Truck Driving Jobs

|

Trucking Jobs

|

Truck Drivers

|

Trucking Companies

 
New Users Register Free Account Here | Existing Forum Members Log In Here
Home | About Us | Contact Us | Testimonials | Spell Check

Class A Drivers.com

Application          Company Listings          Job Search        Load Board
 
  1.   Welcome to the Truck Driving Message Board - ClassADrivers.

    1. Welcome to Class A Drivers Forums

          Already registered? Login above

      OR
       
      To take advantage of all the site's features, become a member of
      the largest community of Truck Drivers.

      The advertising to the left will not show if you are a registered user.

+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 8 of 8

Thread: Should I do it?

  1. #1
    Robicon is offline Rookie Robicon is an unknown poster at this point.  Don't let him/her around power tools just yet.
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Posts
    13

    Default Should I do it?

    I'm 2 weeks away from graduation at a CDL school. I'm currently employed making about 28K a year in a stable job, but trucking has always been a dream for me. This economy is scaring the crap out of me about leaving my current job to go to an industry that is on the brink of disaster. I know things will get better but don't know if it will be 10 months or 10 years.

    I'm faced with 2 decisions:
    1. Finish my CDL and risk it.
    2. Finish my CDL and stay where I'm at untill things improve.

    If I go with #2 I risk not even being able to find a company to hire me after sitting on my CDL for several months without getting in a truck. A refresher course is an option but I will have to pay the full amout again.

    Do you think companys will relax their restrictions in such a case with the economy the way it is. I am told most companies wont take you if you've been out of school for more than 30 days, but I know some will.

    In your honest opinion, what should I do here?

  2. #2
    Fredog's Avatar
    Fredog is offline Senior Board Member Fredog is a trusted source of information and would probably pick up your dry cleaning. Fredog is a trusted source of information and would probably pick up your dry cleaning.
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    North Georgia
    Posts
    3,665

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Robicon View Post
    I'm 2 weeks away from graduation at a CDL school. I'm currently employed making about 28K a year in a stable job, but trucking has always been a dream for me. This economy is scaring the crap out of me about leaving my current job to go to an industry that is on the brink of disaster. I know things will get better but don't know if it will be 10 months or 10 years.

    I'm faced with 2 decisions:
    1. Finish my CDL and risk it.
    2. Finish my CDL and stay where I'm at untill things improve.

    If I go with #2 I risk not even being able to find a company to hire me after sitting on my CDL for several months without getting in a truck. A refresher course is an option but I will have to pay the full amout again.

    Do you think companys will relax their restrictions in such a case with the economy the way it is. I am told most companies wont take you if you've been out of school for more than 30 days, but I know some will.

    In your honest opinion, what should I do here?
    if trucking is what you want to do, go for it, it shouldnt be hard to make more than 28,000 even as a rookie, companies dont relax
    their rules when times get tough, they tighten them, they have more applicants to chose from and can be a lot pickier

  3. #3
    Robicon is offline Rookie Robicon is an unknown poster at this point.  Don't let him/her around power tools just yet.
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Posts
    13

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Fredog View Post
    if trucking is what you want to do, go for it, it shouldnt be hard to make more than 28,000 even as a rookie, companies dont relax
    their rules when times get tough, they tighten them, they have more applicants to chose from and can be a lot pickier
    Sorry, I meant to ask if they might relax their restictions on sitting on a CDL when the economy improves and freight is moving again

  4. #4
    Kevin0915's Avatar
    Kevin0915 is offline Senior Board Member Kevin0915 is on the right path.  You could probably safely loan them a quarter.
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Posts
    931

    Default

    To say the industry is 'on the brink of disaster', is over-blowing it a bit. As long as stores are open, and people NEED things, there will always be a need for trucks. NOW, the question is, when will companies start dropping like hats? We've seen banks fail. why? because of poor business habits. we see stores close, why? Poor business habits. Some companies, like Swift, have their own schools. They still accept students for their schools. Yeah, this is just another form of income for them, HOWEVER, if the student is already broke, and gets their CDL but cannot get hired on with anybody, then where the heck are they going to get the money to pay for schooling to begin with?

