I never said I was leaving teaching, though it does cross my mind, most people assume teachers are all paid like those who teach in the suburbs of major cities which is simply not the case. I assure you most everyone on this site would not trade their paycheck for mine, small rural districts make it hard to stay in teaching, which is why I never have been able to take a summer off and drive a school bus route and work on the family farm (though the last is really more of a passion/family obligation than an income source).
Would it be worth it? Would anybody be interested in someone like me?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by ben5398, Dec 5, 2017.
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Lepton1, NavigatorWife, Toomanybikes and 1 other person Thank this.
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ben5398 Thanks this.
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You could try temp. agencies but, I would think they will be mostly a waste of time. Temp. agency for trucking have just become head hunters for businesses that need truck drivers but don't have the slightest clue how to hire one or manage one. This is especially true in rural areas.
When I was in school a few teachers drove construction jobs in the summer. Dump truck mostly. The school janitor even had an excavation business with several dump trucks. They were some sweet equipment.
The ag. mech teacher ran a wheat harvesting business in Montana. He used to brag how he make $100 an hour running his combine. He had his own combines and trucks. Unfortunately, the model for running such a business has changed; Most of the harvesting is done by corporate processors and they pay high school kids to run combines for $12 a hour.
A few years ago I was working for one of those corporate processors and a couple of the drivers were from the school system. One bus maintenance supervisor, one bus driver, but no teachers. That doesn't mean their couldn't be. They would have hired a teacher in a second.
I think there is room for a teacher out here driving in the summer. I just think you have to try other avenues then a temp. agency to get behind the wheel.NavigatorWife Thanks this. -
I will take my time to figure out what to do, I did not even know there were temp agencies as I am just getting serious about it, although I have been looking into driving for a number of years now.Toomanybikes Thanks this. -
In what part of the country are you living? If you're in an agricultural area look for harvest work.
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NavigatorWife Thanks this.
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Let me explain a little further. Trucking has changed over the years. At one time desk jockeys (office management) had some clue as to what trucking entailed. Most were drivers either moving up in the ranks of a company or just moving off the road. Nowadays, you are likely to find most in the office never drove anything larger then a Honda Civic and really have no idea what the job entails at all. It sounds a simple enough problem to solve but it isn't. Who often gets put in the job of managing truckers and shipments is often someone to incompetent to function in any other aspect of the business so they put them in charge of shipping and the truck drivers. That should be simple enough? Right?
More often then not, these people burn through drivers like toilet paper, and since they often have connections to the business in other ways, they seldom get called out on their BS. This is where the temp. hiring agency comes in. After a driver flees a bad employment situation, the same fool that drove the driver out the door, has little or no skills in evaluating a new driver. The call the temp. agency and rely on their screening services to provide fresh meat for the seat.
The big problem with this situation is not only do you have two bosses, but neither one knows a thing about trucking.
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