Location:
Keeseville, NY
Driving Status:
Experienced Driver
Social Link:
Brett Aquila On The Web
Hey Everyone! I'm the owner and founder of TruckingTruth and a 15 year trucking veteran.
Posted: 1 day, 4 hours ago
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Stay with it! You still have time!
It's incredibly effective. If you keep working through it, you'll blow through the tests like they're nothing.
Best of luck!
Posted: 1 day, 4 hours ago
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Trucking Truth Closing October 1st – What An Incredible Ride!
It is crazy to think of all the love and support and even fighting and drama we have had over the years.
We've had it all, haven't we? What a ride!
Would you believe 10 yrs ago today i stepped on the bus for Prime.
Wow! Happy Truckin' Birthday to ya! That's very cool.
Wow. First off Brett, thank you for everything. I wouldn't have the career that I do, had I not found this community. I feel a kindred spirt to you in many ways. We have had many spirited conversations and threads here.
I feel the same, Davy. Thank you for that. We've had a ton of great conversations over the years, many of which changed people's careers and sometimes their lives. We didn't shy away from anything.
I wish you the best in life. This has been one place where drivers could get truth with no sugar coating.
Thanks Big Scott! That was always the goal - to give the straight, honest, hardcore truth and opinions people needed. It made us a lot of friends and helped launch thousands of careers. All the best.
Brett I know this has to be very time consuming and you have been at it along time. You have a drive and commitment to the industry like noone I have ever met. I commend you for that.
Thanks, PJ! I started CDL school in August, 1993, at 21 years old. I had 15 years of driving, and 18 1/2 years of mentoring, with a little overlap between the two. That gives me a total of just over 32 years in the industry. I can't even really get my head around that.
When I started driving, we didn't have internet, cell phones, or GPS.
Here's a funny one - when Internet first came out in the mid 90's they installed phone lines in the parking lots of truck stops. I had to buy a 100 ft phone line, and anytime I wanted to connect to the Internet, I had to run the phone line out the window, along the length of the truck, and plug it into the receptacle in the parking lot. Then I'd run back to the cab and check to see if I could get online with AOL!
If it worked, which was about a 50/50 chance, great! If not, try another receptacle. Sometimes I had to move to a different spot just to find one that worked. Let me tell ya how much fun that was in the winter!
Good times.
One thing I may be able to do is send you guys a download of your forum comments so you can use them elsewhere. Many of us wrote article-length posts to explain our viewpoints. I can't do it for hundreds of people, not without building a quick system to allow that, but I can do it for anyone who has a significant amount of advice they'd like to use again or just archive for safekeeping.
I am still open to considering ideas for preserving or turning over the content. Keep throwing ideas at me.
I still have a lot to say to so many of you, so stay tuned and keep the comments coming!
Posted: 3 days, 4 hours ago
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Trucking Truth Closing October 1st – What An Incredible Ride!
Sort of feels like the last day of high-school, people you have known for years will be going their separate ways. You may bump into them around town but it won't be the same.
Wow, that really captures it well for me. It does feel that way. It's like this uneasy feeling, not knowing what to say or do, and not knowing what comes next, but knowing it's time to move on and there's no going back.
This is a little harder than I thought it might be.
Posted: 3 days, 4 hours ago
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Trucking Truth Closing October 1st – What An Incredible Ride!
Thanks to all of you for the well wishes and wonderful responses! I'm enjoying it. I'll provide a lot of individual feedback over the next couple of weeks, but for now, I want to address the main topic - whether I should keep the site up and running.
I really wanted to move on a couple of years ago, but I decided I would try to keep it running and start new projects at the same time. Two years later, that has proven to be impossible. I won't pursue business prospects that only require a part-time effort. I dive in deep and go after big goals, like I did with Trucking Truth. It will take all of my time and attention, and running this website takes an awful lot of both. The financial cost of running the servers, email, backups, databases, and all that is not trivial either. It's costly.
I agree that the information here is priceless, so nothing will be deleted. It will all be archived permanently. I have been pondering ways to make at least some of the most valuable stuff available, especially this forum and The High Road. That High Road is more advanced than people realize. The results people get from it really show its strength. The next step would have been to add AI to the High Road, but I hadn't gotten that far.
