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Jsr1 t1_ituhr8l wrote

How does someone with an active warrant keep their CDL and continue driving????wtf!!!

114

Jsr1 t1_itun46x wrote

Cocaine possession, queue greatful dead, “driving this train high on cocaine…..”

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foggy-sunrise t1_ituwuqb wrote

I've heard CDLs got lenient with stuff like that due to staffing shortages/supply chain issues.

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Jsr1 t1_ituxpbo wrote

Yeah cause coked up tractor trailer drivers are a minimal risk to road safety…..till someone dies and a multi-million lawsuit….

5

shelled_peanuts t1_itvi820 wrote

still cheaper than not getting the product there, im sure these guys drive $50k product a day per person so it’d be like two months work if they did get in a 3 million dollar wreck.

liability insurance works wonders too

12

_JunkyardDog t1_ituhg1j wrote

Arrested for possession while having an outstanding warrant for possession. Well done.

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Twombls t1_ituh7r6 wrote

Should be an immediate license suspension at this point.

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cwillm t1_ituhnu7 wrote

It should have been an immediate license suspension years ago.

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nlpnt t1_itupoen wrote

Probably is. He was skating on cops that put out the first warrant not alerting the PA DMV that hey, they might want to pull this guy's CDL.

8

Allemaengel t1_itusu1i wrote

Good luck with that, lol.

I'm from Northeast PA and PennDOT operates on don'tgiveacrap clown time.

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smoggyburrito66 t1_ituccvx wrote

I think they said it was three so far this year.

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thisoneisnotasbad t1_itufaeo wrote

Yup. Third

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nlpnt t1_itunatw wrote

That's way down, in the mid-late 2010s it was a dozen a year.

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cwillm t1_ituhm3h wrote

Every. Year. SMH. Are truck drivers really that clueless about the size of the road or are they really that arrogant to think they can ignore the litany of signs explicitly saying "you will get stuck" and "you will get fined?" Or is it possibly that company owners are demanding drivers take this route to attempt to save time/fuel? Are there any truck drivers who can weigh in on this and attempt to explain why this is a perennial issue?

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thisoneisnotasbad t1_ituij7l wrote

I asked this question of some truck drivers once.

The general answer was, tourist towns often don’t like trucks rolling through. They have on many historic occasions put up signage which say trucks are not allowed, a bridge is too low or a weight limit is too low to discourage trucking traffic. Truckers have done research and discoverd they were lying and simply trying to prevent traffic.

The idea of Stowe lying to not have truck traffic is very believable.

So, it’s not always hubris or arrogance. They just plain don’t believe the signs.

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JimTheJerseyGuy t1_ituljrq wrote

I’m in NJ and we have a similar spot here, though nothing like the notch. What should be a quiet country lane that leads to a narrow, single-lane, wood-decked bridge rated for 5 tons.

The local municipality has gone so far as to post the road as a “No Outlet” because trucks and buses keep on trying to take the road as a short cut and come down a narrow winding road to find a bridge they can’t cross and a road that it’s nearly impossible to back up on.

EDIT: The spot in question, if anyone's curious.

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thisoneisnotasbad t1_itum5j3 wrote

Right, I think that stuff just adds to it.

The town posted a no outlet sign there to deter traffic but it’s very obvious from looking at a map, there is a clear outlet. If they lie about that, why should I believe their weight limit signs.

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JimTheJerseyGuy t1_ituqzkn wrote

I like the idea of something like banger bars/chains hanging over the roadway. I suggested a chicane to my local road works but there’s no room for the here. You could probably do it easily for the notch though. A chicane on each side to get them stuck in a place that they can be removed from easily as opposed to all the way up the road.

Edit: I was thinking about the chains/bars for my own local issue, not for the notch. I still think a really tight, extreme chicane on both sides could work nicely to prevent this. It wouldn’t take up much space and wouldn’t do anything to normal traffic flow other than cause a brief slow down, which is how I’ve seen them used elsewhere - as traffic calming devices.

4

JerryKook t1_itvhdug wrote

Not all tall vehicles are long. Not all tractor trailers are tall.

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landodk t1_itvqj7i wrote

Height isn’t an issue tho

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JerryKook t1_itzq0wm wrote

I was refering to JimTheJerseyGuy's suggestion

>I like the idea of something like banger bars/chains hanging over the roadway.

2

thisoneisnotasbad t1_iturd89 wrote

I agree 100%. The notch solution is pretty easy to implement, not sure why they haven’t don’t it yet.

2

VWSpeedRacer t1_itx8k8h wrote

I thought about this but regular box trucks can go through there all day long without a problem. Why majorly inconvenience them because of a handful of idiots? Instead just keep adding zeros to that fine. If it makes my taxes go down I can drive around a couple extra times a year. It's closed all winter anyhow.

