Women‘s Trucking Federation of Canada wins graphics award with wrapped Western Star truck
The wrapped Western Star 5700XE promoting the Women’s Trucking Federation of Canada.
Shelley Uvanile-Hesch knew her truck was a beauty queen and now it has the title to prove it.
Uvanile-Hesch drives ‘Miss Destiny Star‘, a 2019 Western Star 5700XE decorated with a truck wrap featuring pictures of members of the Women‘s Trucking Federation of Canada (WTFC). She founded the organisation, which recruits women drivers, dispatchers, technicians and managers to the Canadian trucking industry.
Shelley Uvanille-Hesch addresses the audience at the unveiling of the wrapped Western Star 5700XE in April 2018.
Miss Destiny Star‘s purple-and-white graphics package recently won the Private Motor Truck Council of Canada (PMTC) annual 3M Vehicle Graphic Award in the Special Event/Promotional category. The award was announced at PMTC‘s annual conference. The contest, which includes other categories, draws hundreds of entries a year.
The wrap was donated to WTFC this year by Western Star, which is a corporate member of the organisation.
“Western Star is proud to sponsor Miss Destiny Star and support the important work done by Shelley and the WTFC,” said Samantha Parlier, vice president of marketing and product strategy for Western Star. “Miss Destiny Star serves as a valuable resource that helps spread the word about opportunities for women in trucking.”
Custom-designed blue-and-pink LED lighting package on the promotional Western Star 5700XE for the WTFC.
WTFC worked closely with local dealership Highway Western Star in Ayr,
Miss Destiny Star, which Uvanile-Hesch drives for Sharp Transportation of Ontario, is a beautiful truck with a positive message, said Mike Millian, president of PMTC.
“It‘s a sharp-looking truck that really catches the eye. You don‘t just look at it and glance away; you want to examine it more closely,” he said. “It will hopefully encourage more women to consider a career in trucking.”
Uvanile-Hesch said she is thrilled, but not surprised that the truck won the graphics award. She‘s seen the reactions it gets at truck stops and terminals and from other drivers.
“Everyone wants to take a closer look,” she said. “I think people appreciate that it‘s real women on the side.”
When she is not driving the truck on her regular routes through the United States and Canada, she takes it to trucking shows and promotional and charitable events, where she talks to women about careers in trucking. WTFC, which has about 300 members, also mentors women in driving schools and hosts career events at high schools.