My intro to CDL truck driving was from Steuart Petroleum (Steuart was bought by Griffth Oil back in 1993, I got hired to drive an oil truck in the early 1980's. Home heating oil delivery is a young mans game, the oil hose can be up to 150 feet long, often you have to lug it uphill and let me tell you, it can get heavy!
Especially if you're delivering oil in the steep hills of Bethesda Maryland, near the Potomac River along MacArthur Blvd.
Heating oil is mainly a seasonal (winter only) job, we got laid off every spring, they paid us more than enough to keep us coming back. In the summer, coming from a family owned small business background, I went to the highest bidder!
I went to F.O.Day in Rockville Maryland, first dump truck I drove was a 1973 Autocar, I was so green, the ink was still warm on my drivers licence! They put is greenhorns in the Quarry at Rockville Crushed Stone Inc 13900 Piney Meetinghose Rd.
Rockville, MD , 20850
They're now known as Aggregate Industries
(F.O.Day has one of it's asphalt plants on the property)
We got LOTS of overtime, often more than 70 hours a week... later when the CDL hours of service rules came into effect, we had to keep it down to 60 hours or less.
OVERTIME
I made so much overtime delivering oil that I really didn't care what I did/ who I worked for in the summer. I made more money in 6 months of winter that I quit jobs just because the ashtrays were full!
The construction boom of the 1980's helped... Demand Exceeded Supply (still does, although the status quo is no longer in effect)
You could literally: "If you could make it around the parking lot and not hit anything, you were hired"
Then I got my Class A (tractor trailer licence)... no more time and half?
Most of the time we got paid by the mile... which is ok if you don't have to unload the truck!
Waiting to get unloaded is more often than not... done for free.
What a buzz kill!
When I drove for Superior Carriers we got paid $.38 mile.
Ok, my run was to Pittsburg, (well close to Pittsburg), I made $265 a day just for the miles...
Unloading took up to 3 hours and paid a measly $20?
It all worked out in the end.
However... In Frederick, I worked for Blue Mountain Express Inc. most of the time I made the US post office mail run.
When the mail run was over, sometimes BME had me take loaded trailers to local warehouses to unload:
3 hours paid $30
????
You gotta be kidding me. It seems that the mileage drivers all wanted the gravy and us new guys got stuck with emptying the trailers?
Wouldn't have been so bad if I had a truck with a sleeper.
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
Saturday, August 30, 2008
Thursday, August 28, 2008
$1000 week jobs in East Frederick City Frederick Maryland
I cannot speak with any authority about any company that I did not personally work for.
I've got 25 years of heavy truck driving experience, HazMat, Tanker, Class A endorsements.
I drove trucks for 6 years before the federal CDL laws standardized all state requirements.
Now with that kind of expirience under my belt I wont get out of bed for less than $200 a day... the beauty of a class A tractor trailer licence is that if the construction business tanks (locally) you can 'pack up your marbles' and haul something else!
In or near Frederick Maryland (I live within the City of Frederick city limits) there are several $1000 week jobs that I personally worked at and can recommend to any CDL driver looking for employment.
Now that I'm a free lance writer and contributing webmaster for Frederick.com I don't have to drive a truck unless I want to (or if cash flow sucks at the moment)
Here goes:
Hahn Transportation Inc.
PO Box 8, New Market, MD
21774-3210, United States
(301)865-5467, (301)865-3138 fax,
salary I made: $19 an hour
Hauled Gasoline to Wah Wah gas stations
Hahn takes EXTREMELY good care of thier trucks
no kiding... tell the mechanic x, y or z is wrong and it goes in the shop!
Driver supervisor: Fred Lawson
Dewey Jordan Inc.
Frederick Maryland
6309 Monocacy Blvd, Frederick, MD 21701
(301) 662-3389
Driver supervisor: Kirk
salary I made: $16.50 with lots of time and a half
Drove Water Truck off road at Rt355 & Rt85 interchange.
