ok just a question

R

rangell218

Guest
I see all forms of sites and forums about everything to do with expediting trucks,jobs, what to do and how to do it but no sites or forums regarding what owners are good and owners that are not to drive for, I understand there are good owners as well as good drivers I also understand there are bad owners as well as bad drivers, but know one in expediting can say they never heard of a driver not getting payed or an owner that had to go get his truck from so truck stop because some driver left his truck, so why is there no site listing both bad owners as well as bad drivers this could help both sides, again just a question I see alot of guys/gals that have been helping new drivers that are new to this business make it, so why cant that help include a site that will show the good as well as bad so the stories of both owners and drivers getting hurt slows down a bit
 

TeamCaffee

Administrator
Staff member
Owner/Operator
Owners and fleet drivers are like companies some make a good fit and some do not. Ask for references before driving for an owner the same as you would before you drive for a company. Not being a fleet owner and looking from the outside in I think the owner is the one left out in the cold as not many people want to discuss a bad driver.
You can watch over and over here on the forums some so very well with one company and another driver will leave the first company and do very well at the second company and others have to try many companies before they find a great fit or end up leaving the business.
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
It might be difficult to do without running into legal problems. Many times there are problems with a dirver or an owner it often turns out to be more "personal" than a "bad"
owner or driver. That is not to say there is no bad drivers or owners, just when people are involed "things" happen. The first owner I drove for was a good owner but it was not a good fit. The second was great. Get references as Team Caffee said, it is your best protection. Get a good contract that spells out everything required from the owner and from the driver. The "tighter" the contract the easier it will be to resolve problems as they come up. There will always be problems as in any business or job. Layoutshooter
 

bludragon13

Seasoned Expediter
good advice here, anyone going into business for themselves must take responsibilty for their own decisions and not try to find a short cut that is based only on opinions of others,still can't understand why if you want to be in business for your self ,you would want to work for some one ? I mean if you were going to open a pastie shop in the UP would you first work in one for 2 years to find out if it was what you wanted to do? no you'd do your best to research and then do it or not-- working for a fleet owner is not being in business for your self it's working for someone, only with out health,401ks,and other benfits you had in a factory . just my opinion.
 
R

rangell218

Guest
dave i understand your reply and is good advise, but it really had little to nothing to do with the question, thanks anyway
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
It is a bit different Dave. First, I need to know where your pastie shop is, I have a hard time finding good pasties where I live in SE MI. Second. I looked at running with an owner like going to school. I learned a lot about what I was getting into. I got a much better idea of what the cost of the business was. I got first hand experinance. I learned what we wanted and needed in a truck. Sort of like a paid aprenticeship. Layoutshooter
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
"I have a hard time finding good pasties where I live in SE MI."

Because we have none

besides the only really good way to make one is with a wood range, nothing tastes better!!
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
*SIGH* It is a sorry state of affairs. Maybe we could get White Castle to put in the proper ovens!!! MMMMMMMMMM What a great place that would be. Your choice everynight, Sliders
(or gut bombs if you prefere) Church's Chicken or Palin's Pasties!!!! (could not resist) layoutshooter
 

pjjjjj

Veteran Expediter
I mean if you were going to open a pastie shop in the UP would you first work in one for 2 years to find out if it was what you wanted to do?

Maybe not, if you already had pastie shop experience working every aspect of the business. Hopefully someone wouldn't just say, I like pasties, so I'm going to open a pasty shop. They would probably lose their shirt pretty quick.
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Pasties can be found where ever the Cornish Miners emigrated to. You find them in the U.P. in Michigan where they mined copper. There were a couple at the salt mine where my dad worked at in Detroit, but not enough to have really good pastie shops. What a real shame. layoutshooter
 

arkjarhead

Veteran Expediter
what the heck is a pastie. I thought you meant pastry at first. Whatever it is I don't think we have them in southeast Arkansas either.
 

Jayman

Expert Expediter
I just wished I could find another gig that gives me about 35-45 hrs a week and keeps me close to home. I am not getting many hours now.
 

