Kozaryn presents a deeply troubled working environment according to driver testimonies. The most critical issue is consistent payment fraud: drivers report unpaid final salaries, withheld wages under false pretenses, and documented signature forgery on payment receipts. Management, particularly a figure named Sasha, is described as dishonest and threatening, with one complaint filed with Polish labor authorities (PIP) over a 2,500 zł underpayment discrepancy. Working conditions are poor, with mandatory deductions (200 zł for accommodation, 800 zł for fuel) that drivers claim exceed actual norms, leaving many unable to collect final months' wages totaling thousands of zlotys. The fleet operates with poor conditions, mandatory methane gas conversion, night loading/unloading shifts, and widespread tachograph violations. High Ukrainian driver turnover suggests systemic mistreatment, while salary progression (2,300-7,000 zł reported) remains contingent on internship completion with final payments often unresolved.
Pros
Professional Code 95 training programs offered
Employment opportunities for international (Ukrainian) drivers
Fleet uses modern methane gas fuel technology
On-site accommodation provided
Cons
Systematic non-payment of final salaries and wage theft
Documented wage fraud including forged signatures on payment receipts