Monday, August 9, 2010

O.B. market says tow notice meets the mark - SignOnSanDiego.com

From Union Tribune
San Diego

O.B. market says tow notice meets the mark


Saturday, August 7, 2010 at 10:08 p.m.



Wednesday afternoons mean no parking on Newport Avenue

Four of Star Towing’s tow trucks idled on the same Ocean Beach block last week, waiting for their usual 2:30 p.m. Wednesday go time, when it becomes illegal to park on Newport Avenue between Cable and Bacon streets.

By 3 p.m., the only two vehicles left on the block had been ticketed, loaded onto the trucks and hauled away to make room for the weekly Farmers Market.

Some Ocean Beach residents complain that signs on the block aren’t prominent enough to fairly warn the usual one or two motorists a week that still get towed, which can cost upwards of $300. But the Ocean Beach Mainstreet Association, which runs the market, says it’s doing the best it can to remind motorists to move their cars.

In addition to about nine permanent signs, OBMA posts about 25 temporary signs — two in each planter box — the morning of the Farmer’s Market, market manager David Klaman said. He walks around with a megaphone reminding people to move their cars, and asks the lifeguards to make announcements from their stations.

He said he thinks putting the signs up in the morning is plenty of advance notice since cars can only park there for two hours anyway.

Sgt. Gary Mondesir, special events sergeant with the San Diego Police Department, said if a group gets a permit to block a city street for an event, they have to notify drivers at least 72 hours before.
Mondesir has been to the street before the Farmers Market and said OBMA goes beyond what they’re required to do, even going into stores and telling merchants to warn their customers.
OBMA Executive Director Denny Knox said the permanent signs take care of the advance-notice requirement, although some motorists may be leaving their cars after a night at the bars and failing to come get them.

Knox said OBMA tried to hire a company just for the Farmers Market that would tow cars for less money, but the city said that was illegal.

“I don’t know what else we could do,” she said. “We feel terrible about it. We don’t want any cars towed.”
But on Wednesday, some pedestrians watching the truck drivers hook up the vehicles remarked that the warning signs were too small or too infrequent.

“What a total scam,” said Sean Ritz, 40, as he watched truck drivers load the cars onto their trucks.
The Mission Valley resident had been nearby at the beach that day. When he saw the vehicles being towed, he had a moment of panic, worried he might have been parked in the wrong block, although he was not. He said he empathizes with those people, who would come back to the block and not find their cars.
“The signs are not enough,” he said. “They aren’t in every space.”

Klaman, the market manager, thinks people either don’t think to read the parking signs when they park or they just forget to move their cars, but he understands the frustration.
“They yell at me saying, ‘Why did you tow my car?’ or ‘You didn’t have the signs up when I parked,’” he said. “I’ve got horror stories.”

Fox Ludwig, 46, who’s been driving a tow truck for Star for four years, said people have told him they forgot to move their cars or they didn’t think the prohibited parking applied to them, he said

Drivers are paid by the hour instead of commission, so he tries to wait until the last minute to pull someone’s car away, though he has to have the street cleared by 3 p.m.

“We make money, but we don’t want to tow anyone,” he said.

Ocean Beach resident Christina Reilly, 54, had her car towed from the block a few months ago. She said she didn’t see any signs when she parked there at 1:30 p.m. to go to a grocery store about a block away. She returned to find a tow-truck driver hooking up her car to his truck.

Reilly said there needs to be more permanent signs and a more consistent policy on where they are.
“There’s too much room for error,” she said. “It’s just discourteous to the public.”
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O.B. market says tow notice meets the mark - SignOnSanDiego.com
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Thursday, August 5, 2010


Safety safety safety.

I can’t stress this enough.  Too many drivers are getting injured or killed on the highways from numerous things.  The biggest thing that I can stress is BE SEEN!!!  Wear a vest to light up the scene.  There are numerous things you can do.  I remember one time where I was dispatched to a disabled motorist on a toll road.  It was a BMW and came out as a flat tire.  I thought to myself great, this person has never changed a tire before in their entire life and will most likely sit in the car and leave me to the work.  I arrive on the location of the disablement and find that the shoulder was barely enough to have the BMW on the side of the road, let alone my 21’ ford Jerr Dan Rollback.  I saw the disabled car and turned on every light I had so other motorists could see me.  I positioned my truck behind the disabled car so that as motorists came flying by they could see all the lights much better and not slam into us.  I also pulled a page from the police and decided to angle my truck so it gave me a little more room to work, keeping me out of harms way. 
Safety is the biggest thing that we need to follow out there, but so few drivers do.  Wear the safety vest.  Turn on all your lights especially at night.  People can see those work lights and your warning lights. Put extra warning lights on the back of the truck, more than the front.  And if that does not work, flares and triangles are a great tool to keep you safe, whether they are battery powered or the old fashioned ones.