I've considered making at least parts of the forum available for download, such as a free book or something similar. I've also considered using AI to enable people to ask questions, with AI retrieving the results from the website's information. I've thought all of this over for a couple of years now.
I'm still open-minded to making at least some of this available somehow, but I haven't settled on the best way to do that. I'm happy to field recommendations if you have some.
The other big concern I have is making room for the next generation of mentors to step up and take over where we left off. If I keep this website running, it will continue to get a lot of traffic, standing in the way of newcomers.
Old School wrote an absolutely incredible book himself, and perhaps he will want to develop his own mentoring program. I know Kearsey and Turtle have YouTube channels that they use to mentor people. Many of you are still active drivers or soon to retire, and could do exactly as I have. But if I keep this website up and running, it will block some of that traffic you'll desperately need, and I don't want to do that.
So we'll keep this discussion going and see if we can't find a good solution. I appreciate and enjoy the feedback. I can't tell you how weird it will be not having Trucking Truth to nurture day and night after 18 1/2 years. I bought the domain in January 2007:
Creation Date: 2007-01-12 17:27:50Z
I don't have kids, so this will be the closest thing to becoming an empty-nester I guess!
Posted: 3 days, 23 hours ago
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Trucking Truth Closing October 1st – What An Incredible Ride!
Thanks Heavy C!
It's a bummer because I've only recently come back to the forum after taking an Internet break. I was excited to share my experience and unique perspective on the industry when I came back. I guess I'll just have to find new places to guide and inspire the next generation of drivers.
I hope you do find new places where you can help and inspire people. They need it badly, as you know. Trucking is a tough business, and it's especially harsh for new drivers. If you can get them through those first 6 - 12 months, they'll be on their way. But that's no small task. They could use a guy like you to show them how it's done.
All the best to ya.
Posted: 4 days, 3 hours ago
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Trucking Truth Closing October 1st – What An Incredible Ride!
Brett I pray whatever comes next for you serves you as well as you have served all of us.
Thank you, Jay! Sorry we're closing up shop so soon on ya, but you gave me a great idea for the thank you page that I'll put up after we close. I will list resources that I know come from trustworthy people, mostly those in our community. I know we have some members with YouTube channels, and Old School wrote an excellent book, so I'll list great resources on that thank you page Oct 1st.
Anyone who knows of great resources for new drivers can list them here in this thread. I'll make a list of them as we go. Feel free to promote yourselves if you're mentoring new drivers!
Posted: 4 days, 4 hours ago
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Trucking Truth Closing October 1st – What An Incredible Ride!
Hey everyone,
Today I’m announcing the final chapter in Trucking Truth’s amazing journey. After 18½ years of running Trucking Truth, I’ve decided it’s time to bring this incredible chapter to a close. This website will be shutting down permanently on October 1st.
What a ride it has been! From the very beginning, we set out to do things differently — to empathize, encourage, and inspire anyone who was considering a career in trucking and give them the advice and support they needed to make it through that first year in the industry. Together, we built something extraordinary that set a new standard in the trucking world.
Over the years, Trucking Truth has served more than 10 million visitors, and tens of thousands have launched successful trucking careers with help from this community. We changed so many lives, and I couldn’t be more proud of how we did it: with integrity, positivity, and a focus on helping others succeed.
I’ve chosen not to sell the site or keep it running because I feel it’s time for the next generation of mentors to step up, build their own communities inspired by their unique vision, and lead the next generation of drivers. I also want to make a clean break for myself and move on to new challenges in life. I’m leaving with tremendous pride in what we’ve accomplished here together.
But this ain’t over quite yet! For the next two weeks, I’ll be here daily. I’d love for you to share your thoughts, memories, and questions. If you’ve ever wanted to say something about your time here, this is your chance. I’m really looking forward to spending these last two weeks together.
On October 1st, this website will be replaced with a single thank you page as the final chapter. You guys can help me decide what that page should have on it.
This has truly been an incredible ride, and I’ll always carry a deep sense of pride and gratitude for what we’ve done together. Thank you all for making Trucking Truth such a special place, and here’s to the next chapter, for all of us.
