DrugTestCollector.com provides comprehensive industry approved and self-paced drug test specimen collector training and certification which is valid for 5 years, for those wishing to perform DOT and Non-DOT drug test collections. Our collector training programs include urine drug testing, oral fluid drug testing and hair testing. In addition, those wishing to perform U.S. Department of Transportation urine and oral fluid drug testing, must also satisfactorily complete 5 error free proficiency mock demonstrations, which can be scheduled once you have completed the 4-hour training course.
The Hopewell, NJ Drug Test Collector.com urine collector training program is a 4-hour online course where students can log in and out at their pace to complete the course. Upon completion of the course and exam(s), students will receive and be able to download a certificate of completion for the course (valid for 5 years). However, to be DOT Qualified for urine specimen collections, the student must complete 5 error free proficiency mock demonstrations under the direct observation of a qualified monitor as outlined min 49 CFR Part 40.33(c).
Our training course will cover the following subject areas:
The Drug Test Collector.com Oral Fluid Collector Training program is a 4-hour online course where students can log in and out at their pace to complete the course. Upon completion of the course and exam(s), students will receive and be able to download a certificate of completion for the course (valid for 5 years). However, to be DOT Qualified for oral fluid specimen collections, the student must complete 5 error free proficiency mock demonstrations under the direct observation of a qualified monitor as outlined in 89FR 87798.
After you complete your online training course, Drug Test Collector.com has DOT Qualified Monitors who can provide you with the materials, schedule and directly observe your DOT required 5 proficiency mock demonstrations via zoom to perform your mock demonstration's. You may call (888) 385-4842 or you can send an email to training@drugtestcollector.com and let us know you're ready to have your mock demonstration scheduled..
DOT Urine Proficiency Mocks
The five mock collections must include the following types of collections, in any order:
DOT Oral Fluid Proficiency Mocks
The five mock collections must include the following types of collections, in any order:
Step1: The U.S. Department of Transportation requires a DOT Specimen Collector to be knowledgeable about 49 CFR Part 40 regulations, the current DOT urine specimen collection guidelines and the specific DOT Agency Regulations applicable to the employers you provide collections for.
Step 2: Successfully pass 5 error free proficiency mock demonstrations directly observed by a qualified monitor.
Step1: The U.S. Department of Transportation requires a DOT Specimen Collector to be knowledgeable about 49 CFR Part 40 regulations, the current DOT oral fluid specimen collection guidelines and the specific DOT Agency Regulations applicable to the employers you provide collections for.
Step 2: Successfully pass 5 error free proficiency mock demonstrations directly observed by a qualified monitor.
Once you successfully complete your qualification training for DOT Urine or DOT Oral Fluid and proficiency mock demonstrations, you are qualified for 5 years. DOT requires refresher training every 5 years which meets all initial qualification training/proficiency demonstration requirements.
Training Nearby
Long Valley, NJ Victory Lakes, NJ Erma, NJ Essex Fells, NJ Sussex, NJ Sea Isle City, NJ Strathmere, NJ Folsom, NJ Leisure Knoll, NJ Hopewell, NJ
Hopewell is a borough in Mercer County, New Jersey, United States. As of the 2010 United States Census, the borough's population was 1,922, reflecting a decline of 113 (-5.6%) from the 2,035 counted in the 2000 Census, which had in turn increased by 67 (+3.4%) from the 1,968 counted in the 1990 Census.
Hopewell was incorporated as a borough by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on April 14, 1891, from portions of Hopewell Township, based on the results of a referendum held on March 21, 1891. Additional portions of Hopewell Township were annexed in 1915, and the borough was reincorporated in 1924.
The first Colonial influence in Hopewell was the purchase of a 30,000-acre (120 km2) tract of land by Daniel Coxe a Royal British governor of West Jersey, in the latter half of the 17th century. All land in Hopewell can be traced back to this purchase. In 1691 Coxe, transferred his land to a company called The West Jersey Society of England, who intended to sell the land. The society appointed an agent, Thomas Revell, to preside over the land and sell it to prospective buyers. Revell then attracted settlers from New England, Long Island, and New Jersey with questionable incentives, saying that the land was fertile, and tame. However, the families that arrived in Hopewell only found vast stretches of wilderness. The first settler in Hopewell Valley was Thomas Tindall who on November 10, 1699 bought a 300-acre (1.2 km2) tract of land from The West Jersey Society of England through Revell, for "ten pounds per hundred acres". Other early settlers in Hopewell are said to be the Stouts, who immigrated from Holmdel to Hopewell in 1706. Perhaps the first conflict between colonists in Hopewell was the dispute between Revell and the early inhabitants of Hopewell, who realized that their deeds were worthless due to Revell's false claims. Fifty settlers then organized a class action lawsuit against Revell and the West Jersey Society. The long and arduous trial took place in Burlington, and eventually ruled against the settlers, who were forced to repurchase their land or relocate. Many settlers weren't able to repay and moved north into North Jersey and New York.
On April 23, 1715, the settlers who stayed in Hopewell, most notably the Stout family, organized the Old School Baptist Church, and what is now known as Hopewell was then referred to as "Baptist Meetinghouse". One of the most valued members of the meeting house was Declaration of Independence signer John Hart who in 1740 purchased 193 acres (0.78 km2) of land in the north of current day Hopewell, and in 1747 as a sign of Hart's devotion to the Church, donated a plot of his land to the Baptists. The very next year the Baptists made good use of this land and in 1748 erected their Old School Baptist Church meeting house on West Broad Street. The meeting house brought in Baptists from miles around to Hopewell and encouraged Hopewell's early growth.