Matt Thompson
Wrecker Division Resident Tower and Jerr-Dan specialist
East Coast Truck and Trailer
2906 Elmhurst Lane
Portsmouth, VA 23701
1-800-849-2178 (toll free)
(757) 465-2200 x336
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msaks@ectts.com -



Monday, July 26, 2010

News and Specials from East Coast Truck and Trailer Sales! via @constantcontact

http://myemail.constantcontact.com/News-and-Specials-from-East-Coast-Truck-and-Trailer-Sales-.html?soid=1101539072269&aid=Gzt5TRI4DBw

News and Specials from East Coast Truck and Trailer Sales! via @constantcontact

http://myemail.constantcontact.com/News-and-Specials-from-East-Coast-Truck-and-Trailer-Sales-.html?soid=1101539072269&aid=Gzt5TRI4DBw

Tow-retrieval charge takes a hike in Victoria

Victoria Police DepartmentImage via Wikipedia
Times Colonist July 23, 2010



The cost of getting your car back if it's towed from a Victoria street or parking lot is going up.

Victoria councillors yesterday agreed to a hike in the towing fees companies can charge to $85.50 from $65. The storage fee will increase to $20 from $15.

Fees were last increased in 1995.

Towing companies will also be allowed to charge $33.60 for the use of a dolly in a tow.

The city tows vehicles that are illegally parked on streets or in city lots.

Councillors were told the rate increase is needed for companies to meet increased costs.

Only Coun. Philippe Lucas voted against the increase, arguing he couldn't support it without evidence that the increases were necessary to cover costs.

The increases are designed to bring Victoria rates, which have been among the lowest in the region, more in line with neighbouring municipalities.

Saanich recently increased its tow rate to $75 from $65 and Esquimalt's $65 rate is under review.

Because the Victoria Police Department negotiates its own towing services contract, police-initiated tows can be exempt from the city towing bylaw.

Read more: http://www.timescolonist.com/news/retrieval+charge+takes+hike+Victoria/3312693/story.html#ixzz0unQKBGoU
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msaks@ectts.com -













Tow-retrieval charge takes a hike in Victoria
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Friday, July 23, 2010

Peterbilt 379 for sale

Image via Wikipedia




Peterbilt truck2004 PETERBILT 379 Conventional Truck w/ Sleeper For Sale At TruckPaper.com

Quantity 1
Stock Number 6301
Year 2004
Manufacturer PETERBILT
Model 379
Price Call
Location Portsmouth, Virginia
Condition Used
Sleeper Size 63"
Engine Specs Caterpillar
Engine Type C-15
Horsepower 475
Transmission 13 Spd
Ratio 3.55
Tires 24.5
------------------------
email msaks@ectts.com for more information

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Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Diesels make bad dentists

pulled from Toronto Sun
July 21,2010

A Kitchener truck driver is facing a careless driving charge but on the bright side, his tooth doesn’t hurt anymore.

Lambton County OPP say they stopped a big rig driver doing some driving dentistry along Hwy. 402 on Wednesday.

Const. John Reurink told the Sun Saturday it’s the first time he’s ever heard of a driver being pulled over performing dental surgery.

“I’ve never heard of this sort of thing occurring before,” Reurink said, adding he has stopped drivers doing their make-up, reading a map or talking on a cellphone. “Somebody doing an amateur tooth pulling? That’s a first.”

Reurink said it all started June 30 when an officer was on Hwy. 402 in Warwick Township, near Sarnia, and a passing driver pointed him to a tractor trailer being driven “all over the road.”

The officer found the eastbound rig and pulled it over.

Cops determined the 58-year-old driver was driving so poorly because he was trying to pull out a tooth while he was driving.

“The driver was very forthright with the officer,” Reurink said.

The amateur dentist of a driver had rigged a string around his hurting tooth and then tied the other end to the roof of the cab, police said.

“One good bump and the tooth should come out,” police explained.

Turns out the “one good bump” likely did come along at some point.

“The evidence of his efforts were nearby,” Reurink said.

When the driver was stopped the officer found a bloody tooth and a string lying next to him.

