> 00:47:28,369 let me know what areas. I know he said a lot of the Midwest, uh, Memphis, stuff like that. Uh, they 522 00:47:28,410 --> 00:47:34,169 typically have higher thefts than the areas like our Southeast Regionals. So a lot of that I didn't 523 00:47:34,170 --> 00:47:38,489 get to experience is based on the places that I would go. And luckily. But that's also why I tell 524 00:47:38,529 --> 00:47:43,249 people, even today, with me being a year in, I have a little bit more knowledge to give. People who 525 00:47:43,250 --> 00:47:50,129 are newer is try to park in places that are larger corporate backed 526 00:47:50,170 --> 00:47:55,689 places, if that makes sense. So like I would always make sure Love's pilot will be my go to if 527 00:47:55,689 --> 00:48:02,570 anything, parking at places that aren't as sanctioned in a sense, for lack of better words to 528 00:48:02,610 --> 00:48:07,928 me is a little bit more risky, and it opens up more room for less security, which means more 529 00:48:07,969 --> 00:48:14,209 theft, possibly. So just to cover your butt, always make sure you park in places that have more 530 00:48:14,210 --> 00:48:20,969 security and it's more known to be a safer spot. Good advice there. Deontay do you have any 531 00:48:20,969 --> 00:48:27,489 thoughts on that? Yes. Um, just to piggyback off him, once again, let's park in the areas that we know 532 00:48:27,489 --> 00:48:33,569 are safe. Are these rural different areas that mean, I know these guys get to get to a time and 533 00:48:33,569 --> 00:48:37,409 they're tired and all, I'm gonna just shack up here or I'm gonna just shack here for the night. 534 00:48:37,449 --> 00:48:44,089 But just let's really be mindful about parking in this area. Um, the loves, the pilots, the PTAs, the 535 00:48:44,090 --> 00:48:49,329 patrols, the the things that we're welcome to. Let's have the commercial vehicles in that 536 00:48:49,330 --> 00:48:54,729 presence. I think that's the best way to park. And, um, just know if you are parking in something 537 00:48:54,729 --> 00:48:59,889 besides that. Um, I know back when I was going through orientation with, um, Cypress, they always 538 00:48:59,889 --> 00:49:03,570 said, if you're parking that somewhere and you're paying physically for it, just always have 539 00:49:03,570 --> 00:49:08,529 documentation saying that you're eligible to park here, you know, something to cover yourself. And 540 00:49:08,529 --> 00:49:12,489 like you said, man, protect your equipment. Uh, equipment is definitely not cheap. So the 541 00:49:12,489 --> 00:49:17,008 equipment that we really, really need and we use on a daily basis, let's keep it locked up and just 542 00:49:17,009 --> 00:49:21,729 check your surroundings. I mean, um, even at the club, the loves or the pilots, etc.. I'm always 543 00:49:21,729 --> 00:49:26,849 looking at my surroundings. Um, I'm the type of guy I eat, shower, get right back in my safe zone. So, 544 00:49:27,249 --> 00:49:32,369 you know, just keep it safe and keep trucking. Yeah. Keep your head on a swivel. It's. I mean, it really 545 00:49:32,370 --> 00:49:38,649 is so important for drivers on outside of the predatory towing, outside of the load theft, you 546 00:49:38,649 --> 00:49:44,529 still want to be in a safe area, right? The safest area that you can get to. Um, you know, you 547 00:49:44,530 --> 00:49:50,529 mentioned Memphis there. Uh, Devon, that's one of the absolute hot spots. In fact, I just saw a 548 00:49:50,529 --> 00:49:57,370 dedicated, uh, like five hour or five, five minute long news hit just the other day of load 549 00:49:57,409 --> 00:50:04,128 theft in Memphis in particular. Um, are there any places that you guys particularly avoid, 550 00:50:04,449 --> 00:50:10,769 uh, due to the sketchy ness of the situation? Worried about being a victim of predatory towing? 551 00:50:10,849 --> 00:50:15,289 Um, I'll start with you there. Uh, in any places that you're just straight up not going, or you 552 00:50:15,290 --> 00:50:21,810 would rather not if you can keep from it. Um, not as far as city was. Not from where I've been. No, um, 553 00:50:21,810 --> 00:50:28,689 but one thing I made sure to do or to not do as much was, uh, park at the, um, more mom 554 00:50:28,689 --> 00:50:34,009 and pop shops about truck stops because there were a ton of those, um, like, I think when I was in, 555 00:50:34,129 --> 00:50:39,169 I want to say it was North Carolina as well. There's a specific road where you don't have a 556 00:50:39,169 --> 00:50:43,809 gas station for miles, but there's a truck