Women Truckers Are a Special Breed,
Tough, Romantic and Independent
WE DRIVE TILL WE GET
THERE
Seems Nothing much has changed today in 2009-Comment by
Marge Bailey -Admin

A Special
Report by Hank Whittemore St. Louis Post-Dispatch Parade (Sunday
"magazine" insert), July 10, 1988, pp. 4-5.

More than 100,000 women now drive big trucks, but there's one thing
some still feel they need: 'I want respect, that's all'. Bouncing on the
air-cushioned seat high up in the cab of her 13-speed Kenworth tractor,
pulling a 48-foot trailer bound for the West Coast,
Darlene Dwyer is "running hard" over the long, flat highway as the
Florida sun goes down. She is in control of an enormous machine on 18
wheels, carring 40 tons. At the same time, she is a lone female driver
in a world of macho male truckers who see her as a vulnerable object of
prey.
"This is Biscuit," she yells into
the CB radio, using her "handle" to call another woman trucker on the
road. A male voice breaks in:
"Hi, sweetie! Where are you?"
"No sweetie in this truck," Dwyer
retorts. "I'm a driver!"
"Want to
fool around? Make love?"
"No way,
cowboy!" she says, clicking off the CB unit and turning to me as we
roll on:
"A lot of these guys still have the
notion that every female out here
is fair game. To be honest, it's
lonely and tough on the road."
The number of
lady truckers is rapidly growing, from less than 2 percent
of the
total drivers a decade ago to about 4.2 percent today. Of 2.5 million
truckers hauling rigs of various sizes, just over 100,000 are women.
"There has been steady growth," says Ron
Roth of the American Trucking Associations.
"I think women are not so overwhelmed by the hardships anymore."
The new female drivers include many wives "riding
team" with their husbands. Some, married to men who are not truckers,
drive "short haul" and return to their families each night. Those women
who pull the big
rigs alone, over long distances for weeks at a
time, are mostly single
or divorced.
"I
don't recommend it for all women," says Helen Jones, 49, of
Hendersonville, Tenn., who started riding with her husband four
years ago after raising a family.
"It takes a
special kind of person
who can withstand the stress. You have to
enjoy physical labor
and love the outdoors."
Jones and her husband run from a loading dock in Ohio down to Florida,
Louisiana and Texas. They alternate behind the wheel for roughly 1300
miles without stopping, except for short breaks, in 23-hour stretches.
"Handling the truck doesn't take tremendous
strength," she says,
"but it requires lots of stamina and
concentration. When I'm driving, my husband
is in the sleeper
[inside the cab, just behind the seats], and so I'm on
my own. And
I'm constantly thinking ahead in advance of any trouble.
"What if
one of my tires blows? What if that car suddenly pulls in front
of
me? And some days, when the wind is howling and there's freezing rain,
you wish you were anywhere else. But what did our
great-great-grandmothers do?
They went across this country in
covered wagons!"
At the Vero Beach, Fla.,
truck stop, Darlene Dwyer rolls into a vast lot where dozens of
tractor-trailers are parked in rows. As she deftly backs her 62-foot rig
into a space, several male drivers gather to watch.
"Hey," one calls after she hops down, "did you just drive that
big ol' thing in here?
By your little ol' self?"
"Nah," she says, grinning. "I had Captain Kirk beam me down!"
Dwyer, 29, is a single woman who operates her own tractor, driving
alone. Over the last eight years, she has logged 900,000 miles across 48
states. Every few months she returns to Lockport, N.Y., where she grew
up, but otherwise, as she puts it,
"I've
basically been living out of my truck."
Under contract with North American Van Lines to pick up and deliver
cargo, she does all the physical loading and unloading by herself. She
can repair wiring, adjust brakes, change fan belts, fix hairline tire
leaks and even blend her own fuel. A strong, muscular young woman, Dwyer
says she can be as "feminine" as any other female, but that would only
invite more hassles.
