by wtfcanada2015@gmail.com | Jun 29, 2018 | BLOG
Trucking was part of my entire life. I never thought much about it. My dad, grandpa, and most of my uncles were truck drivers. They wore cowboy boots and nice plaid, snap-button shirts. When I was young I wanted to be a policewoman or a teacher. Since then, I have had people tell me I should go into one of those professions.
I loved summer vacation because each of my siblings and I got to take a turn in the truck with my Dad. I remember one trip, going over the 1000 Island Bridge, (thinking how neat it was, but that you couldn’t live on most of the islands; but that it would be cool to go on a boat through them). We picked up scrap cars in the Bronx, New York and delivered them to Oshawa Ontario. We had to be out of the truck during the loading (which makes sense now; as it was dangerous). There was a huge fence around the place, (obviously to keep people from stealing parts or breaking in and getting hurt) and Dad said it was because the city was such a scary place that “even the junk yard dogs are scared’! We must’ve been listening to ‘Bad, Bad Leroy Brown’ at the time! We had to make sure that the doors were locked when we were driving down the city streets.


Someone once said to me a number of years ago, that I “must have had a terrible childhood”. And I thought how mean, condescending and ignorant it was to assume that my life had sucked as a kid. They had no idea what ‘Driving a Truck’ was all about. To me, having a parent who drove long haul and wasn’t home a lot is no different than someone who has a parent working shift work. Sure they are home every day, but they are asleep when the kids get up, and when they get home, the parent is at work. Do those kids see their parent any more than I saw my dad?

My dad was mostly an Owner/Operator, and stopped by the house a lot on his way to/from the yard. He usually made it just in time for supper! He could also make his own schedule. So he was able to go with me on class trips. Who else had a dad go on class trips with them?
I went to college for Horticulture because it sounded fun. I didn’t know what I wanted to do for a living; let alone a career. After 2 years of college and 2 years of minimum wage, living at home with a school debt, I started to look at going back to school. After talking to and researching some schools, my dad suggested looking into trucking. He set up an appointment with Kim R. at KRTS (being a long-time friend). The next day we sat in his office, and then I went out on a road test where I was taken down the road and thrown into the driver’s seat! KRTS helped me with funding and soon I was sitting in the classroom and learning how to back a tractor trailer out in the yard.

The first job I applied for would’ve offered me a job, but the company’s insurance carriers didn’t want a younger, newly licenced driver. So I went over to Zavcor, who were willing to take a chance on me, and started driving for them the following week. They didn’t have any female trainers, let alone female drivers, (They had one O/O husband/wife team), and so the dispatcher went out with me daily for a while to Toronto. For my first year I was in Toronto and surrounding area daily. I would load/unload; drop/hook either at the main yard or at the Mississauga drop yard. I don’t think I need to say that I learned how to back up quite well! My dad was always there for me whenever I had a question (or problem). He is the best driver, boss, salesman and father I know! I knew I could count on him to help me out with any trucking situations/problems or even just to discuss trucking issues.


Then I started going across the border. My first trip out was only to Rotterdam NY (which is near Albany), but as with many drivers, it is too far to go in a single run! (I remember having new drivers tag along with me a few years later and how I would have to stop for them to take a break.) It’s amazing how exhausting it can be paying attention to the signs, traffic, and weather! At the end of the day you are as tired as if you moved a load of bricks from one pile to another by hand! So I drove highway for about 3 ½ years. I thought about leaving to try something else but I had just bought myself a house and was asked to move into the Safety Office. I had a great trainer in the Safety/Compliance office and learned things like what questions to ask applicants, how to judge people, and all about Drug and Alcohol testing, dealing with Insurance Companies and keeping up to date on employee and truck and trailer files. I took a course at the OTA (Ontario Trucking Association) called “Take the risk out of Hiring and Firing”. (FYI I would never fire anyone without someone else being in the building.) I took ‘The Exceptional Assistant” through Fred Pryor and a course on Occupational Health and Safety (OHSA) through the Transportation Health and Safety Association of Ontario (THSAO (now IHSA)).