stop like a mom and pop truck stop, and you will only 557 00:50:43,810 --> 00:50:48,889 see about two trucks there. It's literally in the middle of nowhere. So those are the type of places 558 00:50:48,889 --> 00:50:54,569 that I typically would advise people from parking at. And that could be anywhere. Whether it's in 559 00:50:54,570 --> 00:51:00,209 Georgia, whether it's in Florida, it could be Alabama, just mainly because of the fact that it's 560 00:51:00,209 --> 00:51:05,209 not it's no shame on those businesses because I don't know those businesses at all. But just the 561 00:51:05,210 --> 00:51:09,408 unknown is the part. That's that's strong right there. You don't know anything about this company. 562 00:51:09,409 --> 00:51:13,729 You've never heard of it. You don't know the area. You don't know anything. So why put yourself in a 563 00:51:13,729 --> 00:51:18,729 position where something could potentially happen? Just cover your butt like Beyonce was saying, 564 00:51:18,729 --> 00:51:24,460 cover your butt and just go where you know it's safer. Absolutely. Absolutely. And Deontay, the guy 565 00:51:24,499 --> 00:51:30,459 that faces down Atlanta traffic with a smile on his face every day. Any place out there that 566 00:51:30,460 --> 00:51:36,699 you're avoiding. Uh like the plague. Most definitely the industrial areas where you see a 567 00:51:36,699 --> 00:51:41,259 lot of warehousing. You think it's safe? Trust me, a lesson learned. Do not park in those areas. Let's 568 00:51:41,259 --> 00:51:45,860 get it up to a truck stop and be safe. Uh, just like Davon said, man. Rural areas in the middle of 569 00:51:45,860 --> 00:51:51,179 nowhere. It looks kind of sketchy. Only two trucks there. I wouldn't, uh, guy myself. I wouldn't try to 570 00:51:51,179 --> 00:51:55,979 park there. Um, but normally, traveling up these highways, I've been doing it for the last 13, 12 571 00:51:55,979 --> 00:52:02,579 years. I have go to spots and, um, just like that, uh, that situation that I had was just a 572 00:52:02,580 --> 00:52:07,259 laziness part of me. I knew better, and I knew I shouldn't have parked there. So now I just go to 573 00:52:07,259 --> 00:52:12,019 my spots that I know that's safe and comfortable. But once these guys are like Davon himself, when 574 00:52:12,100 --> 00:52:16,379 he gets back over the road, or he ever gets back out there to do southeast, uh, regional, I'm quite 575 00:52:16,379 --> 00:52:19,739 sure he has different trucks. Not where hey, I don't get here numerous of times. I'm going to 576 00:52:19,740 --> 00:52:25,419 stop here for the night. I'll stay. Here. So when guys get in that comfort zone and have they go to 577 00:52:25,459 --> 00:52:29,339 spots, that's the best thing to do. Go with your first mind and then go to the go to spot your 578 00:52:29,340 --> 00:52:34,579 safe trucks. Safe and quick and safe. Good night. Rest. There you go. D'onte, your advice for drivers 579 00:52:34,580 --> 00:52:40,219 that pull into a spot and just don't feel right? Something about it. Maybe they can't even place it. 580 00:52:40,259 --> 00:52:47,138 Doesn't feel right. What's your advice? My advice is for drivers. That doesn't feel right. Um, my 581 00:52:47,139 --> 00:52:51,938 my type of guy that I go with gut feeling. If it doesn't feel right, I wouldn't park there. Um, if 582 00:52:51,939 --> 00:52:56,178 you're out of time, let's get with dispatch. Just get with the log. Like I said, they work with us 583 00:52:56,179 --> 00:53:01,619 around the clock, 24 over seven. We have late night dispatch. We have late night safety. So if you're 584 00:53:01,620 --> 00:53:05,820 not comfortable, let's get those concerns into those particular people, and they'll give you 585 00:53:05,820 --> 00:53:11,459 advice on what you need to do. Um, I know a lot of guys be, uh, pressed on time. So the main reason why 586 00:53:11,460 --> 00:53:15,499 they'll shut down. I don't have any time. Let's not worry about it too much at the time. The job will 587 00:53:15,499 --> 00:53:19,218 take care of us. What we need. If you follow the correct procedures and let them know that this 588 00:53:19,219 --> 00:53:23,939 does not say da da da da da da. They'll get you to a safe point and you can have a safe night's rest. 589 00:53:24,060 --> 00:53:29,339 Right, right. You've got some of that, uh, just a precious little bit, but some of that PC time that 590 00:53:29,340 --> 00:53:34,939 you can use to get to a safe spot. Right? Absolutely. And a lot of guys, you know, utilize 591 00:53:34,939 --> 00:53:39,379 that if you need to get to a safe spot. I mean, I'm quite sure that's what they'll tell us to utilize. 