Dewey Jordan doesn't really have 'truck drivers', virtually everyone that works there is actually an equipment operator (bull dozers and the like), the fact that they have CDL's is just extra.
Dewey Jordan's equipment needs to be in a museum, but they do fix stuff... the vehicles rarley leave the job site so it doesn't matter much as long as it stops.
You come in every day and do your job and you get LOTS of overtime, no hours shaved off your time sheet, I got more hours than anyone- water truck = first one there, last one to leave.
Blue Mountain Express Inc
291 Bucheimer Rd, Frederick, MD 21701-3141
(301) 663-1270
Driver supervisor: Bill Cooney
US Post Office Mail Contractor
salary I made: paid by the trip, usually worked out to at least $19 an hour.
BME takes good care of their equipment, even though it's not new.
You're being paid to be ontime, this is the US mail we're talking about.
Only gripe I had with BME is when I got sick... do do happens when you start to get old, but the mail is the mail... so I don't hold a grudge.
Good Job, pretty good benefits (Mail drivers got 100% of health insurance fully paid for by Blue Mountain Express which is precisly why I wanted to work there)
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
I've got 25 years of heavy truck driving experience, HazMat, Tanker, Class A endorsements.
I drove trucks for 6 years before the federal CDL laws standardized all state requirements.
Now with that kind of expirience under my belt I wont get out of bed for less than $200 a day... the beauty of a class A tractor trailer licence is that if the construction business tanks (locally) you can 'pack up your marbles' and haul something else!
In or near Frederick Maryland (I live within the City of Frederick city limits) there are several $1000 week jobs that I personally worked at and can recommend to any CDL driver looking for employment.
Now that I'm a free lance writer and contributing webmaster for Frederick.com I don't have to drive a truck unless I want to (or if cash flow sucks at the moment)
Here goes:
Hahn Transportation Inc.
PO Box 8, New Market, MD
21774-3210, United States
(301)865-5467, (301)865-3138 fax,
salary I made: $19 an hour
Hauled Gasoline to Wah Wah gas stations
Hahn takes EXTREMELY good care of thier trucks
no kiding... tell the mechanic x, y or z is wrong and it goes in the shop!
Driver supervisor: Fred Lawson
Dewey Jordan Inc.
Frederick Maryland
6309 Monocacy Blvd, Frederick, MD 21701
(301) 662-3389
Driver supervisor: Kirk
salary I made: $16.50 with lots of time and a half
Drove Water Truck off road at Rt355 & Rt85 interchange.
Dewey Jordan doesn't really have 'truck drivers', virtually everyone that works there is actually an equipment operator (bull dozers and the like), the fact that they have CDL's is just extra.
Dewey Jordan's equipment needs to be in a museum, but they do fix stuff... the vehicles rarley leave the job site so it doesn't matter much as long as it stops.
You come in every day and do your job and you get LOTS of overtime, no hours shaved off your time sheet, I got more hours than anyone- water truck = first one there, last one to leave.
Blue Mountain Express Inc
291 Bucheimer Rd, Frederick, MD 21701-3141
(301) 663-1270
Driver supervisor: Bill Cooney
US Post Office Mail Contractor
From Blogs- Business Advertising Secret Weapon |
salary I made: paid by the trip, usually worked out to at least $19 an hour.
BME takes good care of their equipment, even though it's not new.
You're being paid to be ontime, this is the US mail we're talking about.
Only gripe I had with BME is when I got sick... do do happens when you start to get old, but the mail is the mail... so I don't hold a grudge.
Good Job, pretty good benefits (Mail drivers got 100% of health insurance fully paid for by Blue Mountain Express which is precisly why I wanted to work there)
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
Sunday, August 24, 2008
Frederick Maryland Drug use and CDL drivers
Drugs and Driving Don't Mix, everyone knows that.
But even if you don't drive under the influence, you're still putting several people at risk, not the least of which is the insurance agent of the CDL truck you're driving!