- Brett
Posted: 1 month, 2 weeks ago
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Also drives me crazy that your experience means nothing anymore unless it’s recent over the road. I have 8 years but for the past 2 and a half years I’ve been local And nobody is accepting that
That's the way it has always been. I've been in the industry since '93, and I agree that it doesn't make much sense. I never did get a straight answer from anyone as to why OTR companies don't count local experience. Maybe they figure the OTR lifestyle is an entirely different beast? That's all I can figure, because it isn't the driving part that's harder. Local driving tends to be more difficult than OTR much of the time because you spend more time in traffic, have to maneuver through tight parking lots more often, and you're doing difficult backing far more often as well.
Maybe they've found that local guys who go OTR don't last because they're used to being home. I don't know. It is a bit puzzling.
I drove for 15 years and loved it, but then I decided it was time to move on permanently, so I didn't renew my CDL back then either. It forced me to move on to something else.
Be real damn sure you're done with trucking before you let that CDL go, or you'll likely be facing an expensive and time-consuming process of getting it back, and who knows how that would affect your chances of getting hired.
Things will have to play out for a while yet, maybe a few months to a year, but if they continue to crack down on non-English speaking CDL holders and immigrants, things will swing back in the favor of drivers again.
Posted: 2 months ago
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Dire Warning On Unsafe Highways Amid Flood Of Migrant Drivers
Correct, its not an immigration issue, its a national security issue and a wages issue and a safety issue.
Exactly!
It's also about protecting our industry, bolstering our economy, and preserving our culture and our way of life.
There are right and wrong ways to approach immigration and allow foreign workers to participate in our society. We already have laws to protect us, and they need to be followed.
Many experienced drivers here have called out the headlines about driver shortages as fake news, and for good reason. The 'driver shortage' is the perfect excuse to demand the allowance of foreign drivers and reduced CDL requirements, neither of which is in the best interest of the general public, current drivers, future drivers, or the overwhelming majority of people in our country.
The cost of transporting goods is a tiny percentage of the overall cost of goods on shelves. We don't need to reduce the cost of shipping overall because our industry is already incredibly efficient. We can move 23 tons of goods 3,000 miles in a climate-controlled environment on very short notice in two days for a few thousand bucks. That's incredible!
Our industry is phenomenal. Trucking is one of the last great American blue-collar jobs, and it's the ultimate American adventure. If people want to be part of it, they can earn their way into our industry, just like we had to.
I have absolutely nothing against immigrants; my family was exactly that a few generations ago. But we did things the right way. We came here legally, learned the language, earned citizenship, abided by the laws, and assimilated into the Amercan culture. I see no reason we can't expect the same from others.
You must be 18 to drive a commercial vehicle for the purpose of Interstate commerce. I would support a law that requires you to be a U.S. citizen to do the same. That would protect our wages and defend trucking as one of the best blue-collar careers in America, one of the few left that pays a salary that can support a family.
Posted: 1 day, 4 hours ago
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Big changes to Lease Purchase and then OO.
Wow, I'm rather surprised to hear you're leasing, but once you've been a business owner, it's hard to go back to being an employee unless you've just had enough of the responsibility. So I can understand that.
I don't think leasing is a good business opportunity, but you're the last person I'm worried about. You're a super high-performer that has such a vast amount of experience, drive, and intelligence that you're always going to find success in the end. No one hits a home run on every challenge they take on, but you can't keep a good man down, so you'll always rise to the occasion.
When I first came off the road in 2006, we had a massive ice storm in Buffalo, NY, where I lived at the time. I bought a chainsaw, grabbed my nephew and his buddy, and we went out looking for work cleaning up yards. Once the ground work was mostly cleaned up, the rest was up in the trees.
So I bought a bunch of climbing gear and learned to climb. I started a full-blown tree service and ran that for two years. I always knew the tree service was a short-term thing. It was something I could use to get by until I figured out my next thing. As the tree work started to dry up, Trucking Truth started to take off, so I decided to throw caution to the wind and go for it. I wanted to see if I could turn this into something.
Well, I damn sure didn't expect it to turn into a massive odyssey spanning almost two decades! But hey, you won't know until you try, right?
So maybe this lease will end up being a transition to the next thing, maybe it will turn into an Odyssey itself and you'll own 150 trucks ten years from now. There's no way to know, but one way or another you'll rise to the top of whatever you commit to. You're that kind of guy, and I wish you all the best.