You can find a list of care takers here: http://www.care.com/carmichael-p1035-qxstate|CA|city|Carmichael.html
No
No. CDLs are federally regulated. The same standards which disqualify you in Michigan will disqualify you in Texas.
Federal law requires applicants for CDLs to take physicals and be drug tested.
You need to identify which state. The only licence classes which are universal throughout all 50 states are the CDLs - Commercial Drivers Licences, which come in Class A, Class B, and Class C. Non-CDLs are left to the states to categorise and determine classifications. A Class D licence in North Carolina is a Class R licence in Colorado, etc.
Unless you have the intrastate only restriction (found on CDLs issued to persons under 21 years of age), yes.
We'd need to know the state - although CDLs are federally regulated, the actual restriction codes do still vary by state.
Class B, yes. For a Class A, any state job is almost certainly going to require previous Class A experience, though.
NOWHERE is this legal. CDLs and the corresponding medical requirements are a matter of federal law.
While there are several different jobs that you can apply for after getting your CDLs, the best place to look and apply is on Monster Jobs. www.monsterjobs.com
All of them do. CDLs are state-issued, but federally regulated, and all states must send reports to CDLIS.
There aren't any which don't - CDLs are federally regulated, and all states and territories of the United States are required to report to CDLIS.
So long as the vehicle you're operating remains under 26,000 lbs., then no. However, if you're repossessing Class 7 or Class 8 trucks, or buses, then yes, you do.