592 00:53:39,419 --> 00:53:43,779 I mean, you know, get to a safe spot. Man, that's the best. I mean, at the end of the day, we want to do 593 00:53:43,779 --> 00:53:47,459 everything safely. And that's the most important part. We want to get back home to our families. Yes, 594 00:53:47,459 --> 00:53:53,299 sir. Yes, sir. Devon. Any advice for a driver who gets parked and just doesn't feel right? Kind of 595 00:53:53,340 --> 00:53:59,418 the same thing there or any. Anything to. Add? Yeah, I can't, I can't even, I can't even, I can't even 596 00:53:59,460 --> 00:54:02,860 add more to that. To be honest. I feel like trusting your gut is probably the most important 597 00:54:02,860 --> 00:54:07,779 thing. What doesn't feel right and most of the time isn't right. Um, but other than that, I would 598 00:54:07,780 --> 00:54:13,539 just say do your due diligence. One thing I would probably push that I wish people, of course they 599 00:54:13,540 --> 00:54:16,620 would never know that I'm not thinking like this, but I wish people would have told me a little bit 600 00:54:16,620 --> 00:54:23,540 more. With the trucking industry is take your time there. That is 601 00:54:23,540 --> 00:54:28,019 probably the most important thing that I've learned in the last year of trucking is. And even 602 00:54:28,020 --> 00:54:32,418 when you're local, you see it a little bit more. I see a lot of I have a lot of buddies of mine that 603 00:54:32,419 --> 00:54:36,859 probably that do LTL. They do a lot of local stuff like that. And the things they have to do, they do 604 00:54:36,899 --> 00:54:42,579 fuel delivery and they there's traffic. There's if you if you are always working in a state of mind 605 00:54:42,580 --> 00:54:47,739 where you feel like you have pressure on you, that will affect your decision making in any aspect of 606 00:54:47,779 --> 00:54:52,979 this, of this career, whether it's with parking, whether it's with making turn, just not supposed 607 00:54:52,980 --> 00:54:57,620 to make, whether it's driving down the road you want to take your time. That is probably the most 608 00:54:57,620 --> 00:55:02,459 crucial advice I can give any driver that's listening to this. Um, just from my parking 609 00:55:02,460 --> 00:55:08,419 experience, me wanting to do what I wanted to do and not taking the time to go out and, like, read 610 00:55:08,419 --> 00:55:12,179 all the signs and make sure that I wasn't supposed to park here. That could have saved me. 611 00:55:12,219 --> 00:55:17,619 Even though it was $300. I could've have saved the company $3,500, but it could have saved me $1,000. 612 00:55:17,659 --> 00:55:24,460 Absolutely no. And after a few seconds, how do your day save you so much? Absolutely. And I got to say 613 00:55:24,460 --> 00:55:28,579 that, Devon, I do have to throw the famous sand in there. And the famous word of Matt filling it. 614 00:55:28,780 --> 00:55:34,258 We're not hauling body parts. Take your time. Yeah. Yes, sir. The Lord will get there and everybody 615 00:55:34,259 --> 00:55:37,939 will be safe. Safety is the number one priority while we're out there on the road. We're 616 00:55:37,939 --> 00:55:42,179 definitely not hauling body parts. It's building material. We can get it there. It can't get 617 00:55:42,179 --> 00:55:46,299 rescheduled. And that's something that I had to learn. Because as a driver, your main focus is to 618 00:55:46,300 --> 00:55:51,620 get there safe and have an early delivery. None of us wants to be late. You know, that's not in our in 619 00:55:51,620 --> 00:55:55,259 our category. We don't want to be like so always let's get the load there. Let's get the load there. 620 00:55:55,260 --> 00:56:01,139 But take your time. That's a good, uh, quote there. Um, Devon, take your time, man. Yeah, absolutely. And 621 00:56:01,139 --> 00:56:04,500 and, you know, that's something that I've heard from a lot of the driver trainers. That's 622 00:56:04,500 --> 00:56:08,899 something that, uh, Randy said when he was on here. That's something that Ken said when he was on 623 00:56:08,899 --> 00:56:15,859 here. Uh, it's a big theme. Is that that rush feeling that you want to get. Is going to 624 00:56:15,860 --> 00:56:21,899 affect you, your decision making, your instincts, all of it. And what are we, if not our our decision 625 00:56:21,940 --> 00:56:26,819 making and our instincts when we're out there driving these trucks? Right. And, you know, we talk 626 00:56:26,860 --> 00:56:31,219 about