Road Dogs on Hogs

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Drivers Stranded by Arrow Truck Lines

The times are tough for everyone these days. But for many Arrow Truck Lines drivers, it got worse yesterday. All I ask is read the story below and look into your hearts and help how ever you can. Living on workman’s comp right now I can’t afford to help with money, or a ride, but I can offer a place to stay for a few days.

I am sure that many of you have seen the white and green Arrow trucks rolling down the road over the years. Yesterday they closed their doors and left their drivers stranded all over the country. According to “Tulsa World“, the 61-year-old Tulsa-based flatbed company, closed it’s door without any notice to the office staff or the drivers.

After closing down the company phone system Tuesday morning and not accepting cell phone messages throughout the day, the company issued a statement from CEO Doug Pielsticker at 6:21 p.m.

“The company has been in negotiations with its principal lender,” Pielsticker said. “Those negotiations are continuing, but the lender has elected to proceed with securing its collateral. The company is communicating with several interested parties and continues to seek a prompt resolution.”

Beginning just before noon Tuesday, callers to Arrow’s west Tulsa offices were greeted with a recorded message: “Drivers, if you’re in Freightliner KW, please take your truck to the nearest Freightliner shop. Call this hot line number to Daimler, (877) 294-9679. They will arrange for you a bus ticket home.”

“I’m shut down near Cheyenne, Wyo.,” Arrow driver Denny Carter said by phone. “They asked me to bring the truck and load into Tulsa, but I don’t have fuel to do it. I’ll be taking the truck to a Kenworth dealership in Cheyenne.”

“I haven’t heard nothing and haven’t been able to get ahold of anybody,” driver Ruben Bradley said by phone. He shut down his rig at a truck stop in Wichita Falls, Texas, on Monday night when other drivers phoned to tell him their gas credit cards weren’t working.

Bradley was hauling a load of steel pipe for delivery in northern New Mexico. He had three-quarters of a 240-gallon tank of diesel fuel he thought would take him to his delivery but not enough to return the truck to a terminal or Tulsa.

And with no working fuel card, he didn’t have $500 to $600 of his own money to fill the tank.

“I’m not going to move the truck. I’m not going to get stuck way out in New Mexico without fuel and no way to get home,” Bradley said. “I can’t get ahold of anybody, not even extended operations or the fuel desk.”

Doug Evans was in similar straits early Tuesday.

“I’m not in a very good mood,” the Arrow driver said by phone, his fuel gauge at a quarter tank as he motored west toward Little Rock with a load of steel tubing.

“I’m fixing to be out of fuel. I can’t get any answers. I got a message to take the truck to the nearest Freightliner dealer. We haven’t gotten any paychecks, either.”

By Tuesday evening, Bradley was driving south to a Freightliner dealer and a new job he’d just been offered in Houston. He had just enough fuel to make it, he said.

Evans, whose load was bound for Houston, had run out of fuel. He was parked in a truck stop 60 miles east of Little Rock.

“I’m waiting for somebody to send me some money — Western Union so I can get enough fuel to get the truck to the Freightliner dealer in Little Rock,” Evans said. “And then I’m going to have to walk home to Monroe, La. There are seven drivers I know about — from North Carolina to Arizona — who are walking home.”

Carter, who was stranded in Cheyenne, almost 2,000 miles from his home in O’Brien, Fla., was nearly alone among the drivers in that he will have a merry Christmas.

“Friends out here, people I met on the road, pooled together and bought me an airplane ticket home,” he said.

“I’m flying Cheyenne to Gainesville on Wednesday.”

Land Line Mag reported the story yesterday with the following statement:

Stephanie Ortega, who works in the Fleet Services department at Daimler, said she found out when she arrived at work Tuesday morning that Arrow Trucking was shutting its doors and about the company’s plan to help get Arrow’s drivers home.

She was instructed to tell drivers to drop their vehicles off at the nearest Freightliner dealership and to leave their keys with an attendant there or at a truck stop if they are out of fuel.

Ortega said drivers are asked to then call Daimler at 877-294-9679 and she and others there “can get them a bus ticket through Greyhound or the company will reimburse up to $200 for alternative transportation costs.”

However, one drawback to the plan is that drivers are on their own to find transportation to a local Greyhound station once they have surrendered their trucks.