"If I wore a skirt, I'd
just be asking for trouble." Instead, she wears a driver's uniform
shirt over a pair of jeans, uses no makeup and keeps her hair pinned.
Referring to the grease all over her hands and face, however, she laughs
and adds,
"Of course, right now no guy would go near me!"
Another trucker, Norma McNamara, 33, of Portland Maine, recalls
the
time a male driver at a Midwest truck stop kept "hawking" her to join
him in
his motel room:
"I told him no,
and he got very angry. I went for dinner alone, but
he went out to
the lot and pulled my tractor-trailer pin. When I drove off, the entire
load crashed to the ground behind me!"
Interview and rides with dozens of female drivers hauling heavy rigs
reveal that since the 1970s they have been producing a significant
chapter of the women's movement. In addition to facing male hostility
and being treated as sex objects, they have struggled to overcome strong
doubts about their capabilities.
"There's still resentment
because driving the biggest trucks used to be something only a man could
do," says Marlene McNeill, 49, of Hayward, Calif.
"Now that
is being taken away from them"
McNeill, who
drives for Safeway, raised seven children before she got into trucking
in 1973. At the time, she was the first woman to work out of the local
hiring hall.
"I'd walk up to the loading dock," she recalls,
"and all the guys would glare, as if to say 'What is *she* doing here?'
They gave me four 55-gallon drums and said, 'If you can load 'em, you
can haul 'em.' So I got the dolly while they stood back and watched. I
had to climb up to push that thing over, but I passed the test. I knew
that I couldn't break down or quit, because I was representing any
other women who would come along."
"I
want their respect, that's all," says Patty Balagot, 32, of Newark,
Calif., "because I'm good at what I do. I want them to say to each
other, 'Leave her alone, she's okay. She's a driver!' But it's hard for
men,
when they're in a group, to do that."
Lady truckers who drive alone speak of having to maintain a "split
personality" in terms of how they appear and act. Says Galagot:
"I like to wear dresses and high heels when I go out on a date, but out
here I need a gutter mouth to fit in. I don't want to be the stereotype
of the grubby, macho trucker," says Marlene Day, 35, of Fort Wayne,
Ind., who is lead driver of a Peterbilt Conventional, riding with her
husband. "So I work hard at trying to preserve myself. I keep my
nails done and wear diamond earrings. If I can't wash or shower, I give
myself an alcohol bath to take the grime off. And I use extra deodorant
or perfume. Otherwise, you can easily lose yourself."
For all the women drivers, there are common motivations for taking on
this rugged way of life. Married or not, driving a big rig means a
chance to gain economic independence. Nationwide, truckers gross and
average of $18,200 a year, but senior union members who drive company
trucks can gross up to $50,000.
As an owner-operator, Darlene Dwyer grosses up to $130,000 annually but
spends as much as $32,000 a year on fuel alone. Her fixed costs,
including payments on her truck, amount to $110 a day before she starts
driving. Other expenses, plus income taxes, bring down her net income to
perhaps $35,000.
Each woman I met on the road also spoke of a desire
for personal freedom
and a quest for adventure.
"I love to drive and I've always wanted to see the country," says
Marlene Day. "And although my husband and I ride together, I run the
business as owner-operator. It's a big challenge."
"Part of it for me is having an independent streak," says Norma
McNamara.
"I drove long-distance by myself
for the first four years, but even though I'm married now with two
children, I still love to drive."
Working
short haul, she wakes up at 4 a.m. and drives a big rig from Portland to
northern Maine and back.
"My sister takes care of the kids,"
she says,"and my husband, who is in the warehouse business, is very
supportive. "I'm not incapable of other work," adds McNamara.
"I just choose to make my living this way. Most women drivers are
professionals doing a job. We're just earning money by driving a truck
instead of working, say, in a bank. We don't like to be confined that
way."
The entrance of more females into the
trucking industry has coincided with severe driver shortages caused, in
part, by the chaotic price wars that followed deregulation in 1980. Many
veteran male drivers have retired after company cutbacks or closings.