I know someone who had an accident, the accident was NOT their fault - someone hit the truck, the CDL truck DID NOT hit someone else's car- The CAR HIT THE TRUCK!
And the driver had to drug test...
The driver knew that they'd indulged recently, and that they'd likely fail the urine test... they also knew that they'd have at least a couple hours before the truck got parked and then someone would drive them to the drug test facility...
SO... the person drank as much water as possible, (you can pass a drug test if you flush out your kidneys with lots of water), OK fine.
The person thought they were in the clear, no news is good news, ya think?
Then out of the blue, after working (driving a truck) all week, the test results came back: "Diluted"
oh s***.
They had to drug test again! Thinking that the person had "dodged the bullet" they'd indulged again- but this time DOT came to the work place!
Do NOT operate a truck if you're not clean.
You'll get your self screwed and you did it to yourself!
Even if you've never hit anything with a truck you've been driving... someone can hit you!
and YOU'LL have to "pay the piper"
What needs to happen is that trucking companies need to use the 'hair test' and not the urine test (see this link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_test#Hair_drug_testing
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
But even if you don't drive under the influence, you're still putting several people at risk, not the least of which is the insurance agent of the CDL truck you're driving!
I know someone who had an accident, the accident was NOT their fault - someone hit the truck, the CDL truck DID NOT hit someone else's car- The CAR HIT THE TRUCK!
And the driver had to drug test...
The driver knew that they'd indulged recently, and that they'd likely fail the urine test... they also knew that they'd have at least a couple hours before the truck got parked and then someone would drive them to the drug test facility...
SO... the person drank as much water as possible, (you can pass a drug test if you flush out your kidneys with lots of water), OK fine.
The person thought they were in the clear, no news is good news, ya think?
Then out of the blue, after working (driving a truck) all week, the test results came back: "Diluted"
oh s***.
They had to drug test again! Thinking that the person had "dodged the bullet" they'd indulged again- but this time DOT came to the work place!
(names are not given for lots of reasons, can you tell I know this person?, the moral is what I'm after here)
Do NOT operate a truck if you're not clean.
You'll get your self screwed and you did it to yourself!
Even if you've never hit anything with a truck you've been driving... someone can hit you!
and YOU'LL have to "pay the piper"
What needs to happen is that trucking companies need to use the 'hair test' and not the urine test (see this link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_test#Hair_drug_testing
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
Friday, August 22, 2008
City of Frederick Hiring CDL Truck drivers
I got this while searching in Google about CDL truck drivers in Frederick Maryland:
http://www.cityoffrederick.com/sql/jobs/description.php?id=POS-129-08
The City of Frederick apparently needs a truck driver.
and while I'm at it, this blog is ranking higher in Google!
Currently ranking at #18
Results 11 - 20 of about 96,200 for Frederick Maryland CDL truck drivers. (0.16 seconds)
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&rls=GGLD,GGLD:2005-45,GGLD:en&q=Frederick+Maryland+CDL+truck+drivers&start=10&sa=N
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
http://www.cityoffrederick.com/sql/jobs/description.php?id=POS-129-08
The City of Frederick apparently needs a truck driver.
and while I'm at it, this blog is ranking higher in Google!
Currently ranking at #18
Results 11 - 20 of about 96,200 for Frederick Maryland CDL truck drivers. (0.16 seconds)
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&rls=GGLD,GGLD:2005-45,GGLD:en&q=Frederick+Maryland+CDL+truck+drivers&start=10&sa=N
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Defensive drivers don't tear up trucks
Ever seen a CDL truck driver that didn't have grey hair?
There aren't many... baby boomers out number 20 year olds by something like 2 to 1.
There's just a lot more of us than there are of them...
Youngsters like to "hot dog" their trucks.
Just because a truck "CAN do something", doesn't mean it's a good idea to.
Take two drivers.
Which one earns the most money for the company?
It's not what you make, it's what you get to keep!
