Republic Services

ResidentialDriverCDL

$0–0k San Antonio, Texas, United States FULL TIME
The Brief

“Residential Driver CDL at Republic Services. Skills: Commercial driving, Route operation, Customer interaction. Operate collection truck safely. Provide waste removal services”

What You'll Achieve.

Service all customers in a timely manner; Service all customers in a professional manner; Ensure vehicle defects are repaired timely; Minimize down time; Service all customers efficiently

What They're Looking For.

Must Have

Class B Commercial Driver's license, Air brakes endorsement

What You'll Do.

Operate collection truck safely

Provide waste removal services

Perform vehicle pre-operation inspections

Perform vehicle post-operation inspections

Operate heavy truck on designated route

Operate manual controls

Operate automatic controls

Dispose of collected material

Interact with customers

Interact with dispatchers

Identify unsatisfactory waste containers

Monitor waste for unacceptable items

Clean accidental waste spills

Monitor vehicle condition

Minimize down waste from packer blade

Complete route sheets

Complete productivity sheets

Complete other reports

Maintain productivity standards

Follow safety policies

Follow safety procedures

Participate in ReSOP program

Perform other job-related duties

How You'll Work.

Team & Collaboration

Interact with co-workers

Free ATS check

Applying for this Residential Driver CDL role?

Most applicants get filtered before a human reads their resume. See if yours makes the cut.

How to Apply on Workday

  • Workday has a multi-step form — save your progress after every section.
  • "Apply With LinkedIn" can fail or lose data; manual entry is more reliable.
  • Watch for the "Submit for Review" final step — hitting "Save" alone does not submit.
  • Job requisition numbers are useful when following up with HR by email.

ANONYMOUS · UNFILTERED

What do employees actually say about Republic Services?

Real rants from real employees. Read before you apply.

Read Company Rants →