Opie preplans on Fridays, but during the week it's very rare. But there isn't another dispatcher there that I would have ever traded Opie for. That guy took care of me regarding miles, hometime, and anything in between better than I could have ever imagined
Is millis transfer still a good company too work for
Discussion in 'Millis' started by Expedition, Nov 22, 2016.
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GA regional rarely gets a preplan. Maybe on weekends but i don't normally run weekends.
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Hope all the Millis drivers have a Merry Christmas and a Happy 2017!
Steelersjunkie, DRAGON64, chi-town joe and 2 others Thank this. -
Ok, I finally told my father in law about Millis and me going to truck driving school. He told me to be careful, that it is not an easy job (I already know) and to find out if I have to pay for dead head miles. He said "be careful, they could send you to Colorado to drop a load, then send you clear all across to Texas to pick up a load and those are the dead head miles you will have to pay for out of your own pocket".
Any truth to this? -
You get paid for all miles you drive, empty or loaded. It's also rare to have to deadhead more than 100 miles, since they are in fact paying you to drive without a load.
zany_steverino Thanks this. -
Let me correct myself on something: you get paid for all estimated miles you drive. It's well known that the entire trucking industry uses either PC Miler or the Household Mover's Guide to estimate the miles between locations. This is typically only zip code to zip code, and can be off by 10%. I've kept track of my miles (both dispatched and driven) since I started, and I've averaged a 4% difference, but your mileage may vary.
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Millis keeps you in the Eastern states.
If you want to run coast to coast, Roehl Transport can do that or keep you regional. You have a choice plus they have various hometime options. They also pay you $500.00 weekly while attending their cdl school. One of their schools is in Georgia.
Jim Palmer Trucking is a coast to coast refrigerated company and has their own cdl school. -
Tough job, yes. It gets easier to handle with time. First few months to a year on your own are the hardest but becomes easier as you gain knowledge and experience. Some days become diwnright easy and some are a real pain. Most somewhere in between.zany_steverino and DRAGON64 Thank this.
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