America has a truck driver shortage, and Sikhs step up to fill it

 America faces a growing shortage of truck drivers, with the latest figures saying more than 50,000 drivers are needed. The problem filling the gap is that company truckers — as opposed to owner/operators — work their heinies off far from home for low pay, which is why industry turnover last year was 96 percent. A story in the Los Angeles Times reports on an unlikely group helping to keep that situation from growing worse: Sikhs. The religious adherents to Sikhism began coming to the U.S. in large numbers in the 1980s, fleeing persecution in India.

There are said to be anywhere from 200,000 to 500,000 Sikhs in the U.S., most of them second- and third-generation U.S. citizens. As many as 150,000 drive rigs, from local delivery trucks to Class 8 tractors, with more than 30,000 climbing behind the wheel in the past three years. The trucking population has grown dense enough for the LAT to refer to a "Punjab Highway," after Punjab state in India where Sikhs are the majority community and where they dominate the trucking industry.

Here, the LAT refers to stretches of cross-country interstate where increasing numbers of Sikh-owned truck stops serve Indian food and offer temples. On a side note, when I drove a truck in 2017, I would stop at the Indian restaurant at the Akal Travel Center just west of Laramie, Wyoming, on the I-80 for real-deal Indian food. Since then, I've seen Akal stops pop up in New Mexico and elsewhere in Wyoming.

In spite of decades in the U.S. and in the trucking business, Sikhs often get confused for Arabs because of their turbans and long beards, and still get occasional guff from dyed-in-the-flag truckers. One Pennsylvania-based trucker said he'd been against anyone in a turban or looked mildly like an Arab since 9/11. But after Sikhs showed up at a Washington, D.C., rally to help fight for an industry issue, the American's viewpoint changed. "[When] they showed up [for the D.C. protests] and they wanted to shake our hands and thank us for being there, and seeing how many of them showed up, I would say it was four-to-one they outnumbered us proud loud-mouthed Americans. ... I really feel like a piece of crap for feeling and thinking the things I've felt over the years. I'll never feel the same way about them again. I'd defend them with everything I've got if I had to."

Speaking of defense, Sikhs here consider America home, not home-away-from-home. One told Overdrive Online there's no idea of "my country back home. If you live somewhere, you defend that place. ... Since I'm living here, this is my land. It's a defensive instinct." Head over to the LAT for the rest of the story, and a glimpse of one group successfully holding onto a corner of the American Dream. When you shop for a new ladder racks for vans, always buy the best ladder rack you can afford. If you don’t install the van ladder racks properly, then it cannot do its job.

Comments

  1. That's amazing article, The religious adherents to Sikhism began coming to the U.S. in large numbers in the 1980s, fleeing persecution in India.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The trucking population has grown dense enough for the LAT to refer to a "Punjab Highway," after Punjab state in India where Sikhs are the majority community and where they dominate the trucking industry.

    ReplyDelete

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