This is for any JB Hunt drivers out there that work the Perryman Rite Aid DCS account in Maryland. I am a veteran and am currently in process with a recruiter at JB. Just curious to know a bit more about the account, what the schedule is like and the weekly income average? Any other info would be greatly appreciated as well.
WARNING / DISCLAIMER - If you are a "hater", "whiner", "complainer" or someone who trolls these boards looking to discourage new drivers, do not bother to comment. I have already done a great amount of research on many different companies, so your advice will be disregarded. DON'T waste YOUR time or MINE!
JB Hunt - Rite Aid
Discussion in 'LTL and Local Delivery Trucking Forum' started by RCrollin75, Oct 28, 2016.
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Wow...you have no life apparently. I am seriously using this board for what it is supposed to be used for and your making jokes. Grow up.
Blackshack46 Thanks this. -
Here's some info on Rite Aid.
Rite Aid
Rite Aid Corporation
Type
Public
(Acquisition by Walgreens Boots Alliance pending)
Traded as NYSE: RAD
Industry Retailing
Founded September 12, 1962; 54 years ago (as Thrift D Discount Center)
1968; 48 years ago (as Rite Aid Corporation)
Scranton, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Headquarters East Pennsboro Township, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, United States
Number of locations
4,553 (Sep. 2016) [1]
Key people
John Standley, Chairman & CEO;
Ken Martindale, President & Chief Operating Officer;
Frank Vitrano, Chief Financial Officer & Chief Administrative Officer
Products Pharmacy
RevenueUS$ 30.736 billion (FY2016)
Operating income
US$ 731.28 million (FY2016)
Net income
US$ 165.47 million (FY2016)
Total assetsUS$ 11.277 billion (FY2016)
Total equityUS$ 581.43 million (FY2016)
Number of employees
89,000 (2016)
Website www.riteaid.com
Rite Aid is a drugstore chain in the United States and a Fortune 500 company headquartered in East Pennsboro Township, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, near Camp Hill.[2][3] Rite Aid is the largest drugstore chain on the East Coast and the third largest in the U.S. An offer was presented by Walgreens Boots Alliance in October 2015. Rite Aid accepted the offer and is currently pending government antitrust committee approval. If and when the deal is approved, Walgreens will form the world's largest retail pharmacy chain in terms of number of locations.
Rite Aid began in 1962 as a single store opened in Scranton, Pennsylvania called Thrift D Discount Center. After several years of growth, Rite Aid adopted its current name and debuted as a public company in 1968. Today, Rite Aid is publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker RAD. Rite Aid reported total sales of US$ 25.5 billion in fiscal year 2014. As of 6 February 2015, the market capitalization of Rite Aid was about $7.15 billion.[4] Its major competitors are CVS and Walgreens. The latter announced on October 27, 2015 that it would acquire Rite Aid for $17.4 billion pending approval.[5]
Contents
HistoryEdit
Alex Grass founded the Rite Aid chain in Scranton, Pennsylvania in September 1962.[6] The first store was called Thrift D Discount Center, a health and beauty aids store, without a pharmacy. It was an offshoot of Rack Rite Distributors, a subsidiary of his father-in law’s Lehrman & Sons which Alex Grass launched in 1958, that rented and stocked racks with health and beauty aids in grocery stores. In 1965 their 23rd store added a pharmacy and the company name was changed to Rite Aid.[7] Through acquisitions and new stores, Rite Aid quickly expanded into 5 northeast states by 1965. The chain was officially named Rite Aid Corporation in 1968 and made its debut on the American Stock Exchange. It moved to the New York Stock Exchange in 1970. In 2011, Rite Aid was ranked #100 on Fortune 500Largest U.S. Corporations.
