Meggs Trucking LLC

Meggs Trucking LLC Local, dependable family owned trucking company located in Scranton, SC. Serving mostly SC/NC. HE>i

04/13/2026

NEEDED—-CDL-A Truck Drivers – No Touch Freight – Southeast Region

PAY & BENEFITS:

Driver Referral Program
Vacation and Holiday Pay
Safety and Performance Bonuses throughout the year
Medical and Dental Insurance Available
W-2 Employment with Direct Deposit
Income Potential: $65,000+ per year

JOB DETAILS:
May require 1-2 nights out during week but mostly home EVERY night
No Touch Freight
Running the Carolinas, GA and VA

REQUIREMENTS:
Valid Class A CDL
Minimum 2 years of verifiable tractor-trailer experience
TWIC Card Needed
No automatic restrictions
No SAP within 3 years

Meggs Trucking LLC is a family-owned and operated company with over 20 years of experience in the transportation industry. We value our drivers and strive to provide predictable home time, competitive pay, and a supportive work environment.

If you're a motivated professional who takes pride in safe, reliable driving — join the Meggs Trucking team today!
Call Ben 843-687-7059

02/18/2026
12/15/2025

This story hits the heart of why we do what we do!

The man in the three-thousand-dollar suit glanced at my hands before he even looked at my face.
“Maintenance is down the hall,” he said politely. “Air conditioning issue?”

I knew exactly what he saw.
Knuckles scarred from decades of wrench work.
Hands thick from turning bolts in freezing truck stops.
A permanent line of grease beneath my nails that even my best scrubbing can’t erase.

I looked at his hands—smooth, manicured, topped off with a heavy gold watch.

“No, sir,” I said, my voice a little too loud for the pristine high-school library. “I’m here for Career Day. I’m Jason’s father.”

He blinked, gave a stiff smile, but his eyes said what he didn’t:
You? Really?

My name is Mike Riley. I’m 58 years old. I’ve been a long-haul truck driver for thirty years. I’m a widower, a veteran, and a dad who tries his best. My son Jason attends this polished suburban school where everything smells like new textbooks and wealth.

This was Sarah’s school—my late wife. She taught here, loved here, lived here. After she passed, the school created a scholarship in her name.
So when Jason told his teacher I was a “logistics and supply chain specialist” and should speak at Career Day, I felt like saying yes was a way of honoring her.

I parked my old F-150 between a luxury SUV and a spotless German sedan. I walked in wearing my best jeans, a fresh flannel, and boots I’d shined twice.

Inside the library, the lineup of presenters read like a magazine cover.

Dr. Chen, neurosurgeon, opened with a futuristic video on brain mapping.
Mr. Davies, the finance dad with the gold watch, followed with stock charts and phrases like “leveraging capital” and “Q4 positioning.”

Jason sat in the back row, shoulders hunched, wishing he could disappear.

Then the principal touched my arm.
“Mr. Riley? You’re next.”

I walked to the front with nothing but my own voice. No slides. No videos. Just the truth.

“Good morning,” I began. “My name is Mike Riley. I’m not a doctor or an investor. I didn’t finish college. I’m a truck driver.”

Murmurs. Curious glances. A few raised eyebrows.

“My son calls me a logistics expert. Which I guess means I drive a very big truck a very long way. And I figure I’m here to explain why that matters.”

I turned to Dr. Chen.
“What you do saves lives. But the tools you use—every circuit, every wire, every plastic casing—those didn’t appear out of thin air. Someone packed them in a crate. Someone loaded that crate on a truck. Someone drove it across the country.”

Then I nodded toward the finance dad.
“And sir, those numbers you showed? They represent real things—food, medicine, steel, supplies. This country doesn’t run on unlimited Wi-Fi and spreadsheets. It runs on wheels. On people willing to travel thousands of miles so shelves stay full and hospitals stay stocked.”

The room grew still.

“In March 2020,” I said, “when everything shut down, you stayed home. You did puzzles. You baked bread. But drivers were told to keep going. It felt like I was the only person on the highway some days. I delivered 40,000 pounds of toilet paper once. My dispatcher cried on the phone because her own mom couldn’t find any. You can’t Zoom a bag of flour. You can’t download hand soap.”

Students leaned forward. Teachers nodded.

“Two winters ago, I was hauling insulin across Wyoming. A blizzard shut the interstate. I sat in that cab for three days—twenty below zero—listening to the hum of the refrigeration unit. If that unit died, so did the medicine. I wasn’t thinking about the cost. I was thinking about the family waiting for it.”

I scanned the room. Jason was sitting up straight now.

A student in a “Future CEO” shirt raised his hand.
“Sir… don’t you regret not going to college? My dad says jobs like yours mean people didn’t have other choices.”

The room froze.

