Why Truck Drivers are LEAVING the Trucking Industry

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  • Опубликовано: 14 июн 2024
  • Why Truck Drivers are Leaving the Trucking Industry
    _______________
    Have you ever considered LEAVING the trucking industry?! In this video, Ronen goes through 4 reasons why truck drivers are quitting driving and leaving the trucking industry. Ronen also goes through pay statements comparing a company driver working national average vs a driver working off of a Facebook/Craigslist commission ad ranging 25%-30% of gross earnings.
    Whether you're a prospective entrepreneur considering entering the world of trucking or an existing owner-operator seeking insights for success, this video serves as an essential guide to navigate the challenges and triumph against the odds.
    _______________
    📚 Chapters
    00:00 Introduction - Why Truck Drivers are Leaving the Trucking Industry
    00:39 Creating awareness & Exposing the wrong
    00:58 Company drivers should be paid at a rate/salary
    01:13 Why are truck drivers leaving the industry?
    01:24 Long Hours/Schedule
    01:45 Low Wages
    02:11 Work & Life Balance
    02:39 Health Concerns
    03:07 If it paid better would drivers stay?
    03:31 Would you like to see behind the scenes?
    03:43 Pay Statements
    04:04 $0.65/Mile Per Month
    04:15 $0.65/Mile Per Week
    04:41 25% Commission
    04:53 25% Per Month
    05:04 25% Per Week
    05:15 Comparison
    05:27 Driver Gross 25% Commission
    05:52 $0.51/Mile after calculated 25% Commission
    06:27 Pay statement for 30% Commission
    06:43 National Average
    07:24 Conclusion/Summary
    ______________
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    #trucking #truckdrivers #leavingtrucking
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    mediateam@ettransport.ca
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Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @davidhoward5687
    @davidhoward5687 9 месяцев назад +524

    Hourly pay should be the standard for a Company Driver. The fact that you can work 60-70 hours a week and make less than minimum wage shows just how bad these companies are.

    • @zavettataylor2882
      @zavettataylor2882 9 месяцев назад +16

      They convince you to log off duty and sleeper when at customer or waiting for a load. I stayed on duty 14 hours a day for 5 days. Made good money doing it. My last company only gave drivers 1700 miles a week anyway

    • @davidhoward5687
      @davidhoward5687 9 месяцев назад

      @@zavettataylor2882 I run local LTL and make 2,100 a week after taxes in Ohio and I'm paid hourly. I could not stand waiting at docks lol. I'm actually one of the few who actually enjoy touching freight.

    • @shawnackerman9759
      @shawnackerman9759 9 месяцев назад

      These new generation drivers are soft.. they’re not researching these companies before they jump on board. I’ve been out here 13 years and I made my money, good money and another thing. A lot of the new drivers don’t want to run they always in the truckstop sitting… truck driving is a lifestyle not a job, so go work at 8 to 5 at McDonald’s or Burger King pussy drivers

    • @davesmith2150
      @davesmith2150 9 месяцев назад +20

      One should never be a company driver.... o/o is the way to go....I made 400k 2 years ago....sell the truck just after when the rates fall get the maximum for your truck then buy it just after the bottom when rates start to climb. You will make 30k on the truck if you buy and sell it like I said. After I sell the truck I take off to Thailand where dollar's go far. just drive when the rates are up I drive and live out of the truck just taking home time when the truck needs repairs. I really fell for company driver driving year after year basically working for free.

    • @davidhoward5687
      @davidhoward5687 9 месяцев назад +24

      @@davesmith2150 I have no interest in O/O because that 400k is gross pay, sure you bring home more after taxes but I'm only in trucking to get my debt paid then I'm off to ATP flight school to become an Airline Pilot. I can make 400k within a few years after becoming an Airline Pilot and not have to work nearly as much and I will also have one of the best quality of life jobs out there.

  • @Pokingthebear999
    @Pokingthebear999 9 месяцев назад +270

    Don't forget: mechanical breakdown issues , parking shortage issues and law enforcements got their hands in your pocket issues

    • @angelgjr1999
      @angelgjr1999 9 месяцев назад +38

      It’s just not worth it. Trucking is a shit job.

    • @savedbyzero8947
      @savedbyzero8947 9 месяцев назад +14

      Not to mention..............,
      Dispatchers that pick and choose who's assigned a 1000+ mile trip,and give shag loads to they find
      as "Worthless Drivers"!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @pastoryoda2789
      @pastoryoda2789 9 месяцев назад +8

      I wish all drivers stopped driving so we can see how well people survive

    • @savedbyzero8947
      @savedbyzero8947 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@pastoryoda2789 ..........then watch how Fast the economic disaster effects Everyone!

    • @ap8riot931
      @ap8riot931 9 месяцев назад +8

      Weigh stations with DOT ready to pounce costing the driver thousands in fines. Fines for overweight are due and payable if you want to be allowed to continue on your way. After 11 hours of driving you find no legal places you can shut down resulting in tickets and fines.

  • @BryanM45
    @BryanM45 9 месяцев назад +64

    I'm quitting my Family Dollar regional job due to inconsistent pay and the amount of hours worked. I've parked my truck with 15 minutes left on my 70 hour. I'd have to park at the stores over night so when I unload the truck at 6am I wouldn't log in because if I logged all my hours I'd never be home and would be way over 70 hours. They told me I'd make 75k a year and be home weekends. It was 50k a year and home once a week, normally during the week. Told me there was a $950 a week minimum then took it away without telling us drivers on that account. Stores would NEVER be ready for their 6am, always showing up late and wasting my time. "We need to clean out the back room" well you've known I'd be coming for a week, you show up 30 minutes late then say to give you a few minutes like I didn't already give you 30. I'd go in the store before they close and let them know I'm there but for whatever reason it didn't click in their head to get ready the night before, despite me making it clear. All the Family Dollar stores were in the ghetto. It was very hit or miss with their employees. I had one store unload 1400 units in 2 hours. I had another store take 3 and a half hours for 500 pieces, of the same products. The DC would load the trucks like crap. Bleach and detergent spilled everywhere in the trailer. Tired of eating out of truck stops. A man can only eat so much subway and microwaved food.

    • @josegordillo9354
      @josegordillo9354 9 месяцев назад +6

      This sounds like CR England

    • @airbus-a330
      @airbus-a330 6 месяцев назад

      sounds like every account i've ever run. i sure do love working for free so i can fuck the HoS.

    • @DecrepitBiden
      @DecrepitBiden 4 месяца назад +3

      Same with Aldi. They only wrap the pallets once, instead of 3-4 times like Walmart, to save time & money. Loaders load it stupidly as well. Only way to prevent spilling is if you remember to SLOW down for every single turn. When I was loading it myself, I would put all the dangerous pallets on the right side, so only need to slow down for right turns, but I would go a lil bit faster for left turns. Some store employees don't charge the electric pallet jack, drivers too.

    • @erichunter2935
      @erichunter2935 4 месяца назад +1

      I understand completely

    • @jackrabbit4383
      @jackrabbit4383 4 месяца назад +1

      I stayed away from carriers that move their freight, if you have a good cdl record go to a carrier that doesn't take these lazy disrespectful shipper and recivers. I keep a black book with these problem shipper recivers. Go to a company that doesn't have forced dispatch. This is the problem forced dispatch if drivers can refuse to pull their garbage they will be forced to change their ways. If not they will go out of business cause no one will take their nonsense. I prefer these companies go out of business. Let better people set the standards

  • @Bradleyschaeffer376
    @Bradleyschaeffer376 8 месяцев назад +230

    It is always good to have a financial plan. I work with a professional planner and fixed-income strategist in NY. The fixed income portion of your portfolio won't simply serve as a buffer to the volatility of the equity portion of your portfolio, but will provide legitimate income.

    • @GaryWinstonBrown
      @GaryWinstonBrown 8 месяцев назад

      Creating wealth and financial freedom isn't as tough as many people believe.
      Building wealth and remaining financially stable indefinitely is a lot easier with the appropriate information. Participating in financial programs and products is the only true approach to make a high income and remain affluent indefinitely...

    • @MichealTanner141
      @MichealTanner141 8 месяцев назад

      I couldn't agree more. Taking charge of your life and putting in the hard work is the path to success. Having a portfolio manager like Mr. Samuel Peter Descovich is a game-changer. Their expertise and guidance can truly transform your financial journey. Making $35,000 in profits each month and saving 70% of that is quite impressive!They save you time and provide valuable insights that lead to impressive profits. Keep up the amazing work, and enjoy the fruits of your labor..

    • @AnnaKrueger809
      @AnnaKrueger809 8 месяцев назад

      Found his website easily. It was like the first thing that came up when I searched his name. I'll surely touch basis with him to see what the best step is for me to take right now. THANK YOU!!!

    • @Seanmirrer
      @Seanmirrer 8 месяцев назад

      It’s unfortunate most people don’t have such information, I don’t really blame people who panic cos lack of information can be a big hurdle. I’ve been making more than $65k passively investing with Samuel Peter Descovich, and I don’t have to do much work. It doesn’t matter if the market is crashing, I will always make good profit returns.