another thing that management loves to say is you've got an obligation to the motoring 627 00:56:31,219 --> 00:56:36,539 public to do your job safely. And we want you home safely, and we want everybody out there on the 628 00:56:36,540 --> 00:56:41,698 road around you, home safely. And if you're out there rushing, trying to get things done, little 629 00:56:41,699 --> 00:56:46,779 things are what are going to go by the wayside first. And when you start to pile up, not doing the 630 00:56:46,780 --> 00:56:52,899 little things right, that's when big problems hit. Right, fellas? Absolutely, absolutely. Well, fellas, 631 00:56:52,899 --> 00:56:57,379 this has been awesome. I think that's a great place to get to. Our final segment here, which is 632 00:56:57,379 --> 00:57:02,819 our final thoughts now. Uh, huge thanks to you guys for making your first appearance here on the 633 00:57:02,820 --> 00:57:08,539 Cypress Truck Lines podcast. I hope you enjoyed it. Hey, I definitely enjoyed having you. This has been 634 00:57:08,540 --> 00:57:15,340 very informative And I think that the main takeaway here is that you can this this can 635 00:57:15,340 --> 00:57:20,419 be it's a negative thing that happens. Right. But it doesn't have to all be negative if you go 636 00:57:20,420 --> 00:57:25,779 about it. If you do the standard operating procedure, you call your dispatcher, you've got 637 00:57:25,820 --> 00:57:31,099 help and they're there to help you. They're not there to to to flog you and make you feel bad for 638 00:57:31,099 --> 00:57:36,020 a mistake that you made. Um, even if you can sit here on the podcast and tell me, hey, it was 639 00:57:36,020 --> 00:57:42,299 totally a mistake, I shouldn't have done that. That really speaks to the quality of employees that 640 00:57:42,300 --> 00:57:47,340 Cypress has and the quality of work that they're doing. We're sitting here not far removed from 641 00:57:47,340 --> 00:57:51,979 this, uh, and we're kind of we're looking back at it and, and looking at it as a lesson that we 642 00:57:51,980 --> 00:57:57,979 learned. And it's not something that ended our career or was a huge speed bump. So, gentlemen, just 643 00:57:58,020 --> 00:58:04,139 the the conversation alone is huge. But we do, uh, this thing on this podcast where everybody that 644 00:58:04,139 --> 00:58:10,620 joins us gets their own little mini segment. We call it Final Thoughts, and this segment is for 645 00:58:10,620 --> 00:58:16,619 you guys to totally have the floor if you want to bring up anything that we didn't talk about. Now's 646 00:58:16,620 --> 00:58:21,859 the time to do it. If you want to give shout outs to anybody that you work with or maybe the family 647 00:58:21,860 --> 00:58:27,938 back home, you can use the time for that. It's totally up to you. The floor is yours. Uh, Devon 648 00:58:27,939 --> 00:58:32,459 Sonson, we're going to you first, man. Greatly appreciate the time here today. Can't wait to get 649 00:58:32,460 --> 00:58:37,619 you back on again. Final thoughts from you before we let you go today. Thank you for having me. It 650 00:58:37,620 --> 00:58:42,539 was a pleasure. Um, even just to be able to think back and reflect on this and just, you know, just 651 00:58:42,539 --> 00:58:47,019 see how far I've even come from just the beginning. But I will say, uh, for anyone looking to 652 00:58:47,059 --> 00:58:52,179 get into trucking, I think that bridge is a great company to start off with. Um, I feel like there's 653 00:58:52,179 --> 00:58:58,979 a good balance between good management and just overall communication. I would 654 00:58:58,980 --> 00:59:04,580 say, like, once again, I'll reiterate this. Take your time. Um, there's no need to rush for anything. Kind 655 00:59:04,580 --> 00:59:10,899 of what D'onte was saying. He was like, if you were not hauling body parts, you know. So 656 00:59:11,340 --> 00:59:16,899 once I was that thought set in, then it really helped me kind of put my mind at ease. And that's 657 00:59:16,900 --> 00:59:21,179 really what you're going to need to even get through it. He's successful in his career. Um, you 658 00:59:21,179 --> 00:59:26,099 can take this with any industry you get into, whether it's flatbed, whether it's drive in reefer, 659 00:59:26,419 --> 00:59:33,379 um, any you're going to need that mindset in every single aspect of driving. So be mindful. And then 660 00:59:33,379 --> 00:59:40,379 also be mindful that your, your, your CDL extends further than driving trucks. So you 661 00:59:40,379 --> 00:59:45,580 know like I'm a car guy. So I