Greensboro, PA Locations
Employment, DOT, Court Ordered, Probation, School, Family
Multiple Testing Centers In Greensboro, PA
Scheduling a test is Fast and Easy, call our scheduling department or schedule your test online 24/7
* You must register by phone or online to receive your donor pass/registration prior to proceeding to the testing center.
Greensboro, PA Testing Locations
(Don't see a location near you, call 800-221-4291)
Coastal Drug Testing
HIGHWAY 11 NORTH 18.8 miles
HIGHWAY 11 NORTH
LIVINGSTON,
AL
35470
Categories: LIVINGSTON AL
509 WILSON AVE 19.6 miles
509 WILSON AVE
EUTAW,
AL
35462
Categories: EUTAW AL
202 US HIGHWAY 80 E 20.0 miles
202 US HIGHWAY 80 E
DEMOPOLIS,
AL
36732
Categories: DEMOPOLIS AL
1355 US HIGHWAY 80 W 23.2 miles
1355 US HIGHWAY 80 W
DEMOPOLIS,
AL
36732
Categories: DEMOPOLIS AL
105 US HIGHWAY 80 E 23.2 miles
105 US HIGHWAY 80 E
DEMOPOLIS,
AL
36732
Categories: DEMOPOLIS AL
Scheduling a test is Fast and Easy, call our scheduling department or schedule your test online 24/7
*You must register by phone or online to receive your donor pass/registration prior to proceeding to the testing center
Accredited Drug Testing has drug testing locations in most cities and towns throughout the United States. Providing drug testing, alcohol testing, DNA testing and other related services. Most testing centers are within minutes of your home or office. Same day service is available in most cases. To schedule a test please call our scheduling department at 1-800-221-4291 or you may schedule your test online utilizing your zip code in which you are located.
Employers - Accredited Drug Testing provides easy, convenient, confidential and cost-effective drug testing services, including pre-employment drug testing, random drug testing, post-accident drug testing and reasonable suspicion drug and alcohol testing. We can also assist you with the implementation of your drug free workplace program with drug policy development, supervisor training, employee education and on-going consultation. In many cases a company certified as a drug free workplace can receive discounts on their workers' compensation insurance premiums along with lowering employee absenteeism, enhancing workplace safety and improving employee morale. To open a no cost employer drug testing account click here or call our office at 1-800-221-4291
Individuals - If you are an individual in need of a drug, alcohol or DNA test, Accredited Drug Testing is your one stop shopping for all your testing needs. Simply call our customer service staff at 1-800-221-4291 or you may register online. There is no need to open an account or be affiliated with any company. Accredited Drug Testing offers drug testing for personal, court ordered, probation, child custody or any other reason you may need! To schedule a test please call our scheduling department at 1-800-221-4291 or you may schedule your test online utilizing your zip code in which you are located.
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Local Area Info: Greensboro, Pennsylvania
Greensboro is located in southeastern Greene County at 39°47?34?N 79°54?44?W? / ?39.79278°N 79.91222°W? / 39.79278; -79.91222 (39.792911, -79.912087). It is situated on the west bank of the Monongahela River, opposite New Geneva and the mouth of George's Creek. It is bordered by Monongahela Township in Greene County to the north and west, and by Nicholson Township in Fayette County to the south and east, across the Monongahela. The county and township border follows the center of the river. The closest road bridges over the river are the Masontown Bridge on Pennsylvania Route 21, 8 miles (13 km) north of Greensboro by road, and the Albert Gallatin Memorial Bridge on Pennsylvania Route 88 at Point Marion, 6 miles (10 km) south of Greensboro.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the borough has a total area of 0.15 square miles (0.38 km2), of which 0.11 square miles (0.28 km2) are land and 0.04 square miles (0.10 km2), or 26.06%, are water.
Like much of the region, Greensboro can trace its roots back to Native American settlement, to the Mingo tribes of the Northern Iroquois. What was to later become Greensboro was first known to the Mingo as "Delight", so named in recognition of the rich farmland that stretched along the banks of the Monongahela River. As early as 1752, settlers from the east and south began to stake their claims in the lands along the Monongahela. The first white settler of Delight was explorer-trader John Badolet, who was a close friend of John Minor. Minor was the leader of the first group to settle in the area presently known as Mapletown, to the northwest of Greensboro in Monongahela Township.
Show Regional Data
Population (female): 137
Cost of Living: March 2019 cost of living index in Greensboro: 91.4 (less than average, U.S. average is 100)
Poverty (overall): Percentage of residents living in poverty in 2017: 12.4%
Sex Offenders: According to our research of Pennsylvania and other state lists, there were 4 registered sex offenders living in Greensboro, Pennsylvania as of January 16, 2021. The ratio of all residents to sex offenders in Greensboro is 63 to 1.>
Elevation: 860 feet
Zip Codes: 15338
Median Incomes:
Estimated median household income in 2017: $54,426 (it was $36,875 in 2000)
Estimated per capita income in 2017: $28,475 (it was $18,176 in 2000)
Estimated median house or condo value in 2017: $80,087 (it was $41,900 in 2000) Greensboro:$80,087PA:$181,200
Races:
White alone - 246 - 94.6%
Two or more races - 6 - 2.3%
Black alone - 4 - 1.5%
Hispanic - 3 - 1.2%
American Indian alone - 1 - 0.4%
By the 1850s, the slack water system of locks and dams had been developed by the Monongahela Navigation Company (later acquired by the Army Corps of Engineers), allowing for year-round travel from Pittsburgh to the Greensboro area. This permitted Greensboro to become a shipping point not only for southern Greene County but for parts of what is now northern West Virginia as well. Its growing industrial, commercial, and transportation significance in the mid-19th century helped transform the town into a social and cultural center. In the 1880s, Greensboro essentially lost the pottery and clay tile market due to more efficient producers, and with the extension of slack water transportation to Morgantown became a more localized port.