2

Twombls t1_ituk8y6 wrote

There are like 16 signs that say your truck will not fit. Even miles away. Its just arrogance at this point lol.

2

JerryKook t1_itvh5u8 wrote

That is a great take. I have never thought of that before but it makes total sense. Thanks for sharing!

1

mojitz t1_itul9om wrote

It's worth pointing out that the vast, vast majority don't seem to be.

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Sudden_Dragonfly2638 t1_ituip3t wrote

It's a gps thing. The trucks that get stuck are using things like Google maps which show it as a viable route for "cars" and not a commercial truck GPS that accounts for things like low bridges and restricted roads.

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cwillm t1_itulicy wrote

Its 2022. Between Google Maps traffic updates, drivers knowing better, and trucking companies needing to do better route planning, there aren't any excuses. The dozens of signs on 89 and 100 are either not being payed attention to, or simply being ignored. Honestly, it doesn't affect my day-to-day at all as I'm not commuting through the notch or anything, but it just irks me that vtrans complains constantly about this issue but in the last 10+ years haven't done anything other than raise the fines. Almost makes you think the hassle of getting trucks out of the notch is less objectionable to the state than the money they receive from the fines levied.

1

Sudden_Dragonfly2638 t1_ituw4or wrote

I agree there's no excuse and truck drivers should be using truck gps. An engineering solution won't fix drivers ignoring signs and blindly following GPS. At best it can get them stuck in a location that makes it easier to remove them or that allows cars to bypass them while stuck (not a small or simple solution).

Not sure the whopping $3600 bucks from fines this year is incentive to "keep letting this happen", but an engineering solution to prevent trucks from ending up in the Notch will be very expensive and most likely entirely state funded.

If we're waiting on the $3600/yr to fund a half million dollar project, we'll be waiting about 135 more years.

5

showmeyourbrisket t1_itvu9b2 wrote

It would cost bajilions of dollars to plop down a couple jersey barriers.

−1

showmeyourbrisket t1_itvu02z wrote

> Almost makes you think the hassle of getting trucks out of the notch is less objectionable to the state than the money they receive from the fines levied.

Bingo Bango!

−1

Paid-Not-Payed-Bot t1_itulj7l wrote

> not being paid attention to,

FTFY.

Although payed exists (the reason why autocorrection didn't help you), it is only correct in:

  • Nautical context, when it means to paint a surface, or to cover with something like tar or resin in order to make it waterproof or corrosion-resistant. The deck is yet to be payed.

  • Payed out when letting strings, cables or ropes out, by slacking them. The rope is payed out! You can pull now.

Unfortunately, I was unable to find nautical or rope-related words in your comment.

Beep, boop, I'm a bot

−7

Hanginon t1_itwbsvp wrote

> are they really that arrogant to think they can ignore the litany of signs

Bingo! If you work in the field for long enough, or actually not even that long you're going to run into the driver who sees themselves as having a skill level way above the norm and can pull off tricks that mere mortal drivers would flinch at.

"You'll get stuck!" Cue Arrogance/ignorance rush. "Heh, heh, Well maybe a 'regular' driver would but I've been haulin' freight for.... ^dornes ^on ^and ^on."

Yeah, way too many hours alone in the cab can start one believing their own bullshit. That and the temptation of a 'shorter' route can be a real trap, as stuck between some rocks trap. ¯\_( ͡❛ ͜ʖ ͡❛)_/¯

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tamerenshorts t1_itvzw3m wrote

>signs

I had a good laugh when I saw the bilingual sign in French.

3

timesuck47 t1_itwz9fk wrote

Google maps told them to go that way. They don’t read signs.

Ref: Independence Pass in Colorado.

3

Vermonter623 t1_itugjl7 wrote

This isn’t news anymore. Just a rolling count on how many stupid people drive big rigs

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Ergotnometry t1_itv1j69 wrote

It's the single most common job in the US. There's bound to be a huge cross section of dumb to smart people.

3

Vermonter623 t1_itvnjoy wrote

Nobody called all truckers dumb. This is just the way to weed them out

1

DicmoVolant t1_itvtknx wrote

My dad drives cross country. According to him, most truckers are absolutely the dipshit slobs they are stereotyped to be.

My wife is a PA who's worked in primary and urgent care for 13 years. Until the pandemic, the only patients who would threaten her life are CDL exams. She's been threatened, stalked, assaulted, had to get a restraining order, and has had two would-be active shooters who were caught by the cops on the way to the clinic, armed to the teeth. All truckers who failed their CDL physicals.

