 Spring Cleaning is here and Appalachian Wireless has the deal to get you started. Get a Samsung Galaxy S8 for a penny or a Galaxy S8 Plus for only $89.99 on the region's best network. Better service, bigger savings, that's today's Appalachian Wireless. So your agreement requires you to store for details. If you hear people talking about seeing a red, white and blue casket traveling through the region with a police escort, then the organizers of the American Toman Spirit Ride will know their ride has been successful. The idea was how do we get people's attention and boom. You see a casket on the back of a tow truck going down the highway, you know, it grabs your attention. Mike Corbin designed and built the casket that reminds motorists to slow down and move over when they approach first responders working beside the road. Many drivers initially mistake the procession for an actual funeral, but Corbin says he doesn't mind. We're trying to get across is that it could be actually could be a real funeral. If you don't obey the law and slow down and move over, this is the result. The American Toman Spirit Ride remembers all first responders killed while working alongside the road, but it emphasizes an often overlooked first responder, the tow truck operator. Several police and fire departments escorted this symbolic casket as it came through their areas in full support of its message. Our tow truck operators are usually at greater risk. There's only one of them. They're limited on their traffic control that they can do. The Spirit Ride began last summer and has been relayed in nearly 150 cities from tow truck to tow truck in processions totaling more than 10,000 first responders. And in every city, the message is the same. All first responders are out there to help you. Give them the courtesy, obey the law, so please slow down and move over. In Pike County, I'm Shannon Deskins, EKB News.