Which training company to start with?

Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by alexlockhart, Jun 28, 2011.

  1. alexlockhart

    alexlockhart Bobtail Member

    47
    49
    Jun 28, 2011
    Medford, OR
    0
    After 6 or 8 years of battling a 9-5 schedule and wishing I was driving a truck, I'm finally about to get started. I need my CDL and training, and am planning to go to a "driver mill" company to get that plus a year of driving experience before switching to a good company. I've read all the horror stories about training companies, but I know that I can make it by being smart, quiet, patient, and hardworking - all things I'm good at anyway. I don't have the budget or driving record (speeding in 2009, reckless in 2003) to go to a private school and start with a decent company right away, and I can take my lumps. So, I'd like some input on what company would be good (or maybe "not awful" is good enough) to do the company-sponsored training and get some experience. My research on this forum has led me to consider the following:

    Stevens
    Swift
    Prime
    Roehl
    Watkins Shepard
    USA Truck
    Central Refrigerated

    I'm single with no personal attachments, young, fit, adaptable, and smart. I find that I never seem to mind any of the things in life that others complain about. So I don't mind if I never get home time, have to throw tarps on a flatbed, sleep in CA without idling, wait 5 hours for my next load, or any of the other things people complain about in trucking. I live in southern Oregon and would prefer a company that has a lot of freight in the west, but am happy to "relocate" to somewhere that's in some company's hiring area. Since I don't have a house or family to go home to and everything I own is in my car, my address means nothing more than some numbers and letters.

    I know I need to talk to recruiters to get some real answers, but I'd like help prioritizing my list so I start with the best of these bottom feeders. Which are better than others? I'm thinking Roehl, Prime, Central? Am I missing other worthwhile places that offer their own CDL training? Thanks!

    Alex
     
  2. Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.

  3. Ranger_309

    Ranger_309 Medium Load Member

    450
    753
    Sep 26, 2010
    0
    Prime or Roehl, IMO.

    Maybe Watkins-Shepard

    Stay AWAY from Central Reefer and Werner, period!

    I am assuming that you KNOW that you will be driving regional, at best, and X-country more then likely. And you might want to
    see what your company's policy is on idling is, or if they use APU's.

    If they send you to places like southern AZ, it can be 110 at nightime in that cab in summer-time, down Yuma, Pheonix, Tuscon way.
     
    Last edited: Jun 29, 2011
  4. alexlockhart

    alexlockhart Bobtail Member

    47
    49
    Jun 28, 2011
    Medford, OR
    0
    Thanks for the info. I'm planning on doing OTR - all I want is a minimum of BS and a maximum of miles, so I'm not interested in regional and line haul. I just spent a bunch of time reading a bunch of threads about Prime, Stevens, and Swift, and of those, I'm leaning towards Prime. But all opinions are welcome.
     
  5. Big Rigg

    Big Rigg Medium Load Member

    360
    317
    Jun 14, 2011
    Corona, CA
    0
    I don't know much about the other companies so can't compare them for you. I went with Central Refrigerated and I am happy. The training is only 2 weeks and you are out on the road training and making money. I have a friend who works for Prime and he likes them. He has been with them for 10 years now. Just keep doing your research and you will find one that you like.
     
    bullhaulerswife Thanks this.
  6. BigJohn54

    BigJohn54 Gone, but NEVER forgotten

    1,972
    1,599
    May 13, 2011
    SW Missouri
    0
    I have no personal experience with any on your list. Based on my reseach I second Ranger's choices. I would try Schneider first though. Big Rigg is offering some facts too.

    JMO and I'm wrong alot.
     
  7. alexlockhart

    alexlockhart Bobtail Member

    47
    49
    Jun 28, 2011
    Medford, OR
    0
    Thanks for the info. Does Schneider have their own school? I think their website said they have a program to hire drivers from approved (probably PTDI certified) schools, but they don't have their own training. They'd be on my list if they do!
     
  8. Mustangjoey

    Mustangjoey Bobtail Member

    36
    6
    Jun 29, 2011
    Rockford, IL
    0
    They have a training school at Schneider. That's who I went through for my CDL... You need your permit to start the program, but then it's a two week course and at the end they take you for your test. I can recommend them for training. I didn't enjoy working for them, but more because I didn't like being gone a couple weeks at a time.

    I quit before my year was up and paid them 2500 or so back for the training and got a local job a couple months later. I'm overall pleased with the experience.
     
  9. BigJohn54

    BigJohn54 Gone, but NEVER forgotten

    1,972
    1,599
    May 13, 2011
    SW Missouri
    0
    Try your local vo-tech or community college for training. Especially for CDL permit. You could do that on your own, if you'd study.
     
  10. alexlockhart

    alexlockhart Bobtail Member

    47
    49
    Jun 28, 2011
    Medford, OR
    0
    That's good to know. All I can find on their website is this:
    http://www.schneiderjobs.com/CompanyDrivers/TruckDrivingSchoolGraduates/index.htm
    I can call a recruiter, of course, but I'd marked them off my list because it looked like they don't have their own school or sponsor you in a third party school - they just reimburse you for the $$$ you put into school after you're driving.

    My local community college has a CDL training class, but it's not much different than the private ones: Pay a few grand, sit in class and/or drive for 4 weeks, sign up with a recruiter that visits the school, and get reimbursed after you start driving. That's a good way to go, but I don't have the budget for that. Also, my less-than-3-year-old speeding ticket makes me ineligible to drive for at least one of the companies that hire from my local community college. I talked to the recruiter at Gordon already about that and would expect a similar response from most other companies that hire that way. So that's why I'm pretty set on getting started with the bottom feeders who will take anyone - I just need some experience driving while my ticket turns 3 years old, then I can go anywhere.

    I drove a school bus for a while, and have my Class B CDL from that. So I could drive a straight truck, dump truck, tour bus, etc. Anyway, I'm not sure if I actually need the CDL learner's permit since I already have the Class B, but if so it's nothing - just make some marks on paper and pass the test again. Once I pick a school the recruiter will tell me if I need that.

    Thanks, and keep the info coming!
     
    BigJohn54 Thanks this.
  11. Mustangjoey

    Mustangjoey Bobtail Member

    36
    6
    Jun 29, 2011
    Rockford, IL
    0
  • Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.