Source: Women In Trucking Founder: Ellen Voie
African-American Women Consider Trucking
By Ellen Voie
If you’ve ever attended Women In Trucking’s “Salute to Women
Behind the Wheel” in Louisville, Kentucky, you’ll find the largest gathering of
female professional drivers in the United States. These women come from all
parts of the country, as well as Canada. Some are in their seventies; others
are in their twenties. Some have been driving for decades, others are newcomers
to the industry.
The event allows these women to meet one another and to enjoy
the acknowledgement they receive for their service as professional drivers.
One group that has become more visible is female
African-American drivers. Although women only comprise 5.4 percent of the
driver population, the number of African-American female drivers is closer to
one-half of one percent.
However, that could be changing.
Recently, Women
In Trucking Association partnered with an organization called WorkAmerica (www.workamerica.co), whose mission is to put Americans back to
work with a new approach to recruiting and training. They partner with schools
to pre-qualify, train, and place new drivers with carriers.
Collin Gutman, WorkAmerica’s CEO, has been surprised to find an
increased interest in African-American women who are looking for a new career.
Collin shares this insight. “Over the past months, as I’ve attended job fairs
from Delaware to Virginia to Tennessee recruiting drivers for WorkAmerica, I’ve
noticed a new trend in driver recruiting. The individuals stopping by our booth
interested in trucking jobs didn’t fit the profile of the stereotypical truck
driver. Some wore heels, others were in fatigues, but, surprisingly, most were
women. A few had children or husbands in tow, while others came solo. Most of
these women had one unexpected trait in common:
they were African-American.”
“At each fair, they came early and they came often. ‘I would
love to be over the road, driving an 18 wheeler. It is a whole new lifestyle,’
said the first lady to stop by my table at Delaware’s New Castle County Job
Fair last week. ‘Trucking is trucking, no difference between genders,’ declared
my next visitor a few minutes later, as she picked up a business card. Her
friend agreed, ‘I mean, I should be accepted for whoever I want to be.’ At the
end of this fair alone, we had over twenty African-American women signed up for
interviews, totaling half of our interested applicants from that job fair.”
Thanks to organizations like Women in Trucking, seeing a female
driver behind the wheel of a tractor-trailer isn’t as rare as it used to be.
Now a little over five percent of drivers are women, and while this is a low
number, the trend is encouraging. Since women of all ethnicities represent one
out of twenty of our nation’s 3.2 million drivers, the fact that approximately
fifty percent of WorkAmerica’s new driver applicants are exclusively
African-American women is something to note! And this is even more remarkable
when considered in the context of the crippling driver shortage.
With 30,000 current vacancies and a predicted shortage of
239,000 drivers by 2022, CDL schools, carriers, trucking associations, and more
are all scrambling for solutions. Recently the Allied Committee for
Transportation (ACT 1) unveiled TruckingMovesAmerica, an ambitious re-branding
campaign with an impressive roster of members working to raise $5 million over
five years.
This is a great start, and there’s opportunity for more. To be
truly successful at attracting new recruits, we must look to do more than
simply grow the pool of “traditional” drivers. We can’t just hope to change the
public’s view of “truckers,” we need to actively reach out to these new
recruits. This means changing recruiting methods, messaging, and branding. It
means embracing the knowledge that these women already know-- “that trucking is
trucking,” and everyone is welcome. White and Latino men still comprise the
majority of truckers and we certainly must continue to build bridges into these
communities.
But it’s time for someone to start building bridges into other
communities. African-American women are clearly ready for trucking and might
represent our best hope for dramatically increasing the number of professional
drivers entering the industry over the next five years.
As an industry, it’s time for us to move forward and think
outside the box when we think about who is in the truck. Let’s encourage,
support, and invite all individuals to join us in the most vital industry of
trucking.
1 comment:
Thank you so much for sharing this wonderful post. Keep posting such valuable contents. Visit here: Trucking Permit Services
Post a Comment