The hot rod will cost his company not just thousands more in repair costs, insurance claims, etc... it could easily run TENS of Thousands of dollars!
Here's a rule of thumb:
Place a coffee cup on the dash of your truck.
Run through all 13 gears...
if you don't spill the coffee, you're a truck driver
if you get coffee down into the defroster vents... the head mechanic will hunt you down and... you get the picture.
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
There aren't many... baby boomers out number 20 year olds by something like 2 to 1.
There's just a lot more of us than there are of them...
Youngsters like to "hot dog" their trucks.
Just because a truck "CAN do something", doesn't mean it's a good idea to.
Take two drivers.
both make the same # of runs for the company both come in ontime, and don't call out sick unless they really are sick
One drives defensively
The other ( a Youngster) hot rods his truck.
Which one earns the most money for the company?
It's not what you make, it's what you get to keep!
The hot rod will cost his company not just thousands more in repair costs, insurance claims, etc... it could easily run TENS of Thousands of dollars!
Here's a rule of thumb:
Place a coffee cup on the dash of your truck.
Run through all 13 gears...
if you don't spill the coffee, you're a truck driver
if you get coffee down into the defroster vents... the head mechanic will hunt you down and... you get the picture.
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
Friday, August 15, 2008
Drug and Alcohol Testing for CDL Drivers is a Complex Issue
By Richard Slagle
The issue of drug and alcohol testing of county employees has, at best, been a gray area. Questions frequently arise as to when an employee's protection under the Fourth Amendment of the Federal Constitution and Article 1, Section 9 of the Texas Constitution (unreasonable search and seizure by a governmental entity) is overridden by a greater governmental need to test for drugs and alcohol.
To further add to the confusion, the courts have not been consistent in their answers. While testing public sector employees in "safety-sensitive positions" has been found acceptable by different courts to varying degrees, the definition of "safety-sensitive position" itself can be highly subjective. Needless to say, it is quite a challenge for a county to develop an effective drug and alcohol testing program without the possibility of violating an employee's constitutional rights.
There is one area of county employment, however, where the right to conduct drug and alcohol tests is not only clearly defined, it is specifically required. In fact, failure to follow the requirements can lead to severe penalties.
What employee group falls into this category? — county employees who drive vehicles that require the driver to have a commercial drivers' license (CDL). These requirements, administered by the Department of Transportation (DOT) and the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), are not new.
Testing for drivers in counties with 50 or more qualifying CDL drivers became effective on Jan. 1, 1995 and, for counties with fewer than 50 qualifying drivers, testing became effective on Jan. 1, 1996.
Any county that operates vehicles that meet the definition of a "commercial vehicle," as defined in the regulations, is subject to the testing requirements and responsibilities, as are all drivers who operate those vehicles. By definition, a commercial vehicle, for purposes of these drug and alcohol testing requirements, includes any vehicle which:
Has a gross combination weight rating of 11,794 or more kilograms (26,001 or more pounds) inclusive of a towed unit with a gross vehicle weight rating of more than 4,536 kilograms (10,000 pounds); or
Has a gross vehicle weight rating of 11,794 kilograms or more (26,001 or more pounds); or
Is designed to transport 16 or more passengers, including the driver; or
Is any size and is used in the transportation of materials found to be hazardous for the purposes of the Hazardous Materials Transportation Act (49 U.S.C. 5103(b)) and which require the motor vehicle to be placarded under the Hazardous Materials Regulations (49 CFR part 172, subpart F)
The rest of this article can be found here
information from http://www.county.org/resources/library/county_mag/county/156/2.html
============
For CDL drivers in Frederick Maryland... if you even think you're dirty, don't test.
If you have need for the sentence above, go to one or more of my blogs:
http://crackaddictionrecovery.blogspot.com
http://victimbehavior.blogspot.com
You can... drink lots of water to pass a drug screen, but you won't really be out of suspicion, you might not test positive, but the test can come back 'diluted'...
