About three months ago I had made the bad decision of using. How far back do you need to be clean so you can be accepted by a company sponsored training program?
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.
Urine tests for most drugs are 30 days, hair test are 90 days
...and it depends on the company. We have a drug-test thread that lists which major company does what.
You may have to wait, to be sure, depending on the company you're going with.
Just keep it clean from here on out and know that you have to make that commitment, if this is what you want to do. That's part of taking good care of you.
Welcome to Trucking Truth by the way!
Remember: Be good to yourself.
-mountain girl
New! Check out our help videos for a better understanding of our forum features
About three months ago I had made the bad decision of using. How far back do you need to be clean so you can be accepted by a company sponsored training program?
Company Sponsored Training:
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.