Strangely, police say the road down that way isn’t that bumpy and was recently resurfaced.

“He may have been better off on a sideroad,” Reurink said.

Police won’t be releasing the driver’s name because he’s charged under the Highway Traffic Act, not the Criminal Code, and they figure he’d be “continuously bombarded” by media trying to talk to him about his stunt - which would likely be more of a headache than a toothache.
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msaks@ectts.com -


- msaks@ectts.com
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Monday, July 12, 2010

Useful fuel savings tips

On a recent tour of Volvo’s New River Valley truck plant in Dublin, Va., I had the chance to listen to truck expert Frank Bio discuss aerodynamics and fuel efficiency. He gave a 10-minute overview on the subject in front of a Volvo VN. Here are four quick tips (all of them easy and inexpensive to implement) that I thought were worth sharing:

Slow down: When travelling down the highway at 65 mph, 30-50% of the energy generated by the engine goes towards simply moving the vehicle through the air, Bio noted. A lot of customers are beginning to slow down to improve fuel mileage. Bio said many customers that used to gear to run 72 mph are now reducing their road speed down to 67 mph, which causes a 3-5% fuel economy improvement. There’s just one caveat, Bio says, you must also keep your rear axle ratio set where it will allow the engine to continue running in the sweet spot...more tips click here
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msaks@ectts.com -
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Thursday, July 8, 2010

Trucking firm TransForce Inc. signals faith in the West



One of Canada's largest trucking companies has tripled its presence in Calgary, signalling confidence in the city's -- and Western Canada's -- future potential as a major transportation hub.
Montreal-based TransForce Inc. said Wednesday it acquired a 52-door terminal in the city which will substantially increase its subsidiary TST Overland Express's ability to move shipments into and out of the region.
Calgary is a central location for cross-border as well as interprovincial truck traffic.
"We are continuing to invest in our operations in Western Canada because of the region's economic strength and growth potential," said president Alain Bedard. "This new terminal enables TST Overland to deliver expanded services in and out of Calgary, which is a major gateway for shipments within Western Canada as well as to and from the United States."
The subsidiary, headquartered in Mississauga, Ont., has added direct line hauls between Calgary and Dallas, reducing freight handling and transit times. It boasts Canada's largest less-than-truckload network, using terminals such as Calgary to consolidate shipments between destination points.
The estimated $10-million cash acquisition is small for the multibillion-dollar company, but significant as it signals a strategic push to boost capacity in the less-than-truckload traffic in Western Canada, said RBC analyst Walter Spracklin.
"This is a vote of confidence in the future growth potential of the west," Spracklin told the Herald.
"I don't think capacity is tremendously stretched today, but certainly when you go out a few years. . . . You don't want to position yourself for next year, you want to position yourself for the long term, and that's what they've done."
The acquisition gives the company extra capacity to grow in a promising region, Spracklin said.
"It doesn't do anything to the actually level of volume," he said. "What it does is it allows that volume to come in, where as before it was extremely constrained."
TransForce made the deal with cash-strapped YRC, the largest cross-border player in Canada, which has been shedding assets to improve its financial footing.
The company, a merger between the Yellow Transportation and Roadway networks, has extensive global trucking operations, and operates in Canada under YRC Reimer.
"Given the fact that YRC is the largest cross-border player, we consider TransForce, as the No. 2 player, to be in a very enviable position of acquiring assets at what could be very distressed prices," Spracklin noted.
domeara@theherald.canwest.com

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Warrant not needed for truck searches

REGINA -- Despite not obtaining a search warrant, the Supreme Court of Canada said the seizure of nearly 400 pounds of marijuana and a large stash of money in Saskatchewan was within the law.


Initially, the two men occupying the semi were acquitted by a trial judge who determined that the men had been detained arbitrarily and that the search infringed their right to privacy. The judge excluded the money and marijuana from evidence, causing the men to be acquitted...to read the rest of the article click here

Thursday, July 1, 2010

NAFTA Surface Trade Jumps in April

Surface transportation trade among the United States, Canada and Mexico rose 32.4% in April, the third straight jump of at least 24%, the Department of Transportation said Tuesday.

The year-to-year increase to $65.8 billion in trade among the North American Free Trade Agreement partners left the index 11.4% below the level for the same month in 2008....to read the full article click here

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Creative trucker beats speed-limiter ticket in Canada

Persistence and creativity have paid off so far for trucker Lee Ingratta.

