I will be attending a school so that I can look at different opportunities.
Paying for the school is no problem.
My wife works and she makes enough $ to pay the bills + some to savings.
Financially I can spend up to 12 months until I need to go to work.
Question:
How can I maintain the driving skills I learned until I get at job.
Keeping skills between school & job
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Race Grandpa, Jul 16, 2011.
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Most companies are going to want you start immediately after school. If you wait more than a few weeks the are going to want you to go through a refresher course. This is why during your schooling they have you filling out job apps everyday.
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Chompi is right. If you don't go to work within 90 days you just as well shoot yourself in the foot with a 12-gauge. Either way you will be crippled.
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I don't want to insult your intellegence but I will share my standard advice since you are new to the forum. Some of it might be helpful and some won't apply.
You need to research and find out what the important questions are. You can make an above average living but you will make sacrifices that other jobs don't require. Read the "good companies" and "bad companies" section on this forum and get an idea of what company you want to work for and what kind of trailer you want to pull. Don't just go to school and then try to figure out where to go.
I don't know your financial situation. Don't take training from a company if you can afford it or get it with financial aid. You will be their slave for up to year. If you leave they will trash you DAC and credit record. Check out your local community colleges and employment office.
Just know that most training and trucking company recruiters will do nothing but lie to you. They will let you talk about what you want and then tell you what you want to hear. Trucking is about moving freight to make money for the company. Your home time, family, paycheck and everything else comes second.
It is not like any other job. Local is usually backbreaking delivery work 10+ hours a day, 6 days a week. Often you unload dozens of times a day or you are a salesman. In my area most dump truck jobs pay less than a good factory job. Regional is lots of loading and unloading time, fewer miles than OTR and not as hard as local but will wear on you and push your HOS limits. OTR is out 3 - 5 weeks with 3 - 4 days home, less manual labor and more miles.
You'll probably have to pay your dues before you get the gravy job. Weekends off, if you are lucky enough to get something like that starting out, may be home Thursday afternoon and leave Saturday night or home Friday night and leave Sunday afternoon. Loads deliver on Monday early and you leave in time to get them there. Often your home time will be in the middle of the week.
Regardless of your driving choice, after school you will go through company training. For OTR this can be six weeks to three months with little or no home time. The first phase is usually $400 a week and the second phase is $500-550 a week. Some pay less. One company pays 12 CPM for training.
One last thing, you don't want to wait around too long after training or you'll have trouble finding a job. If you get out before you have a year in, when you try to come back a few months later you will find they want you to start over.
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Like these guys said you'll need to start no more than 90 days after graduating and even at that point you will have limited your oppurtunities. Many have 60 day limits and a few even have 30 day limits.
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Excellent advice from the others!
If you want some more practice, you will have a CDL when you get out of school. Go rent a truck for the day and have some fun! I did, and it helped immensely. -
Thanks for all of the info and advice.
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Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.