'It's not your 9 to 5 job:' UPS trying to attract younger drivers in tight labor market - ABC Action News
Sean Holland has driven the same route for work every day for more than 20 years. He says it hasn't gotten boring yet.
"It's not your 9 to 5 job," Holland said. "If that's what you're looking for, this isn't it."
Holland is a UPS driver in suburban Denver. He took the job in the early '90s, and since 1995, he's been driving the same truck: Bertha.
"I've had her, next month, it will be 26 years," Holland said. "The old girl, she comes out full to the gills every day. I get rid of all that, and then we do another pickup run in the afternoon and fill it back up. There's a sense of accomplishment that goes along with that."
Sean Holland has driven the same route for work every day for more than 20 years. He says it hasn't gotten boring yet.
"It's not your 9 to 5 job," Holland said. "If that's what you're looking for, this isn't it."
Holland is a UPS driver in suburban Denver. He took the job in the early '90s, and since 1995, he's been driving the same truck: Bertha.
"I've had her, next month, it will be 26 years," Holland said. "The old girl, she comes out full to the gills every day. I get rid of all that, and then we do another pickup run in the afternoon and fill it back up. There's a sense of accomplishment that goes along with that."