 My name is Anthony Evans. I started training about three years ago and the reason I started training, because of my military background, I've always trained, you know, soldiers since 1982. I've been training in some capacity or another. Two years as a drill instructor, four years as a platoon sergeant, three years as a observer-controller trainer for National Guard and Reserve Units. In Korea, I was the school's non-commissioned arson charge, so basically over-salt division schools. My name is Nate Jorgensen, so I went through the program that earned my CDL. I graduated and I'm with my trainer Anthony. The Squire program was really good. I thought they had four guys that were training, Joe, Joey, Ray, and Luis. And what was really nice about it was class size was pretty small, relatively. We had, you know, less than ten people in our class, and so I felt like the instructors were able to, you know, give you that one-on-one attention if you needed it. What I find most rewarding about training is, every month you got a different student, every four weeks, and every student is different. So it's always rewarding to see students once they get it. When they have their light bulb moment and finally figure it out, I think that's one of the most rewarding parts of training there. My first day with Anthony, I was a little nervous just because, you know, the unexpected, but what was really nice was he made me very comfortable. But what impressed me the most about Anthony on the first or second day was, you know, by the time we had two days in under our belt, he kind of knew my learning style and was able to kind of teach me based on how I learned most effectively. Another thing that was pretty interesting is, you know, as I'm sitting with Anthony, their passenger seat or driver seat while I'm learning, you know, going along, it's pretty neat kind of hearing him get some phone calls from past students that have graduated through the program, gone past training and, you know, even have a couple years under under the belt, you know, still calling Anthony for advice or, you know, what to do in certain situations that they hadn't encountered before and shares his knowledge. He really wants to help out and just doing it for the pay. Great guy, great trainer, and, you know, it's just real easygoing. I always say, if you get into training for the money, you're doing it for the wrong reason.