    • @PennyBurdick318
      @PennyBurdick318 8 месяцев назад

      I have turned over more than half
      MILLION working with SAMUEL PETER DESCOVICH on a wide array of options and finally sticking to a few that have been favorable in the past 2 years.

  • @brianmaroney2172
    @brianmaroney2172 9 месяцев назад +73

    Hourly. Period. With overtime. All hours behind the wheel, fueling, waiting for the service truck, loading and unloading. Any on duty hours. Otherwise you're ripping your drivers off. Just like the scammers.

    • @davidbiros6231
      @davidbiros6231 6 месяцев назад +4

      Was OTR for 5 years and just burnt out from the hours. Local job now, paid hourly and nothing like sleeping in your own bed at night. No regrets.

    • @rickbergstrom3859
      @rickbergstrom3859 Месяц назад +1

      Trucking is little better than slavery. Sleep in the truck , be responsible for the truck even off duty. Rarely see family. The company basically owns you.
      Driver cameras , constant surveillance, DOT road pirates, pay is so complicated you need a PhD to understand it.
      It's a terrible job imho

  • @russvoight1167
    @russvoight1167 9 месяцев назад +85

    I quit driving after 13 years and went back to welding. Too much personal liability involved

    • @johngreenwood3106
      @johngreenwood3106 9 месяцев назад +2

      Totally agree with you 👍👍💯

    • @Ball.Daily11
      @Ball.Daily11 9 месяцев назад +2

      Hope you got union job otherwise wielding pays like shit

    • @russvoight1167
      @russvoight1167 9 месяцев назад +6

      @@Ball.Daily11 No it's not union and the pay & benefits are good. But the culture and atmosphere there makes it an outstanding place to work

    • @elimuro3173
      @elimuro3173 9 месяцев назад +4

      And I know a couple of welders that left welding to become drivers,when people are fearful be greedy 🤷‍♂️🤷‍♂️

    • @ap8riot931
      @ap8riot931 9 месяцев назад +7

      That's what blew my mind how the liability shouldered by the driver is intense and one mistake can ruin you for life, put you in jail, cost you your job, tie you up with lawyers fees etc. People don't realize truckers are often cited under the criminal code. Not traffic code.

  • @davidsyked9420
    @davidsyked9420 9 месяцев назад +29

    Your 1st trucking job is to get experience, after 1yr in the industry, it up to you shop around for better pay and conditions

    • @grantog123
      @grantog123 3 месяца назад +1

      Damn, I heard 2 yrs.

    • @Jad-TV
      @Jad-TV 3 месяца назад

      Still all the same long hours, and if you got one that isn’t, it’s the exception not the normal.

  • @farmerdave7965
    @farmerdave7965 9 месяцев назад +82

    I used to be a truck driver. 20 hours per week doing company work and not getting paid for it. Live loading and unloading without pay. Spending two hours in line at Blue Beacon to get the blood washed out of my trailer without getting paid. Taking truck or trailer to repair shop and waiting for repairs to be done without being paid. I averaged out my pay and it came out to less than minimum wage. Truckers need to be paid by the hour !

    • @truthhurts5158
      @truthhurts5158 5 месяцев назад

      Sorry your driving that vehcle . You are resposible for it. Thats like saying I should get paid for my car being in for repair and my time driving to and from work. I should get payed for waiting in line to wash my car.

    • @ernestpassaro9663
      @ernestpassaro9663 5 месяцев назад +3

      You are so right farmer Dave they expect you to work for free !😡😡

    • @ursulasmith6402
      @ursulasmith6402 5 месяцев назад +1

      That is dead wrong. Companies need to regulated again. This situation now is not working.

    • @beautifuldreamer3991
      @beautifuldreamer3991 5 месяцев назад

      That's why you shouldn't do it

    • @truthhurts5158
      @truthhurts5158 5 месяцев назад

      @@ernestpassaro9663 No they expect you to do your job. You know what the pay is you know what the job is. If you don t like don t do it. QUit whining

  • @bryanspear6108
    @bryanspear6108 9 месяцев назад +567

    Pay me a $150K as a company driver and I’ll come back

    • @ryukirito2616
      @ryukirito2616 9 месяцев назад +8

      I wish!

    • @fordracing5oh
      @fordracing5oh 9 месяцев назад +41

      More like 250k

    • @LastExile1989
      @LastExile1989 9 месяцев назад +89

      Drivers in the 80s made the equivalent of 250k.

    • @jonathanhnunez
      @jonathanhnunez 9 месяцев назад +28

      There’s people making 150k doing LTL. We got some people running i90 in South Dakota between Rapid City and Sioux Falls hauling triples that average 150k.

    • @pats9414
      @pats9414 9 месяцев назад +12

      @@LastExile1989company drivers absolutely did not

  • @user-to9em9ii2x
    @user-to9em9ii2x 9 месяцев назад +108

    I'm 47 and been driving for 23 years and I'm about to leave this industry as I'm getting my forklift license to get a factory job.
    Trucking sucks anymore, no parking, way to expensive to eat out here, drivers blocking fuel Islands, crumbling roads, more and more no english speaking drivers walking around in flip flops and washing their feet in the restroom sink . Soon they'll take over the trucking so might as well get a factory job.

    • @gregorylyon1004
      @gregorylyon1004 9 месяцев назад +15

      I'm 50 years old. I am a factory worker. The factory sucks as well. I been at my current shop for 2 years. I'm only making 15 dollars an hour. This is Michigan. So I'll trade you careers friend. I'm starting truck driving school next week. It's better to start out making 20 dollars than 15 .

    • @user-to9em9ii2x
      @user-to9em9ii2x 9 месяцев назад +9

      @@gregorylyon1004 I hope everything works out for ya
      Once i get my forklift certification I'm looking at $25 an hour to start, out of Kentucky.
      I wouldn't even take a local cdl job I'm sick of it

    • @gregorylyon1004
      @gregorylyon1004 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@user-to9em9ii2x It definitely sounds like Kentucky pays a lot better than my state does in manufacturing. 25 is good money for Hi Lo jobs. Congratulations

    • @thomyg425
      @thomyg425 9 месяцев назад +7

      You are absolutely right,the complete industry was destroyed by this people.
      i left as well after more than 30 years

    • @user-to9em9ii2x
      @user-to9em9ii2x 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@gregorylyon1004 yes sir, if you're certified forklift driver you can find a decent paying job.

  • @akusitaaiai2215
    @akusitaaiai2215 9 месяцев назад +60

    Hey guys, I’ve got CDL August last year and worked 11 months as 9 car hauler on Peterbuilt 389, 2020. My rate was 30% from gross. My monthly gross were $50000. But I did 1.5-2 long month trips. I’ve been taking home $20000-$30000. But my little daughter learned speaking while I’ve been on my long trips and I have been missing a lot. Now I’m running my own welding business and I am happy again. Every day at home.

    • @billyblanco6700
      @billyblanco6700 9 месяцев назад +1

      Hey whats up can you point me in the right direction to make that? I’m only getting 1 round trip every two weeks where I’m at that’s no cutting it for me…

    • @adamspencer6666
      @adamspencer6666 9 месяцев назад +6

      I mean that’s great money why not put a driver in the seat and collect the cash and stay home?

    • @akusitaaiai2215
      @akusitaaiai2215 9 месяцев назад

      @@billyblanco6700 Hey man, I used to be a company driver in Autoline Express Inc. They do work with tesla factory in Fremont, CA. They take 8-9 teslas and take them to Portland, Oregon and Seattle, WA. On the way back they take new Toyotas, GM vehicles, used single cars. They not taking any copart junk cars. They drive teslas to all California. From LA area they take new kia and Hyundai from port and deliver them close to Fremont. Some drivers doing single loads from LA to East Coast and back to California. I liked to work with teslas. I never went to East Coast. It’s hard in the beginning but ok in 1-2 months when you get experience. Money is very good but if you have family it’s sucks. I got CDL in Cali last August and started driving alone after 10 days of training. They pay $100 per day and pay for motels every night. Other companies doing the same routes are BZ TRANS, EZH. Good luck

    • @djdeznyc
      @djdeznyc 9 месяцев назад

      Are you running as a owner operator right?

    • @kogguk
      @kogguk 9 месяцев назад

      dont be driver Hire other /d/ots who will drive for you 👍😊

  • @5N05L1DR
    @5N05L1DR 9 месяцев назад +171

    My biggest issue with the industry right now is the endless micromanaging through the driver disciplinary measure cameras (lytix or other). Someone cut you off and it trips the forward collision radar? Better believe your going to get that put into your driver file / report card for following too close! Going through a construction zone and the temporary lines on the road don't always match up with the "lanes"? Better believe your getting another mark on that report card for going out of your lane!

    • @femalecrusader8389
      @femalecrusader8389 9 месяцев назад +5

      Some drivers do drive to fast when operating a tractor trailer. It is difficult dealing with traffic. Sometimes can't be helped but when possible plan your route and time. Just like bad storms wait it out if you can.