Others, who were owner-operators, have bowed to competitive pressures
and quit the road. In their place have come less-experienced male
truckers, who often accept low rates in order to obtain loads. Some of
these new owner-operators, the older men complain, give the entire
industry a bad image: taking drugs to stay awake, behaving wildly at
truck stops (where "lot lizards," or prostitutes, are plentiful at
night) and generally "raising hell" on the nation's highways.
By
contrast, lady truckers are regarded as a counterbalancing, positive
force.
"I feel safer out there with the
majority of those gals behind the wheel," one man told me.
More important, perhaps, is the fact that customers have been
increasingly asking for lady truckers to haul "sensitive" loads. Both
Darlene Dwyer and Marlene Day have become experts
in the handling of
tricky freight such as computer systems, Grand Prix cars, medical
equipment and valuable works of art.
Despite the
obstacles, life is improving for women truckers. Most truck stops now
have separate shower facilities. Gone are the days, mostly, when a lady
driver had to find a man willing to "stand guard" for her outside a
men's room.
Another sign of women's influence is
the more domestic atmosphere of the sleeping compartments in the tractor
cabs: Now there are double bunks, hot and cold running water, portable
toilets and microwave ovens, not to mention cuddly stuffed animals as
well as live pets.
Because of the difficulty in finding qualified
drivers, trucking schools are actively seeking to enlist women of all
ages.
"They're going after the female labor
market," says Kathleen Coy, an
executive at North American Van
Lines, "and the industry is looking at predictions that within the
next several years many of the new drivers will be women."
Most will become employees of the companies, earning union wages. Of the
1.6 million heaviest rigs on America's highways, less than 20 percent
are driven by owner-operators. Only a handful of these entrepreneurs,
perhaps 9,000, are women; and the vast majority
of those are part of
husband-wife teams. Single women like Darlene Dwyer, who drive their own
trucks by themselves, are in a small but special category. Dwyer may be
an exception to the rule, but she is the quintessential lady trucker.
"No matter how lonely it gets out here, I'm
always aware that I'm running my own business," Dwyer says. "My
*life force* comes out of this truck. Last year I met a male driver, at
a truck stop of all places, and now we're engaged. We plan to run
together when we get married. But he knows how much my work means to me
and that the truck comes first in my life because it supports me. This
is what I love, what I do, what I am."
The
sun has gone down, and we are back on the road in darkness. Dwyer shifts
by ear, as if there were diesel fuel in her blood. On the dashboard,
dozens of luminous dials are potential warnings of trouble with
temperature, pressure, water, fuel, oil, electricity, brakes, axles.
Dwyer is alert to it all, not to mention the potential dangers on the
highway itself. It's impossible, she reminds me, for an 80,000-pound rig
going 60 mph to stop on a dime.
"I prefer to
be out here at night," she says. "I love it when the
road is clear.
There's more freedom."
A self-confessed
workaholic, Dwyer drives 10 hours at a time, with as few breaks as
possible. Late at night, when she wants to sleep, she pulls to the side
of the road or finds a shopping center where she can park. But then she
is back up at 5 a.m. and, after brushing her teeth with water from a
jug, she keeps on running.
At age 21, she
answered an ad for a co-driving job and got her training all over the
country from a few veteran male truckers. Along the way, she survived a
wreck in Utah after her rig slid on ice and nearly rolled down a ravine.
She has walked miles for help after mechanical breakdowns, and she
learned to handle all the paperwork involving mileage and taxes. To buy
her first tractor, a used model, she put down $1,000 and paid off the
remaining $28,000 in two years. Her hands are callused and tough from
physical labor, but she shares with all truckers a sense of romance,
because she has seen so much beauty from behind the windshield.
Relishing her hard-won feelings of freedom and, yes, even the power, she
seems to embody the motto inscribed on the back of her Kenworth cab:
"Without dreams, there is no need to work. Without work, there is no
need to dream. Go for it!"
A
Special Report by Hank Whittemore