Moot

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
The best pasties can be found in the U.P. and Northern Minnesota. MMMMMM, a rutabaga pastie and a bottle of ketchup.
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
The best pasties can be found in the U.P. and Northern Minnesota. MMMMMM, a rutabaga pastie and a bottle of ketchup.

I can't figure that one out, Minnesota? OK I guess.

Yea ketsup and a good size pastie, nothing better on a cold day.

Ark, they are not well known outside of the great lakes for some reason. I have found them in Arizona (made by a Mexican who told me she learned from her 'english' grandmother), I found them in PA, I found them in of all places Tampa, the same place that I get my cubanos from.

I grew up on them (maybe why I am fat?), was taught to make them from scratch on a wood range (which by todays standards is really hard) and still miss them - there is no place to get them here that are of any quality. They are meat pies... well sort of... some use just onions, potatoes, and a swede (rutabaga) with salt and pepper added some add carrots and some even things I don't want to think about. While the purists don't ever use carrots, the Cornish who were the miners here in the north brought them here when they came in the mid 1800s. I had some made by Finlanders which were... well.... good.

Layout, the reason they landed here was because in the late 20's a lot of miners left the copper country and migrated here to work in the auto plants. I had a distant cousin who opened up a bake shop in the 30's selling them to the salt miners, she claimed (don't know if this is true) that she and her freind were in competing bake shop and were the first ones to bring them here. I would think they were here before but who knows?

If you go to Han**** in the UP of michigan, there is a place you have go to Kaleva Cafe on main street (Quincy), they serve the closest thing to the way they should be made and lets not forget if you can make it there for the Pastie Fest in Calumet, it will be June 27, '09..... yum.....
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
The Cornish miners used to take them down in the mines instead of sanwiches. They were self contained meals, sort of the first M.R.I.'s. They would stay somewhat warm from home. They brought this delicacy with them when they came over here. You can find them around most Northern Mining regions where they tended to settle since they were miners in the old country. I remember when Oakwood Bakery, right down by the mine, was still owned by the original family. My dad would bring home loaves of hot bread, mmmm, so crusty and good. Never made it to the table. In fact, if we drove up there from Riverview to pick up a loaf or two they never made it back!!!! The bakery was bought out years ago by a middle eastern bunch. They sell the bread in stores now. It is now where as good as it used to be. Layoutshooter
 

arkjarhead

Veteran Expediter
Ya'll are making me upset I'm just a young redneck. My dad said his mom used to bake home made bread all the time. That was the only kind they ate. And not any of this stuff out of a Wal Mart bread machine either. She also made home made potato chips. No one has time for that anymore. Now it takes 2 incomes. I get jealous when I here people talk about how it was in the 50's and 60's. I mean some things are better. Like desegregation. But other than that I pray for a return of the old day.Even though I know it won't happen.
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Not all was better, I remeber Polio, quarinteened house for things like Whopping Cough etc. We were not quite dirt poor but we had what we needed. What I miss is the civility. Plain old common curtisy. I miss neat neighborhoods and neatly dressed people. We had fun back then with homemade hockey sticks. We played ball all summer. Fished on the river. Sold pop bottles to buy nightcrawlers and picked our own crawdads for bait. We could walk down the street with UN-CASED shotguns to go small game hunting in the fields at the end of the block. NO one batted an eyelash. We never once killed anyone. Lots of rabbits bit the dust. Just lived and let lived. We minded our own business. That is the key. Mind your own business. Layoutshooter
 

letzrockexpress

Veteran Expediter
To get back to the original question, for 29.95 or less you can pay for a background check on just about anyone. These reports can, if you want them to, include a listing of any law suits the investigatee has been a part of, small claims, etc. You can often get a pretty good idea of the character of someone this way. US Search is one such investigator. There are many of these investigators easily found on the internet.
Secondly, the best pastie (gutbomb) I ever ate was in Laurium, Michigan. I wish I could remember the name of the place but it was right on the main drag, I do remember that.
 
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