
Truck convoy arriving in southwestern Ontario on Thursday
CTV
Matt and Tim Devereaux are sending three of their transports to Ottawa this weekend to protest mandatory vaccines for truckers crossing the border.
Matt and Tim Devereaux are sending three of their transports to Ottawa this weekend to protest mandatory vaccines for truckers crossing the border.
They say their truckers have endured a lot of the past two years and a vaccine mandate now, is just too much.
“Drivers are saying enough is enough. We know drivers that are vaccinated and they’re just saying if I have to prove I’m vaccinated to cross the border then I’m just not going to do it and retire,” says Matt Devereaux, who along with his brother, Tim, own Intermodal Heritage Freightlines in Seaforth and Paisley.
Little Rock Farm Trucking in Walkerton is sending five trucks to Ottawa, including one that reads, “This Land is our Land.”
Owners, Mark and Daniel Reuber say the truckers that worked through the worst of the pandemic are now feeling they are being told they are danger to the public, unless their vaccinated.
“We probably spend 60 per cent of our time trying to appease the regulations of our government, and now with this added on top, it just adds to the weight,” says Mark Reuber.
The Canadian Trucking Alliance, which does not endorse this trucking protest, estimate 85 per cent of 120,000 Canadian truckers are vaccinated, so this border mandate affects 15,000 truckers, they believe.