Adam, You say you finished truck driving school 14 years ago. Did you have any CDL type jobs since then? The FMCSA was set up in 2000, just before your schooling. If you've been "away" from trucking that long, it's a really good idea to brush up on the latest. Do you have a current CDL-A license and medical card?
A good place to start is the High Road Training Program which will take you through all the regulations & rules. It has self-testing after each section, so you'll know where you stand on that.
A CDL is required to drive any of the following vehicles:
The CSA is a Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) initiative to improve large truck and bus safety and ultimately reduce crashes, injuries, and fatalities that are related to commercial motor vehicle
The FMCSA was established within the Department of Transportation on January 1, 2000. Their primary mission is to prevent commercial motor vehicle-related fatalities and injuries.
What Does The FMCSA Do?
I have kept my cdl A over the years, just got my medical card renewed. Any advise on schools?
A CDL is required to drive any of the following vehicles:
I have kept my cdl A over the years, just got my medical card renewed. Any advise on schools?
Take a look at this: How To Choose A School I used this as well as the information on Truck Driving Schools. and Company-Sponsored Training . Hope this helps. DO ask any other questions, here, too!
You know the schools are designed to start at "Zero", and prepare students for the CDL test. You may want to check with trucking companies to see what they would require as far as refreshers. (TT has everything you need to work your your own plan!)
I went to Swift Academy, and one of the students had been a Swift driving mentor, but stopped driving for personal reasons in 2012. He had to take the whole school. But, he was able to test out quickly.
A CDL is required to drive any of the following vehicles:
A Company-Sponsored Training Program is a school that is owned and operated by a trucking company.
The schooling often requires little or no money up front. Instead of paying up-front tuition you will sign an agreement to work for the company for a specified amount of time after graduation, usually around a year, at a slightly lower rate of pay in order to pay for the training.
If you choose to quit working for the company before your year is up, they will normally require you to pay back a prorated amount of money for the schooling. The amount you pay back will be comparable to what you would have paid if you went to an independently owned school.
Company-sponsored training can be an excellent way to get your career underway if you can't afford the tuition up front for private schooling.
When a violation by either a driver or company is confirmed, an out-of-service order removes either the driver or the vehicle from the roadway until the violation is corrected.
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I completed truck driving school 14 years ago. I am planning to get into the business as soon as possible. I have been told that I need to go through a refresher course before I will be eligible to drive. Does anyone have any advise for me?