“If they can get themselves to a local Greyhound station, we will get them a bus ticket and get them home,” Ortega told Land Line.

The trucking world is coming together to helps it’s own. There has been a Facebook page created with the sole purpose of helping drivers connect with people that can help. Weather it is with money, a ride home, or just a place to stay till someone can get them home, any help a person can give would be greatly appreciated by the many drivers left standing in the cold.

CDL of it” also have a list going in their Christmas Group Forum of drivers that need help and people that are willing to help. According to a message felt on the Facebook page, there are 2 lists there, one with drivers needing rides, fuel, help. another with a list of folks that can provide rides, help, etc. you can also call 866-929-9627 or 417-200-4411.

4 State Trucks – The Chrome Shop Mafia also made a statement on their Facebook page:

All of us at CSM certainly feel for these Arrow drivers that may end up stranded. If someone knows of a driver that needs a lift home for the Holidays, please contact us at customerservice@chromeshopmafia.com and we will try our best to hook them up with one of our customers, fans or friends to get them back home. We all agree that the trucking business can be tough, but things like this shouldn’t happen.

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Posted 8 months, 2 weeks ago.

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YouTube Page

We have created a YouTube page for video clips of our ride to Sturgis Bike Rally each year. If you have video you would like added, please contact White Rose for instructions on how to get it to her for upload or to upload it yourself.

See the YouTube page by clicking on the link at the top of the page or  HERE!

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Posted 9 months, 2 weeks ago.

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Gearing up for 2009

Well, it is almost that time of year again…..time to start gearing up for Sturgis. So all you “Road Dogs on Hogs” need to strat talking it up on the road and on the shows. We want to make sure that eveyone in the trucking industry knows that we are going to ride to Sturgis Bike Week and just how much fun it is going to be.

We have also set up a council now. These are the people that helped organize “Road Dogs on Hogs” and put many hours and dollars into making it want it was this year. These 7 people will be your point of contact for anything we do and for information on the ride, the rally, and any other information you may need to plan your trip.

White Rose in Mississippi
Buzzard in Nebraska
Harley Cowboy in the Texas Panhandle
Slider in Pennsylvania
Idaho Hunter in Washington/Idaho
Two Horses in Colorada

** For those that don’t ride a motorcycle, but want to join in on the fun, you are more than welcome to join us. The campgrounds we have picked allows bobtails.

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Posted 1 year, 9 months ago.

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Counting the days!

OK,  don’t know about everyone else, but I am getting very excited with each passing day! We are 15 days to the kick off of Sturgis Bike week. I know some of ya’ll will be leaving in 12 to 14 days, but I am in hopes that I will be leaving in 11 days, July 30th.

I am truly amazed at the response we have gotten and the numbers of drivers/riders that had signed up to ride and camp with us while there. What started as a crazy idea, (so I thought), has turned into almost a major event for the drivers in the trucking industry. We have Truck Shows all over the country all year round. Never before have just the drivers tried to create an event for fun, outside of the trucking industry. They wont be any show trucks to shine and polish, (just your bike), there wont be any driver recruiters, no truck dealers trying to talk you into buying their truck, no people telling you how to make it in the trucking world or any other of the things you see at any other gathering of truck drivers.

For once, drivers are getting TOGETHER to HAVE FUN! If that doesn’t make you excited, I just don’t know what will!!! We have gone from a hand full of drivers saying they will be joining us a couple of months ago, to almost 30 drivers with family and friends, somewhere around 40 to 50 people so far, that are now saying they have their reservation at the Iron Horse campground. Isn’t that great!!

For me, it is a dream coming true. I have always wanted to go to Sturgis and I love meeting other drivers. We are going to have a great time and I look forward to meeting each and everyone that attends.

REMEMBER this, even if you can’t ride up on your bike, if ya get a load through the area, we will pick ya up at the truck stop of you can catch the shuttle and join us for a few hours or a few days. We will love to have ya there!

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Posted 2 years, 1 month ago.

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Patches are here

I got the patches in a few days ago. Here is the picture that the company sent me for approval. I will have them with me at Sturgis for ya’ll to purchase. they will cost $5 for each.

Our Patch

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Posted 2 years, 2 months ago.

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