have to always constantly remind myself like, dude, I can't make 662 00:59:45,580 --> 00:59:50,659 any rash decisions on the road because that affects my career. It's not just your license, 663 00:59:50,660 --> 00:59:55,939 that's your career. Your license is now officially your career. So be mindful that you're also 664 00:59:55,939 --> 01:00:01,459 technically working outside of work. So really good. Advice. Yeah, really good advice there. That's 665 01:00:01,460 --> 01:00:07,109 very unique advice. And I listen uh, the trucking industry. Devon is something that sort of lends 666 01:00:07,110 --> 01:00:12,230 itself to car guys, right? Like, hey, uh, I like driving. Might as well get in a big rig and drive 667 01:00:12,230 --> 01:00:18,069 around and get paid for it. So that's very poignant advice there, because, listen, I've been 668 01:00:18,070 --> 01:00:23,029 behind the wheel of a mustang. I understand what that gas pedal does to you. It's it's something 669 01:00:23,429 --> 01:00:28,149 it's it's a connection with your heart. And there's nothing you can do. But if you're mindful, 670 01:00:28,149 --> 01:00:32,709 you can protect yourself out there and not end up with a huge mark on your record that might affect 671 01:00:32,710 --> 01:00:38,709 your career. Man, that. Is. Super unique advice and I greatly appreciate it. Devon, thank you so much 672 01:00:38,750 --> 01:00:43,590 once again for joining us here today. You're welcome back anytime, my friend. Thank you man. 673 01:00:43,590 --> 01:00:48,830 Thank you for having me. Of course. Uh, Deontay, let's get to your final thoughts, man. Uh, a guy 674 01:00:48,830 --> 01:00:54,509 that, uh the Atlanta traffic doesn't even faze him anymore. That really does say something. There's a 675 01:00:54,510 --> 01:01:00,029 reason I keep hammering that home, man. But you've given some great advice here today to, uh. Final 676 01:01:00,029 --> 01:01:05,669 thoughts from you, Deontay, before we let you go. Final thoughts man. First off, I want to thank 677 01:01:05,669 --> 01:01:10,149 everybody for having me. Thank you. Cypress. Thank you for the podcast team for having me. Um, just 678 01:01:10,149 --> 01:01:16,510 leave you with some food of thought. Patience is a virtue. Take your time. Take your time. Be safe. Uh, 679 01:01:16,510 --> 01:01:20,989 like divine. And, um, we just mentioned you want to get back to your family and want other family 680 01:01:20,990 --> 01:01:25,670 members to get back to their family. Just take your time. Um, your license is your career. This is 681 01:01:25,670 --> 01:01:30,149 your bread and butter. Um, I know some of us have other plans. Oh, I'm just going to do this for a 682 01:01:30,149 --> 01:01:35,989 minute to do that. But why are you doing it? Just take your time and be safe. And, um, shout out to 683 01:01:35,989 --> 01:01:39,709 Cypress. Most definitely. Man. It's been a pleasure since I've been here for the past two years. 684 01:01:39,790 --> 01:01:45,509 Looking to grow more years with them. And, um, I enjoy what I do. Um, I wake up every day motivated 685 01:01:45,509 --> 01:01:50,509 to get the job done safely and get back home to my family. And, uh, PS if you ever do Atlanta, you 686 01:01:50,509 --> 01:01:55,069 need a shortcut. Hit me up. I'll get you through that. No problem. I'll be. I'll be on the phone, man. 687 01:01:55,069 --> 01:01:59,749 I got to go out there to the Smyrna terminal when we did our launch. And let's just say, uh, when we 688 01:01:59,750 --> 01:02:05,389 pulled out of there to drive up to Wilmington. I was very glad that I was not behind the wheel. 689 01:02:07,869 --> 01:02:13,830 Yes, yes, I definitely understand. Devon and D'onte be safe out there. You guys got a great 690 01:02:13,830 --> 01:02:17,948 mind for that, you can tell. Thank you both so much for your time today. Thank you so much for having. 691 01:02:17,949 --> 01:02:22,388 The trucking man to stay down. You too ma'am. Thank you. Absolutely. Thank you again. 692 01:02:30,710 --> 01:02:36,790 Huge thanks to Devon and D'onte for bringing their stories to the Cypress Truck Lines podcast. 