What if it Snows?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Dave_in_AZ, Mar 19, 2018.
Page 3364 of 23459
-
WesternPlains, Rcranch81, 650cat425 and 4 others Thank this.
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
Bulk Transportation was offering some huge money as a company driver.
Chemicals.
You have to wear a chemical suit. In Phoenix. In the summer.
Dude.
Part II is all the people that have been at that place awhile, all have chemical burns, and the story is always some other drivers fault. Not minor stuff either. Like skin grafts, etc..
F that.WesternPlains, Deere hunter, Rcranch81 and 7 others Thank this. -
WesternPlains, Deere hunter, lovesthedrive and 3 others Thank this.
-
WesternPlains, Deere hunter, Rocks and 4 others Thank this.
-
yeah and it means no burritos, too. I mean you'd self gas then. lol
WesternPlains, Deere hunter, Rcranch81 and 2 others Thank this. -
At that point, I was like," I'm afraid, I'm very afraid."
Both drivers that caused these issues had been terminated. Like who gives a rats ### about that? Your shirt is still part of your anatomy now. If God wanted you to have a shirt melted into your skin, he would have made it so you were born with one.WesternPlains, Deere hunter, Rocks and 5 others Thank this. -
WesternPlains, Rocks and 650cat425 Thank this.
-
Oh sure it burns driver, quit complaining. You can wash that off at home tonight. (And come back doing again tomorrow more burns... or choking on the acid fumes...) We don't have the money or time to play with those silly bubble suits driver. Get that clean, today.
If Most of america abuses their workers every day in the light of day I don't wonder why we bother.RidgeRunner731, WesternPlains, D.Tibbitt and 4 others Thank this. -
WesternPlains, Rcranch81, x1Heavy and 1 other person Thank this.
-
My 2 cents, FWIW, refer has plus and minus. As a newbie, there is so much to be learned and experienced, to add in the responsibilities of the refer unit is just feeding the fire with more to burn. OTOH, having a teacher that is experienced (please note I said teacher, not trainer) to actually instruct you and advise you of the use and care would be good. however ... recently, these past few years, "trainers" with all training companies don't seem to muster up to the task. Training companies need people to be trainers allowing rookies to train rookies,,...not a good combination.
Use your first 8 months-1 year to get comfortable in the operation and life style change as simple as you can. Dry van is the safest way to go. Especially when you consider the new over-regulating that is happening. E-logs, no room for error....every second is tracked. Every move you make is monitored by some faction,....either the company or some LEO is always watching over your shoulder. You have a new routine to learn, and with a co-driver it gets intense right off the bat.
As a teacher for 14 years....I said teacher, not trainer....I put all of mystudents first, not the miles they brought to the truck, but the students needs in learning a new career, a new life style, how to cope with being away from family, away from freinds for weeks at a time. Teaching the use of time, maintaining a schedule, breaking bad habits and inserting good habits that will become routine. So many distractions everywhere, its easy to get out of sync with everything.
OK...I'm rambling...send me a PM if you want, glad to chat with you about this stuff.WesternPlains, D.Tibbitt, Rocks and 3 others Thank this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 3364 of 23459