I would fill in for dispatch occasionally and was in charge of compliance issues, drug and alcohol testing, safety training, file maintenance, log books, annual reviews and accidents.

I left Zavcor in 2006 to work for a small 5-truck operation and would complete local deliveries and pickups with a flatbed when I wasn’t working in the office. I ended up running the entire office by myself, which included billing, accounts payable, accounts receivable, dispatch, payroll, safety, compliance, etc.
With the 2008 economy drop, we all had to walk away from the company. So I tried a completely different job – filling in for a 1 year maternity leave position as potted salesperson at a large greenhouse. I got married that year to a guy I went to high school with and asked out at our 10 year reunion. The next summer I worked in my husband’s family owned greenhouse (so my Horticulture diploma sort of paid off!).
I then went to work at a sod company delivering bags of soil and mulch along with skids of sod on a tri-axle flatbed with a piggyback tow motor. In the winter I took a job delivering scrap metal around Burlington and up to 5 hours across the border. I spent a lot of time at the recycling plants off of Burlington Street in Hamilton (so again, lots of backing up). I drove scow and dump trailers, but it was a little too dangerous for me. Standing on top of a load of scrap metal in the snow is not my idea of fun.
In the spring I went back to driving the flatbed with the piggy back tow motor; and in the summer I drove the live-bottom trailer for pick-up and delivery of various soils, peat moss, gravel and sand. I got to see a few quarries and drive into the middle of fields! At the end of the summer, I decided to stay home for a while. We were trying to start a family without much luck. I went back to the sod company the next 2 springs as a sales rep on weekends.
I was then called by a small company who had been referred to me, to handle compliance. So I also did that part-time for a couple years. I was approached by a local farmer to work 1 day/week delivering grain to his barns. It turned into hauling pigs from Norwich to Dunnville on a triaxle every Friday, and going down the escarpment to deliver to the grain mills or to haul back pig feed.
During all this time, my husband and I were still trying to get pregnant. With lots of help, in the spring of 2013 I was pregnant with twins; and was unable to work at all. My son and daughter were born early January 2014. (But that’s a whole other story!)


In 2015 I was approached by my first trucking boss to drive 1 day a week hauling dry vans to/from Wainfleet, Brantford, London and a little bit of Toronto, for another of his companies. It was mostly drop/hook, except that you usually had to place the new trailer in the same door – which means extra drop/hooks! (Eye roll)! Actually, I loved it. It was a reprieve of days with just me and 2 babies. (I struggled greatly with PPD (post-partum depression) and thought this would help; but it only helped me to avoid it.) I had a sitter show up in the morning, and she stayed until my husband came home, so I was free to get home at whatever time I was finished. If there was no run that day, I would help with filing and vehicle maintenance records.

In 2017 I started working full-time back at Zavcor in the new role of Director of Zavcor Training Academy. With my experience in so many previous roles, this was a great fit for me. I’m back in the industry I love, working with great people and assisting those wishing to learn more about our industry and become a Licenced Driver. I wouldn’t say that I’m a role-model, but I think that I am doing my part to make this industry better and safer; and to show/prove that it can be, and is, a viable career; regardless of age, sex or race! I love trucking ☺

Sarrah Dekker – Director Zavcor Training Academy
Email: sarahd@zavcor.com

Zavcor Training Academy
by wtfcanada2015@gmail.com | Jun 16, 2018 | BLOG

Ester Rony
I joined the trucking industry in 2010, by that time I was pregnant, here when you get pregnant after high school you become a disgrace in society, I was 19 and naughty as any young teenage girl would be, I was told to get out of the house by my Dad who was so angry about me getting pregnant, I wasn’t annoyed at all because that’s how any parent would have reacted, I was strong yet I had nothing, but I don’t know where I got the courage to move out, the father to my pre born baby was a high school sweetheart so he couldn’t do much.
So I went in an abandoned house and started a life, let me get to trucking now.