693 01:02:36,829 --> 01:02:41,509 Uh, before I get into some more stats and info here about what we're talking about today, I just 694 01:02:41,509 --> 01:02:46,869 want to say that, um, that that's a big deal for those guys to come on and tell the story, and 695 01:02:46,870 --> 01:02:52,870 especially to have the attitudes that they do. Um, you know, just not very long down the line. I mean, 696 01:02:52,909 --> 01:02:57,669 you heard Devon say it. This happened when he was about five months in. That means it's only been, 697 01:02:57,710 --> 01:03:02,229 you know, maybe about seven months ago that this happened to him. And you heard the way he 698 01:03:02,230 --> 01:03:09,149 recounted that story. A took responsibility right on the chin, right from the word go. B can 699 01:03:09,149 --> 01:03:15,309 now look back at that story as a positive learning experience that keeps him safe 700 01:03:15,790 --> 01:03:22,109 from, from then on. And and look, there's never a something that you can do that's going to 100% 701 01:03:22,150 --> 01:03:27,949 prevent something like this from happening. These scumbags will find you. That's what they do. That's 702 01:03:27,950 --> 01:03:34,628 their whole M.O. is to go out and find drivers to take advantage of. But if you listen to what 703 01:03:34,629 --> 01:03:39,870 Davon and D'onte said, the way that they go about their day, the things that they're looking for, the 704 01:03:39,870 --> 01:03:45,269 instincts that they're listening to. Now, what you find is that, hey, we can all learn something from 705 01:03:45,269 --> 01:03:52,269 this. Um, truck parking is a problem, and it's going to remain a problem until they, I don't 706 01:03:52,270 --> 01:03:58,268 know, ten x the amount of spots that there are. And my guess is that type of infrastructure building 707 01:03:58,269 --> 01:04:04,189 is going to take God knows how long, decades, probably, and especially if there's legislation or 708 01:04:04,189 --> 01:04:08,749 permitting involved. Uh, at that point, you put it in the government's hands and we can just turn 709 01:04:08,749 --> 01:04:14,589 everything down to a snail's pace and wait patiently until we hear from him again. So the 710 01:04:14,589 --> 01:04:21,469 parking problem is not going away. And what you heard there, those stats that I read off the top, 711 01:04:21,510 --> 01:04:28,189 would suggest that the crime that is associated with the parking problem is only going to keep 712 01:04:28,189 --> 01:04:34,509 being more prevalent. Okay. Uh, and now, as I said, we didn't talk a lot about load theft there because 713 01:04:34,510 --> 01:04:40,309 these two guys were here to tell us stories about being towed. Um, but I do have some more stats and 714 01:04:40,309 --> 01:04:46,589 info that I want to bring you guys just to really put a bow on this. This is not a small problem. In 715 01:04:46,589 --> 01:04:53,189 fact, uh, Atari will tell you over probably the past 4 or 5 years their top ten 716 01:04:53,229 --> 01:04:59,590 issues in trucking where they pull drivers and ask them, what are you concerned about? Uh, cargo 717 01:04:59,590 --> 01:05:05,389 theft and predatory towing have been on those lists, uh, frequently across the last few years, and 718 01:05:05,389 --> 01:05:11,389 they move around on the list. Yes, but there's still a problem. And I've got some stats and info 719 01:05:11,390 --> 01:05:16,669 here for you that'll really illustrate it even further than we already have. Uh, Cargo Net has 720 01:05:16,669 --> 01:05:21,949 reported that food and beverage loads are among the most frequently targeted freight categories 721 01:05:21,949 --> 01:05:27,229 because they're easy to resell quickly with little traceability. We're not hauling food here. 722 01:05:27,230 --> 01:05:33,149 That's just something to know. This next bullet point is where it really starts to, uh, make sense 723 01:05:33,150 --> 01:05:38,789 for us here at Cypress and Sunbelt Electronics, copper, automotive parts and 724 01:05:39,790 --> 01:05:46,349 construction materials are also heavily targeted because thieves can move them quickly 725 01:05:46,350 --> 01:05:53,029 through secondary markets. According to cargo security analysts. The average time it 726 01:05:53,070 --> 01:05:59,689 takes stolen freight to disappear in secondary markets can be as little as 48 727 01:05:59,690 --> 01:06:06,148 hours. That's crazy. That means that on your on your 34, 728 01:06:06,629 --> 01:06:11,830 that largely if you got something stolen from you, that by the time you reset your clock and you're 729 01:06:11,830 --> 01:06:18,389 ready to go back to work, that stuff could already have disappeared in the secondary market and you 730 01:06:18,389 --> 01:06:25,228 might never find it. And that's that's a big deal and a big cost for everybody involved. A large 731 01:06:25,229 --> 01:06:30,829 percentage of cargo theft now actually happens through what they call strategic theft rather 732 01:06:30,829 --> 01:06:37,189 than traditional hijacking. That means fake dispatchers, fake carriers, fake broker identities, 733 01:06:37,190 --> 01:06:43,669 or fraudulent paperwork instead of somebody physically taking the load from you. And that is 734 01:06:43,670 --> 01:06:48,269 important because there's a lot of communication that happens in the transportation industry. 