    • @normancastor2564
      @normancastor2564 9 месяцев назад +25

      @@femalecrusader8389lol yeah right, you would have a lot of waiting then. A driver comes up on different situations about every twenty minutes or so. Then you’re dispatcher is wondering why you’re always late on your appointments. Then you end with all of the hauls that nobody else wants. And you get get squeezed out because you’re pay goes down. They have the odds completely stacked against the driver. I’m at retirement age and if I had it all over to do I wouldn’t even step into a truck anymore. DOT, the way people drive, all the signs no truck parking here or there, The way they mess with you when you get to your destination not wanting to unload you. I can go on and on with what a driver has to endure it’s a joke.

    • @adrianvazquez6142
      @adrianvazquez6142 9 месяцев назад

      You have a Ltyx camera??

    • @JoshuaTerence38
      @JoshuaTerence38 9 месяцев назад

      @@normancastor2564 if y9ou coming up to a ituation evefrfy twenty minujtes, you jmight want to go back to driving school

    • @soultrain58
      @soultrain58 9 месяцев назад

      I didn't know they worked like that😮

  • @Jamal33270
    @Jamal33270 9 месяцев назад +92

    Nice Video…
    I’ve been trucking 13 years and I went from 185k a year down to 78k in 2023 . I’ve did the lease , O/O , now company driver. I can say in the start things were great. Now I see so much micromanagement and lies it’s ridiculous. 😂 The best thing I did was take care of my finances the last decade. I saved 77% of my income and lived modest. I build my home from ground up on 10 acres of land. I only purchased a boat and 2 vehicles . I’m satisfied with my current low of income at this point. I focused on how much can I keep vs how much can I make ..😁🤷🏾‍♂️
    It does suck in the industry now. All I can say is do the best you can . If not, change careers.

    • @HomeOverTheRoad
      @HomeOverTheRoad 6 месяцев назад +3

      Smart man...I live on 25 percent of my income...3 homes paid for...w900 paid for. All toys paid for. Never stress the market, you can't change it, but you can change what you spend!

    • @Albertalorian
      @Albertalorian 6 месяцев назад

      "micromanagement and lies" Nailed it, ELD's are not ELD's now, they're all in wonder driver harassment systems. Samsara has basically destroyed my company/job, just chugging along, until I can get into my Citys Government Earthworks Division.

    • @Jamal33270
      @Jamal33270 6 месяцев назад

      @@HomeOverTheRoad🎉🎉👍🏾💪🏾 Epic.

    • @Jamal33270
      @Jamal33270 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@Albertalorianyou right. They do everything they can to screw the drivers now. My buddy drive for a company that dropped his pay. Then have to talk to brokers that hurrass him about the load and he’s a company driver. SMH. It’s crazy. Then they try to charge him for things like he’s an owner operator. One of those black ops companies. I told him he’s very screwed but he don’t want to be W2 . He wants to be 1099 which going to back fire. We will see everything when the tide goes all the way out.🤷🏾‍♂️

  • @MuhammadAslam-wi5jc
    @MuhammadAslam-wi5jc 9 месяцев назад +35

    It is better for the drivers to find another job and say bye bye to its current trucking company.

  • @AlC92575
    @AlC92575 9 месяцев назад +13

    Went through CDL school at my local Tech school. Got all the endorsements. School alone convinced me not to do it. The instructors are all jaded and in bad health. The companies that came through trying to recruit were all full of shit.

  • @Crybabyhere
    @Crybabyhere 9 месяцев назад +65

    I worked for a company that I was 1 out of 20 drivers at the start of a company. Youngest and not many years in trucking. But I was setup to hurt my driver history to keep me out of trucking 3 years later. I retired from trucking after being fired on lies and enjoying my time with my family. It hurts that people would take steps to hurt me after I put company over family time.

    • @TLJAWSIMIB
      @TLJAWSIMIB 8 месяцев назад +5

      EVERYBODY IN LIFE GOES THROUGH HARDSHIPS AND PAIN.

    • @jamestaylor7226
      @jamestaylor7226 8 месяцев назад +1

      I work for a good company, i like life on the road, it's working for me.

    • @abc123lov7
      @abc123lov7 7 месяцев назад +4

      Yeah, I've been fired on a lie too. Tenstreet did nothing to validate the claims and I was fuct for a while. It's wrong and they should be held accountable.

    • @curlyhairdudeify
      @curlyhairdudeify 6 месяцев назад +2

      Same with my aunt. Sje was a supervisor at a warehouse, and she qas set up. They fired her.
      I bet it was a jealous coworker, sice all of her pictures were of her and ger family in family trips in Mexico that she took on her days off.
      She literally just drove to Mexico in her days off posted the pictures, amd some jealous coworker probably couldn't believe how he/she couldn't fo the same things as her on her days off.

    • @mitch8575
      @mitch8575 6 месяцев назад +1

      Learn how to communicate

  • @payne7761
    @payne7761 9 месяцев назад +26

    I drove for a local gig 14hr a day 5 days a week home every night. Got paid 45 cents per mile and barely cleared 1000 bucks a week. I left that shit after about 2 months.

  • @mrcrowleyoz
    @mrcrowleyoz 9 месяцев назад +48

    If you’re working 70 hours a week you might as well own your business. Other industries work an average of 50 hours a week, home everyday and they make above 2k

    • @silversevinz5203
      @silversevinz5203 9 месяцев назад

      Which one other

    • @femalecrusader8389
      @femalecrusader8389 9 месяцев назад +1

      That is how truck driving is. Not all work it included down time, showers, meals, and fueling. Being a truck driver on duty, off duty in cab is included of the 70 hours. Just think working in manufacturing plant you work 80-88 hours a week. You still get down time right?

    • @grantog123
      @grantog123 3 месяца назад

      ​@silversevinz5203 electricians, plumbers, welders, and unions.

    • @mrcrowleyoz
      @mrcrowleyoz 3 месяца назад

      @@femalecrusader8389 but you don’t get paid for all 70 hours. If you do, and do the math, it’s very little pay

  • @mindforgecollective
    @mindforgecollective 8 месяцев назад +37

    Low pay in comparison to other work is my problem. Example: Before I started driving I was a forklift operator. I was clearing $900 a week with overtime only working 50 hour weeks, and home every night and off on weekends. I started driving thinking the money would be better, but instead I gave up being home at night and on weekends for $200 to $300 more per week on good weeks, which haven't been that many. So now I'm working everyday all week long for months away from my family for an average $1000 to $1200 a week. Doubling my work and hours didn't double my income. At this rate I'd do better getting 2 regular jobs and getting out of this truck.

    • @John_R_Jackson_III
      @John_R_Jackson_III 8 месяцев назад +5

      You should get out the truck, it’s a scam bro

    • @mindforgecollective
      @mindforgecollective 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@John_R_Jackson_III Yeah. I've figured that out. I'm working on starting a business right now that should be ready to start Taking customers in a week or 2.

    • @joseadrianvaldes9792
      @joseadrianvaldes9792 7 месяцев назад +3

      That depends, you cant compare driving a truck to some other labor intensive, in the sun, sometimes dirty work.
      Id take the driving job anytime

    • @ericallen8263
      @ericallen8263 6 месяцев назад

      You poor bastard lol..I've been driving almost 30yrs and done just about everything in trucking..If I was going to find a job it would be a local gig doing LTL type stuff with doubles and triples...it's easy it pays pretty good and your home every night.

    • @jsteinbrunner24
      @jsteinbrunner24 5 месяцев назад

      I say I clear 100k a year hauling fuel locally 60 hours a week paid 30 dollars an hour overtime after 40 . Why I most likely won't do anything else

  • @stanleyvalinskas2748
    @stanleyvalinskas2748 9 месяцев назад +10

    If you are away from home for weeks at time,but stay away from truck stop restaurants because they are too expensive,something is majorly wrong.

  • @echo3996
    @echo3996 9 месяцев назад +90

    I used to be a OTR driver and there is no way i will drive more than 10 hours a day. I had a discussion with my boss about them resetting my logbook remotely to try to get me to drive past 10 hours a day. I quit the moment I got home.

    • @vgdubrovin8439
      @vgdubrovin8439 9 месяцев назад

      Pu$$yiffied quitter

    • @femalecrusader8389
      @femalecrusader8389 9 месяцев назад +10

      If you can prove them resetting your e-log remotely you should have reported them.

    • @redmesa2975
      @redmesa2975 9 месяцев назад +8

      You were working for the Chicago Volvo Mafia ?

    • @nicolesharpe9774
      @nicolesharpe9774 9 месяцев назад +11

      I had one try to get me to drive 45 minutes on a flat. I have it all in text messages and the dot refused to help me. It's all bs.

    • @echo3996
      @echo3996 9 месяцев назад

      @@femalecrusader8389 I did after I quit and had a paper logbook just in case DOT needed the logs. No idea what happened to them after tho.

