What is the story: UPS drivers hauled in seven of the 10 Joseph M. Kaplan Safe Driver of the Year Awards.
Professional drivers across the U.S. and Canada are nominated for the award every year – and the recognition is not easy to achieve. Drivers must have at least 15 consecutive years, or 250,000 consecutive miles driven, without a preventable accident.
Why it matters: UPSers are serious about safe driving. Nearly 10,600 Circle of Honour drivers earned the distinction by driving more than 25 years without an accident – that is about 15 billion miles without so much as a prang. The top seven of this elite group were awarded Safe Driver of the Year.
The secret to their success is a commitment to world-class training. In the U.S. alone, we invest more than $260 million a year on safety training at UPS. Our operations employees participate in five million hours of safety training per year.
Give them a message of congratulations: Show appreciation for your safe UPS drivers here or use #ThankAUPSer.
Award Winner | Regional Category |
Karl Peter | Canada |
William Lazarski | East North Central |
Kenny Gregory | East South Central |
Samuel Stevens | Mid Atlantic |
Roy (Rusty) Holloway | Mountain |
Barry Marr | West North Central |
Javier Saldana | West South Central |
Did you know: UPS is now hiring more than 100,000 seasonal workers for the Christmas holidays. Following last year’s Christmas season, nearly 35,000 seasonal employees – more than a third – earned permanent positions with UPS.
That can be life-changing: The average pay for a UPS delivery driver is $95,000, or $112,000 for tractor-trailer drivers. Add in another $50,000 in health, welfare and pension contributions. After four years, drivers make an average of $42 per hour.
Learn more and start your UPS journey here.
Pictured left to right: National Safety Council President Lorraine M. Martin, Barry Marr, Samuel Stevens, Kenny Gregory, Bill Lazarski, Michael Phillips (2021 UPS Kaplan Award winner), and Rusty Holloway.