    I think it is DUMB to keep schools open, spend the manhours 'teaching' all the wear and tear on equipment (which costs money) only to not hire any of them, save the ones already with a few years experience, and then go thru the hastle of going to court to get the $$$ for tuition.

    Of the ones they DO hire, and of the ones that DO make it thru 6 weeks of training, they wont stick around for a month waiting on a truck to become available. And the ones that DO....they wont stick around making $150-250/week.

    i got very lucky, and got in at the tail end of the hiring phase before the economy took a dump. i'm making just enough to keep me out here. it is still more than when i was working at a truck stop, but if it gets so bad that i start making sub $300 paychecks.....i'm going back to work at Pilot. =)

  5. #5
    repete's Avatar
    repete is offline Senior Board Member repete is on the right path.  You could probably safely loan them a quarter.
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Posts
    1,281

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Kevin0915 View Post
    but if it gets so bad that i start making sub $300 paychecks.....i'm going back to work at Pilot. =)
    LESS THAN $300!!! damn man thats just a little better than lunch money! I'd be bailing too

  6. #6
    Truckin Tim is offline BANNED Rookie Truckin Tim is an unknown poster at this point.  Don't let him/her around power tools just yet.
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    PRIME TIME!
    Posts
    5

    Default

    truckin is the best decision i ever made in life i was workin for the county jail moppin flooers and i didnt want to do that no more. Now i leesed a truck at prime and im makin lots of money seein this beatuful country in a brand new truck. the key to makin money in this biz is you gotta stay out on the road i stay out 3 months and see my kids about 3 days and then back out on the road. my wife divorced me so its just me out there and the freeedom of the open road no repsonbilities and like i said its a great paycheck but you gotta work for it alot of guys dont wanna work they want to get paid for doin nothin. if you wanna work theres plenty of loads to pull for a hardrivin trucker you just log it right and get the freight there on time and your company will take care of you. here at prime I keep that truck movin i dont stop unless i have to and my dispatcher keeps me movin.

  7. #7
    Cluggy619's Avatar
    Cluggy619 is offline Senior Board Member Cluggy619 is on the right path.  You could probably safely loan them a quarter.
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Granbury, TX
    Posts
    1,201

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Truckin Tim View Post
    truckin is the best decision i ever made in life i was workin for the county jail moppin flooers and i didnt want to do that no more. Now i leesed a truck at prime and im makin lots of money seein this beatuful country in a brand new truck. the key to makin money in this biz is you gotta stay out on the road i stay out 3 months and see my kids about 3 days and then back out on the road. my wife divorced me so its just me out there and the freeedom of the open road no repsonbilities and like i said its a great paycheck but you gotta work for it alot of guys dont wanna work they want to get paid for doin nothin. if you wanna work theres plenty of loads to pull for a hardrivin trucker you just log it right and get the freight there on time and your company will take care of you. here at prime I keep that truck movin i dont stop unless i have to and my dispatcher keeps me movin.


    That's funny....
    Deja moo. It's when you feel you have heard this BS before.




  8. #8
    Jumbo's Avatar
    Jumbo is offline Senior Board Member Jumbo is a distinguished poster and probably helps little old ladies across the street. Jumbo is a distinguished poster and probably helps little old ladies across the street. Jumbo is a distinguished poster and probably helps little old ladies across the street. Jumbo is a distinguished poster and probably helps little old ladies across the street.
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Northern Wisconsin
    Posts
    2,102

    Default

    Could this be another reincarnation of CFM? Last time he was a lease operator at England. This time maybe he is leasing from Prime.
    Don't trust anybody. Especially that guy in the mirror.

  9. This ad will disappear if you login

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
Trucking Companies | Trucking Job Search | Online Job Application | Trucking Links | Truck Drivers Message Board | Contact Us | Site Map


Truck Driving Jobs © 2003 - 2012 ClassADrivers.com
 

Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0