The one-truck owner-operator from Gravenhurst, Ontario, has captured the attention of the trucking community for the method he used to beat a ticket for an alleged violation of the provincial law that requires trucks to be equipped with speed-limiting devices.

A judge tossed Ingratta’s case out of court on June 4. Not surprisingly, provincial enforcement officials have filed an appeal...
to read the rest of the story click here
"Trucking and supply chain firm NFI Industries said Tuesday it has acquired IPD, a global transportation and logistics company based in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada..." to read more click here

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Tow-truck driver's death sparks change in law

"Andy Starmer died despite doing everything he could for his safety. Starmer, a tow-truck driver was helping a stranded motorist on I-64 near Victory Boulevard in Newport News. He pulled his vehicle to the side of the right-shoulder of the road and turned on his flashing amber lights. He was wearing reflective clothing.

Then a truck plowed into him. He died three days before his 37th birthday..."

To read the article click here

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Rules Tighten for Tow Truck Ops

Article Summary:

The city council of Rochester NY is creating much stricter rules for tow truck drivers

Key quote:

"The annual fee for tow truck operators will be $350 dollars instead of the suggested $500"

link to article

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Stop that tow truck!

From creativeloafing.com
by Rhiannon Bowman

Article Summary

  • A woman is protesting predatory towing practices in Charlotte, NC by boycotting local stores

Key quote from article

"Meanwhile, Starbucks leases 12 parking spaces — 12, that’s all. So, drink your latte at your own risk."

My thoughts:

Starbucks better get more parking spots quickly or the customers are going to be too broke to afford a $5 latte.

To see the original article click here

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

This makes a lot of sense......much too easy for govenment use!!!!

The politicians and other idiots will probably want to spend $Millions/Billions and more for a panel of engineers to study the problem, and then most likely won't find the simple solution these guys have....



click here for link to video clip

Monday, June 7, 2010

Is the city stealing the towers' business?....

Bridgewater towing company protests municipal impound lot proposal 

from MyCentralJersey.com 

Article Summary: 

  • A New Jersey municipality wants to have their own revenue generating impound lot.

  • Traditionally, Private lots owned by towing companies are where cars were impounded

Key Quote from article: 

"Frank Sanchez, a Somerset Hills Towing spokesman, questioned the township's math, and worries the impound lot will cost the municipality money to operate it, as well as towing companies' business."

 Link to article

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Towing Straps: another excellent use on a motorcycle


I saw another tow411 article post on towing straps. Notice in the picture how tightly secured the straps make the motorcycle to the towing vehicle.

for story link click here

Using tow straps on a motorcycle


I saw this article on Tow411. The towing professional did an excellent job of using the straps to secure a motorcycle and complement the chains holding the bike in place. The choice to use the flexible straps to completely secure the motorcycle was great

For story link click here

Friday, June 4, 2010

Gojak wheel lift system



For Gojak pricing click here

GoJak

Towing Parts and Products
feature item 

 GoJak 6200

The Model 6200 is an ox. Able to jack vehicle weights to 6,200 lbs. (1,550 lbs. per wheel), including light duty trucks with tire widths up to 13 inches wide and 36 inches tall. This auto jack / dolly is the most versatile and strongest GoJak® in the line. It has steel rollers, wider axles and two heavy-duty 5-inch diameter, and two heavy-duty 4-inch diameter, double-ball raceway casters. This combination makes for easier rolling with heavier loads.  The Model 6200 has a 5-degree offset pedal for additional foot-to-tire clearance.

See it in action: click HERE 

To price the item click HERE


Thursday, June 3, 2010

Tow-truck gang hurl dog from stolen car

Article Summary 

  • A rogue tow truck gang stole a ladies car and threw her pet dog out of the window
  • Tow truck gangs are targeting older cars to be used as scrap
Key quote from article

The Express & Star revealed at the weekend thieves posing as tow-truck drivers had taken up to 30 cars from homes and car parks in the Black Country before selling them as scrap.


 to read the article click HERE

Council bill would prohibit towing without tickets

Article Summary

  • The Philadelphia  city council has voted that a car cannot be towed from a private lot without a ticket 
  • The council is enacting this to stop what they call "rogue towers"
  • Some towing groups believe this will create a paperwork nightmare for police
Key quote from article

"This will be 56,000 times every quarter that a policeman may have to be called to issue a ticket, and I'll be interested to see on a map . . . where policemen were issuing tickets when major crimes were occurring elsewhere in the district," Green said.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Towing company under fire for inaccessibility to people with disabilites

Article Summary

  • A disabled man in Texas could not see the towaway sign in the dark and thought he was exempt because of the disability sticker on his vehicle.
  • When the disabled man went to the towing company, he could not access the office due to the face he was in a wheelchair.
Key Quote from Story

"Travis County Constable Bruce Elfant says all business operating in Travis County has to comply with the American Disabilities Act or A.D.A. Elfant says there are a few exceptions."

 for link to story click here

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

'News and Specials from East Coast Truck and Trailer Sales!'

