In what part of the U.S has the most concentrated Deliveries for Sprinter Van Expedite Drivers.Thank You
California To Build Bridge To Hawaii - GadlingDon't accept ANY loads to Hawaii, there's no bridge yet.
If the carrier or the customer is willing to pay the ferry toll, I'ma do it.Don't accept ANY loads to Hawaii, there's no bridge yet.
St. Louis gets hot as does the KC Area, if there is a auto plant there you'll find expediters goingIs there much running west ever? I am in Joplin Missouri so will I always be a long way from home base? I understand the industrial areas in Ohio, Michigan and the North East but are the loads going other parts of country as well or is it hit and miss with trouble getting loads out of areas. Thanks
St. Louis gets hot,........
Much ever. I don't know that there's ever been much running out west, but there's some. The farther west of the Mississippi River you get, the more iffy it gets. Depending on the carrier, you can run like crazy up and down the West Coast, though.Is there much running west ever?
Always? No. The overwhelming majority of the time? Yeah. But it depends on your definition of "a long way," too. You can get to KC a lot, but it's been years since I've had a load going to Springfield, Joplin, or even Tulsa. I've gone months without being within 300 miles of Western Kentucky where I live. You'll get the occasional load to NW Arkansas, and by occasional I mean one or two a year, or not. Then, suddenly, you get 4 deliveries in one month to Eureka or Branson. Ya never know.I am in Joplin Missouri so will I always be a long way from home base?
There are loads going TO everywhere. Getting back out is the trick sometimes. Like, I've taken a load to Scottsbluff, NE. Getting out of there loaded is not gonna happen very often. About 4 or 5 loads a year get shipped out of Havre, Montana, but I know a guy who got two loads out of there in one day (RLENT, left loaded, then they called him an hour later and told him to go back to get another load, one went to Wichita, one went to KC - he should have bought Powerball tickets that day). It can be hit and miss everywhere, even in a place like Chicago, but it's worse where there is little or no manufacturing.I understand the industrial areas in Ohio, Michigan and the North East but are the loads going other parts of country as well or is it hit and miss with trouble getting loads out of areas. Thanks