I know of someone who: got hit by a car (not their fault, the truck didn't hit the car, the car hit the truck), drank lots of water... thought they were out of the forrest... test came back diluted... had to retest
it wasn't pretty...
if you aren't clean, do NOT drive, it's as simple as that.
When you wiegh 80,000 lbs everyone else's life is in your hands.
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
The issue of drug and alcohol testing of county employees has, at best, been a gray area. Questions frequently arise as to when an employee's protection under the Fourth Amendment of the Federal Constitution and Article 1, Section 9 of the Texas Constitution (unreasonable search and seizure by a governmental entity) is overridden by a greater governmental need to test for drugs and alcohol.
To further add to the confusion, the courts have not been consistent in their answers. While testing public sector employees in "safety-sensitive positions" has been found acceptable by different courts to varying degrees, the definition of "safety-sensitive position" itself can be highly subjective. Needless to say, it is quite a challenge for a county to develop an effective drug and alcohol testing program without the possibility of violating an employee's constitutional rights.
There is one area of county employment, however, where the right to conduct drug and alcohol tests is not only clearly defined, it is specifically required. In fact, failure to follow the requirements can lead to severe penalties.
What employee group falls into this category? — county employees who drive vehicles that require the driver to have a commercial drivers' license (CDL). These requirements, administered by the Department of Transportation (DOT) and the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), are not new.
Testing for drivers in counties with 50 or more qualifying CDL drivers became effective on Jan. 1, 1995 and, for counties with fewer than 50 qualifying drivers, testing became effective on Jan. 1, 1996.
Any county that operates vehicles that meet the definition of a "commercial vehicle," as defined in the regulations, is subject to the testing requirements and responsibilities, as are all drivers who operate those vehicles. By definition, a commercial vehicle, for purposes of these drug and alcohol testing requirements, includes any vehicle which:
Is any size and is used in the transportation of materials found to be hazardous for the purposes of the Hazardous Materials Transportation Act (49 U.S.C. 5103(b)) and which require the motor vehicle to be placarded under the Hazardous Materials Regulations (49 CFR part 172, subpart F)
The rest of this article can be found here
information from http://www.county.org/resources/library/county_mag/county/156/2.html
============
For CDL drivers in Frederick Maryland... if you even think you're dirty, don't test.
If you have need for the sentence above, go to one or more of my blogs:
http://crackaddictionrecovery.blogspot.com
http://victimbehavior.blogspot.com
You can... drink lots of water to pass a drug screen, but you won't really be out of suspicion, you might not test positive, but the test can come back 'diluted'...
I know of someone who: got hit by a car (not their fault, the truck didn't hit the car, the car hit the truck), drank lots of water... thought they were out of the forrest... test came back diluted... had to retest
it wasn't pretty...
if you aren't clean, do NOT drive, it's as simple as that.
When you wiegh 80,000 lbs everyone else's life is in your hands.
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
More on Owner Operators vs Company Drivers
If you have a clean driving record, it's probably best to work for a larger company.
However, small independent owner operators can be useful if you're driving record leaves something to be desired.
If you've got a few months until a suspension or points come off your Maryland MVA driving record you may want to work for a smaller company.
PROS and CONS
Larger Companies pay from the moment you turn the key OR clock in
smaller companies often rent their trucks out to larger firms, you get paid ONLY for the hours the truck is earning money...
This isn't technically legal, the law is the law: just because you agree to violate the law, doesn't mean the law doesn't apply!
However... you got your licence messed up, you did that to yourself.
You DO want to work, don't you?
If you don't have enough experience, working for a small company might be just what the doctor ordered... just suck it up and pay your dues.
It wont take long, (less than a year, remember, demand exceeds supply) and you can quit the crappy job and get a real job.
MORE PROS and CONS
Bigger companies pay either once a week or every two weeks
Owner Operators often pay cash at the end of each day
If you're working a job, temporarily, just until you get a better job, getting paid cash could really work out for you.
How do I know any of this?
