Walmart offers $110,000 to new drivers amid shortage

Folks, this is what happens when certain cheerleaders for the technology say that self-driving trucks will be the norm in a few years and drivers will have to find other work. Now nobody wants to be a driver. Imagine that. Would you want to enter or stay in the field?
 
Folks, this is what happens when certain cheerleaders for the technology say that self-driving trucks will be the norm in a few years and drivers will have to find other work. Now nobody wants to be a driver. Imagine that. Would you want to enter or stay in the field?
Well, maybe if truckers were not treated so badly they wouldn't move to a better profession...

When they feel underappreciated and underpaid, truck drivers currently in the industry, are leaving their jobs to look for something that offers better pay, benefits and working conditions. Low wages. There was a time when truck drivers made decent money for their hard work.
 
Folks, this is what happens when certain cheerleaders for the technology say that self-driving trucks will be the norm in a few years and drivers will have to find other work. Now nobody wants to be a driver. Imagine that. Would you want to enter or stay in the field?
This is only part of it.

I'm 31, when I graduated high school all the counselors were saying "go get a college degree or you won't find a job". I have a degree, I've worked hard, and currently work in IT at a University with a decent salary. I have friends working in trades who never went to college that make the same or more than I do. In my state there are companies begging for high school kids to fill positions when they graduate from the tech schools, and starting them at $60k a year.
 
Well, maybe if truckers were not treated so badly they wouldn't move to a better profession...

When they feel underappreciated and underpaid, truck drivers currently in the industry, are leaving their jobs to look for something that offers better pay, benefits and working conditions. Low wages. There was a time when truck drivers made decent money for their hard work.
Yup, it's also a result of companies laying off higher paid seasoned truckers in favor of cheap minimum wage contracting companies that hire steering wheel holders. It's not just trucking, I see it in all sorts of fields.
 
Meanwhile I'm on a hiring committee at the University where I work that is trying to fill a staff administrative position, bachelor's required, starting at $40,000. 🤦‍♂️
Lol, try to fill law enforcement positions right now. With the last 2/3 years and raises stuck in the county commissioners 'we'll get around to it someday' agenda, it is nigh on impossible to get people.

Then the same commissioners come to us and tell us we work too much overtime.
 
You won't fill it for that. If you can't fill an opening-the pay isn't high enough. The can't afford to pay the students loans the took out to get that degree at $40,000.00
Exactly what my argument has been this whole time I've been on the committee. They are having a hard time finding qualified applicants.

1. We are competing in a nationwide market now, these people can take their qualifications to somewhere like Alabama where the same $40k salary goes much further.

2. Why are we insisting people have degrees specific for the position? A degree of some kind and relative experience/being competent at completing tasks should take priority since this isn't a rocket science position.

3. The people setting these salaries make $250k+ and are out of touch with reality.
 
This is only part of it.

I'm 31, when I graduated high school all the counselors were saying "go get a college degree or you won't find a job". I have a degree, I've worked hard, and currently work in IT at a University with a decent salary. I have friends working in trades who never went to college that make the same or more than I do. In my state there are companies begging for high school kids to fill positions when they graduate from the tech schools, and starting them at $60k a year.
That's a whole other debate, but we are all living the results from years of kids being told that a degree is the only way forward in life.
 
This is only part of it.

I'm 31, when I graduated high school all the counselors were saying "go get a college degree or you won't find a job". I have a degree, I've worked hard, and currently work in IT at a University with a decent salary. I have friends working in trades who never went to college that make the same or more than I do. In my state there are companies begging for high school kids to fill positions when they graduate from the tech schools, and starting them at $60k a year.
I'm curious, did your high school offer technological studies? Examples would be auto mechanics, wood working, hospitality/tourism and horticulture.
 
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Exactly what my argument has been this whole time I've been on the committee. They are having a hard time finding qualified applicants.

1. We are competing in a nationwide market now, these people can take their qualifications to somewhere like Alabama where the same $40k salary goes much further.

2. Why are we insisting people have degrees specific for the position? A degree of some kind and relative experience/being competent at completing tasks should take priority since this isn't a rocket science position.

3. The people setting these salaries make $250k+ and are out of touch with reality.
You are not competitive...you can't fill it. If they are going to a neighboring state-then you need to pay them $50,000.00 to stay in YOUR STATE. Maybe mention that to those degree laden guys who make $250,000.00
 
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