Celebrating Women in the Transportation Industry 

Celebrating Women in the Transportation Industry 

My name is Deborah and I was raised in Quebec as a member of a small transport company which was owned and operated by my grandfather and two of his sons. So twenty one years ago I
decided to follow in their footsteps after having completely a degree in Psychology and working in various different areas ranging from assistant manager to training race horses. I have thoroughly enjoyed this career which has taken me all over the United
States and Canada visiting and seeing some of the most beautiful country in North America as well as  seeing and stopping in some of the most dirty and somewhat sketchy of areas.

In my twenty one years I have met and remained friends with people from all walks of life. I remember one trip I made with a company to the Carolinas, I was driving down the interstate
and a car pulled up beside me and a little boy in the front seat with his dad looked up at me and beckoned me to pull the chord on the air horn, so I did. He and his dad began talking with me using the CB they car mounted in their car. The little boy asked
me where I was going so I told him, he then turned to his dad and said something. After which he asked me if I would like to come and spend Thanksgiving with them, the little boy said “You shouldn’t be alone on thanksgiving it wasn’t right”. I graciously thanked
him but declined since I had an appointment to make. Another time I was running reefer for a company out of Calgary AB when I ended up doing a reset in a little town in Arkansas. I met a lady on Facebook and we became friends.  When she learned I was doing
a reset in the area she invited to me spend the down time with her and her family. She had a travel trailer she used in the summer to take the grandchildren on vacation, she offered it to me for the reset.  When I arrived she met me and took me back to her
home and we ended up having a wonderful time. She gave me a tour of the town and the big university which supported the town and introduced me to her family and friends. The day my reset ended and I was ready to go back to work, so she drove me back to the
truck and invited me to come and stay anytime I wanted. Unfortunately that was the last time I was in her hometown.

I realized then that there were people who did appreciate drivers and women as drivers, since at that time twenty one years ago women weren’t but a few in the Industry and were still
not being completely accepted.

Since that time I have gone from town to town and listened to women congratulate me and tell me they are really amazed that I am able to do this career for as long as I have. Many
have told me that they don’t believe they would be able to handle such a large piece of equipment but my answer to them is that anyone can handle it with good training and a good professional company behind them. I have been extremely fortunate to have been
employed by some great companies and received great training.

I began my career with SGT 2000, went to Highland Transportation for some years as a driver and a driver trainer, after which I found myself working for a company out of Troy Alabama
for 2 years…between Highland and Wiley Sanders Trucklines I gained mountain experience and West Coast along with East Coast training and have been running west coast mountains ever since. I later went to work for Kriska Transportation (after they bought
out BMD in Lansdowne) . At that time I owned my truck and wanted to have a change. Kriska was able to help me obtain that change and I went back to being a company driver and driver trainer. After almost five years I started getting the desire to run California
and West Coast and found myself on a plane to Calgary where I worked for a refrigerated company for a couple years running West Coast back to the East coast.

I am now working with another exceptional company in Ariss Ontario, Flash Freight Systems, who stand behind and support their drivers completely.

It has been an amazing career so far and I can only hope I will be able to carry on in this wonderful industry filling various rolls and be able to influence and give other women the
chance to learn and excel in the industry.


Submitted by Heather Darrington 
October is Women’s History Month. The Women’s Trucking Federation Of Canada is celebrating this month by sharing stories of Women in the Transportation Industry.  If you’d like to share your story please email shelleyu@wtfc.ca . Please include a picture. Thank you 

Here’s the thing about being a girl becoming a woman and entering into the workforce…by Stacey Bredow 

Here’s the thing about being a girl becoming a woman and entering into the workforce…by Stacey Bredow 


When we’re young we’re raised to be ladies with a gentle way of handling situations. We’re raised to feel like the weaker sex, not on purpose of course. Play barbies instead of toy tractors… 

We grow up and find a career that’s a bit more “rough” than what our soft hearted mothers wanted for us. 

So we work hard and show them our determination, not the pain we go through mentally and physically. 

We deal with men that see the weak little girl struggle climbing up into the larger vehicles. 

