Stevens sounds efficient! I have a friend who works with Jim Palmer, he made it sound like it was worth the waiting. But it's nice to know other options.
No touch freight, rookie driver
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by daniphoenix, Sep 13, 2017.
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Those have microphones too. Go ahead and belt one out.

I do that in a different way whenever I drink anything carbonated.
daniphoenix Thanks this. -
Go to Schneider. Don't even fool around with the others. Their west coast base is in Phoenix now. Full training facilities.
Unless
You can get on with ABF. They were looking for trainees to go to their school. You've sailed under a lucky star if you land that gig.
But back to reality, just go to Schneider. They have compitant trainers, and a good school their, and you'll be at home during the process.
Get your year under your belt, then you can do lots of things. -
ABF's hiring process takes a bit of a long time.
Texas_hwy_287 Thanks this. -
Plus, she wants no-touch freight and my old aching back tells me that's a wise decision.BigBob410, Lonesome, Texas_hwy_287 and 1 other person Thank this.
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Gotta agree with Dave, Schneider would be a good choice. I would also take a hard look at Roehl.Texas_hwy_287 Thanks this.
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Well, ABF may not be no-touch freight, but they'll pay far better than any yin-yang OTR company they may try and SAY they're a no-touch freight type of outfit.BigBob410 and Texas_hwy_287 Thank this.
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Werner and Navajo come to mind. Werner will send you to a private school that is ridiculously expensive but if I'm not mistaken, the female:male ratio is insane there. I may have to sign on tbh. And if I'm not mistaken, Navajo is female run.
Texas_hwy_287 Thanks this. -
What about Freymiller?
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Tribe and Veriha are female owned.
![[IMG]](proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fimg.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Fv642%2Fshakespeares_sister%2Fnavajo.jpg&hash=aa96cd1d0787e3a47b278518e1f78554)
Navajo Express is owned by the Digby family. The story is, the "Blue Eyed Indian" is Mr. Digby's granddaughter. Maybe some Navajo driver learned something during orientation and will chime in.
Years ago on late night truckers radio, Navajo advertised for drivers; "Look for the Blue Eyed Indian running coast to coast", or something like that.Last edited: Sep 14, 2017
Texas_hwy_287 and RedRover Thank this.
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