'I can't stay home, I'm a trucker': Life on the road during COVID-19 - Action News
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'I can't stay home, I'm a trucker': Life on the road during COVID-19

Truckers are still driving across Canada and the U.S., ensuring the supply chain doesn't break down, but strictly avoiding all contact on those long hauls means "no food, no bathroom, no shower."

Strictly avoiding all contact hauling loads through the U.S. and back means 'no food, no bathroom, no shower'

Steven Kastrantas says doing the long hauls to and from the U.S. is especially lonely when you can't get out of your truck for fear of contamination: 'I've started to think in extremes.' (Submitted by Steven Kastrantas)

Truck drivers are still hauling loads across Canada and the U.S., but with strict measures in place in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, life is far from normal.

Steven Kastrantas has been driving a truck for the past 14 years, and he's never experienced anything like what he's going through now.

"It's not easy.It's not easy," he said.

"All we have to do in the truck is talk on the phone or think, and I've started to think in extremes."

Saint-Eustacheis home for Kastrantas, but he's more often on the road. This week, he travelled to Tennessee and back, loaded with paper.

For the drivers still hauling loads through the hard-hit U.S., there is no stopping for a restaurant meal or a washroom break.

Max De Kiewit says nobody at the border has ever asked him if he's feeling sick. (Submitted by Max De Kiewit)

"No food, no bathroom, no shower," Kastrantas says.

"I've got a little barbecue that I can plug into my truck, so I can cook outside."

Kastrantasalso bought a portable toilet, essentiallya children's potty, that he keeps in the cab of the truck.

Another trucker, Max De Kiewit, just drove a load ofauto parts toLaredo, Texas, coming back to Canada laden with pharmaceuticals. He's heading back out, this time toHuntsville, Ala.,on Sunday.

"The problem right now is all the restaurants are closed, so it's hard to get food," he said.

"You can't take a truck through the drive-thru. But more and more, restaurants will take your order and take it out to you."

Jeremy Dyckson, who lives in Moose Jaw, Sask., hauls food and cleaning productsacross Canada, including to Montreal.

He says in Canada, the truck stops are mainly open, but some fast-food places have closed their counterservice, and the trucks are too big for the drive-thru lane.

Often, if you walk up tothe drive-thru, as he witnessed at a service areanearMontreal,you won't be served, he says.

"Trucker after trucker was walking back empty-handed, and I felt so sorry for them," Dyckson said

Jeremy Dyckson chats via Whats App from the truck cab at a stop in Pembroke, Ont. (CBC)

One thing he notices the roads are free and clear.

"There's no traffic!" he said. "I can drive in and out of Toronto in 20 minutes, which usually takes me two hours."

Missing family

Kastrantassaysas a trucker, he's often away from his kids, but with the pandemic, it's even worse.

"I'm separated, so I have two kids that I haven't seen in almost three weeks," he said.

Kastrantas also has a girlfriend who he doesn't live with, and he hasn't seen her, either.

"It's very hard on them."

On Facebook, truck drivers are adding the banner 'I can't stay home, I'm a trucker' to their profile pictures.

Dyckson says he does gohome to his family, but he is cautious on the road and interacts directly with no one.

"If I get sick, I'll have to go home and self-isolate, because I don't want to get my family sick," he said.

Normal work procedures have changed, too. Instead of interacting with people when unloading, drivers stay in their trucks and exchange paperwork throughthe window.

Like many of his fellow truckers, Steven Kastrantas updated his Facebook profile picture to highlight his work. (Submitted by Steven Kastrantas)

Border crossings

As an essential service, truck drivers continue to cross back and forth overthe Canadian and American border.

Kastrantas says how well that goesdepends on which border crossing he uses.

Two weeks ago, in Windsor, Ont.,the border agent didn't even take his passport, he said,just askinghim his birth date and where he was headed.

"When you go to the States, they ask you where you're heading, what the load is and if you've gone overseas in the last 30 days," said Kastrantas.

"In Canada, they just ask, 'How're you doing?' and hand you a paper explaining quarantine rules."

De Kiewitsays nobody asks if he's feeling sick when he crosses the border.

"They ask you where you've been, what are you hauling, and have a good day."

Kastrantas says his job is more important than ever, even if he sometimes gets scared.

"I have to be strong, I'll get through it, and I want to keep going because people have got to eat."

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