I've taken jobs that pay cash... you do NOT have to work a job unless it's to YOUR advantage...
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
However, small independent owner operators can be useful if you're driving record leaves something to be desired.
If you've got a few months until a suspension or points come off your Maryland MVA driving record you may want to work for a smaller company.
PROS and CONS
This isn't technically legal, the law is the law: just because you agree to violate the law, doesn't mean the law doesn't apply!
However... you got your licence messed up, you did that to yourself.
You DO want to work, don't you?
If you don't have enough experience, working for a small company might be just what the doctor ordered... just suck it up and pay your dues.
It wont take long, (less than a year, remember, demand exceeds supply) and you can quit the crappy job and get a real job.
MORE PROS and CONS
If you're working a job, temporarily, just until you get a better job, getting paid cash could really work out for you.
How do I know any of this?
I've taken jobs that pay cash... you do NOT have to work a job unless it's to YOUR advantage...
They need you more than you need them.
There AREN'T ENOUGH CDL TRUCK DRIVERS
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
Labels:
company drivers,
independent owners,
owner operators
Sunday, August 10, 2008
Owner operators vs. company drivers
Once you get your CDL licence, now you have to find someone to work for.
You could work for a large Maryland trucking company, OR you could work for a small owner operator.
Owner operators frequently work within tiny profit margins, and the skyrocketing cost of diesel fuel isn't making it any easier for the little business owner.
What are the pros and cons of each?
If you have bad stuff on your driving record OR if you have experience is one type of driving but not another, working for a small outfit might be just what you need to round out your CDL driving resume.
Off Road driving vs. on road driving.
These two are very different beasts.
Different skill sets. The suspension of an off road dump truck/ concrete mixer/ or what have you is MUCH stiffer. When you raise the bed of a dump truck, the center of gravity shifts.
It's VERY easy to flip a dump truck over, you must make sure that both rear wheels are level or you'll turn the damn thing over.
The turning radius of a concrete mixer is surprising. If you turn AGAINST the rotation of the drum, you can turn as fast as you'd like.
Turn WITH the rotation of the drum and you're buthole will be suckin naugahyde (the artificial leather seats are made of)!
Think about this: Both a dump truck and a concrete mixer are 20 ton loads, the max you can carry on a truck's back (in Maryland anyway)... but the dump truck's center of gravity is on the truck's frame, or near your butt.
A mixer is carrying a liquid load, one that's rotating, and the center of gravity is behind your head.
It only takes one time for the wheels to leave the ground (just for a moment) and you'll learn to NEVER DO THAT AGAIN.
(note) When I write about driving a truck, remember this:
I've been fired at least once, for everything you could possibly think of to NOT do.
So when I tell you DON'T Do X, Y or Z, I know what I'm talking about.
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate discription of what it was like to work there.
You could work for a large Maryland trucking company, OR you could work for a small owner operator.
Owner operators frequently work within tiny profit margins, and the skyrocketing cost of diesel fuel isn't making it any easier for the little business owner.
What are the pros and cons of each?
If you have bad stuff on your driving record OR if you have experience is one type of driving but not another, working for a small outfit might be just what you need to round out your CDL driving resume.
Off Road driving vs. on road driving.
These two are very different beasts.
Different skill sets. The suspension of an off road dump truck/ concrete mixer/ or what have you is MUCH stiffer. When you raise the bed of a dump truck, the center of gravity shifts.
It's VERY easy to flip a dump truck over, you must make sure that both rear wheels are level or you'll turn the damn thing over.
The turning radius of a concrete mixer is surprising. If you turn AGAINST the rotation of the drum, you can turn as fast as you'd like.
Turn WITH the rotation of the drum and you're buthole will be suckin naugahyde (the artificial leather seats are made of)!
Think about this: Both a dump truck and a concrete mixer are 20 ton loads, the max you can carry on a truck's back (in Maryland anyway)... but the dump truck's center of gravity is on the truck's frame, or near your butt.