Esther Rony
Female truck drivers face a lot of challenges in my society, its a job of single mothers, orphans, drug addicts and any bad behavior you may think of, so the public talks poorly about anybody in the trucking industry, I joined the trucking industry, at first I approached a female driver and asked to be her helper, I told her my story of being a single mom and she took me in, we started traveling together from Kampala heading to the east to the border in Malaba then crossing over to Kenya which is another country.
She didn’t know my intention was learning to drive, but I helped her whenever she needed my help, as time went on, I learnt routes, how l am supposed to behave on the road, she became my friend and she taught me slowly how to drive, how to identify problems and fault, how to handle simple mechanical problems , we got along well.

Esther Rony
I finally got in to business, started getting money and applied to a university where I pursued a degree in information systems, I got my father’s attention and other family members back, it was through a lot of hard work, toil and sleepless nights that I achieved my degree, I started talking to different female drivers whenever i met them on stop overs, they thought they are doomed, I started empowering them and I told them we also are needed in this society, if we cut off supplies of food the society will lack. I used my opportunity of being exposed and we formed a women’s committee in a big Association called Uganda National Lorry drivers and Transporters Association.
Written and submitted by :
Esther Rony
Uganda East Africa
Spokes person of Uganda National Lorry and Transporters Association
by wtfcanada2015@gmail.com | Apr 5, 2018 | #BeTheException, BLOG
In December 2002 I finished my driving school education. May 2003 I started driving for a small company out of Orangeville Ontario, running from our yard to Montreal QC and back, 3 times a week. I did that for the first 4.5 years till the rates changed. Then I was asked to run USA & that’s when my pay per miles went up and my career changed, along with my personal life. For 6 months I continued to work for the little company until I was informed the trucking company filed for bankruptcy & my 10 year marriage had ended with no children. So I went on the search and in the final two weeks of work I found Titanium Trucking, where I made it my new career.

4 years ago I realized I hadn’t explored the other options within the industry and I took a short 4 month leave from long haul trucking & Titanium. Going to the oil patch out west in Alberta running tanks of liquid nitrogen into Fracking sites. As much as I enjoyed that experience, my season was shortened & I had to go back home for personal reasons. Back in the Titanium driver seat I wanted more. So I went internally & decided communications was lost in so many ways for drivers. I started a unofficial Titanium truckers lounge Facebook page. Where for the past almost 4 years, any and all drivers can converse in just another helpful way for all, not just within the company but also publicly.
After the FB page became noticed as a positive thing, Titanium asked if I wanted to be a part of the health & safety committee as the drivers representative, there I’ve been able to provide support in the needs of all 450 plus drivers. In addition to this position, I am also the Drivers Contact, answering questions and talking about concerns they may have. The less important but still willing to add to my plate was the position as the Rep on the company Social Committee where we come up with ideas & events that can bring everyone together doing something fun.

My future will not end in the driver seat, as much as I enjoy the job but I feel I can help out in other areas of the industry. I do feel that at this time there could be a better foundation for woman drivers to stand on more firmly. There’s many ways to do that, it’s just a matter of finding out what I can do for the future of all. I’m not perfect in any way & have made mistakes, probably still do, but hopefully I’ve learned, evolved and developed a better sense of what is needed of me to do and what I’m able to do in the future.
In my career of trucking I have been able to adapt the day to day needs as a woman into my routine of being a long haul/over the road driver. It’s been trying and I’m just thankful that I’ve been given the Opportunity to do what I’ve been destined to do.
My first truck as a company driver 14/15 years ago.

My first brand new truck with Titanium and had light pink decal that didn’t last long.

All clean in the spring season with a new bright pink decal. Same truck 2014.

