Bay of Plenty Times

Road to driver’s seat a matter of grit for mum

Happy truckie one of four women filling Fonterra heavy transport roles

- Sandra Conchie

Forging a career in maledomina­ted industries, Bay of Plenty solo mum Dariene Taia says she had to “fight my way to the top” and put up with “a lot of flak, sexualised talk, [and] shenanigan­s”.

That changed when she started driving milk tankers for Fonterra a couple of years ago, a job she loves.

Now she wants to encourage other women not to be scared or take flak from anyone to pursue their passions.

She and her tanker-driving colleagues Susan Musgrave and Wendy Howes, and apprentice mechanic Georgia Moore have shared stories of how they got started in the industry in a bid to debunk the myth that only men could work with trucks.

It comes as the transport industry, facing an ageing workforce, works to encourage more women to get behind the wheel of a rig. Fonterra specifical­ly aimed to increase its female driver proportion from five per cent.

Taia, 43, a solo mother from Kawerau, told the Rotorua Daily Post she began working for Fonterra at Edgcumbe in 2022 after completing a free three-month Level 3 Heavy Vehicle Operators training course at Toi Ohomai Institute of Technology.

“Growing up I was never a girlie-girlie type of person and previously worked in the weldingfab­rication industry for most of my adult working life.”

This included repairing Holden Crewman utes in Melbourne for four years, working in the gold mines in Perth for almost two years, then repairing fishing boats after moving back from Australia in 2008.

Taia never saw herself driving milk tankers before she was approached by Fonterra.

”I wanted to drive tip trucks delivering soil, rocks and metal but being a milk tanker driver is the best job ever . . .

“Especially compared to what I’ve had to put up with in the past, which was a lot of flak, sexualised talk, shenanigan­s and bullshit.”

Taia said she had to “fight her way to the top” and attributed her success to a strong role model — her mother Lorraine Taia from Rotorua.

“My mother is the hardestwor­king woman I know, and she is not shy to stand her ground and tell you what’s up.

“I want to tell other women not to be scared. Fight for your passion, your mana and wairua, go for it. And don’t take flak from anybody.”

Taia wanted to encourage other women, especially Ma¯ori wa¯hine, to enter the transport industry.

She also hoped her 12-year-old son Lebron would one day join her driving trucks out on the road, and said she was “proud to show him what I can do”.

She is among four women drivers profiled by their employer Fonterra in a bid to encourage others into the industry.

Musgrave said in a Fonterra statement she hit the road because she wanted to break out of a mundane office routine.

Now she describes her job as being a “paid tourist”.

She said she believed industries and companies failing to hire women in some roles was costing them and the country.

“It’s like having a car and driving it everywhere in second gear.”

Howes, one of Edgecumbe’s lead tanker drivers, started out in a sewing factory and ran the family business before taking an adventurou­s leap and joining Fonterra.

“I always say you can do anything you want and you’re never too old for change. If you want to do something, go and grab it,” she said in the statement.

Heavy automotive apprentice Moore’s interest in driving trucks came from growing up on a farm, the statement said.

Moore said she appreciate­d the camaraderi­e among her colleagues and that they had helped “unlock her potential” in a what was a male-dominated environmen­t.

Fonterra general manager of national transport and logistics Paul Phipps told the Rotorua Daily Post empowering women in transport was good for the industry.

Phipps said diversity behind the wheel brought fresh perspectiv­es as well as enhanced safety and efficiency on the roads.

“Embracing women in tankerdriv­ing roles not only empowers individual­s but strengthen­s our entire transport sector, fostering innovation, inclusivit­y and driving positive change for the future of logistics.”

Ia Ara Aotearoa Transporti­ng NZ interim chief executive Dom Kalasih said boosting diversity was an important industry issue: “I believe it is a necessary initiative to address our ageing truck driver population that will leave a significan­t gap in our workforce in the short to mid-term.”

More importantl­y, treating people fairly and equally was simply the “right” thing to do, he said.

Kalasih said among the associatio­n’s recent substantiv­e diversity initiative­s was establishi­ng a cohort of diversity champions, including 11 successful women.

“Our aim was that they would provide leadership at varying levels and share their stories.”

Kalasih said at the associatio­n’s national conference last year, most industry award winners were women.

Changing people’s attitudes, behaviours and culture were, however, “considerab­le challenges”.

“While it feels like progress is being made, we still have a long way to go, and we have to be committed to playing a long game.”

Sandra Conchie is a senior journalist at the Bay of Plenty Times and Rotorua Daily Post who has been a journalist for 24 years. She mainly covers police, court and other justice stories, as well as general news. She has been a Canon Media Awards regional/community reporter of the year.

 ?? ?? Left: Wendy Howes, one of Edgecumbe’s leading tanker drivers, presents a certificat­e to Lebron Taia at a Fonterra family day event.
Left: Wendy Howes, one of Edgecumbe’s leading tanker drivers, presents a certificat­e to Lebron Taia at a Fonterra family day event.
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 ?? ?? Transporti­ng New Zealand’s interim chief executive Dom Kalasih.
Above: Georgia Moore, an apprentice heavy vehicle mechanic at Fonterra’s Edgecumbe site.
Transporti­ng New Zealand’s interim chief executive Dom Kalasih. Above: Georgia Moore, an apprentice heavy vehicle mechanic at Fonterra’s Edgecumbe site.
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