  • @user-xf2cv5or4m
    @user-xf2cv5or4m 9 месяцев назад +42

    I read these comments and wonder how these drivers didn’t end up where I am. I sold my truck in 2014 and went company. I would have to say they have been good to me and I am only considering leaving trucking at this point because I am getting ready to retire. I built my entire career as OTR.

    • @HomeOverTheRoad
      @HomeOverTheRoad 6 месяцев назад +3

      I went the other way...I did a year as a company guy, then bought a pre emissions w900...I can't imagine going back. God bless.

  • @waynebutler7813
    @waynebutler7813 6 месяцев назад +5

    I love my job as a truck driver. The hours are great, I'm home with my family every night, I get paid for every minute I'm clocked in, and get a bonus every year. I've had two breakdowns (tires) and the maintenance crew take very good care of the trucks and trailers.

  • @Blacktopcowboy
    @Blacktopcowboy 9 месяцев назад +53

    I left in July. Things are bad. Even as a company guy. 50cpm is ridiculous. Esp when loads are bad. I was waiting more and more each week for a load. Making 600-800 gross checks a week. For that I’d rather just live off the government and Uber.

    • @level80888
      @level80888 9 месяцев назад

      DML drivers (carhauler) made $20,000 gross in June. You are simply lazy person. Thats it.

    • @Blacktopcowboy
      @Blacktopcowboy 9 месяцев назад

      @@anthonymercado8126 800 a week is terrible if you’re working almost 70 hours a week and away from home for 7-14 days. It’s awful if you’re sitting for 34 hours every other day. Most people can make 800 working a full time and part time job or full time and Uber on the side and still be home, allowed to drink when they want, and smoke weed. For the restrictions we have on us, the time away from home, even on home daily gigs.. 800 a week is awful.

    • @stretch273
      @stretch273 9 месяцев назад

      @@anthonymercado8126not true Uber driver in Dallas making 400-500 a day working 25-30 hours a week home every night heck of a lot better than trucking

    • @coolgood450
      @coolgood450 9 месяцев назад

      @@stretch273 stop cap in Dallas you lucky to get 150 a day 😠😠

    • @stretch273
      @stretch273 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@coolgood450 no he actually showed me his earnings

  • @russvoight1167
    @russvoight1167 9 месяцев назад +34

    Wages? I remember my Dad driving in the 60s and 70s supporting our family of 5 on his one paycheck. Mom was home ruling the roost !
    Trucking companies make more money screwing their drives than they do hauling freight, quote from Dave on the Smart Trucking channel

  • @kevinakakp9120
    @kevinakakp9120 9 месяцев назад +11

    I am on hourly local and it is treacherous. I been with my company three years, I’m burnt out at this point, and yes I am considering leaving because im😢tired of 10-17 hour days, got me feeling like a slave…last year I had a mental breakdown and had to take a few days off, and requested lower working hours, which they obliged since I am the best driver they have ever had, but the hours quickly started going up. It gets to a point that money doesn’t matter, I’m 51 years old and this local company has made me hate trucking,

    • @Brsrafal
      @Brsrafal 9 месяцев назад

      U tell em 48 hours max or I'm out Truckin jobs all kind everywhere. Too many hours more tax

    • @generalg.8769
      @generalg.8769 7 месяцев назад +1

      Understand this, they need you, you don’t need them, you can always find another company. Experience CDL drivers are always needed.

  • @imjussayn7936
    @imjussayn7936 9 месяцев назад +24

    I came off the road this past January because I'd jack knife my truck (ouch). But it's now August, I've had offers to come back. I had time to reflect on how rough trucking was on my body. As much as I love my trucker life, my health had to come 1st.

    • @prestonjohnson7694
      @prestonjohnson7694 9 месяцев назад +1

      So true

    • @sssbattleaxe
      @sssbattleaxe 9 месяцев назад +4

      There's plenty ways to stay in shape on the road. No excuses.

    • @DecrepitBiden
      @DecrepitBiden 5 месяцев назад

      Walk around or jog when you're done. I had a small gym bench inside my truck & 2 sets of dumbbells. You can do dips, pushups, jumping jacks. For pull ups, I go inside my trailer. Put a strap or load bar across & there you go.

  • @theoneandonly676
    @theoneandonly676 9 месяцев назад +71

    What made me bounce out the industry was my experience with a company that pay below 50 cents and a Bad dispatcher. He would short me during the week so I could work over the weekend. He tried to create a wedge between me and my wife cause he was single.

    • @payne7761
      @payne7761 9 месяцев назад

      That's grounds for an ass whippin.

    • @ne9835
      @ne9835 9 месяцев назад +2

      Damn... Messed up...

    • @timmellow1353
      @timmellow1353 9 месяцев назад +1

      Wth??

    • @WolfOfBrooklynXOfficial
      @WolfOfBrooklynXOfficial 9 месяцев назад +13

      Lmao 🤣 that boy wanted u for himself on the weekends

    • @socialisttrafficregulator2015
      @socialisttrafficregulator2015 9 месяцев назад +3

      I had a dispatcher like that.
      Marriage did indeed fail, but he
      only aggravated the situation.
      The guy was married with five kids, but was running a cig smuggle scam and was banging the office skanks.
      It eventually caught up with him, couldn't have happened to a nicer guy. LoL.

  • @thedevilandhertrumpets4268
    @thedevilandhertrumpets4268 9 месяцев назад +104

    Being paid per mile as an OTR company driver was BS for me. I’d have to call in frequently for a pre-plan or new load. My time is valuable, and I’m not sitting for free. I left after a year to go o/o. The rates & market are terrible right now, but my time, schedule and life is mine and that’s what matters.

    • @jasonbailey4411
      @jasonbailey4411 9 месяцев назад +2

      haul for private companies. Cargill is real good.

    • @theelvisguy6933
      @theelvisguy6933 9 месяцев назад +1

      Being paid by the mile as company driver is the biggest lie, they pay off household movers book so your not getting paid actual miles to deliver the load. Put 37 years Otr when no electronic logs. Glad to be retired and don’t miss any of it.

    • @skip123davis
      @skip123davis 9 месяцев назад +1

      what is o/o?

    • @theelvisguy6933
      @theelvisguy6933 9 месяцев назад

      @@skip123davis owner-operator

    • @skip123davis
      @skip123davis 9 месяцев назад

      @@theelvisguy6933 thx!

  • @DK-nt1nn
    @DK-nt1nn 9 месяцев назад +3

    People have opened there eyes. Noone wants to work ridiculous hours, and not own anything. We're sick of getting scraps.

  • @toneallday5468
    @toneallday5468 8 месяцев назад +7

    During covid I self taught myself coding. Now I'm in school for cyber security and ready to get in the field entry level.

  • @richuncle9689
    @richuncle9689 9 месяцев назад +19

    Pretty solid guy. To the point. I've always said truckers aren't paid enough. No one believes me

  • @markjukes7486
    @markjukes7486 9 месяцев назад +33

    option 3 which is way better than the other two option. pay the drivers 30.00 per hour(bare minimum) because the eld can be link to a timeclock and get pay for all the hours on duty and driving period. heck, you can make it straight time and delete the overtime. After a couple of weeks the carriers will drop shippers who don't have the cargo ready on time or start charging them a fee. 70 hours time 30.00 per hour is about 2100 a week.

    • @scottlemiere2024
      @scottlemiere2024 9 месяцев назад +1

      Currently have drivers I work with that if they got paid for every second they were logged on duty, would never log off. I mean they would not log off to go home or to sleep. We are ag exempt so the HOS doesn't matter.

    • @malakiscorner
      @malakiscorner 9 месяцев назад +1

      If you do that, unfortunately there are drivers who would 'milk the clock'. Its a sad reality i see with some local drivers

    • @markjukes7486
      @markjukes7486 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@malakiscorner I know that this isn't a perfect solution but don't punish the good drivers because of the ones that going to game the system. I believe with ELD tracking your truck, locations, time, and etc. You can monitor the drivers.

    • @marcushennings9513
      @marcushennings9513 9 месяцев назад

      They should also be paid something reasonable for fueling , scaling, and any other truck related duty. Pay should be paid from actual eld milage, a company once tried paying me on some post office to post office pay nonsense but it was corrected.

    • @chriswiggins214
      @chriswiggins214 9 месяцев назад +3

      If you split the driving and on duty time and pay them like $10.00 for on duty time and $30.00 for drive time it would give the driver incentive to not "milk the clock".

  • @jerryb5631
    @jerryb5631 9 месяцев назад +9

    It's not all doom and gloom. I just got out of truck driving school. Found a job with an environmental company hauling HAZMAT. They are starting me off at 100k my first year and im home 3 nights a week, most weeks 4 nights. It took me 2 months after school to find this job. Good jobs are out there, keep looking. So happy that i didn't take that Yellow job offer working overnights and weekends for $21 an hour. I've been at it 2 months solo. It's been good.

    • @generalg.8769
      @generalg.8769 7 месяцев назад

      Good that you didn’t take that job, they went out of business.