I smiled gently. “Son, when the lights go out, you call a lineman, not a business professor. When the pipes burst, you don’t reach for a textbook—you call a plumber. And when you walk into a store expecting food on the shelf, you’re relying on farmers, factory workers, warehouse crews, dispatchers, and drivers like me.”

I paused.
“Those careers aren’t fallbacks. They’re foundations.”

A voice spoke from the back. Quiet at first.

“My mom’s a dispatcher.”

A skinny kid stood up, eyes shining.
“She works nights. Holidays. She’s the one who finds drivers when hospitals need supplies. People yell at her all the time when packages are late, but she keeps going. She isn’t less important than anyone else.”

He looked at the CEO shirt kid.
“She’s a hero. And so is he.”

He pointed at me.

The room fell silent. Then applause. Real, heartfelt applause.

Jason walked up and stood beside me. He didn’t speak—he just put his arm around me. And that was enough.

Later, on the drive home, he finally said, “Dad… I had no idea about what you’ve done out there.”

“It’s just the job,” I said.

“No,” he whispered. “It’s so much more.”

Here’s the truth:
This country isn’t held up by titles or corner offices. It’s held up by callused hands, tired feet, and people who show up in storms, in shutdowns, in the middle of the night when no one else can.

We are not the backup plan.
We are the backbone.

So next time you ask a young person what they want to be, don’t just say, “Where are you going to college?”
Try asking, “What do you want to build? What do you want to keep running? What will you help carry?”

And if that kid says,
“I want to weld,”
“I want to fix engines,”
“I want to deliver supplies,”
“I want to drive trucks like my dad,”
look them in the eye and say:

“This country needs you. We’re counting on you.”


Truck driving was not a fall-back plan for my husband. He has delivered groceries, furniture at college dorms, textile and manufacturing products, yarn and plastics and everything in between. We started this business to serve in this way. We are proid of our employees and appreciate them showing up everyday!

So the next time you look down on someone who chose a “fall-back” job, think about how those items got on the shelf or from Amazon to your house and who you will call when the lights go out or the pipes burst.

All professions matter no matter if it requires 12 years of college or a trade school or no college, as long as it’s honest work, everyone matters the same.

Another load delivered to your local Sam’s Club. Thank you God for your provisions.
10/31/2025

Another load delivered to your local Sam’s Club. Thank you God for your provisions.

Work hard but play hard…life is too short.
05/08/2025

Work hard but play hard…life is too short.

01/20/2025

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR CLASS A CDL DRIVERS—Come Join Our Family Today Container Haulers Needed with Some Van work available also Call Ben $65,000+ Potential * Must have TWIC card or ability to get...

What a great evening we had with our employees and their families as we celebrated the holiday season at the 9th Annual ...
12/08/2024

What a great evening we had with our employees and their families as we celebrated the holiday season at the 9th Annual Meggs Trucking Christmas party, held at The Schoolhouse BBQ in Scranton. Good food, presents for all and great company made for a truly special night. We are blessed to have such a talented and dedicated team and thank God for bringing them into our lives. May His blessings continue to shine upon us and our workers in the New Year. Merry Christmas to all! 🎄🎄

”Then Pilate had Jesus flogged with a lead-tipped whip. The soldiers wove a crown of thorns and put it on his head, and ...
03/29/2024

”Then Pilate had Jesus flogged with a lead-tipped whip. The soldiers wove a crown of thorns and put it on his head, and they put a purple robe on him. “Hail! King of the Jews!” they mocked, as they slapped him across the face. Then Jesus came out wearing the crown of thorns and the purple robe. And Pilate said, “Look, here is the man!” When they saw him, the leading priests and Temple guards began shouting, “Crucify him! Crucify him!” “Take him yourselves and crucify him,” Pilate said. “I find him not guilty.” Then Pilate turned Jesus over to them to be crucified. So they took Jesus away. Carrying the cross by himself, he went to the place called Place of the Skull (in Hebrew, Golgotha). There they nailed him to the cross. Two others were crucified with him, one on either side, with Jesus between them. Jesus knew that his mission was now finished, and to fulfill Scripture he said, “I am thirsty.” A jar of sour wine was sitting there, so they soaked a sponge in it, put it on a hyssop branch, and held it up to his lips. When Jesus had tasted it, he said, “It is finished!” Then he bowed his head and gave up his spirit.“
‭‭John‬ ‭19‬:‭1‬-‭3‬, ‭5‬-‭6‬, ‭16‬-‭18‬, ‭28‬-‭30‬ ‭NLT‬‬

12/25/2023

Merry Christmas from our family to yours!!!
Remember Jesus is the reason for the season.

Address

2726 McAllister Mill Road
Scranton, SC
29591

Telephone

+18436877059

Website

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