You can follow Casey Sarginson on the unofficial Facebook page Titanium Truckers Lounge at https://www.facebook.com/TitaniumTrucking/
For more information on Titanium please visit their website www.ttgi.com
by wtfcanada2015@gmail.com | Jan 1, 2018 | BLOG
It’s a New Year. It’s about getting another chance. A chance to forgive, to do better, to do more, to give more, to love more and to stop worrying about what if ….
A time to stop doubting yourself, negative thinking, fear of failure, criticizing yourself and the fear of success.
It’s a time to start embracing what will be, to set a new goal, to live a new adventure or start a new dream . To believe in yourself !!
It’s a time to work hard but stay humble, take time for family, friends and the people that matter the most, and to be kind to everyone you meet.
Their is always someone who believes in you, even when you don’t believe in yourself !!! Isn’t it time you believed in you too !!
Let’s #BeTheException
by wtfcanada2015@gmail.com | Nov 24, 2017 | BLOG

Many have never heard of this great organization and all that they do to make Christmas a little easier for a Trucking Family in need at Christmas . They have helped over 125 families enjoy the holiday season in the last 8 years, and Raised over $73,000 .
Although they are based in the United States of America they help drivers in need across North America. Both Canadian and US drivers are eligible to be nominated for assistance . The board members and volunteers are from both sides of the border .
I had the honor and pleasure of working with this great group of Drivers who graciously volunteer their time to help their fellow sisters and brothers of the highway .
It was a heart wrenching experience listening to the stories of these families and the struggles they are facing.

It’s time for Santa and his Elves to get busy working on the 2017 Truckers Christmas Group season. They can always use more elves. It is a voluntary effort that only pays you for your efforts in being able to help others. If you are interested in becoming a Truckers Christmas Group Elf. Send an email to Mark at mark@truckerschristmasgroup.org

Testimonial From December 2016 Family
As a single Dad of three, I wasn’t sure how I was going to get through Christmas 2016 or the months following. I wasn’t working at the time due to illness. Living by the grace of god and charity, it was the first time in my life I had to reach out for my family’s survival. Christmas however, was a luxury not affordable in my budgeting. I reached out to the Truckers Christmas Group for help and they reciprocated. The help I received was enough to give my young children a Christmas not otherwise possible. On Christmas morning no feeling compared to the happiness felt within my family opening and playing with new Christmas toys and 6 am chocolates. What a great cause for professional drivers in Canada and USA to help in times of need. I am forever grateful knowing and having my trucking family there for me.????

Do you know a Trucking Family in need this Christmas ??? Simply click on the link and nominate them today !!! Must meet eligibility requirements. Confidentiality assured.
http://truckerschristmasgroup.org/nominate-a-trucking-family/
NOMINATIONS WILL OPEN ON NOVEMBER 24 2017 and WILL CLOSE AT 23:59 ON DECEMBER 16TH 2017

Truckers Christmas Group
Have you checked out the gift items on their Christmas Store ???
Interested in purchasing 50/50 tickets ??? Do you have a product or service you’d like to donate ? Would you like to become a sponsor ?
Go to their website at http://truckerschristmasgroup.org/
Check out their Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/truckerschristmasgroup.org/
To contact the Truckers Christmas Group :
TCGO- TRUCKERSCHRISTMASGROUP.ORG
1236 E. BROADBECK DR.
WICHITA KANSAS
67219
1-802-455-8246
Please feel free to contact any one of us with any questions or concerns.
President: Mark Abraham mark@truckerschristmasgroup.org
Secretary: Kerry Mullins kerry@truckerschristmasgroup.org
Treasurer: Mary Abraham mary@truckerschristmasgroup.org
Director of Public Relations: Greg Manchester greg@truckerschristmasgroup.org
Member of the board: Eldon McFarling eldon@truckerschristmasgroup.org
Member of the board: Idella Hansen idella@truckerschristmasgroup.org