Growth and acquisitionsEdit
Rite Aid in Tawas City, Michigan
Just ten years after its first store opened, Rite Aid operated 267 locations in 10 states. It was named the third largest drugstore in the United States by 1981; shortly thereafter, 1983 marked a sales milestone of $1 billion. A 420-store acquisition along the east coast expanded Rite Aid's holdings beyond 2,000 locations, as did the acquisition of Gray Drug in 1987. Among the companies acquired was Baltimore, Maryland's Read's Drug Store. On April 10, 1989, Peoples Drug's 114 unit Lane Drug of Ohio was purchased by Rite Aid.[8]
Rite Aid acquired twenty-four Hook's Drug stores from Revco in 1994, selling nine of those stores to Perry Drug Stores, a Michigan-based pharmacy chain. One year later, in turn, the 224-store Perry chain was acquired by Rite Aid.[9][10] The 1,000-store West Coast chain Thrifty PayLess was later acquired in 1996. The acquisition of Thrifty PayLess included the Northwest-based Bi-Mart membership discount stores, which was sold off in 1998. Acquisitions of Harco, Inc. and K&B, Inc. brought Rite Aid into the Gulf Coast area.
In the 1990s, Rite Aid partnered with Carl Paladino's Ellicott Development Co. to expand the company's presence in Upstate New York.[11]
Partnership with GNCEdit
General Nutrition Corporation (GNC) and Rite Aid formed a partnership in January 1999, bringing GNC mini-stores within the Rite Aid pharmacies. A partnership with drugstore.com in June 1999 allowed customers of Rite Aid to place medical prescription orders online for same-day, in-store pickup.
Company troublesEdit
Rite Aid in Scott Depot, West Virginia
Rite Aid had a major accounting scandal that led to the departure (and subsequent jail time) of several top ranking executives, including the CEO, Martin Grass, son of company founder Alex Grass. Former Rite Aid vice chairman Franklin C. Brown is serving a 10-year sentence in a medium-security facility at Federal Correctional Complex, Butner, near Raleigh, North Carolina.[12] After serving six years in prison, Martin Grass was released on January 18, 2010.[13] Founder Alex Grass died of cancer on August 27, 2009.[14]
At the time, Rite Aid had just acquired Thrifty PayLess and was integrating those into the company. As a result, Leonard Green, who ran the investment firm that had sold those stores to Rite Aid, took control of the company and installed Mary Sammons from Fred Meyer as CEO.
In July 2001, Rite Aid agreed to improve their pharmacy complaint process by implementing a new program to respond to consumer complaints.[15]
On July 25, 2004, Rite Aid agreed to pay $7 million to settle allegations that the company had submitted false prescription claims to United States government health insurance programs.[16]
In August 2007, Rite Aid acquired approximately 1,850 Brooks/Eckerd Stores throughout the United States in hopes of improving their accessibility to a wider range of consumers. On December 21, 2007, The New York Times reported that Rite Aid had record-breaking losses that year, despite the acquisition of the Brooks and Eckerd chains.[17] The following fiscal quarter saw an increase in revenue but a sharp fall in net income as Rite Aid began the integration process. Rite Aid shares fell over 75% between September 2007 and September 2008, closing at a low of $0.98 on September 11, 2008. Rite Aid shares subsequently dropped to $0.20 on March 6, 2009, the all-time low as of 8 December 2011.[4]
Scott Cole & Associates, APC filed a class action lawsuit against Rite Aid Corporation on behalf of its salaried California Store Managers. It was alleged that Rite Aid failed to pay overtime to these workers and denied them their meal and rest periods. In 2009, the action settled for $6.9 million. Scott Cole & Associates - Rite Aid Class Action
In June, 2010 John Standley was promoted from Chief Operating Officer to Chief Executive Officer, with former CEO Mary Sammons retaining her position as Chairperson;[18] Ken Martindale, previously co-President of Pathmark, was named Chief Operating Officer.[19]
Customer loyalty and rewards programsEdit