735 01:06:48,269 --> 01:06:53,749 You're constantly in touch with your dispatcher. You're making calls. Maybe you're calling the, uh, 736 01:06:53,830 --> 01:06:58,710 the the the shipper or the receiver. Uh, maybe somebody walks up to you and is talking to you 737 01:06:58,710 --> 01:07:04,790 and asking you to sign something. You have to vet all of these people all the time. And that's where 738 01:07:04,829 --> 01:07:10,389 dispatch really comes in. If you could take anything from Devon and D'onte stories there, 739 01:07:10,389 --> 01:07:15,749 what you can take from it is that dispatch is there to help. They are not there to hinder. Uh, 740 01:07:15,749 --> 01:07:21,628 that's why that first call when something like this happens is so crucially important. Get the 741 01:07:21,629 --> 01:07:26,069 right people on the phone. Devon even said treat it like it's a criminal proceeding, and 742 01:07:26,070 --> 01:07:33,070 anything that you say or do can incriminate you. Clam up and get dispatch on the phone. They 743 01:07:33,070 --> 01:07:39,709 are your biggest advocate here for sure. Getting back into some of these stats. Many cargo thieves 744 01:07:39,749 --> 01:07:44,549 specifically target weekends and holiday periods because loads end up sitting longer and 745 01:07:44,550 --> 01:07:50,229 communication can slow down. Theft crews have been known to follow trucks leaving distribution 746 01:07:50,230 --> 01:07:55,989 centers and wait for drivers to stop within the first 200 miles of a trip, knowing that the load 747 01:07:55,989 --> 01:08:02,149 is likely at its fullest value at that point. This is crazy. Some organized cargo thefts rings use 748 01:08:02,189 --> 01:08:09,189 GPS jammers and signal blockers to temporarily disable tracking systems on trailers. Heavy duty 749 01:08:09,230 --> 01:08:16,029 tow bills. Now we're getting back into the towing thing here. Um, you heard it. $3,500 just to set 750 01:08:16,029 --> 01:08:22,269 your truck down. That's uncalled for. I mean, that's criminal when you really think about it. You 751 01:08:22,270 --> 01:08:27,349 lifted it up. You haven't even strapped it down. If you got into your wrecker and took off. Right now, 752 01:08:27,350 --> 01:08:31,309 that truck's hitting the ground whether you want it to or not, because the job that you're charging 753 01:08:31,310 --> 01:08:38,149 for has not been done. But here's some things that can really make, uh, tow bills climb 754 01:08:38,149 --> 01:08:44,789 up into the five figure range very quickly. Those things are multiple axles being involved, recovery 755 01:08:44,789 --> 01:08:51,669 equipment being used, storage fees that can accumulate. Or law enforcement requesting special 756 01:08:51,670 --> 01:08:57,508 handling. Um, a towing bill can skyrocket immediate. I mean, it's that's probably pretty common sense 757 01:08:57,509 --> 01:09:03,909 hearing that they want 3500 bucks just to set the thing on the ground. Um, and a few other takeaways 758 01:09:03,910 --> 01:09:10,829 real quick that get independent of our stats here. But they really, really spoke to me when we were 759 01:09:10,829 --> 01:09:15,869 recording that interview. I've just got some lines here that I want to repeat that were, uh, that were 760 01:09:15,870 --> 01:09:20,149 said by either Devon or D'onte during our interview, and I really want them to stick with 761 01:09:20,149 --> 01:09:26,829 you, so I'm saving them for the very end of this episode. Your license is now officially your 762 01:09:26,830 --> 01:09:32,829 career. That was very, very well said and well put. And, uh, look, I know there's more than one of you 763 01:09:32,829 --> 01:09:37,470 guys out there that are NASCAR fans. I know there's a bunch of gearheads on the staff. I know 764 01:09:37,470 --> 01:09:41,950 you guys like to wrench on your own project cars in your off time. You like to have something 765 01:09:41,950 --> 01:09:47,799 that's really nice to drive around. As a daily driver, you always have to be mindful that license 766 01:09:47,799 --> 01:09:52,159 that you carry, that allows you to drive your Mustang or your Camaro, is also the one that 767 01:09:52,160 --> 01:09:57,439 allows you to work and make a living for your family. So you gotta be mindful of that every 768 01:09:57,439 --> 01:10:04,119 single day. Sage advice there. Um, one that we hear frequently on this podcast that I love and I will 769 01:10:04,120 --> 01:10:08,919 always repeat whenever I hear it. We're not hauling body parts here at Cypress and Sun Belt. 770 01:10:08,959 --> 01:10:14,759 Alright, we've got a load on the back. We've got a driver in that seat. That is the main focus. 