'News and Specials from East Coast Truck and Trailer Sales!'

We have a winner!

Tow truck battle brewing in Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania may settle fight over truck parking

Article Summary :

  • Truckers are being towed away for parking their trucks in the once free Wal-Mart lot.
  • Wal-Mart has no control over property management enforcing the laws.
  • The laws are there to keep truckers from causing property damage or deterring customers.
Excerpt from article

"Norita Taylor, a spokeswoman for the Owner Operators Independent Drivers Association, said a shortage of parking across the U.S. is causing problems for long-haul truckers. She said statistics aren’t kept on the number of truckers towed from parking lots or the total paid in fines."

To read more..click here
 

Tow Truck Driver Turf War

Drivers bashed at gunpoint in tow truck turf war

By Francis Tapim

The Transport Workers Union (TWU) says tow truck drivers have been bashed at gunpoint in an apparent turf war in Brisbane over lucrative towing contracts. TWU secretary Hughie Williams is calling for an inquiry into the industry after serious allegations by drivers of violence and standover tactics by some operators.... Link to article

Friday, May 21, 2010

6" Oval Amber - PARK/CLEARANCE/AUXILIARY TURN $30.85

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Pete Light - Clearance Marker - Amber $10

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Vantage 6" Oval Amber - PARK/CLEARANCE/AUXILIARY TURN $15.95

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Thursday, May 20, 2010

Medium-Duty Hybrids Expected To Be Biggest Sellers

From Trailer Body Builders
May 20, 2010 1:51 PM,
By Sean Kilcarr, Fleet Owner senior editor

The music must really be loud there....

City council settles on two strikes, you’re towed

Noise ordinance goes into effect immediately

By DEANA POOLE (deana.poole@sj-r.com)
Posted May 19, 2010 @ 12:16 AM
Last update May 19, 2010 @ 06:33 AM
Twice in two years and you’re towed.

Springfield aldermen Tuesday voted 6-3 in favor of a proposal that allows police to tow a vehicle if a driver gets caught playing music too loud twice in 24 months.

The previous threshold was three times.

The change takes effect immediately.

Fines will stay the same — $250 for the first offense, $500 for the second, $750 for the third and subsequent offenses.

The city council approved the new rules, which were suggested by Ward 4 Ald. Frank Lesko and Ward 8 Ald. Kris Theilen, after again rejecting a proposal by a vote of 4-5 that would have allowed police to tow vehicles on the first offense.

The debate prompted emotional testimony from both sides of the issue. Opponents said towing on the first offense is too severe, unfairly targets rap music and could lead to racial profiling. Supporters said music is often played so loud that it affects other residents’ quality of life.

After the vote, Mayor Tim Davlin called the approved changes a “good compromise.”

“Perhaps our results will be somewhat similar to what happened in Peoria, we’ll have some quieter neighborhoods,” he said.

Ward 6 Ald. Mark Mahoney, who sponsored the one-stop-and-you’re-towed ordinance, was disappointed in the outcome.

“It’s an improvement, but obviously it doesn’t have the deterrence as the one-stop… It looks like more communities are moving to the one-stop impoundment because it works, and we are at the second stop,” Mahoney said. “Perhaps we’re headed in the right direction; it just takes us longer.”

Mahoney’s proposal was modeled after Peoria’s rules, which allow police to tow a vehicle on the first offense. Fines, however, would have been lowered.

Peoria’s police chief, Steve Settingsgaard, told Springfield aldermen Tuesday night that just the possibility of being towed immediately made Peoria a quieter city.

Theilen said he believes Springfield’s current fines are making a difference. He pointed to statistics that showed only seven people had two violations in the last year, and just two people had three violations.

Settingsgaard said he judges the success of a city’s rules by how quiet it is.

“It’s not how much money we raised, it’s not how many tickets we issued, not how many cars got impounded,” he said. “It’s when people are sitting on their porch at night, do they have peace and quiet?”

Aldermen rejected Mahoney’s proposal by the same 4-5 vote in December, but Ward 9 Ald. Steve Dove was absent. The issue was reintroduced in April because Mahoney believed he had Dove’s support. But Dove recently said he wouldn’t support Mahoney’s proposal, leaving it without enough votes to pass.

Dove voted “no” on Mahoney’s ordinance Tuesday, and Ward 3 Ald. Frank Kunz, who originally voted against it, was absent.

A group of opponents stood outside city hall before the meeting chanting: “Save our music. Save our cars.”

Springfield resident Ryne Goodrich has been a vocal opponent, saying the proposal unfairly  targets rap music and ignores a lot of other noisy activities.

“We still have buses. We still have motorcycles. We still have big trucks, loud mufflers, lawn mowers, leaf blowers, roofers, construction, dogs, neighbors, ice cream men,” he told the council. “We’ve got all this stuff. So you guys are really only addressing one issue.”

At the end of the meeting, Ward 7 Ald. Debbie Cimarossa referred to the discussion as “really kind of sad.”

“This isn’t about the type of music. I really take offense that people are not understanding the issue,” she said. “This is a neighborhood issue. It boils down to a lack of respect. When people go through neighborhoods and blare their music. … I just hope they use their energy to talk about respect.”

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Tips for towing, from hidden fees to costly considerations

Tips for towing, from hidden fees to costly considerations

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Strange but interesting towing story..

Tow truck driver accused of stealing parked cars

By h.b. - May 19, 2010 - 7:49 AM
From Typically Spanish.com
Archive Photo - Wikipedia Archive Photo -
The vehicles were sold on to a breakers yard


The owner of a tow truck company has been arrested for taking cars from the street to resell them to a breakers yard. He was collecting just 100 € per car.

La Opinión de Málaga reports that the National Police say that he had taken ‘at least one’ vehicle from the street, and that they had acted after a driver complained that his car had been removed despite it being correctly parked. Police had a break when they found that one of the cameras from a nearby commercial center had captured the theft.tow parts, towing, tower, winch cable, v strap, tow men

A police spokesman said that the price of 100 € for the car seemed ‘relatively low’ but it all depended on the number of cars he removed each day or week. Police investigations continue with several workers at breakers yards called to give statements.tow parts, towing, tower, winch cable, v strap, tow men

Only the City Hall is authorized to remove a vehicle from the street.tow parts, towing, tower, winch cable, v strap, tow men
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Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Grade 70 V-Strap $70.39


Grade 70 V-Strap 24" legs with 8" J & T Hooks

on sale until June 18, 2010 for $49.95

To order click HERE

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Monday, May 17, 2010

What a Driver Wants: Top Fleets Share Secrets to Success - Truckinginfo.com

What a Driver Wants: Top Fleets Share Secrets to Success - Truckinginfo.com

Autohauling HOW TO quick tips




-

This is a great autohauler resource with basic how to tips and techniques.

Tow trucks helping the flow of traffic


Standby tow truck project keeps city traffic flowing



By Suzanne Wilton, Calgary Herald May 17, 2010
From the Calgary Herald


 A city pilot project using standby tow trucks to improve clearance of busy roadways is keeping traffic moving during morning and afternoon rush hours, according to a city report.City officials report that 333 incidents were attended by standby tow trucks roving on five major routes during peak morning and afternoon times between Feb. 16 and April 16, an average of seven incidents per day.A report going to a city committee on Wednesday states that 64 per cent of the incidents were during the afternoon hours and the tow trucks responded in less than five minutes.This compares to five to 35 minutes for incidents detected by 52 cameras keeping an eye on major roadways."The roving tow truck service has provided good roadside assistance to motorists and we've been able to keep traffic moving," said Troy McLeod, the city's manager of traffic.McLeod said motorists have also appreciated help in cases where their vehicles have stalled in traffic, either because of an accident or vehicle failure or in one case, a medical situation. For example, a tow-truck driver came upon a woman slumped over her steering wheel at Deerfoot Trail and Memorial Drive and called EMS.The woman, who suffered a medical condition, was taken to hospital. In another situation, a woman ran out of gas on Deerfoot Trail at McKnight Boulevard and didn't have a cellphone to call for help.She was towed to a safe location and the towing company dispatcher called a family member to bring the woman some fuel."We also had a road rage incident averted because of the tow truck service," McLeod said.The one-year trial will cost $636,000, but how it will be funded into the future, if the program continues, hasn't been decided.Another update will come to council in November, when it will have to decide whether to continue the program and how to fund it.