The Wellness Plus card (officially rendered as wellness+) is Rite Aid's shopping rewards card that started nationwide on April 18, 2010. Membership is free, and benefits include free health and wellness benefits as well as shopping and prescription drug discounts and special prices. Earlier, in March 2005, Rite Aid had introduced Living More, a seniors'loyalty program which offered similar discounts and benefits. This program was very similar to the former Revco program which was called "Senior Shoppers" (Rite Aid had attempted to purchase Revco in 1996). The Living More program was being discontinued as of October 31, 2010, having been essentially superseded by the Wellness Plus card. However, as of 2013, the Wellness+ plus card allows seniors to upgrade to the Wellness 65+ card, basically reintroducing the previous Living More benefits along with the newly created Wellness card. Rite Aid also holds some surveys for their loyal customers to share praise and complaints. Surveys are just like a platform where good and bad estimations are mingled together. Upon the completion of the customer satisfaction survey, customers are invited to try to win the grand prize and monthly prize as a feedback.[20]
In May 2015, Wellness Plus was integrated into the new American Express-backed Plentirewards card, which Rite Aid shares with AT&T Mobility, Direct Energy, Enterprise Rent-A-Car, ExxonMobil, Hulu, Macy's, and Nationwide Insurance; Rite Aid was the only one of the group that had an existing loyalty program before the creation of Plenti. The new system requires Wellness Plus cardholders to receive new cards displaying both the Wellness Plus and Plenti logos.[21]
Merger with Eckerd and BrooksEdit
A map of all Rite Aid stores as of September 2015
On August 23, 2006 the Wall Street Journal announced that Rite Aid would be buying the Eckerd Pharmacy and Brooks Pharmacy chains (Brooks Eckerd Pharmacy) from the Quebec-based Jean Coutu Group for US$3.4 billion, and merging the two chains into one dominant pharmacy system. The company's shareholders overwhelmingly approved the merger on January 18, 2007.[1]After some store closures and the conversion of the two chains was completed, Rite Aid became the dominant drug store retailer in the Eastern U.S., and the third largest drug retailer nationwide (behind the faster-growing Walgreens and CVS chains).
Similar to what CVS experienced in the Chicago metropolitan area after its purchase of Albertsons drug store chains, the deal gave Rite Aid some locations that were too close to each other. (Only 23 store locations nationally were sold off to Walgreens, The Medicine Shoppe, or independent owners in order to meet federal regulations.) In many situations, especially Pennsylvania, where both chains were dominant and had roots in those states (Rite Aid originated in Scranton, while Eckerd has roots in western Pennsylvania via Erie for itself and Pittsburgh for converted Thrift Drug locations), there were now two Rite Aids as close as right next door to each other. However, in March 2008 some of these overlapping stores were closed, with the locations saying that they "moved" to a new address, when, in fact, they "moved" to the other Rite Aid that was nearby. Most of these stores that closed were pre-existing Rite Aids from before the Eckerd deal, since Eckerd had built newer, more modern locations with drive-thru pharmacies and larger space under ownership of both J. C. Penney and Jean Coutu Group, and the "moved to" sites were converted Eckerds. Employees at the closed stores were transferred to the nearby locations, so no layoffs were necessary.
Rite Aid had sold some locations to J. C. Penney's Thrift Drug chain in the mid-1990s shortly before J.C. Penney's acquisition of Eckerd, and had also sold all of their Massachusetts stores to Brooks in 1995, bringing some existing Eckerd and Brooks stores that were once Rite Aids full circle.
Because Eckerd was previously owned by J. C. Penney, Eckerd stores accepted J. C. Penney charge cards. Since the merger, all Rite Aids accept J. C. Penney charge cards, a policy also followed by competitor CVS Pharmacy, which had earlier acquired most of the Eckerd chain in the southeastern United States.
