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Archive for the ‘News Article’ Category

» Discover How You Can Get Paid CDL Training :: 1StopFinanceShopUK …

By On April 28, 2010 No Comments

This can be a very expensive way to find out that truck driving is not for you. Maybe you can find someone to ride along with before you decide that this is what you want to do. Paying for courses for a cdl license can run into …

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» Discover How You Can Get Paid CDL Training :: 1StopFinanceShopUK …


Get Your CDL and Get A Job

By On March 8, 2010 No Comments

This article really brought home the fact that truck driving jobs are out there and getting a job as a cdl truck driver is a possibility in this economy. If you are interested in a truck driving school, go to http://www

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Get Your CDL and Get A Job


Jobs in Kansas City, MO (02/25/10)

By On February 25, 2010 No Comments

Truck driving jobs – Kansas city – Hazmat required – class A cdl , Truck driving jobs – Kansas City Regional class A job hauling containers from railyards.

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Jobs in Kansas City, MO (02/25/10)


Jobs in Kansas City, MO (02/25/10)

By On February 25, 2010 No Comments

Truck driving jobs – Kansas city – Hazmat required – class A cdl , Truck driving jobs – Kansas City Regional class A job hauling containers from railyards. HAZMAT REQUIRED before being scheduled. $850/wk avg pay plus bene… …

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Jobs in Kansas City, MO (02/25/10)


The Trucking Industry is Vital to our Economy

By admin On June 12, 2009 No Comments

The overall health of the trucking industry is vital to our economy, but research shows that it is still plagued by higher rates of death and injury than many other industries – and not merely the result of collisions the road. Truckers need to be as careful as they walk behind the wheel.

In 2007, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, there were 1.4 million trucks transport workers. And each year, one in 18 is injured or made ill through work.

The truck has a rate of injury by 30% higher than in other U.S. industries, and, on average, BLS reports, more than 500 truckers were killed at work each year. In fact, truck drivers are six times more likely to be killed on the job than other workers.

We already know that many trucking-related deaths are caused by collisions of the road, but the 2007 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Census of Fatal Occupational injuries reported 42 deaths from “contact with objects and equipment”, this which makes them only seconds to transport the frequency of incidents. In the collection of waste, for example, 28% of deaths are caused by contact with objects and equipment.