Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

New York Times Paints Portrait of Truckers' Lives on the Road

The New York Times recently ran a piece about the lives of truck drivers that may not have helped raise the profile of truck driving as a potential career, but it and a follow-up piece did paint a colorful portrait of the life of a trucker, as Deborah Lockridge explains in her All That's Trucking blog.

Deborah Lockridge
Deborah LockridgeEditor and Associate Publisher
Read Deborah's Posts
June 12, 2017
New York Times Paints Portrait of Truckers' Lives on the Road

Screenshot via New York Times website.

3 min to read


A few weeks ago, the New York Times ran a piece about the lives of truck drivers that didn’t do much to help raise the profile of truck driving as a potential career, but it and a follow-up piece did paint a colorful portrait of the lives of truckers.

In “Alone on the Open Road: Truckers Feel Like ‘Throwaway People,” Times reporters visited a Petro truck stop in Effingham, Ill., and interviewed truckers they found there.

Ad Loading...

“At a moment when President Trump has ignited a national discussion of blue-collar labor and even climbed into a truck during a White House event, trucking, which was once among the best-paying such jobs, has become low-wage, grinding, unhealthy work,” wrote Times reporter Trip Gabriel.

“We’re just like cops. Everybody needs us, but nobody wants us,” said Greg Simmons, 54, Hastings, Fla., a driver for 27 years. He was also the source of the “throwaway people” line.

“You forget how to communicate with people,” said Ayisha Gomez, 39, Riverside County, Calif., a driver for three years. She’s only doing this long enough to pay off her daughter’s college loans.

“Any one of my grandkids do it, I’ll kill ’em,” said Ron Carrabis, 70, Las Vegas, who’s been driving 30 years for the same company.

Yet it wasn't all bad.

Ad Loading...

“Every day, you wake up somewhere different,” said Susan Zimmerman, 48, Danville, Va., who’s been driving two years. “You have sunrises and sunsets. Yeah, it’s the same sun, but it’s different everywhere — the colors, the textures.”

Michael Gallant, 22, of Biddeford, Maine, who’s been driving for eight months, told the Times, “Truck driving is something I’ve always wanted to do since I was a little kid. I love it. There are some times when it’s kind of a crappy job, but other times it’s great.”

Even better, the Times followed up last week by publishing more voices from the road, having asked truckers to write in and say what they would say to drivers of four-wheeled vehicles if they got the chance.

“Responses came in by the — well, by the hundreds, let’s just say, with practical advice about highway safety, fervent pleas to put down those smartphones and requests to be treated with dignity.”

The photos paint a colorful portrait of the trucker's life. There’s a dog with his paws on the steering wheel and a sock monkey moose zip-tied to the passenger-side door; an in-cab crock pot and a passenger-side seat and floor filled with bananas and Doritos; the comforts of home ranging from a plant seat-belted into the passenger seat to a bicycle hanging above the sleeper bunk.

Ad Loading...

The article shares drivers' thoughts ranging from how to share the road safely with big trucks to the need to quit texting and driving; from the essentiality of trucking to the loneliness of the job; from the music they listen to on the road to pleas for a little respect and appreciation. This story was probably an eye-opening one for people who have never really thought much about the drivers behind the wheel of those big trucks they share the highways with.

What do you think? Did these NYT articles hit the nail on the head with the good, the bad, and the ugly of being a truck driver, or did they do a disservice to trucking?

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Blogposts

TMC 2025 Takeaway 2: Buy... or Subscribe?

TaaS. Does that mean trucks as a service, trailers as a service, or tires as a service? HDT's Deborah Lockridge has another takeaway from the Technology & Maintenance Council meeting in her blog.

Read More →
Red Cummins X15 powertrain display at TMC

TMC 2025 Takeaway: The Journey Toward Vertical Integration

HDT's Deborah Lockridge on how the trucking industry has moved toward "vertical integration" over the past 25 years.

Read More →
Girl Scouts at Touch a Truck event

Trucks Are For Girls!

HDT Editor and Associate Publisher Deborah Lockridge is a longtime Girl Scout leader and loves to connect her passion for inspiring girls with her love of the trucking industry.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
All That's Truckingby Deborah LockridgeOctober 29, 2024

Trucking Advocacy: Impact Beyond the 2024 Elections

No matter who wins the election, trucking continues to work to educate the people who pass the laws and make the rules that affect the industry. HDT's Deborah Lockridge shares insights from two major trucking associations in her All That's Trucking blog.

Read More →
View of Gulf of Mexico from under beach umbrella
All That's Truckingby Deborah LockridgeAugust 22, 2024

Recharge Your Brain for Better Business

Skimping on vacation may be the worst thing you can do for your business, your career, and your mental health. In her All That's Trucking blog, Deborah Lockridge writes about the importance of giving your brain what it needs to be innovative.

Read More →
kitten caught between two truck tire wheels

Trucker Pre-Trip Leads to Mission 'Im-paw-sible'

See what happened when a truck driver found an unexpected stowaway during his pre-trip inspection.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
All That's Truckingby Deborah LockridgeDecember 28, 2023

HDT Editor: 2023's Most Important Trucking Topics

Read Deborah Lockridge's picks for the most significant stories we covered at HDT in 2023: freight recession, zero-emission trucks, drivers and marijuana, and more.

Read More →
All That's Truckingby Deborah LockridgeOctober 31, 2023

3 Takeaways from ATA's 2023 Management Conference

HDT's Deborah Lockridge talks about key themes that emerged during sessions, conversations, and on the show floor during the American Trucking Associations' annual management conference.

Read More →
All That's Truckingby Deborah LockridgeSeptember 22, 2023

An Update on Spencer Patton's Battle with FedEx Ground

In her All That's Trucking blog, Deborah Lockridge shares a follow-up to last year's story about a FedEx Ground contractor who was very publicly challenging the company about alleged unfair treatment of its contractors.

Read More →
Ad Loading...

Girl Scouts Rock the Supply Chain

Curiosity about how Girl Scout cookies get from the factory to the customer drove the development of a supply patch program. HDT's Deborah Lockridge, a Girl Scout herself, writes about it in her All That's Trucking blog.

Read More →