    • @Jad-TV
      @Jad-TV 3 месяца назад

      95% are you just got lucky that’s all.

  • @p5ychojoe138
    @p5ychojoe138 9 месяцев назад +14

    Pay and micromanagement finally wore me out. I didn't mind being out, even with family. But, I wasn't making enough to handle things at home and handle myself while I was gone. If it hadn't been for that and how strict things are getting I probably would still be on the road. And some companies have awful top pay, yeah bud I'm gonna work for you for years and rarely if ever see a pay raise. Liked my dispatcher, too. He actually listened and respected my judgement. Sure, he'd push from time to time, but usually understood if I say nope, it means nope. Also it's gotten dangerous as hell and with all the laws and complexities, you can't really protect yourself which was the final nail in the coffin as I couldn't risk going into cities.

  • @choose2vibe
    @choose2vibe 9 месяцев назад +84

    This was great. Complex pay statements (big highs/low lows- no consistency in take home pay) and the down time were a big reason I stopped OTR and went local to drive Class B garbage and dumptrucks a few years back. Recently considered going back OTR then remembered the poor work life balance. Now you're saying the money isn't really there anymore? Yes, companies need to be more driver centric. Truckers move the nation. The world, really. And we expect more.

    • @lionhearted4eva
      @lionhearted4eva 9 месяцев назад +2

      Enter…A.I. trucks lol

    • @SuperGankBros
      @SuperGankBros 9 месяцев назад

      @@lionhearted4eva Won't happen for decades. Teslas can't even drive themselves properly, you expect an 80,000lb truck to not have issues and kill dozens of people?

    • @ap8riot931
      @ap8riot931 9 месяцев назад +3

      Dispatchers get all the holidays and weekends they request off. Drivers never do. I was OTR out of California. I was in Florida doing hurricane relief deliveries and had requested (and approved ) my birthday off (3 days as my home time that month). So here I am 4 days from California and I am pushing to start homeward. They told me one quick trip to Chicago then I can head west. I broke down in Chicago and never got home. Didn't bother the company at all.

    • @BarnacleBoy42069
      @BarnacleBoy42069 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@ap8riot931yep that's how it goes, there's always some bullshit before you go home, it's like clockwork

  • @lancerains4185
    @lancerains4185 9 месяцев назад +9

    The one that always gets me is when we have modern GPS they still want to try to pay use zip code to zip code and cheat you out of about 800 miles a month..

  • @DirtySouthRider
    @DirtySouthRider 9 месяцев назад +4

    I APPROVE THIS MESSAGE! I HAVE BEEN DRIVING FOR 20 YEARS AND ALWAYS TRYING TO FIND MORE MONEY IN TRUCKING AND ALL OF THEM ARE SELLING DREAMS.

  • @darrenshaneblackmon8402
    @darrenshaneblackmon8402 9 месяцев назад +3

    I quit. I’m at home right now I’ll never go back. the pay, dot always on the hunt, people throwing trash out the windows, no place to park, not worth it.

  • @Prairietrucker
    @Prairietrucker 9 месяцев назад +13

    I'm thinking about getting out. Over worked and underpaid.

    • @DispholidusTypus
      @DispholidusTypus 3 месяца назад

      Go too a construction 🚧🏗️ company and drive as a seasonal driver you can get laid off during the winter and or summer months depending on who you work and drive for and where you drive from as well if you choose too or continue driving for them on your off time and or part time can possibly be up too as well if you choose too and regardless of whether you're driving class A and or B truck's you can get on certain federal pay job's with some exceptions here and there and the load your carrying as well and or depending on where it's being transported too and what job you're driving of course on many major and or federal or military base's if it's considered a special specific certain federal job you're getting paid very big $$$$$ Another thing too consider is driving a CDL truck or straight truck that just requires health card in some cases for a company that does physical labor indoor's and or outdoor's for example that work for and on construction 🚧🏗️ companies as well! I know guy's hauling Sheetrock, Insulation, Railroading, Asphalt, Concrete and or even Landscaping that make good bread 🍞 and also get too do ALOT of physical labor and work as well! Some truck driver's don't like doing that though if they don't have too! Another good job too consider is driving a trash 🗑️ truck as taking out the🤢 garbage 🤮can be very rewarding as well as some companie's pay's very 🤑 good SCRATCH depending upon the company! Just something too consider is all!!! Good 😎 luck either way🤞

    • @DispholidusTypus
      @DispholidusTypus 3 месяца назад

      Another good option as far as trucking goes if you can handle the stress and physical labor as well as obtaining the endorsement's are livestock 🐖🐄 🐂 hauling as well as those companie's typically take care of their employee's and pay them very well and provide them with good benefits as well as good trucks and trailers! 😎

  • @SRBrown-vn4sw
    @SRBrown-vn4sw 9 месяцев назад +9

    Right now, as I speak, migrants are being trained to be truck drivers and will work for low wages and have a place to live while they’re doing over the road. I see children in truckstops now after 30 years I quit earlier this month and I’m not coming back.

  • @ralphdrees4413
    @ralphdrees4413 7 месяцев назад +1

    Dry van is a blood bath right now. I run flatbed for a percentage of the gross and I’m killing it. Less and less but still better than I would ever do hauling van.

  • @anarchyxf36
    @anarchyxf36 5 месяцев назад +2

    I spent 2 years with schneider national working as a company driver and in the end i along with other veteran company drivers were getting on average 400 - 800 miles a week while brand new extremely green and very dangerous rookies fresh out of trucking school were getting about 3k miles a week on avg for the first few months with the company. Suffice to say i learned the hard way that i was getting that kind of milage not because of my track record as a driver (Hell out of 2k loads i had a 98% on-time avg delivery rate) but because the company wanted to cheap the hell out and kill rookies then to give a better well seasoned driver like myself more money while feeding their experienced drivers the excuse of "We don't have any decent loads to give you cause we're not getting them" which i knew was total BS especially after talking to numerous rookie drivers fresh out of training and finding out what they avg about 2-3k per week milage wise. It got to a point where I learned a valuable lesson where week after week i was owing the company more because i was constantly forced to borrow money from the company when my paychecks every week were about $45 take home after taxes if i was lucky. Suffice to say i payed the company back in the end and learned a valuable lesson that any major company doesn't give a flying crap about it's drivers and only gives a crap about how much they can line their pockets with at the expense of their drivers.
    I figured i'd put this out there for new drivers in the hopes that you learn from my experience that when you see your milage dip off dramatically after so long your better off cutting and running instead of sticking around so whatever major company you're working for doesn't bleed you dry and milk you for all your worth to them.

  • @Victorseafog
    @Victorseafog 9 месяцев назад +7

    My older friend works at walmart night shift and makes about 20.00 a hour with some overtime . Night shift is rough but he is home every night after 8 hous and not sitting in a truck paying for showers and bs food dealing with weather, DOT, nasty people and traffic. OTR driving sucks and it always has since the 1980's and deregulation

  • @Nihil2005
    @Nihil2005 9 месяцев назад +7

    I left OTR and now I’m a yard spotter at a local warehouse. Less pay but home every day.

  • @MS-oz2wu
    @MS-oz2wu 9 месяцев назад +28

    There are 168 hours in a week. If you get paid $2,500 a wk it comes to about $15.00 per hr for being in that truck!!!!!

    • @jesterjake88
      @jesterjake88 9 месяцев назад +1

      To be fair it’s still way more money per week…80 hour checks at 18:50 an hour paid me less…

    • @MS-oz2wu
      @MS-oz2wu 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@jesterjake88 you can get $18.50 hr 40 hrs a week staying home working at job rather than leaving home & living in a truck 80 or 168 hrs a wk.

    • @jesterjake88
      @jesterjake88 9 месяцев назад

      @@MS-oz2wu I worked for $18.50 an hour at a computer job and got 80 hours a week…1700 a week is still double the annual salary I made there…

    • @weaverlove1
      @weaverlove1 4 месяца назад

      Who makes that kinda pay a week

    • @MS-oz2wu
      @MS-oz2wu 4 месяца назад +1

      @@weaverlove1 lol, its been a while since the i wrote this. I just used it for the sake of discussion on truck wages vs a stay at home. I believe I was comparing the $2,500 based on a monthly wage of a person, working a regular 160 hr month, that's all.
      Just cut the $2500 in half, $1,250 a wk and the hour in half and it all is even worse, $7.50 an hr.

  • @davehumeniuk4534
    @davehumeniuk4534 5 месяцев назад +3

    I left the industry a number of years ago, and it had nothing to do with money, surprisingly. What got me was the total lack of respect by virtually everyone: the shippers, the receivers, your dispatcher, truck stops, and, of course, other drivers. It used to be a profession that was looked up to when I was a child, but not anymore.

    • @TheEducatedTrucker
      @TheEducatedTrucker 4 месяца назад

      Dude yes. Every shipper/receiver I go to the people are just straight up rude. I conduct myself respectful, polite and professional. Why the fuck are you treating me like shit when I’m here to deliver YOUR GOODS?? That’s what really gets to me because I could really beat some ass but I’m trying to be a better person here 🤦🏻‍♂️. It’s so bad to the point to where when I get a shipper/receiver that’s friendly I thank them for their compassion.

