On-Site Drug Testing Bautista, TX
Time is money, we can come to you. Accredited Drug Testing provides on-site drug testing services in Bautista, TX and throughout the local area for employers who need drug or alcohol testing at their place of business or other location. On-site drug testing methods include urine drug testing, hair drug testing, oral saliva drug testing and breath alcohol testing. Both instant drug test results and laboratory analyzed testing is available. Testing purposes can include pre-employment, random, reasonable suspicion and post-accident.
725 S BLISS AVE 10.0 miles
DUMAS, TX 79029
224 E 2ND ST 10.4 miles
DUMAS, TX 79029
202 S MEREDITH AVE 10.4 miles
DUMAS, TX 79029
418 E 1ST ST 10.5 miles
DUMAS, TX 79029
419 E 1ST ST 10.5 miles
DUMAS, TX 79029
511 E 1ST ST 10.6 miles
DUMAS, TX 79029
1330 FM 2203 13.9 miles
DUMAS, TX 79029
Drug Test Screening Panels Available In Bautista, TX
We offer a 5-panel drug test, which screens for the following:
- Amphetamines
- Cocaine
- Marijuana
- Opiates
- PCP
We offer a 10-panel drug test which screens for the following:
- Amphetamines
- Barbituates
- Benzodiazepines
- cocaine
- Marijuana
- MDA
- Methadone
- Methaqualone
- Opiates
- PCP
- Propoxyphene
We offer a 12-panel drug test which screens for the following:
- Amphetamines
- Barbiturates
- Benzodiazepines
- cocaine
- Marijuana
- MDA
- Methadone
- Methaqualone
- Opiates
- PCP
- Propoxyphene
- Meperidine
- Tramadol
** Customized drug testing panels such as bath salts, synthetic marijuana, steroids and other drugs are also available.
Urine or Hair On-site Drug Testing In Bautista, TX - You Choose!
Our on-site drug testing services in Bautista, TX include urine drug testing, which has a detection period of 1-5 days and hair drug testing which has a detection period of up to 90 days. Negative test results are generally available in 24-48 hours, when analyzed by our SAMHSA Certified Laboratories. Negative instant test results are available immediately, non-negative test results require laboratory confirmation.
Why Use On-Site Drug Testing in Bautista, TX?
Time is money and when sending an employee to one of our many drug testing centers in Bautista, TX would cause disruption to your business operations or affect your employees work productivity, conducting on-site drug testing will eliminate these issues.
Who Uses On-Site Drug Testing?
- Construction Sites
- Manufacturing Plants
- Power Plants
- Motor Pool Facilities
- Car Dealerships
- Trucking/Transportation Companies
- Schools
- Sports Venues
- Hospitals
- Oil & Gas Drillings Sites
Are you a DOT Regulated Company?
Accredited Drug Testing has trained and qualified collectors who also specialize in providing on-site drug testing services for all DOT modes to include:
- Trucking Industry-FMCSA
- Maritime Industry-USCG
- Aviation Industry-FAA
- Public Transportation-FTA
- Railroad Industry-FRA
- Pipeline Industry-PHMSA
Additional DOT Services:
- DOT Consortium Enrollment
- DOT Physicals
- Supervisor Training
- DOT Drug Policy Development
- MVR Reports
- Employee Training
- Background Checks
- FMCSA Clearinghouse Verification/Search
How To Schedule On-Site Drug Testing In Bautista, TX?
Step 1 - Call our on-site coordinator at (800)221-4291
Step 2 - Have at least 10 employees needing to be tested (recommended)
Step 3 - Provide the date, location and time of the requested on-site drug testing services
In addition to on-site drug testing in Bautista, TX, we also have drug testing centers available at the following locations.
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Local Area Info: Comanchero
The Comancheros were traders based in northern and central New Mexico who made their living by trading with the nomadic Great Plains Indian tribes, in northeastern New Mexico, West Texas, and other parts of the southern plains of North America. Comancheros were so named because the Comanches, in whose territory they traded, were considered their best customers. They traded manufactured goods (tools and cloth), flour, tobacco, and bread for hides, livestock and slaves from the Comanche. As the Comancheros did not have sufficient access to weapons and gunpowder, there is disagreement about how much they traded these with the Comanche.
Prior to the coming of the Spanish, with their horses, into the American Southwest, with early explorations beginning in the 1540s and permanent settlement in the late 1590s, the people who came to be known as Comanches did not live in the Southern High Plains. The Comanches, a Shoshonean people, migrated from the North and arose as a separate and distinct tribe in the early 18th Century, largely as a result of having obtained breeding stocks of horses after the Pueblo Revolt of 1680. They migrated southward through the Rocky Mountains and into the Southern High Plains, where they and their Shoshonean kinsmen, the Utes, began to appear at trade fairs in Taos about 1700. During the first half of the 18th Century the Comanche gradually spread their area of occupation throughout the Southern High Plains and large areas of Texas, where they largely displaced the tribal peoples who had lived there prior to the coming of the Spaniards, mostly the Apache, who were themselves an earlier migrant group of Athapaskan peoples from the North.
In 1719, the Comanches made the first recorded raid for horses upon the settlements of the Rio Grande Valley. For the next 60 years, the relations of the Comanches with the Spanish and Pueblo settlements was a patchwork of alternate trading and raiding, with different bands being sometimes at peace and sometimes at war with the settlements along the Rio Grande. During the mid-18th century (1750–1780), the plains tribes, notably the Comanche, but also the Apache and other tribal groups, raided the Pueblos and Spanish settlements for horses, corn and slaves with ever-increasing frequency. This continued until 1779, when a 500-man army led directly by the new young governor, Juan Bautista de Anza, and including 200 native auxiliaries, undertook a punitive expedition against the largest and most active group of Comanche raiders, who were led by a man known as Green Horn (Cuerno Verde), and, surprising the Comanches in their camp, killed Green Horn and dealt a severe defeat to the Comanches. This show of force resulted in various Comanche war leaders acceding to peace over the next several years. By the end of 1785 all, or substantially all, of the Comanche bands had agreed. On 28 February 1786 at the Pecos Pueblo a treaty between the Comanche and the Spanish in New Mexico was signed between Governor de Anza and Ecueracapa, a Comanche war chief who had been selected as a plenipotentiary for the Comanche nation.