Today, New York with 620 stores is home to the largest number of Rite Aids, followed by California and Pennsylvania with 583 and 540 respectively.[22]
Market exitsEdit
On January 4, 2008, Rite Aid Corporation announced that it would terminate operation of its 28 Rite Aid stores in the Las Vegas, Nevada, area and had signed an agreement to sell patient prescription files from that metro market to Walgreens. The company said Las Vegas was a non-core market that had not been contributing to overall results, and it had not opened a new store there since 1999. One Nevada store would remain open in Gardnerville, close to the border of California, where Rite Aid had more than 600 stores.[23]
On February 5, 2009, Rite Aid announced that it would terminate operations of 7 Rite Aid stores in San Francisco, California, along with 5 stores in Eastern Idaho through a sale to Walgreens.[24]
Merger with WalgreensEdit
On October 27, 2015, Walgreens announced that it would acquire Rite Aid in a deal valued at $9.4 billion ($9 per share), pending regulatory and shareholder approval. The deal will result in a merger of two of the United States' three largest pharmacy chains.[25] Walgreens plans to initially keep the Rite Aid name on existing locations when the deal goes through,[26]though the long term plans for the Rite Aid name are currently unknown.lagbrosdetmi, Bob Dobalina and Blackshack46 Thank this. -
Thanks for the Rite Aid info....really...appreciate it. I was not trying to be a jerk with my warning to trolls. Just tired of taking time to ask really important questions and either not be taken seriously or having to deal with all the negative that comes out, about every single company on these boards.
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I did a small stint this summer at GFS Aberdeen,MD helping out literally right down the street from Rite Aid Mid Atlantic Distribution.
From what I could see it was a mix of Rite Aids own trucks, owner operators, JB Hunt and probably some others thrown in for good measure.
Very busy 24-7 because Rite Aid dominates the east coast. I don't know if you will have to go to NYC or not. Trailers were a mix of lift gates and non lift gates. Also some trailers had side doors.
What I think is Rite Aid used the plastic totes and in some locations you back up to a door set up a ramp and roll totes down.
Remember lots of Rite Aids do not have full fledged loading docks and some are probably in very hard if not impossible to access strip malls so trucks really can't get to them which is probably why they have lift gates. Throw on the 4-ways and drive the pallet to the door using the lift gate and pallet jack.
Others like NYC you have a Rite Aid on every corner, but it's got no back door because there in old Antiquated buildings this is why there trailers have side doors open up the side door and slide the totes down the roller ramps.
Now at the same time your probably respinsible for picking up the empty totes which is probably a pain, but do able because they all stack.
I don't know how many stores they can fit on a truck probably 4 or 5 stores if I had to guess could be less. Might take a good 2-3 hours to deliver at each store. Hope that gives you some help.Dumdriver Thanks this. -
Thanks for the reply Mike. Appreciate the solid information and insight. I do know that the contract says NO NYC, so thats a plus. I would be going to Baltimore, DC and Philly metros and everything in between I would assume.
Mike2633 Thanks this. -
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Speaking from experience, philly and north jersey Rite AIDS are every bit as tough as NYC. Some actually tougher because Philly is a free for all with trucks (and you'll get a ticket literally every time you stop the truck- make sure driver is not responsible for these tickets)..
Like mike said it's gonna be a lot of front door deliveries from the side of MAJOR streets. You'll get used to it though -
JB Hunt's Rite-Aid account. Home of the classic bait-and-switch.
Mike2633 Thanks this. -
Rite aids.
I won't bother with the fluff and bs, some of the places probably still have a trailer left in the woods where they fell off the berm in some of these centers when overflowing with trailers with a yard boss yelling, I don't give a *&^^ where you put it.
It is not limited to rite aid either. Other DCS's had the similar as well. It's tough. Fist fighting tough in my day. Im glad to be through with it.
We don't have rite aids here in Arkansas (Thank. God. But we do have a bunch of Dollar stores.... don't get trapped trying to side dock a semi across a 4 lane center turn highway past cars coming and going around you.
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