A mixer is carrying a liquid load, one that's rotating, and the center of gravity is behind your head.
It only takes one time for the wheels to leave the ground (just for a moment) and you'll learn to NEVER DO THAT AGAIN.
(note) When I write about driving a truck, remember this:
I've been fired at least once, for everything you could possibly think of to NOT do.
So when I tell you DON'T Do X, Y or Z, I know what I'm talking about.
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate discription of what it was like to work there.
Tuesday, August 5, 2008
Demand Exceeds Supply, it still does construction or no
How many young CDL truck drivers do you see?
Not many.
How many CDL truck drivers do you see with grey hair?
Most of em.
Baby Boomers make up the largest part of the population, and we're all retiring at once... There ARE no 25 year olds to take our place.
This is a fact!
Now the economy is changing, the status quo no longer holds, entire careers are becoming obsolete at a faster and faster rate.
You're career is likely to be gone within 11 years, so if you're going to get a raise or move up you should switch jobs every 3 years.
The thing I like about construction CDL jobs is overtime. In an over the road job, you get paid for miles driven, the law says your company does not have to pay time & a half.
What's wrong with this is frequently you get stuck off loading and not getting paid.
What I like about tractor trailer jobs is that you're availablity of work is NOT dependent on housing starts, the prime rate, mortgage money availablity... you can 'pack up your marbles' and haul something else.
Frederick Maryland construction CDL jobs are in short supply, there's probably 100 drivers seeking 30 job openings...
that said, you can haul something else, you do not have to work in construction!
Demand Still Exceeds Supply
David Bruce Jr.
Frederick Web Promotions
http://frederickwebpromotions.com
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
Not many.
How many CDL truck drivers do you see with grey hair?
Most of em.
Baby Boomers make up the largest part of the population, and we're all retiring at once... There ARE no 25 year olds to take our place.
This is a fact!
Now the economy is changing, the status quo no longer holds, entire careers are becoming obsolete at a faster and faster rate.
You're career is likely to be gone within 11 years, so if you're going to get a raise or move up you should switch jobs every 3 years.
The thing I like about construction CDL jobs is overtime. In an over the road job, you get paid for miles driven, the law says your company does not have to pay time & a half.
What's wrong with this is frequently you get stuck off loading and not getting paid.
What I like about tractor trailer jobs is that you're availablity of work is NOT dependent on housing starts, the prime rate, mortgage money availablity... you can 'pack up your marbles' and haul something else.
Frederick Maryland construction CDL jobs are in short supply, there's probably 100 drivers seeking 30 job openings...
that said, you can haul something else, you do not have to work in construction!
Demand Still Exceeds Supply
David Bruce Jr.
Frederick Web Promotions
http://frederickwebpromotions.com
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
Sunday, August 3, 2008
Hahn Transportation- Good Job near Frederick
One of the first CDL truck driving jobs I landed when I first moved to Frederick was delivering gasoline for Hahn Transportation in New Market Maryland.
I found them a good company to work for, although I did NOT get along with the other truck drivers. This was probably more due to my attitude toward any job, and my ideas clashing with the old timers that have worked for Hahn for upwards of 30 years.
At Hahn, you get paid to be careful.. not just drive the truck. You're carrying roughly 8,000 gallons of flammable liquid. To deliver gasoline, you have to have your head screwed on straight!
Being a free lance writer, Local Frederick Google advertising consultant... I'm not your typical blue collar worker... I prefer to be self employed and ONLY work a 'job' when I need to raise cash for my next business venture.
This attitude did not set well with the drivers who trained me at Hahn, I called them dinosaurs... I believe
demand exceeds supply
lets face it, the status quo has been gone for a long time.
80% of all truck drivers are baby boomers.
There are very few young people coming up the ranks to fill our places when we retire.
The old timers at Hahn still remember the scarcity of the last depression.
The employment rule for the 21st century is that your entire career is going to be obsolete in roughly 12 years.