771 01:10:14,759 --> 01:10:20,359 Getting there safely. Getting home safely. Your obligation to the motoring public. You're not 772 01:10:20,400 --> 01:10:25,438 hauling body parts. I'm so glad that got brought up, because it's something that I heard the very 773 01:10:25,439 --> 01:10:30,720 first time in the very first meeting that I ever had with management at Cypress, before this 774 01:10:30,720 --> 01:10:37,720 podcast ever was born. And you know that it runs through the bloodlines of Cypress Trucking. A 775 01:10:37,839 --> 01:10:44,759 tired driver under pressure is vulnerable. This is just a fact of the matter. This is what we 776 01:10:44,759 --> 01:10:50,439 do. This is your job. It's a pressure filled job. It's a high stakes job. There's a lot at stake. 777 01:10:50,440 --> 01:10:56,319 Every time you get behind that wheel, you are hauling giant amounts of weight that nobody on 778 01:10:56,319 --> 01:11:02,880 the road has any respect for. And that, along with all of the other things, your delivery dates, the 779 01:11:02,880 --> 01:11:08,719 traffic accidents, construction, you name it, these things all put pressure on you. And if you're 780 01:11:08,720 --> 01:11:14,519 under pressure, you're more vulnerable. So listen to the things that Devon and D'onte said. Keep 781 01:11:14,520 --> 01:11:20,439 your eyes up, keep your head on a swivel, be aware of your surroundings and trust your instincts. If 782 01:11:20,440 --> 01:11:25,839 it doesn't feel right, don't park there. That's another quote that came out of that interview 783 01:11:25,839 --> 01:11:30,479 from both of the guys. They piggybacked off one another for that one. You got to trust your 784 01:11:30,480 --> 01:11:35,319 instincts, and even if you don't feel like you have them yet, even if you're a real new driver, 785 01:11:35,399 --> 01:11:40,239 they will come. And you can build those instincts by listening to some of these stories that we 786 01:11:40,240 --> 01:11:46,479 tell here on the podcast. That's the whole purpose behind it. And finally, and maybe most importantly, 787 01:11:46,560 --> 01:11:52,079 uh, Devon really, really hit the nail on the head when he said, take your time, slow down. You've 788 01:11:52,079 --> 01:11:57,959 heard it so many times on this podcast. Um, you know, we talked to the Tony Millers of the world, 789 01:11:57,959 --> 01:12:02,199 the Angel escudos of the world, these other driver trainers that we've had here on the show. And they 790 01:12:02,200 --> 01:12:09,038 will tell you, you have to slow down, Ken from CTC will tell you, you gotta slow down. 791 01:12:09,039 --> 01:12:16,039 Randy, over at orientation, you gotta slow down, take your time, do this job the right way, 792 01:12:16,080 --> 01:12:22,959 the safe way, and we'll be able to make all of this cargo theft and predatory towing and all 793 01:12:22,960 --> 01:12:29,600 the BS that comes along with it. A smaller problem, as long as everybody slows down, does the job 794 01:12:29,600 --> 01:12:34,999 right, takes their time, and is aware of their surroundings. What a fantastic episode today here 795 01:12:34,999 --> 01:12:41,679 on the Cypress Truck Lines podcast. Again, huge thanks to Devon Sonson and D'onte Pitmon. I 796 01:12:41,680 --> 01:12:46,399 can't thank those guys enough. I was just a random dude trying to get in touch with them last week. 797 01:12:46,399 --> 01:12:51,279 And here they were on the podcast with me delivering an absolute Grand Slam performance. 798 01:12:51,279 --> 01:12:56,839 Thank you fellas. We greatly appreciate the time and you're welcome back anytime, as are the rest 799 01:12:56,839 --> 01:13:03,119 of you Cypress drivers listening. You want to be on this podcast? Hit me up. podcast.cypresstruck.com. 800 01:13:03,200 --> 01:13:08,399 That's it for today. Be safe out there. Remember your obligation to the motoring public. Remember 801 01:13:08,440 --> 01:13:14,439 take your time. Slow down a little bit. And like we always say at the end of these things, be safe out 802 01:13:14,439 --> 01:13:19,640 there. Cypress and Sunbelt. We'll talk to you again next week Wednesday, 5 a.m. local time.