Not all truckers are dumb, just most of them. It's shitty enough work and life that the smart ones leave.

2

Vermonter623 t1_itxashn wrote

I’ve always assumed that most were certainly lazy.

−1

Sharp_Path3354 t1_ityv6vd wrote

There are truck drivers and then there are people who drive trucks.

2

Vermonter623 t1_itzn3i7 wrote

There are people who fuck and then there are fuckers

1

Sharp_Path3354 t1_itzp3sw wrote

Exactly! Well spoken with very choice WORDS. I don’t even like taking my car through there.

1

06EXTN t1_ituvv34 wrote

  1. $5,000 mandatory fine
  2. automatic suspension of CDL for 90 days
  3. impoundment of truck, trailer & cargo

all three of these should be mandatory with no way to squeeze out of it. Tell me word wouldn't get around the trucking community real fucking quick.

8

foggy-sunrise t1_itux86z wrote

Isn't it also 4 pts to your driver's license? His insurance just got gnarly.

2

durpdurpturd t1_itupjud wrote

The signs can be easily missed. They need some barriers that simulate the rocks in the notch that you must weave through before going up. It’s the only way to prevent this. But then we would have nothing to talk about.

7

historycat95 t1_itupzqk wrote

I've been saying this for years.

Not that the signs are easy to miss, but that a simulated run up with an easy escape on each side would solve this.

5

durpdurpturd t1_ituqt0e wrote

Or just orange plastic stakes that are on a spring and can bobble. The last time I drove up there the words on the sign were scrolling and what it said when I drove by didn’t make sense, if I were a trucker zoning out to am talk radio that sign would not have conveyed the message.

3

RobertJoseph802 t1_itv0jwx wrote

I have to agree the sign wording needs improvement. "TT won't fit" is not a clear message.

5

RetiscentSun t1_itw9plf wrote

The drivers typically don’t claim to miss the signs.

2

Unfair_Holiday_3549 t1_itunyd0 wrote

Was just there thie past weekend, glad I went through before this guy was there.

6

Essarray t1_itw00lm wrote

Add more signs. Throw in pictures and a link to a YouTube playlist while they still have time to pull over and watch previous victims. Also take their cocaine away.

6

HandCarvedRabbits t1_itv7723 wrote

I saw a Dollar General truck today stopped in Hazen’s Notch (rt58) this morning in Montgomery. A gentleman had flagged him down and advised him of his mistake before he got too far into skinny parts (and one lane stone bridge)

4

retromullet t1_iturij7 wrote

They should put in a chicane on both sides of the road that you must navigate before you get past the point of no return.

3

nlpnt t1_itw3xs3 wrote

The biggest limiting factor is the ski areas on either side of the restricted section that receive truck deliveries and tour buses.

5

DamonKatze t1_itvvuv5 wrote

You're right. there are easy preventative measures to prvent this, but they choose not to implement them.
I'm starting to suspect they like the fine $$$$...

0

3vknight4 t1_itxipzy wrote

A couple thousand in fines is nothing in the world of transportation costs. The problem is the road is mostly very narrow and the state doesn’t own the land.

2

VermontSkier1 t1_itv3xrq wrote

I think we are only at 4 or 5? Well below the average? 😆😆😆

2

FunStuff802 t1_itw4hny wrote

People aren't getting smarter.

2

Ok-Statement-8801 t1_itxnti9 wrote

In Port Huon Michigan people were complaining they were ending up in Canada despite 10 huge highway signs telling them they were going to Canada.They chose to believe what their navigation system was telling them vs. what the signs were saying.

1

hikevtloveyourdog t1_ity2xvn wrote

Google should be billed for the idiocy. Or pay for a checkpoint to turn truck drivers around. People come down my class 4 everyday and turn around even though it's posted dead end at the top. If you use Google maps it says it connects. We have reported it to Google several times and it still directs people down it. It was washed out during Irene years ago

−1

Medium_Routine_9398 t1_ituovv8 wrote

Plot twist:

The reason Vermont doesnt 100% act to prevent this problem is because it has the potential to create extra revenue on the fines from each incident. Better ROI!

[Cues twilight zone music]

−11

Romanovs_Penguin t1_itvlw74 wrote

I think the fine is about $2,500. My guess is that the police time (expense) spent on these things far outstrips that.

3

Medium_Routine_9398 t1_itvrcrg wrote

Oh dude, the expense totally outweighs the fine. Just having some fun and imagination. Grew up on a farm in VT and have seen this for the past 20+ years or so and it amazes me to this day that it keeps happening.

Too bad they keep getting trapped up in the notch. Glad everyone made it out safe!

0