Sorry if my topic question is vague, I really didn't know how to summarize it. The last four years I have been driving I have pulled mostly food. I never got a Hazmat endorsement but a new company I am going to requires it so I plan on taking the test during my next home time a couple of weeks from now. I remember from trucking school we did a small segment on Hazmat and I remember that hazmat trucks have to stop for every train rail crossing with the flashers on and their window down before crossing. I also know there are tunnels that Hazmat isn't allowed.
I was wondering if you get a Hazmat load, do you have to jump through extra hoops at the shipper or just place the placards on your trailer and its like a normal load? Do you have to pull into every weigh station and get checked out? Anything else different? I was sent a sample of their live board and saw Hazmat loads that paid $3.50 per mile and was wondering if there is a ton more work involved which is why it pays more or is it just a fear factor of people not wanting to pull it which is why it pays good. Thanks.
Doesnt pulling Hazmat loads require a lot more work?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by OOwannaBE, Mar 14, 2015.
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haz-mat is somthing that you have to pay for annually. there are roads you have to be on/cant be on,they are marked"no hazmat". they will placard your truck in 4 spots, back of trailer, front of trailer and both sides. it will take a few weeks befor you get permission to take hte test. until TSA clears you for hazmat you cant take hte test.
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A lot of people seem to be afraid of haz, but hauling it can pay too. It's all about the load being properly secured(easy in a tanker), having the correct placards displayed and making sure you BOL is correct. Yes, it does sometimes get you more dot attention and hazmat = $$$ for them. If you have PrePass the only scales that are mandatory pull ins are in Arizona ands Arkansas.
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Yes you have to stop at railroad crossings. You also have to stay on hazmat routes around many of the larger cities. You need to check your tires every time you stop for heat, something I did anyway. Tunnels, depends on the tunnel and what you are hauling. A few states require hazmat loads to stop at weigh stations if open, Ohio is one.
Keep the BOL within easy reach when driving, and on the drivers seat when parked, and you are away from the truck.
Make sure you placards stay in place.
I pulled general frieght hazmat, ie no explosives and no nuclear waste, and tankers, no more work than a load without the hazmat labels. -
OK thanks guys it seems that I already know the basics then. Some places I go to (not hazmat) have a million rules and take pics of everything so I was wondering if every hazmat load is that way or they just slap the placards on your truck and send you on your way.
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bubbagumpshrimp, pattyj and ncmickey Thank this.
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The term "Hazmat" alone, normally instills a little apprehension to nearly all drivers new to hauling hazmat.
Hazmat loads can range from just a load of car batteries (Class 8, Corrosive) up to the significantly more dangerous materials.
Along with what the previous posters have said, my advice would be... once you study & pass your endorsement, realize that only teaches you the bare basics.
Once you start hauling loads, even tho the shipper is responsible for all proper paperwork & labeling, you have the ultimate responsibility to make sure that everything is proper, legal, and conforms to the regulations.
Additional studying is needed, so you can be 100% confident, for each hazmat material you haul, that you placard it correctly, and load/transport it correctly.MZdanowicz, The_Dude and OOwannaBE Thank this. -
Yeah, I don't know how/where this "yearly" rumor is ever true. Since the Feds dictate the Risk Assessment process, I can't understand why any state wouldn't want a HazMat endorsement to be annual; would drive the BMV folks just crazy.
My Risk Assessment expires in the Fall of 2019, my CDL expires Spring 2018. I've met the "It's an annual renewal" folks here in former employer's breakroom, so I have no idea where it might be true.
Hauling gasoline to service stations is HazMat, but from what I've heard, the biggest challenge isn't hauling the gasoline, it's dealing with owners/managers that insist on ordering a load that "should fit by the time you arrive". -
See if your state is like MI, I have to get my background check done first, before I can even take the written test. This may just be a national requirement but Im not sure.
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