Long-haul trucker Varinder Toor says he and fellow drivers are frustrated and getting angry about a lack of tractor parking in Surrey and the rest of Metro Vancouver.
For truckers it鈥檚 a long-running problem in the region, and they want government to help find solutions that could include relaxation of Agricultural Land Reserve (ALR) rules to allow truck parking on those sites.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 want something for free, we are willing to pay for the parking spot, but at least give us something, give us some options,鈥 said Toor, who lives in Newton.
In Surrey Wednesday (May 15), Toor and others attended a news conference and rally urging immediate action on the region-wide shortage of truck parking.
鈥淲here I park changes every few months,鈥 Toor explained as he stood in the parking lot of Aria Banquet & Convention Centre. 鈥淧arking on the boulevard is not an option, I understand that too, so we find parking and then after a few months we find out that is not a good parking spot, not allowed by the bylaws, and we pay for that space. There鈥檚 no public land for this.鈥
The Canadian Trucking Association of BC (CTA-BC) says 2,000 more truck tractor parking spaces are needed in the Surrey/91原创 area, and 5,000 more in the region.
In March, (South Fraser Perimeter Road), just east of Port Mann Bridge, and in March Surrey council OK鈥檇 at four locations in North Surrey, amounting to 150 parking spaces.
Truckers say it鈥檚 nowhere near enough.
鈥淭hey have opened a few spaces, yes, but that is a drop in the bucket,鈥 Toor said. 鈥淚 appreciate the government did that, but a lot more needs to be done.鈥
CTA-BC president Amit Kumar says truckers are the backbone of the local economy, delivering food and other goods we buy. But many operators have nowhere legally park their rigs at night, and often incur large fines when forced to park in non-designated areas.
Kumar wants to make truck parking an issue in this fall鈥檚 B.C. election, and doesn鈥檛 rule out truck convoys to get more public attention.
He and others at Wednesday鈥檚 rally wonder why trucks aren鈥檛 allowed to park on ALR lands.
鈥淭rucking is an agri-support industry, we cannot be looked at differently,鈥 Kumar said. 鈥淚f we look south of the border, there are no such restrictions, and you look east toward Alberta and Saskatchewan, there are no restrictions like that, so why do we have a made-in-B.C. problem?鈥
Avtar Sundher, director of opertions of Agricultural Land Commission, says ALR lands in B.C. are generally reserved for farming purposes, nothing more.
鈥淭he Agricultural Land Commission Act reserves the land for agricultural purposes, and anything outside of agricultural purposes requires an application to the commission and approval by the commission in order to use that land for a non-farm purpose.鈥
He said it鈥檚 鈥渁 stretch鈥 for truckers to say they鈥檙e part of the agriculture business.
鈥淎s we all know, truckers transport all sorts of goods and materials,鈥 Sundher said in a phone call. 鈥淭here are lots of truckers that move soil around and that sort of thing, and it all fails under a commercial enterprise. Commercial enterprises under our legislation require a non-farm use application to the commission, that鈥檚 legislated.鈥
At Wednesday鈥檚 rally, truckers applauded former Surrey mayor Doug McCallum when he said the solution is allowing truck parking on ALR lands.
鈥淧eople don鈥檛 realize that a third of our land base in Surrey is ALR land, and I cannot understand why anybody would think to not put five trucks on maybe a 10-acre plot that is zoned, or X number on a larger plot, why would there be any problem to do that? It鈥檚 a simple solution.鈥
Other speakers at the rally included B.C. Conservative leader John Rustad, Mission-Matsqui MP Brad Vis, Surrey-Newton MP Sukh Dhaliwal and Surrey Coun. Linda Annis.
鈥淚 think all levels of government need to step up and fix this,鈥 Annis said. 鈥淚 think it means building multiple locations, locations that are close to major transportation routes. So I don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 one part that is a solution. I think it鈥檚 multiple, but I do think we need to get on with it. This problem is being kicked down the road for so, so many years now, and it鈥檚 time that we get ahead of it.鈥
Toor has been driving long-haul for 12 years now, and says he鈥檚 proud to live and work in Surrey.
鈥滻 only get to come back home one or two days a week,鈥 he noted. 鈥淏eing away five days a week is not a challenge, and the most frustrating or challenging part of my job is finding a parking spot, that鈥檚 my biggest challenge. I鈥檝e gotten tickets, yes, and each time is about $200. That is something, but the mental strain you go through when you get that ticket, when you arrive at your truck and you鈥檙e now planning to travel a long distance and you see the ticket on your window. That changes the scenario of your whole trip.鈥
Toor said he鈥檚 considered moving and changing jobs, as have other truckers.
鈥淚 have thought about going to the next province, Alberta, where the parking is half the price of what we pay here, those lots are paved and fenced, security cameras and all those things,鈥 Toor said. 鈥淏ut I鈥檝e been living here for a long time, I like my city, my kids go to school here, all my relatives and friends are here, so moving is a challenge. The next easiest thing would be to change the profession. This is why we鈥檙e not finding new drivers. Parking is one issue, though, and there are so many other hurdles.鈥