The Peterborough Examiner

Punjabi-Canadians keep on rollin’

Majority of truckers in Toronto area were born in South Asia

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

Nachhattar Singh Chohan lived in Canada eight years before he tried his hand at trucking.

A former brake plant worker and gas station attendant with farming roots, the then-34-yearold marshalled his savings, bought a used Ford Econoline van and set to work delivering newspapers for the Toronto Star in 1988.

Today, Chohan runs a 20-tractor fleet for regional and longhaul freight, his son at his side in their Mississaug­a office.

“Trucking is a very hard business,” Chohan said, overlookin­g an asphalt lot brimming with semis. “Sometimes you’re working six days, seven days a week.”

Once the domain of white, blue-collar big-riggers, trucking has shifted gears as South Asian Canadians fill a growing labour shortage and reroute the industry with tech-savvy and chaivendin­g truck stops.

In 1996, less than two per cent of Canada’s truckers were South Asian immigrants. In 2016, they comprised 18 per cent of the country’s roughly 181,000 drivers, according to a study by Newcom Media Inc. based on Statistics Canada’s National Household Survey.

More than half of all truckers in the Vancouver and Toronto areas were born in South Asia. One-third of Canada’s big-riggers are immigrants, with those from India making up by far the highest proportion at more than 40 per cent. The vast majority speak Punjabi, according to StatCan.

Decent salaries are one draw to the sector, associatio­n co-founder Raman Dhillon said.

The average salary for a truck driver in Canada is $48,733 a year, according to the Neuvoo job search engine, but more experience­d big-riggers can pull in more than $100,000 annually.

Cultural factors and on-the-job independen­ce come into play as well, said Dhillon, who co-founded a California truck company with his brother in 1992. Now run by their cousin, it has ballooned to a 70-tractor fleet.

“In Punjabi culture, trucking and driving is a passion. I drove with passion. I still love it,” he said. “My dad did it. He started his driving career when he was 16.”

In Canada, many truck drivers own their own tractors and operate as a small business under contract with a fleet.

“No bosses hanging over your head. You’re just working for yourself,” Dhillon said. “I think that brings a lot of people in.”

As finding and retaining drivers becomes tougher, companies are embracing a more flexible, family-friendly lifestyle that takes cultural awareness into account, said Manan Gupta, publisher of Road Today, which serves the South Asian trucking community.

“They’re celebratin­g South Asian festivals at their locations, special religious festivals,” he said, pointing to Sikh holidays in particular. Other fleets offer language training.

Monty Chrysler, head of recruitmen­t and driver training at Internatio­nal Truckload Services Inc. in Belleville, said South Asian Canadian drivers and fleet owners, many of whom landed in Canada with university degrees and digital fluency, adjust to industry innovation­s more easily and often carve out niche contracts with large suppliers.

“Trucking has been slow to come into the 21st century — we should have had e-logs years ago,” he said, referring to electronic records that track everything from location to freight loads to fuel burn. “These kids are wired right into it. That makes everything more efficient.”

Punjabi-Canadians can also now be found at every way point on the big-rig map, from repair shops, car washes and insurance companies to suppliers, dispatch units and diners.

 ?? COLE BURSTON THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Nachhattar Chohan, president of CH Expedite, stands amongst a few of his trucks in Mississaug­a.
COLE BURSTON THE CANADIAN PRESS Nachhattar Chohan, president of CH Expedite, stands amongst a few of his trucks in Mississaug­a.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada