Fleet Safety Award Presented to Premier Transportation

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Fleet Safety Award Presented to Premier Transportation

For more information contact:

Helen Roman

Sentry Insurance
1800 North Point Drive
Stevens Point, WI 54481
800-610-4888

Premier Transportation Earns Fleet Safety Award

Forest Park, GA – Management and employees of Premier Transportation were honored October 15 for their superior commitment to safety during the past year. Don Olson – Vice President Transportation and Terri Berlin – Senior Safety Services Consultant from the company’s insurance carrier, Sentry Insurance, presented the Fleet Safety Award plaque to Tim Pilato, President of Premier Transportation. 

Premier Transportation has been in business since 1982. They specialize in retail transportation and distribution logistics nationally. 

In making the presentation, Don Olson and Reese Smith stated that the trucking firm was one of a very select group reporting minimal accidents / losses during the year. They received an “A” safety rating from Sentry’s Safety Services, reflecting a superior commitment to controlling losses through a formalized safety program. 

Tim Pilato accepting the plaque for the company commended the efforts of all employees and management for their ongoing attention to safety at all times. He specifically mentioned the work of VP of Safety, Mr. Don Haney, who is in charge of Premier Transportation’s safety program.

 

 

Our Very Own Jerry Hughes – NFL Replacement Ref

Replacement ref: NFL officiating a “dream come true”

 

(CBS News) The National Football League’s replacement referees have had their five

Jerry Hughes in his former NFL uniform. Hughes was a replacement referee during the ref lockout. (CBS)

minutes of fame, although critics may say “infamy” is a better word. 

In all, there were 135 replacement officials hired by the NFL, all with years of experience at the high school and college level. Referee Jerry Hughes was one of those replacements. He jumped at the chance to live his NFL dream. 

Finally, everything is back to normal. The regular referees are on the field, the distractions of replacement refs are gone, and everyone seems happy. Well, almost everyone. 

Hughes told CBS News he’s “a little sad right now.” 

Hughes said he would have liked to have just one more week to say goodbye to the crew whom he had gotten very close to during the referee lockout. 

But it was close, perhaps, in the way soldiers who share a foxhole are close. Because for the replacement refs, it could seem like everyone was against them. 

Asked about those criticisms, Hughes said, “It comes with the territory. It’s out of our control. We went out there, we did a good job, the game of football went on.” 

Hughes made it through his three games relatively unscathed, with no major botched calls. Though he did pronounce St. Louis – “St. Louie” – in one call during a game against Chicago. 

Hughes said, “There was an interception, then a fumble back and forth and we had to go to replay. … I think nothing of it. I’m going home on the plane and I have to watch the tape to watch, I get to that point and I announce ‘St. Louie’ and the announcers went crazy.” 

Asked about the increased scrutiny the replacement refs were working under, Hughes said it was probably more than the regular refs. He said, “We were under the microscope from the coin toss to the very ending.” 

It was a call at the end of a game Hughes wasn’t working – Seattle and Green Bay last Monday night – that received the most scrutiny, as two officials seemed to make opposite calls on the decisive final play in the end zone. 

Asked about that call and if he considers it blown, Hughes said, “No. It went to replay. They said there was not enough to overturn it. It’s the way the game is played.” 

And Hughes knows a little something about the way the game is played. He’s been involved in officiating football for 40 years on all levels, from high school to college, and now the NFL. And while football may be football, the leap to the pros is a huge one. He showed CBS News the difference between the National Collegiate Athletic Association rule book versus the NFL rule book, which is considerably thicker and bigger. 

“There’s a lot more rules in the NFL,” Hughes said. 

As he sat and watched football on TV, he couldn’t help but wish he was still out there. “It’s a dream come true,” Hughes said. “When you get into officiating, you always want to keep moving up the ladder, and the NFL is the pinnacle. … I was there.”

 

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Premier Transportation Featured in Fleet Owner Magazine

Fleet Owner Article

Clean Energy Fuels Corp. announced that five additional trucking fleets have started using natural gas vehicles through its infrastructure. The five firms, Saddle Creek Logistics Services, Lakeland, FL; Premier Transportation, Atlanta, GA; Hoopes Turf Farm, Transport Division, Ulysses, PA; Lily Transportation Corp., Needham, MA; and Lancaster Foods, Jessup, MD, will use compressed natural gas (CNG) at existing Clean Energy public access stations, new stations built for the companies, and liquefied natural gas (LNG) at Clean Energy stations along “America’s Natural Gas Highway.”

“These companies are geographically diverse, but the common theme we hear from all of them is a desire to reduce their fuel costs and to deploy cleaner operating fleets,” said James Harger, Clean Energy’s chief marketing officer. “With the availability of a new class of heavy-duty natural gas trucks as well as more fueling stations, regional and national trucking operators are seeing the enormous benefits of converting to natural gas as their transportation fuel.”

Saddle Creek, a nationwide third-party logistics company, has expanded its contract with Clean Energy to build additional private natural gas fueling stations to support Saddle Creek’s expanding fleet of for-hire CNG trucks. Fueling at its new CNG station at the company’s Lakeland headquarters, a fleet of 40 Freightliner natural gas trucks is now serving Saddle Creek’s Florida customers. With its CNG fleet size projected to grow to 120 trucks, this will be the largest over-the-road CNG truck fleet in the state.

“Sustainability is a core strategy at Saddle Creek. We have opted to transition our truck fleets to natural gas power to help our customers secure the benefits of this clean, cost-efficient, abundant domestic fuel,” said Mike DelBovo, Saddle Creek’s president.

Premier Transportation has deployed a new fleet of CNG-powered heavy-duty Freightliner trucks to serve its customers in the Greater Atlanta area.

“Our transition to natural gas fuel for our truck fleets gives us a hedge against rising fuel costs, and the chance to offer a clean, domestic, abundant fuel source to support the sustainability objectives of our retail industry customers,” said Mike Medici, chairman & CEO.

Hoopes Turf Farm is a family-owned sod production and contract truck transportation company that offers solutions for construction and energy development sites, industrial hauling, materials delivery, commercial transportation needs, large equipment pick-up and delivery, and private residential requirements. With 10 LNG trucks in service now, the company plans to transition its entire fleet of 50 trucks to LNG power.

As a dedicated contract carrier, Lily Transportation provides transportation to the grocery, retail and industrial sectors. Lily has recently deployed a new fleet of CNG-powered trucks to serve one of its supply chain customers in the Los Angeles area. The fleet will fuel at Clean Energy’s extensive local network of public access CNG stations.

A subsidiary of Guest Services, Inc., Lancaster Foods is the largest wholesale produce company in the U.S. Mid-Atlantic region. The company has begun its transition to natural gas power with a new fleet of CNG temperature-sensitive refrigerated trucks. The Clean Energy CNG public access station at Baltimore/Washington, DC International Airport will provide fueling service to the Lancaster trucks.

Chastity Hobbs wins $10,000.00 Safe Driver Bonus

 

Premier Transportation honors Chastity Hobbs with a check for $10,000.00 as part of the Safe Driver Safety Bonus Program.

 

We are extremely proud of Chastity and recognize her professionalism and expertise. She is a consumate professional both on the road and off. The winner is chosen among professional drivers nominated for their total driving record, including miles and years driven without a preventable accident.

 

Congratulations Chastity!!!