3 Fat Truckers

This is the podcast by three guys you would never dream of listening to in every day life, but now we have microphones. We're going to give you our take on some of the topics effecting modern life from the viewpoint of three fat truckers.

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3 Fat Truckers - Episode 12


Show #012

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The Best ‘Florida Man’ Stories

By News Desk -December 6, 2018, 8:19 am

 

1 Naked Florida man starts house fire while smoking pot,and taking a shit, drinking and baking cookies on George Foreman grill

According to reports from Northwest Florida Daily News and the Niceville Police and Fire Departments, a naked man rescued from a house fire admitted to accidentally setting his house on fire after he drank 2 liters of vodka, smoked marijuana and attempted to bake cookies on an indoor grill known as a George Foreman grill.

According to reports, the grill and cookies caught fire after he left the grill unattended. When the man attempted to cover the flame with towels, the towels also caught fire.

As firefighters extinguished several items in the home which caught fire, an officer detained the man and removed him from the house for his own safety. Firefighters said that if he had stayed in the home much longer, he could have possibly died from smoke inhalation. Fortunately, the incident ended with no life-threatening injuries.

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2 4. Florida Man steals $45,000 to buy new teeth for his puppy

Timothy Powell, 52, of Plantation,FL, allegedly scammed an 80-year-old man with dementia whose ID was sold on the dark web. Powell used his ill gotten gains to purchase new teeth including $40,000 worth of dental work. In addition to the dental work, Powell also planned to purchase a French Bulldog puppy for several thousand dollars. According to a report from WFTV, Powell told investigators that he was recruited by crooks who urged him to have his rotted teeth replaced with pearly white implants to improve his appearance and increase his success rate in future scams.

Powell’s scam unraveled when his victim’s caretaker noticed two large invoices from a  South Florida dental clinic.

“I never heard about anything like that,” the victim’s brother Jake Brenner told the media. “It’s kind of different.”

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3. Florida Man arrested for practicing fake dentistry in bus, AKA his “the teeth mobile”

From Miami CBS 4  and Miami Dade Police Department – According to Miami-Dade Police Medical Crimes Unit investigators, Daniela Sulbaran Gonzalez, 37, and Victor Bernal, 44, of Miami, were providing free breast exams and dental services inside a bus located in a parking lot at 6001 NW 74th Avenue in west Miami-Dade.

Fake Dentist Bus – Courtesy of Miami-Dade Police Dept.

After several months of investigation, undercover operatives from the Florida Department of Health and the MDPD Medical Crime Unit, posed as patients on Nov. 15.Bernal and Sulbaran diagnosed and offered treatment to the undercover detectives. At that point, both individuals were taken into custody without incident and charged for the unlicensed activity, according to police.

Neither has ever been licensed in Florida. Bernal is also charged with drug possession with the intent to sell, dispense, or deliver drugs without a prescription.

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Trucking news

 

Hundreds of truckers protest AB5 at Southern California’s busiest ports Port of Oakland truckers plan Monday demonstration against independent contractor law

Wednesday, July 13, 2022 4 minutes read

https://www.freightwaves.com/

 Organizers of the work stoppage at the ports of LA/LB handed out at least 350 T-shirts to protesters. Photo: Cindy Perez/LA & LB Port Driver

BeyondWords

Some California truckers turned off their trucks, blocked terminals or staged slow rolls to snarl traffic around the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach Wednesday to express frustration over a controversial state law, AB5, that seeks to limit the use of independent contractors and largely classify them as employee drivers.

Cindy Perez, co-owner of Southern California-based Aztec Enterprises and founder of the Facebook group LA & LB Port Drivers, says she worked with countless other groups, including motor carriers, that serve the ports to stage Wednesday’s protest.

She and her husband, who own a small trucking business, said they’ve heard all of the AB5 arguments about being an employee driver versus being owner-operators. They’ve done both.

“We worked for a company that served the ports of LA/LB that offered us some benefits and paid for diesel fuel and permit costs, but we also got paid peanuts, didn’t get to choose our loads, and instead of owning the whole pizza, we only got a slice,” Perez told FreightWaves. “Instead, we worked hard to save our money to become owner-operators and purchase our own trucks. Yes, we are aware that we incur more costs as owner-operators, but we’re no longer company drivers and we get paid as business owners.”

Perez said her Facebook group printed 350 “No AB5” T-shirts that were all snapped up within hours of the start of the protest.

She suggested that a statement by Rachel Campbell, media relations manager at the Port of Los Angeles, about a “convoy of approximately 100 truckers moving through the LA/LB port complex” downplayed the size of the demonstration.

“Not everybody brought their trucks to the ports to participate in today’s protest, but they showed up wearing T-shirts, holding signs and educating the media about what AB5 means for independent truckers in California,” Perez said.

Campbell said there was “no disruption of terminal activity.” 

“Los Angeles Port Police will assist in making sure all parties are able to express their First Amendment rights while also making sure the Port continues to operate safely and commerce continues to flow,” Campbell said in a statement to FreightWaves.

However, news stations showed traffic jammed for miles because of the AB5 protest.

Some motor carriers that serve the ports of LA and Long Beach say despite their efforts to encourage truckers to become employee drivers, many independent owner-operators continue to refuse.

“Many of the port truckers who are independent owner-operators are first- and second-generation Americans who want to be their own bosses and dream of owning their own businesses,” said Gordon Reimer, manager of Southern California-based FHE Express.

Many of the 75 owner-operators his company uses to serve the ports have turned down FHE’s requests to make them employee drivers, Reimer said.

“Today’s actions by frustrated owner-operators at the California ports is a clear cry for help,” Reimer told FreightWaves. “It takes courage to park your truck and take a stand against a state intent on ending your ability to earn a living — California’s AB5 is just that.”

On June 30, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear the California Trucking Association’s challenge to AB5, returning the case to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. 

Ongoing legal challenges prevented AB5 from going into effect in January 2020. The law stems from the California Supreme Court’s decision against Dynamex Operations West Inc., a package and document delivery company. The court found that Dynamex had misclassified its delivery drivers as independent contractors rather than employees and that all California-based companies that use independent contractors must follow the “ABC test,” a three-pronged test to determine whether a worker is an employee.

The B prong defines an independent contractor as a worker engaged in “work that is outside the usual course of the hiring entity’s business.” That is problematic for motor carriers utilizing independent owner-operators to move freight.

It’s unclear how many independent contractors or owner-operators participated in the work stoppage on Wednesday or what the financial impact may be to the supply chain.

“Owner-operators are the most difficult segment of the trucking industry to try and organize — it’s like herding cats — because everyone has their own personal gripes,” Reimer said. “The intent of this self-serving piece of legislation is to deprive 70,000-plus small business trucking companies of their ability to earn a living in this state.” 

 




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 July 17, 2022  1h12m