  • @oldhick9047
    @oldhick9047 8 месяцев назад +5

    I am a retired truck driver with over 30 years and 1.75 million accident free miles. I have been out for 15 years now. It wasn't the perfect job but I liked it and it gave my family a nice life style and it put three kids through collage. I would not do it over again today, never. I feel for you girls and boys out there truckin' your asses off for little money and worse treatment.
    And the law and rules makers are not your friend either. If they were, the industry would have ONE rule book, not 50. They won't miss you until your gone. Love and good luck to you knights of the road.

  • @jaybrown2549
    @jaybrown2549 9 месяцев назад +11

    Any driving job where you have to work 70 yours a week is insane. If you do the math, you're not making much per hour. The best jobs are hourly, local jobs.

    • @ap8riot931
      @ap8riot931 9 месяцев назад

      When most of the major carriers are paying from zip code to zip code instead of actual address to actual delivery address, after my first year I did the math. I was (legally) cheated out 0f 6,000 miles of pay. They don't make these rules because they benefit the driver. Get paid by the job or hourly if you can.

  • @realDiviDawg
    @realDiviDawg 9 месяцев назад +11

    These companies are only offering 50 cents for experienced OTR drivers. Unless you are already making 60-70cpm it is bad out here.

    • @milkdudd6758
      @milkdudd6758 9 месяцев назад +3

      What good is 60 to 70 cents per mile and then they cut your miles

  • @Nemo_IRL
    @Nemo_IRL 9 месяцев назад +2

    For the first several paychecks companies give you the "welcome aboard" check.... and then all of a sudden you get the "you're no better than anyone else" check.

  • @kdeezo326
    @kdeezo326 9 месяцев назад +4

    Truck driving used to be one of the highest paying blue collar jobs, just like construction. As inflation increased, the wages have not, but you can guarantee these companies are profiting. It will only change when the drivers take a strong stance.

  • @mikeziegler7008
    @mikeziegler7008 9 месяцев назад +12

    People from impoverished nations can come to North America and enter the industry and life is so good for them compared to what they left behind. Three sweaty cousins to a truck and a 5 gallon bucket to poop in. Who can compete with that? Trucks are so expensive that you almost have to run team if you want to run OTR. How can you justify parking a $300,000 investment for 10-12 hours of each day? For the record, I was in trucking for 40 years. I quit in 2018 and have not spent ONE SECOND regretting it or missing it.

    • @GrdDog
      @GrdDog 9 месяцев назад

      Holy crap many you were running semi's 7 years before I was born; glad you made it Legacy Trucker, congratz.
      Hard to compete with 3 drivers that do not have to stop; almost impossible to compete.
      I have been OTR for 32 years now and time has fore sure changed from the past when I first started back in 1989; some good and some horrible.
      I can afford an new truck I bought this year and it is almost paid off; 247K for a brand new freightshaker with an awesome warranty package.
      I'm able to do this simply because of how I made choices after starting to be an being an O/O for the first 10 years and yes I made a lot of mistakes; I got really lucky by having a mentor in trucking that showed me how to start hauling loads by making and contacting certain companies and receivers and hauling from the directly (ever now and then I use a load board but not often; these are the worst for paying loads to me). This has allowed be to make a lot of $$ and spend time with my blood family in FL more often than in the past. In the end since I do not have a wife or kids; I can also stay out a lot longer then most, IN 2023 I left at the end of may and will not return until the end from the road until the end of September, so I can bank that cash
      Each driver learns if they choose to; there is a shit ton of information out there and a some of it bad info, so double and triple check the info, this is unlike when we first started, a big problem is executing at this time.

    • @mntrucking3171
      @mntrucking3171 9 месяцев назад +1

      Mike please stop blaming immigrants for all of your downfall. Trucking is a supply and demand game.

    • @zavettataylor2882
      @zavettataylor2882 9 месяцев назад

      Americans from economically depressed areas will drive cheaper too. That's who ur competing with. The media wants u to blame immigrants, but it's the poor from rural areas. Look at some of these RUclipsrs bragging bout their wages. It's quite obvious they were either on welfare or fast food workers before getting their CDL

    • @mikeziegler7008
      @mikeziegler7008 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@zavettataylor2882 I don't disagree with your statement except I never see anything about this from the media. When I drove, I saw it on the road and at the fuel pumps.

    • @mikeziegler7008
      @mikeziegler7008 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@mntrucking3171 I didn't have a downfall. I am doing quite well, tyvm. What I described above was from eyewitness accounts from years on the road. I have nothing against legal immigrants driving trucks. But don't pretend as if immigrants haven't had a HUGE impact on "supply and demand"

  • @donmcatee45
    @donmcatee45 9 месяцев назад +14

    I’ve made the same as I did 22 years ago which is actually less because of inflation, now I’m too old to start over again in something different… Good times in the world of trucks…

    • @User37717
      @User37717 9 месяцев назад

      I'm sorry, this realm isn't fair

  • @JustMe-pu3xm
    @JustMe-pu3xm 9 месяцев назад +3

    He isn’t lying about it.. That’s exactly how it is..The hours we put in doesn’t match the pay.

  • @kellybaumann1450
    @kellybaumann1450 9 месяцев назад +3

    I retired 2 years ago after 40 years of service and dont miss any aspect of trucking a bit

  • @phillipsmith2443
    @phillipsmith2443 9 месяцев назад +8

    I left after 20 years because i had to stay out a month at a time to make ends meet. I was sitting more than i was driving just looking for loads that paid a reasonable rate.

  • @mattpilloud4336
    @mattpilloud4336 9 месяцев назад +3

    Get rid of the 36hrs reset . Should be a monthly limit. Lets say 22 days and you can pick and choose when you whant to take your days off. And no one should be on the road sleeping in a truck for less then 500 a day for a full days worked. But so long as they keep finding drivers to replace the ones that quit the undercutting and lowball rate program will prevail. There are great paying gigs out there but they usually dont involve swingin doors or in your local area. If you've got 5 plus years experience and cant make 100k a year working 70hrs a week on the road that basically means you're working for the same wages as new drivers.
    Find a better job or a different career dont stay at it for another 30 years complaining about cheap rates and the industry.
    No one is forcing you to go to work . So if the money isn't descent. Get out of it sooner then later.
    Some people are too dumb to know when too quit.
    The industry will never change because there are no standards when it comes to minimum pay.
    95% of shippers and receivers dont care if you are old young fat skinny driving a nice truck ugly truck or how much experience you have .end of the day just whant there shit hauled for cheap. You are worthless in the public's eye no matter how good or bad you are. That will never change. Focus on yourself .
    You get paid what you allow companies to pay you.
    If they whant to haul cheap loads and make it your problem that they can't pay you more. Move on.
    Know your worth and set your own standards. No company likes someone that is greedy but at the end of the day they are not paying your bills.
    Every company wants drivers that are willing to work for free.
    Dont let them manipulate you.
    Drivers are there own worst enemy

  • @pierrec5536
    @pierrec5536 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for what you do I've learned a lot already in just a few months of watching you

  • @danielcristiangarcia2881
    @danielcristiangarcia2881 9 месяцев назад +2

    Tribe transportation out of Gainesville Georgia I went there with the intention to work and then did road test I pulled to the side of the road and told him it's not safe and needs wheel alignment you can definitely tell. And I wasn't able to retake the test wow .

  • @scottreal7787
    @scottreal7787 9 месяцев назад +4

    I worked for a courier service. I got 25% of the gross. But here's the kicker, I was never told what the gross was. I left that place.

  • @VirtuousYoungLady1
    @VirtuousYoungLady1 9 месяцев назад +16

    The only problem I have with cpm is driving in heavily populated areas where it takes 3 hours to go from 1 end of the city to the next, like Atlanta metro area, New York, California. It's better to get percentage pay the cpm, because you spend more time in traffic pileups than anything else and it's hard to find parking to rest in those areas too.

    • @ap8riot931
      @ap8riot931 9 месяцев назад

      Swift, Knight and England only pay from zip code to zip code effectively cheating the drivers out of hundreds of miles driven every month.They don't pay for your moving the load to he actual address on the BOL.

    • @k.eubanks6473
      @k.eubanks6473 9 месяцев назад +1

      only worthwhile pay these days is salary or high hourly.

    • @k.eubanks6473
      @k.eubanks6473 6 месяцев назад

      @@Watchthestars-oh3oq lot of times if u dont take the load u get played with by dispatch until you quit by being fed shit loads.
      good luck proving it for driver coercion charges too.

