Nursing Jobs at None in Ohio
897 active Nursing positions at None across Ohio
Clinic RN (Per Diem) - Family Medicine
RN - MedSurg and Rehab - St. Elias
RN - Emergency Department
RN - Operating Room
RN - Renal Care Unit
Charge RN - Obstetrics - Full time Night
RN Fellow - Operating Room - PAMC Jul 2026
LPN LVN - 0.01 FTE Float Personnel
RN Fellow - PCU 2W - PAMC Jul 2026
RN - Post Anesthesia Care Unit
RN - Med Surg 3rd Flr - Full Time Night
Clinic RN - OBGYN
RN - Cardiac Cath Lab
Supervisor Clinic RN - Pediatric Subspecialty Clinics
RN - Nursing Resource Pool
RN - Cardiac Surgery
LPN LVN - Emergency Services - Full Time Night
RN - High Acuity - St Elias
RN - Labor and Delivery
Clinical Nurse Specialist - Critical Care
About nursing jobs at None in Ohio
None is one of the carriers actively hiring nurses across Ohio, with 897 open seats listed above.
Like most Ohio-based fleets, None prioritizes drivers who live within reasonable distance of its operating lanes. Reading the full description on each posting is the fastest way to see if you're a fit on home time, equipment, and endorsements.
Types of nursing jobs at None
Drivers exploring None will see a few common kinds of seats on the board:
- Local / home daily — short hauls inside one Ohio metro.
- Regional — Ohio plus PA, IN, MI, KY, WV with weekly home time.
- Dedicated — repeat lanes for a single shipper, predictable schedule.
- OTR — over-the-road, all 48 states, 2–3 weeks out.
- Owner operator — lease-purchase or independent contractor seats.
Pay expectations at None
Pay at None depends heavily on the seat type. Local and home-daily Ohio Nursing roles in this market typically run $22–$32 per hour, regional positions commonly land between $0.55 and $0.72 per mile (roughly $70K–$95K per year on consistent miles), and OTR and dedicated lanes often clear $80K–$110K. The exact number for any given posting is on the listing.
Typical routes for None
Routes vary by account. Some None drivers stay inside a single Ohio metro on local home-daily work; others run regional weekly with home time on the weekend; OTR seats run all 48 states from an Ohio terminal and reset every 2–3 weeks.
Why drivers choose None
If you're weighing None against another offer, the things that matter most are home time consistency, dispatcher quality, equipment age and condition, and how bonuses actually pay out. Ask specifics on each — generic answers usually mean the answer isn't great.
Ready to apply?
Pick the None role that fits your home time and miles, then submit your application in under a minute.