So, this is my first post on any forum, so please be gentle.... I'l start off by saying that I'm a Paramedic from Raleigh, NC. After 15 years, I've finally decided to change my career, and I, like many newbies want advice in the best Comapny Paid CDL training. I don' have the means to pay for the training myself, so going to a private school is out of the question. I'e looked at a few different companies (Prime, PAM, Mill is, etc.), but I'm not sure what's actually competitive, and what I should compare between the companies before choosing. I'm comfortable driving bigger vehicles (Ambulances, Ladder trucks, Large Rescue trucks, etc.) So the length of yard time isn't a deal breaker. Any help would be great....even a few snide remarks are welcome! Thanks for your time!
You can also do this: pay for private school with a credit card, then hire on with a company that does tuition reimbursement. This way, the trucking company is giving you the money each month to make the credit card payment. Here's one with a $6000.00 sign-on bonus that would be enough to pay for cdl school. Raven Transport Truck Driver (OTR), $6,0000 Sign-On Salary: $65,000.00 to $75,000.00 /year To qualify, candidate MUST be at least 21 years of age and possess a valid Class A CDL License. For those brand-new CDL drivers graduating from a National Publicly Funded Truck Driving School, we have a program for you (earn while you train (6-8 weeks) and then $.40 CPM until you make the one-year experience level). Paid orientation. Rider program available and Pet Policy available.
System Transport: We are now offering to pay your tuition back 100%! CDL-A Company Truck Drivers – Glass Haul Flatbed Drivers Location: RALEIGH DURHAM, NC Base Pay $0.50 Per Mile – Up to $0.74 Per Mile! $1,000 Sign-On Bonus $300 Quarterly Safety Bonus (90% + Achievement Rate)! Pick/drop pay Tarp pay Hourly pay Weekly Pay + Direct Deposit Paid Orientation Assigned Equipment Medical/Dental 401(K) And much more!
There's not much difference in any of the trucking company schools, though a few stand out for being above average: Millis Transfer - dry van running eastern half of USA Wil-Trans - refrigerated running eastern half of USA Jim Palmer Trucking - refrigerated running coast to coast Roehl Transport - flatbed/refrigerated/dry van - dry van has a "National Fleet" Schneider Bulk - best paying of all these. A recruiter might set you up with a private cdl school & pay upfront for it. Schneider Bulk is tankers and they usually put you with dry van division for 6 months, then switch you to tanker division. Get the details from a recruiter. Tanker drivers usually make around $1000 - $1500 weekly. Contract Freighters - www.cfidrive.com - coast to coast dry van. Prime Inc. - refrigerated/flatbed/tankers
Try Superior Carriers. I don't think they have a CDL school but they'll hire you out of school if I'm not mistaken. You might be right in their hiring area and they pay well too. The misadventures of a rookie tanker yanker From Schneider to Superior
Check the with the un-employment office in your county. There is a program, here in Ohio it's called the WIA program, where the county/state will pay for you to be trained in another field, like truck driving. It is a grant so you don't have to pay it back and they cover all costs, and that will allow you to go to a private school. Worse they can say is no. Good luck.
All of the training companies are pretty much the same thing. They are just a means to gain your first 6 months to a year of experience. One might give you more driver comforts while the other pays a few more cents per mile. What type of trucking are you looking into? Reefer, Dry van, Tanker, Flatbed? A few companies to stay away from: CR England, CRST, Western Express.
Pay your own way at private schools or they have tuition assistance. ***** Contact your local J.T.P.A. for qualification requirements. They pay all cost for CDL training and offer daily lunch and gas money in the form of a weekly check. Some trucking companies even reimburse the cost of schooling to YOU! **** Schooling is not necessary. You may choose to obtain a CDL permit from DMV. If you did not complete the driver education program designed specifically for commercial motor vehicles, hold a commercial learner's permit for at least 30 days before taking the CDL road skills test at DMV. Borrow or rent the unit for testing purposes. Good Luck!
I didn' know this, and I'm actually looking into this right now! Huge thanks! Where you at in Ohio? Grew up in Canton/Akron area until 2009.
Honestly, I really don' have a preference. Was looking mainly dry vans, from my limited understanding of the differences, seems to be the "least physically demanding" for the most part? But I could be way off. My shoulders, back, and knees aren't what they used to be from lifting fatties my whole career.