- Apr 5, 2004
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I just applied and am waiting for a interview date to open up. Anyone ever work at UPS or any co. of the sort as a Package handler? I guess im gonna be loading up the trucks right?
Originally posted by: Injury
Seeing as they are probably letting their seasonal help go now, I'd be surprised if that interview came soon.
Originally posted by: Brutuskend
Were you a place kicker in high school?
(I think that helps to get you in...)
and how to indentify, handle and record HazMat stuff - usually smoke detectors or chemicals.
Originally posted by: rasholianmon
your sister handles my package...
Originally posted by: rasholianmon
your sister handles my package...
Originally posted by: Citrix
and how to indentify, handle and record HazMat stuff - usually smoke detectors or chemicals.
why are smoke detectors hazmat? is it becasue they are slightly radioactive?
Originally posted by: Citrix
and how to indentify, handle and record HazMat stuff - usually smoke detectors or chemicals.
why are smoke detectors hazmat? is it becasue they are slightly radioactive?
Originally posted by: jammur21
Tips
You want to be an unloader.
IIRC there are two divisions for loading and unloading (primary/long haul and local)
Local unload (brown UPS trucks) seemed to be the best overall starting position
Local loading seemed alright
You are expected to work and finish several brown local trucks in a shift (again IIRC)
You want to be an unloader.
The long haul unloaders (big rig/semi truck/18 wheeler) also seemed alright
I think they might have worker 2 to a truck - not sure though
You want to be an unloader.
I worked long haul loading - South Orange,CA county hub to NY hub was my truck.
Basically it was load up an entire big rig truck by yourself and try to stay ahead of the never ending steading flow of packages coming down the chute.
Its about 3,000 boxes a truck - all have to be scanned, stacked and built into a series of tight walls
They'll tell you its like playing Tetris - only its not fun
I think they updated the scanners, but you wear the keypad/PC on your wrist and wear a finger trigger bar code reader
I hated the finger trigger as it had a habit of flying off deep into your finished stacks while pounding on a box to make it fit - its worth $300 or so, so you'd have to tear apart your walls to go find it.
Bring a gallon jug of water every day - those trucks get unbelievablly hot during the summer
Don't ever forget your employee card - they won't let you in the front gate without it
Bring Kleenex in your pocket - you will get the nastiest black snot from breathing in all the dust in the back of those trucks.
The first week is a breeze. You sit there for 3 days and learn how to lift properly, comapny policy, how to work equipment, and how to indentify, handle and record HazMat stuff - usually smoke detectors or chemicals. Day 3 or 4 they ask all the new recruits which of the above jobs you want. You want to be an unloader. Day 4 you start doing a little work. Day 5 they cut you loose onto the floor.
I would run into some of the guys from the trainnee group from time to time. They agreed that the unloading was much easier than the big rig loading.
