TWIC is really good if you go tankers. Also, companies are hurting for drivers right now, so ignore "experience requires" and apply anyway. Most companies have online applications. Start the applications right now, don't wait until you graduate, then pick through the job offers for the one you like best.
R. A. Jeffreys Distributing Company, largest Anheuser-Busch distributor in N.C.
Southeastern Freight Lines
Sysco
Florida Rock & Tank
Bay & Bay Transportation
Cargo Transporters
D.M. Bowman Inc.
Epes
Swift Southeast Regional and how many miles to expect
Discussion in 'Swift' started by Iceman1984, Jul 11, 2014.
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Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
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Tanker companies that hire new CDL grads:
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Schneider Bulk
Trimac
Superior Carriers
CTL Transportation
Tidewater Transit
SVTN
Coast-to-coast teams:
Cargo Transporters
WLA Inc.
Cooke Trucking Company
Watkins-Shepard
Inman Trucking Co.
There you go; lots of trucking companies listed on your thread. Many you may not hear about in CDL school.Iceman1984 Thanks this. -
Don't base your decision on cents per mile; that's only one part of the total pay package. Cents per mile doesn't mean much if the other pays aren't there and the miles aren't there.
Here's a good company:
Founded in 2005, TRIBE Transport is one of the fastest growing minority carriers in North America. Outfitted with state of the art equipment, we specialize in deep frozen and temp controlled transportation. Trucks equipped with refrigerators and Tri-Pac APU's. That's the owner in the picture.
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Are miles more consistent with smaller companies or is it pretty much the same across the board? I've looked at all those companies Chinatown, I will definitely be speaking to most of them!
Chinatown Thanks this. -
Some companies show all their terminals on the websites, and for example, Tyson and Navajo have terminals scattered from East Coast to West Coast which means there's some good long runs there. One Tyson driver posted he bumped $60K in 12 months running solo. There's some reefer drivers making that kind of money and the key is time management. They're on Elogs and have time management down to a science. It takes a while, but you will learn it also.
The easy money is in tankers. I'll admit, I did enjoy flatbed, reefers and tankers.
Howard Transportation is the transportation department of Howard Industries. They have 3 factories and haul their own freight, which is good. Tyson hauls their own product and usually give their junk runs to outside carriers such as KLLM. -
No where near the 2500-3000 the recruiter promised by the recruiter. That is why Swift needs a recruiter. The need to lie about the income to entice people to work for them since 100% who do are out the door before one years of service. It is hard to work a full time and a half job earning 1500miles @ .24cpm; about $360 a week before taxes and insurance.
scottied67 Thanks this. -
I really appreciate it y'all. It's tough to decipher between being sweet-talked vs. facts. Glad you guys are trying to help me out.
But yeh, miles is the one thing I'm scared of not getting enough of! Kind of nervous I'm going to pick the wrong company and not be able to make a decent living because I'm not running. -
Swift's pay scale is really enticing, if it's true what the recruiter told me. A .02cpm increase every 4 months. So I would start out at .28cpm then at the end of my first year I would be at .34cpm.
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$.34 cpm is no great income though. I believe crete will start you out at $.39 cpm and you are like to get more miles. -
What you are describing is what happens to the lazy, entitlement minded drivers that slept through the government-paid CDL class. They pick up a load Friday morning, with a delivery 500 miles away with a window 0000 Saturday to 2359 Monday. Rather than delivering on Saturday, they sit in the driver's lounge at the local truck stop the whole weekend, grousing to anyone who will listen about how their miles suck at Swift. They deliver Monday night, and get a Tuesday morning load that delivers by Friday night.
Why do they only get 1000 mile weeks? Because they have repeatedly shown their DM that it takes them three days to go 500 miles.
If I pick up a Friday morning load, I'll be there as soon as I legally can. Pick up another 500 mile run on Saturday, deliver Sunday, and so on.
If it averages 1500 miles/week for Swift drivers, I must be carrying two 1000 mile lazy bums. My typical week is 2200-2800 miles. I can't remember the last 1500 mile week I've had without taking time off. I currently have 2300 miles of preplans on the Qualcomm for next week, and that will likely be revised upward as the week progresses.
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