Several months of proving everyone wrong turns into years. 

As the years pass you don’t see or feel the struggle as much. 

Your bones ache yet you smile because you remember that one time you hurt yourself years ago, a painful reminder of what not to do. 

You laugh about how naive you were. 

Every time you make it to a shipper or receiver those eyes are still on you as they wait for you to take 45 minutes to get backed in. 

The flushed burning face of embarrassment sweeps across. 

You remember a decade ago the laughter towards you.  

Doubt runs through your mind, your heart sinks. 

You look at all angles. 

The ruts in mud sink holes from failed attempts to get into a difficult door are everywhere.

You smile and remember that “one time” you screwed up. 

This ain’t nothing, I’ve been in worse places. 

With one whip of the wrist one shot.

 One try. 

Without even skipping a beat.

It feels like breathing. It’s natural. 

It’s not a struggle anymore. 

You step out and see smiles from men. 

They smile out of disbelief. 

I see the mud on thier tires, they’re the ones that got stuck in that spot. 

Shocking! A little girl did such a good job! 

**insert sexist comments from strangers. **

“I’ve never see someone back in so well, especially a girl”

“oh. Ok. Thanks?” 

“have you been driving awhile? ”

“Ya. Few years”…  as I walk pass without bothering with another comment. 

My former embarrassment from years past, I passed to him. He’s flushed from shame. 

My years of struggling something happened to me. 

I unknowingly am better than them. 

I don’t need to tell them what I’m capable of. It’s not good to “show boat ”

I sit back being the soft hearted lady my mother raised.

Written by Stacey Bredow

My 1st week of Truck Driver School 

My 1st week of Truck Driver School 

Hey… I am currently in training for my  Class 1 at Breton Commercial Truck Training school in Cape Breton ! They are awesome to learn from and deal with. I can’t wait to finish and hit the open road!


This is my first week. I have a few pictures I’ll share more through the next 11 weeks ! I am the only girl in this class of 9. There were 2 girls before my class and one starting a class after mine ends
 I keep forgetting to ask my classmates to take pictures of me driving lol. 


We are in our training yard with our trailers today. We have been around the industrial park on the actual road with our trainers learning to shift. We then learned backing up just bobtailing…  And now that we have that down we are working on backing up trailers.

Kryssy Tracz – Class 1 Student 

October is Women’s History Month. The Women’s Trucking Federation Of Canada is celebrating this month by sharing stories of Women in the Transportation Industry.  If you’d like to share your story please email shelleyu@wtfc.ca . Please include a picture. Thank you 
  

Celebrating Women in the Transportation Industry 

Celebrating Women in the Transportation Industry 

Mary Jane started with Flash Freight Systems  shortly after she got her license, driving with her husband Joe.

She is wonderful to work with and I suspect if Joe was asked, we would find that the truck is truly a  home away from home with MJ’s touches.

We hear stories of great meal preparation, and  they give  superior service to our customers. 

They drive as a super-single team and Flash Freight uses them as test models when we think we have something new to try.  The wrinkles get ironed out with truck #163.

Submitted by Heather Darrington 
October is Women’s History Month. The Women’s Trucking Federation Of Canada is celebrating this month by sharing stories of Women in the Transportation Industry.  If you’d like to share your story please email shelleyu@wtfc.ca . Please include a picture. Thank you 

Celebrating Women in the Trucking Industry 

Celebrating Women in the Trucking Industry 

My name is Sarah Clarke and I’ve been involved in the trucking industry for a year next month. Both my husband and father in-law work in the field as mechanics with Steed Standard and when the position for a truck washer was available I decided to give it a shot. A short year later a position became available in the dispatch office and that is where I find myself today. I am still learning every day and I enjoy being part of a great team and look forward to what the future holds for me in this industry and with Steed Standard. 
October is Women’s History Month. The Women’s Trucking Federation Of Canada is celebrating this month by sharing stories of Women in the Transportation Industry.  If you’d like to share your story please email shelleyu@wtfc.ca . Please include a picture. Thank you  ????