Yellow | The truck driver.

A beautiful love letter from a daughter to her father, and a little reflection of the life lived by the highway heroes that make living possible for the everyman.

As a second generation truck driver, I grew up admiring my father and the hard work he did to make my life possible. Now I have joined him on the road. The story of the truck driver is timeless in it's own way, and I have respect for everyone who's put their life into this industry because it takes a hardy soul to do this for 30+ years.

Cheers, everyone. :guiness:
 
That was better days.when an employee was worth there work ethic. YRC doesn't care about the worker or there work ethic today. Your only as good as your last hook, deliverer, scan, or fixed instrument. Sad but true. If they did care they would have never , ever, come after the only thing we have been working for . And that is a retirement at a somewhat age to still enjoy life from a job that you put so much time and effort and deication into.
 
That was better days.when an employee was worth there work ethic. YRC doesn't care about the worker or there work ethic today. Your only as good as your last hook, deliverer, scan, or fixed instrument. Sad but true. If they did care they would have never , ever, come after the only thing we have been working for . And that is a retirement at a somewhat age to still enjoy life from a job that you put so much time and effort and deication into.

If YRC doesn't care about it's workers then what about all the unionized companies that have shut their doors and totally abandoned their workers over recent decades? And most did that without paying their pension liabilities. Just saying.
 
If YRC doesn't care about it's workers then what about all the unionized companies that have shut their doors and totally abandoned their workers over recent decades? And most did that without paying their pension liabilities. Just saying.

That should say "its workers" not "it's workers". Didn't have my coffee before I posted. :smile new:
 
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