1099s force drivers to violate HOS.

Discussion in 'Report A BAD Trucking Company Here' started by january_resonsnt, Jul 27, 2025 at 10:51 AM.

  1. BoostedTeg

    BoostedTeg Road Train Member

    1,774
    3,103
    Jun 2, 2008
    Boise ID
    0
    This week I ran 4234 miles and 2 of those days were very short being 3.5 hours the first and 7.5 the next.
     
    Lonesome Thanks this.
  2. Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.

  3. Tb0n3

    Tb0n3 Road Train Member

    4,559
    9,079
    Oct 5, 2012
    Earth
    0
    That's the vast majority of 1099 employers. They're company drivers who hope their higher income translates to a higher net income without understanding their tax burden.
     
    mjd4277 and Walk Among Us Thank this.
  4. Sons Hero

    Sons Hero Road Train Member

    2,287
    22,577
    Jan 8, 2021
    Indiana
    0
  5. january_resonsnt

    january_resonsnt Bobtail Member

    13
    5
    Yesterday
    0
     
  6. january_resonsnt

    january_resonsnt Bobtail Member

    13
    5
    Yesterday
    0
    "Don't worry about HOS. We can make it look legal. " That was an outfit called HazTrans. Imagine that. A HazMat company cooking the books. That's a recipe for disaster. Also, here's another one which I actually worked for until I had enough: Super Ego.
     
  7. Lonesome

    Lonesome Mr. Sarcasm

    11,150
    22,851
    Dec 15, 2007
    Northern Indiana
    0
    Tell us, in your own words, the methods they used to "force" you to drive illegal.
     
    tarmadilo Thanks this.
  8. january_resonsnt

    january_resonsnt Bobtail Member

    13
    5
    Yesterday
    0
    Super Ego: The first thing they did was set the ELD to an eight hour clock, so that if I wanted to get a full eleven-hour day I would have to stop and ask them to refresh my hours, and they would reset my clock to another eight hours. Another thing they did was tell me to go to a truck stop and xerox over the time stamp on the BOL with a different time stamp. I knew that was crooked, but I needed the job and I was OTR a month with my son and just couldn't get out of it until I got back to the terminal in Chicago where my car was. Then, as soon as I got my car back I quit and went home. One too many twenty-hour days.
     
    Walk Among Us Thanks this.
  9. Lonesome

    Lonesome Mr. Sarcasm

    11,150
    22,851
    Dec 15, 2007
    Northern Indiana
    0
    They "reset" your clock? That means that you have to run all those hours? You couldn't stop when you were legally done? They forced you to run those hours? And how did they force you to go to the truckstop, and change the time stamp? Follow you in a car, and force you in?

    Interesting....
     
  10. january_resonsnt

    january_resonsnt Bobtail Member

    13
    5
    Yesterday
    0
    Also, I had two strong incentives to keep going. The first was that my truck was literally my home, and second, as a "SAP" driver I knew that Super Ego was one of the few trucking companies that would hire me and I was trying desperately to complete step six in the SAP program.
     
    Walk Among Us Thanks this.
  11. january_resonsnt

    january_resonsnt Bobtail Member

    13
    5
    Yesterday
    0
    No, it just took a while for it to sink in.
     
    Numb Thanks this.
  • Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.