Computers put secretaries out of a job... technology is going to put all of us out the traditional concept of staying at a job for life.
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
I found them a good company to work for, although I did NOT get along with the other truck drivers. This was probably more due to my attitude toward any job, and my ideas clashing with the old timers that have worked for Hahn for upwards of 30 years.
At Hahn, you get paid to be careful.. not just drive the truck. You're carrying roughly 8,000 gallons of flammable liquid. To deliver gasoline, you have to have your head screwed on straight!
Being a free lance writer, Local Frederick Google advertising consultant... I'm not your typical blue collar worker... I prefer to be self employed and ONLY work a 'job' when I need to raise cash for my next business venture.
This attitude did not set well with the drivers who trained me at Hahn, I called them dinosaurs... I believe
demand exceeds supply
lets face it, the status quo has been gone for a long time.
The old timers at Hahn still remember the scarcity of the last depression.
The employment rule for the 21st century is that your entire career is going to be obsolete in roughly 12 years.
Computers put secretaries out of a job... technology is going to put all of us out the traditional concept of staying at a job for life.
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate description of what it was like to work there.
Saturday, August 2, 2008
Who NOT to work for.
There are in Frederick, quite a few truck driving jobs that are less than useful.
(I'm being politically correct with that phrasing)
Because of the downturn in residential home construction, there are currently more CDL drivers with construction backgrounds looking for a decreasing number of construction CDL jobs.
Fear not, the Maryland construction scene is not dead. It's just not in residential construction.
Infrastructure- Bridges, overpasses, highway construction, utilities are all being built in mass quantities.
Last Year I worked for Dewey Jordan.
I drove the water truck, I have Hazmat, Tanker and 25 years verifiable expierience.
Dewey Jordan Inc paid me $25,000 in 5 months. ($16.50 an hour, 24.75 for overtime)
averaging roughly $1000 week.
Find out about Dewey Jordan Inc here (they do NOT have thier own website so this is what I found on Dewey Jordan)
http://www.hotfrog.com/Companies/DEWEY-JORDAN-INC
Tractor Trailer jobs are not required to pay time and a half.
Local driving jobs ARE required to pay time and a half.
for that reason, I prefer a straight truck (under 100 mile radius) to a tractor trailer job.
Hahn Transportation in New Market paid me $19 an hour to deliver gasoline, but it was straight time.
Dewey Jordan's overtime brought my average pay (even though it was only $16.50 an hour) to the same pay as Hahn Transportation.
more coming, this is a new blog
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate discription of what it was like to work there.
(I'm being politically correct with that phrasing)
Because of the downturn in residential home construction, there are currently more CDL drivers with construction backgrounds looking for a decreasing number of construction CDL jobs.
Fear not, the Maryland construction scene is not dead. It's just not in residential construction.
Infrastructure- Bridges, overpasses, highway construction, utilities are all being built in mass quantities.
Last Year I worked for Dewey Jordan.
I drove the water truck, I have Hazmat, Tanker and 25 years verifiable expierience.
Dewey Jordan Inc paid me $25,000 in 5 months. ($16.50 an hour, 24.75 for overtime)
averaging roughly $1000 week.
Find out about Dewey Jordan Inc here (they do NOT have thier own website so this is what I found on Dewey Jordan)
http://www.hotfrog.com/Companies/DEWEY-JORDAN-INC
Tractor Trailer jobs are not required to pay time and a half.
Local driving jobs ARE required to pay time and a half.
for that reason, I prefer a straight truck (under 100 mile radius) to a tractor trailer job.
Hahn Transportation in New Market paid me $19 an hour to deliver gasoline, but it was straight time.
Dewey Jordan's overtime brought my average pay (even though it was only $16.50 an hour) to the same pay as Hahn Transportation.
more coming, this is a new blog
This site is not responsible for libel, any driver who ever worked for a truck company is welcome to rate any company they worked for, of course if they got fired, they might not give an accurate discription of what it was like to work there.
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