    • @jongensbill7772
      @jongensbill7772 5 месяцев назад

      I don't understand why anyone would do what OTR people do. I work a labor intensive job in the Canadian oil patch. I get 750 a day flat rate plus 150 LOA and 1.90 per kilometer to run my own pickup truck. I'm gone 25 to 28 days per month. I'm 61 and I love my job. I talk with truckers at the truckstops who are gone 28 to 30 days a month and take home 3000 bucks. I wouldn't wake up for 3000 bucks a month. These guys brag because they get 65 cents a mile and I get 1.90 a km. Do the math. The trucking industry just does not compete or compare. That's why all the new immigrants are taking over the industry. Last month they made 11 rupees and this month they're making 3 grand. There's no future in trucking OTR as far as i can tell. BTW I run trucks in my off season but only regional and only off-road, because nothing on the highway pays. I just don't get why you guys sacrifice so much for so little.

    • @k.eubanks6473
      @k.eubanks6473 5 месяцев назад

      @@jongensbill7772 i take home about $1600-2800/wk depending on loads.
      I personally do it because it enables me to save money on housing, transportation, etc. and so i can use that money for stocks/ savings. it's definitely not the best work but other work requires me to have a bunch of payments id rather not incur such as car insurance, home insurance, etc. Waiting for a while and pooling money up to just outright buy my needs

  • @kopp0e541
    @kopp0e541 9 месяцев назад

    I really enjoyed the dissertation of the trucking payouts..! Stay on top of the game watching this..!

  • @jdtractor2012jb
    @jdtractor2012jb 8 месяцев назад +2

    Im a local driver, switched from otr to local ag exempt work, after heart attack. Been working very long days, as im the only driver our company has at the moment. But loving it and putting money aside for my own truck. Wife is home with the newborn, im Home to sleep a couple hours at night, and off on weekends. And making more than otr.

  • @farmytomalien6448
    @farmytomalien6448 9 месяцев назад +53

    Drivers whose trucks are governed at 68 or less while being paid per mile are getting a hard cap on how much they are able to make. Simply having the ability to drive at the speed limit, which is 70 + on most interstates in the US, makes a significant difference in pay per mile. It not only enables a driver to get more miles per shift, but allows better opportunity for more loads. If you’re driving for a company that governs their trucks at 68 or less then you are getting screwed.

    • @Countrycashflow
      @Countrycashflow 9 месяцев назад +3

      70+mph doesn’t guaranty you more miles always. There’s to many variables.

    • @Jack-pd4ps
      @Jack-pd4ps 9 месяцев назад +4

      Fast trucks = less demand = lower pay
      Governed trucks, rules and HOS actually saves and creates more jobs.
      If I have 5 trucks in rotation. They’re speeding, weaving through traffic and breaking HOS laws. I don’t need any more drivers. I don’t even have to raise the pay.
      If I have 5 trucks in rotation. They’re fallowing the laws and driving safe. I’ll need to hire a 6th or 7th driver to get the work done. Demand is higher for drivers.

    • @scottlemiere2024
      @scottlemiere2024 9 месяцев назад +2

      In most states the speed limit on trucks is between 60 and 70, not 70+.

    • @MrLasboor
      @MrLasboor 9 месяцев назад +2

      Welcome to California

    • @Countrycashflow
      @Countrycashflow 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@Jack-pd4ps some one who gets it

  • @rodderick1983
    @rodderick1983 9 месяцев назад +3

    I've changed trucking jobs recently and love my new situation. Mine is more of a regional job close to drop and hook our store stuff only. The primary reason I quit trucking in a sense was due to the waiting to load and unload appointments and the issues finding convenient places to rest for 10 hours. Couldn't keep rolling and schedule other loads due to those primary issues.

  • @billwhitis9997
    @billwhitis9997 9 месяцев назад +2

    It's not just low pay. I love how a driver will drive a company truck, and he is somehow responsible for poor maintenance and the resulting fine. Police mark truck drivers as an easy source of revenue.
    I pointed out a problem with the brakes on a truck I was driving, and the owner said not to worry about it. went on for weeks till I was pulled on the weigh scale for random inspection. 4000 dollar fine that I was responsible for. The company refused to pay the fine ( I quit after that). Needless to say, they didn't repair the truck either. Yeah, and then the inspector told me I should not have driven truck. I'm sure my mortgage company would have totally understood.
    It didn't take me many months to figure out that this was an occupation with no future.

  • @douglassmith7683
    @douglassmith7683 6 месяцев назад +1

    Agree. I'm in the cargo van industry. It amazes me how many of these youtube videos don't talk about or even know how to figure Cost Per Mile.

  • @bentstrider
    @bentstrider 9 месяцев назад +5

    I honestly got into this back in 2010 since I sucked at academics after repeated college attempts and my social skills were always a bust. Just got to get some light exercise and cut out the junk food. I carry a bicycle and the company provides a decent fridge to keep fresh groceries in.
    I also drive regional tanker and get home for 2-3 days each week. Better jobs are out there. Just got to get your start where you can and bone out to some place better once you get that 1-2 years in. Of course it also helps if one lives in an urban area with more hourly/local options.

  • @jonathanhnunez
    @jonathanhnunez 9 месяцев назад +11

    Drivers should take their health more serious. Most people aren’t aware of the average life expectancy for a trucker, there’s people out there that just don’t care until is too late.

    • @Jack-pd4ps
      @Jack-pd4ps 9 месяцев назад +3

      For real! Most are too worried about getting the most out of their clocks.

    • @travisfyne9316
      @travisfyne9316 9 месяцев назад +3

      You cant out exercise a bad diet, also very hard to out exercise sitting 70 hrs a week

    • @Jack-pd4ps
      @Jack-pd4ps 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@Walkingnluv there is something you can do. Most drivers a busy chasing the “Green Carrot”. Lots of people put the Money over health not realizing the hospitals and doctors will take it later on at a faster rate. You have a choice to work 10 hours and walk for 2. It’s not a 110 degrees 24 hours per day. Many Drivers choose to work 14 hours and lay in the sleeper for a few hours. Eating healthy is vary good!

    • @Jack-pd4ps
      @Jack-pd4ps 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@Walkingnluv I’m a CDL Driver. The trucking industry is the way it is because Drivers allowed it to happen. Speeding, weaving through traffic, breaking HOS laws, getting the job done faster than it’s supposed to be done is what’s “watering down” the work and creating low wages. Working longer 14 hours shifts sets the standard that shippers and carriers expect. Drivers are the leaders of this industry until they give up their leverage and then their jobs. Many drivers don’t know or realize that.

  • @tylerblake4028
    @tylerblake4028 9 месяцев назад +1

    I’m getting on the road I have faith things will turn around for the better.. starting school in a few months too

  • @trakeespree
    @trakeespree 7 месяцев назад +2

    My neighbor was pushed out of trucking for Dart in Los Angeles. He said Dart is starting outsource their driving jobs to temp agencies and most of the new people he see coming in are on work visas and driving for half the pay rate. He had to take a goat driving job just to stay afloat.

  • @williamroberts9966
    @williamroberts9966 9 месяцев назад +4

    Thanks for exposing this this should be illegal. Keep the videos coming.

  • @jk6854
    @jk6854 9 месяцев назад +7

    Trucking Industry is a complete joke.

  • @lmylemuel
    @lmylemuel 5 месяцев назад +1

    This guy really put thought and research into this before posting. Way to go bro. I absolutely agree with u on all points made. And I’m 10yrs in. U ain’t said nothin wrong

  • @calebmcmillan5152
    @calebmcmillan5152 5 месяцев назад +1

    Guys and girls .. go to a company who cares about you as a driver and cares about keeping the equipment up to par. I emphasize both because you will feel way better going to work with a company who cares about you and your safety. I drive for Roehl Transport and man they are good. You’ve gotta put in that work but there are a lot of incentives, great communication, nice terminals, and they care about what we go through on the road. If you are a driver especially an OTR driver.. it’s imperative that you drive for a company who will respect you as a person first and a driver second. Wish you all safe travels on the road and happy holidays 🖤.

  • @rochac44
    @rochac44 9 месяцев назад +4

    I was working at 25% per mile last year , you got to look at the load pay per mile, when they where paying at 2.50 to 3.00 per mile I could make at least $ 2.400 a week driving 3.500 miles , but this year everything dropped ,now loads are paying 1.20 to 1.80 per mile , someone are keeping the money drivers could be making.

  • @erichaley6776
    @erichaley6776 9 месяцев назад +3

    Great video! My only concern is that there are too many people in trucks and not enough freight at the moment!

  • @amrogibril1985
    @amrogibril1985 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so so so much for making this video I just left the trucking industry after 8 years in it totally became nothing but a scam every year rather than u make more you make less !!! Fighting for your money every day between brokers and dispatchers and your company trying to jack you off!!! For any expenses they can throw at you!! So disgusting and feel sorry o wasted years of my life and damaged my health !!! Sincere advice don’t get into this industry we as drivers have zero respect in this business

  • @kareemb.muhammad1471
    @kareemb.muhammad1471 9 месяцев назад +1

    Great video. I been telling guys to stop taking percentage not only is it less per mile but when they pay percentage they can alter the ratecon

  • @stevendorn1736
    @stevendorn1736 9 месяцев назад +7

    I'm so stressed out sitting in winslow arizona at the pilot...the company i've been running for almost a month. I only got paid $366.00, ,I thought we had labor laws. But they don't even give a fUK,

    • @Jack-pd4ps
      @Jack-pd4ps 9 месяцев назад +3

      I’d clean, detail, and photograph the truck and leave it on their property. That pay is disrespectful

    • @billyanderson9574
      @billyanderson9574 9 месяцев назад +5

      If you have been running steady and don't owe a bunch back to them in advances and have only made 366.00$ I'd be looking for a bus station and go home.

