Trucker Fired For Refusing To Drive In Bad Weather Awarded $180k
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by insipidtoast, Jul 12, 2019.
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Yup, but how many of those lease drivers actually read the contract? Or better yet, understand all of the language in the contract? I have a buddy that has leased at 7 times that I can think of, and i tell to see if he can get an attorney to check those contracts out. He never does, and gets done in every time. It seems to always happen when the truck has a major breakdown. I have heard conversations between him and the company arguing because of something he signed, bit did it blindly.
Lepton1 Thanks this. -
“Stupid” is a conscious choice that many make.
Cattleman84, MartinFromBC and bryan21384 Thank this. -
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And if a driver damages a truck they alone are responsible for it.
So let the driver whine in court, then counter sue him for legal fees and damages. -
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I do have some experience in this arena. I was a Union Steward, Local President and numerous other positions within our Union. I am not saying I am right, I'm sure many will disagree. But, my statements and assessments are based upon real life experiences I have been a part of. Had a supervisor write up an employee for being late. We got ahold of the security camera footage showing when employees come and go out of the parking lot and were able to show that several of his employees were late on a regular basis and the employee he wrote up was being scrutinized significantly more than other employees under this supervisor, grievance won. A lot more to that story regarding the bad motivation of this supervisor against this employee. The worker was a long term employee and had never had problems before and there were no issues with the actual quality or quantity of the employee's work. The supervisor involved simply had a beef against this worker that was not legitimate or proper. Also had an employee who had won a major costly discrimination settlement several years earlier at a different office. I never learned the details of it, but I know that our management treated this guy very carefully and considered him protected. I have seen things in this area and am only stating what I think based off of those observations and experiences.
Also not trying to imply that this worker can go back and be a total douche and not do any work and be simply terrible. There are naturally limits. I'm simply stating that the company will have to be careful in how they treat this employee. If it can be shown that he was in any manner singled out and treated differently than others, negatively, it is easy to prove retaliation. If hints of being negatively singled out can make it's hard for a company to win against a retaliation claim.Last edited: Jul 13, 2019
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Cattleman84 Thanks this.
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I'm done with this thread and reading your comments from this moment forward. Have a great life!
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
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