    • @stevendorn1736
      @stevendorn1736 9 месяцев назад +1

      Update finally got paid in full, took advice from the US labor board, and state of California, plus I delivered their last load to a walmart DC in San Bernardino, CA ,then posted up in their truck and refused to moved it for two days then they caved in, $$$$

  • @combatkool-aid9495
    @combatkool-aid9495 9 месяцев назад +6

    Tbh it was the 53ft trailers for me that made me detest the trucking industry after driving some 40ft trailers and all the diffrent parking you have access too makes a huge difference in employee experience.

    • @csxns
      @csxns 9 месяцев назад +2

      They need to go back to 45ft trailers.

    • @ap8riot931
      @ap8riot931 9 месяцев назад +3

      Walmart Neighborhood grocery stores expected us to navigate their tiny parking lots to come to a tiny loading dock with zero turn around room pulling a 53 foot trailer. Then slide it down a 9 foot wide chute to get to the dock doors. It was a friggin nightmare. Those docks were designed for box vans.

  • @coreyburns7744
    @coreyburns7744 6 месяцев назад

    IM A OTR COMPANY DRIVER , THIS VIDEO IS THE BEST I HAVE EVER SEEN REGARDING THE INDUSTRY IT'S 100% ON POINT ❗️

  • @petegamez2692
    @petegamez2692 8 месяцев назад +2

    I've been a truck driver for 21+ years and Yes more Pay is very beneficial and important!. I'm definitely not getting Paid what I'm worth or for my years of experience!.

  • @sandro3182
    @sandro3182 9 месяцев назад +4

    I'm paying guaranteed millage per week, if they drive less, I pay agreed guaranteed miles, if they drive more than agreed milage, than I pay what ever they drove.. but with this economy, it is getting harder and harder

  • @aarongiertz8147
    @aarongiertz8147 9 месяцев назад +5

    Your right Sir. I left trucking last year . Sold my truck and all the equipment due to high costs, low rates, high fuel, money grubbing contractors . After 31 years I was done.
    If I was to do it again I’d stick to company driver. Even if the rates fall you’ll kind of be ok and your not on the hook for all the expenses.
    Trucking rates will come back eventually , but whom knows when ?
    Also I’m remarried now , 55 and want to enjoy life and weekends off. I did my time and now it’s time to hand the reins to the younger drivers . It’s they’re turn to run it all now wether that be into the ground or to success . Only time will tell.

    • @flonkas
      @flonkas 9 месяцев назад +1

      I’m a young driver just starting out. I’ve never made more then 30k in my life. I’m excited to make more money then ever. I don’t have any kids or wife. I’ll take the reigns bro don’t worry we got this

    • @poonetidestroyer8955
      @poonetidestroyer8955 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@flonkasyou’re going to look 55 in your 30s. Take this reigns boy and make those companies money off your back !

    • @flonkas
      @flonkas 9 месяцев назад

      @@poonetidestroyer8955 yes sir

    • @BMW9661
      @BMW9661 8 месяцев назад

      ​@flonkas don't believe the hype, you won't make a lot of money in trucking

  • @lewis9888
    @lewis9888 3 месяца назад +1

    I drove Trucks for nearly 30 years before I retired a few years ago. I am so glad that I got out of the Trucking Industry and retired. I drove for the last company almost 12 years averaged 2500 miles a week and got home every weekend. I lived within my means. I never had a credit card and that helped tremendously.

  • @Russb93988
    @Russb93988 27 дней назад +1

    Finally someone being real, in a owner op with my own authority and the health is my biggest downfall, I came in fit as can be at 24 now at 30 it’s hard to make it to the gym after driving 14hr a day and I’m home most of the time but with a family and kids it’s rough. We need to take health seriously in this industry

  • @plainman9887
    @plainman9887 9 месяцев назад +3

    Why drivers are also fed up: #1. INVASIVE SPYING DRIVER FACING CAMERAS, designed to give the employer/company/insurance scammers a way to throw you under the bus after an incident/accident but lying and claiming "it's for your safety". #2. E-snitch=E-logs AKA earnings limiters. 3. Severe lack of non police harrassing overnight parking with shower/restroom/food facilities. Could've been addressed with the money thrown away on Ukraine (who irritated Russia in the first place)
    4. College kids pretending to be "dispatchers" who lack experience and proper communication skills. 5. Having to keep driving crap equipment with over 250K miles on it and delayed/neglected maintenance on trucks while bugging you about "using your cell phone while driving."

  • @moritaagishta6190
    @moritaagishta6190 9 месяцев назад +6

    You are telling the truth.

  • @TheMotorolaman
    @TheMotorolaman 9 месяцев назад +1

    And they frown about job hopping. Thanks for the info and great video

  • @sarysa
    @sarysa 9 месяцев назад +11

    A lot of folks put up with it as a stepping stone, either to their own truck or to the big leagues. (I e. Walmart) That said, the universe has a way of reaching equilibrium if you catch my drift.

    • @ryukirito2616
      @ryukirito2616 9 месяцев назад

      That’s my plan.

    • @yoitstonytone7790
      @yoitstonytone7790 9 месяцев назад

      Exactly my plan. Get my cdl and get a local gig soon after

  • @noobgrinderTV
    @noobgrinderTV 9 месяцев назад +4

    The only difference between Trucking and Telemarketing is that you need a license to truck. OTR is a scam and dog shit pay. I went local beer delivery with my CDL and couldn't be happier. With the Overtime and hours, the pay is about the same. Plus I get home nightly. Sure, the elbow grease is there, but who cares?

    • @BryanM45
      @BryanM45 9 месяцев назад +1

      I got offered a home every day job from a Budweiser contractor straight out of school. Should have seen the looks on the instructors and recruiters faces when I told them I refuse to do OTR. They had the typical "YOU HAVE TO DO OTR CUZ I DID" super trucker mentality. I ended up taking a regional job though. Don't regret my decision, but think I would have been better off doing the Budweiser job. All worked out in the end because I begin a food service job in two weeks. Which I would have went for regardless of who I started with. Imo the elbow grease is just a paid workout. Always had jobs that required labor and sweat, and being in the Florida sun.

    • @noobgrinderTV
      @noobgrinderTV 9 месяцев назад

      @BryanM45 born and raised in Boca Raton man. Worked outside most of my life. But fuck super truckers, and fuck OTR.

  • @heathermatthews7422
    @heathermatthews7422 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you for these videos they are fantastic.😊

  • @yglordco9793
    @yglordco9793 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for the insight I actually needed that

  • @GuILty718
    @GuILty718 9 месяцев назад +4

    I found a gig that pays me by the day even if the truck doesn't move. When I do move, it's 6 hours a day. On top of that I get per diem for every night that I stay in the truck which is usually 4 nights a week (I do get home once or twice a week too), and I'm home weekends. Weekends start early afternoon Friday. If I left this company, I don't think I'd find another gig like this, and would probably turn in my CDL. #FLATBEDGANG

  • @midlifetrucker-thombell4722
    @midlifetrucker-thombell4722 9 месяцев назад +6

    My first year 2020, I made $62k. I’ve made six figures W-2 every year since. It’s out there but it isn’t going to come find you.

    • @Maoud2
      @Maoud2 9 месяцев назад

      What are you hauling

    • @midlifetrucker-thombell4722
      @midlifetrucker-thombell4722 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@Maoud2 Dry van, mostly LTL for a major forklift company.

  • @azarbashir4429
    @azarbashir4429 9 месяцев назад +1

    Talks like real brother who understands man

  • @i.am.ghost.
    @i.am.ghost. 9 месяцев назад +1

    Very good! A million and a half came into trucking since 2020, so let me know when they are out.

  • @frederickknapp5340
    @frederickknapp5340 9 месяцев назад +4

    I started in the beginning of 1999, I left in 2001 due to wanting more family time. Now, I love this life but am tired of the drivers out there now, truck and 4 wheelers.. I hate the fact that I am willing to leave a life I love due to others. My usual take home covers my monthly expenses and the other 75% is play money. At the rate pay is dropping, I will need a weekend job to cover what I enjoy. I love this industry and always wish it the best but shippers need to step up.

    • @payne7761
      @payne7761 9 месяцев назад +2

      Don't let those others live in your head rent free boss.

    • @frederickknapp5340
      @frederickknapp5340 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@payne7761 No one lives in my head for free, You have to pay big admissions to live here. Remember I am 3/4 nuts and half crazy

    • @payne7761
      @payne7761 9 месяцев назад

      @@frederickknapp5340 the math checks out.