For Immediate Release
July 20, 2004
Contact: Nancy O'Liddy, Director of Public
Affairs
703/838-7936 or noliddy@truckload.org
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Truckload Carriers Association Awards Scholarships
Alexandria, VA, July 20, 2004 – The Truckload Carriers Association Scholarship
Fund continued its long tradition of providing financial aid to truck drivers,
their spouses, children or grandchildren by awarding eighteen college scholarships
for the 2004-2005 academic year. The scholarships were awarded on the basis of
need, academic excellence, major field of study and quality of an assigned essay.
Special consideration is given to those students studying in the field of transportation.
"
The Scholarship Trustees are proud to have once again been able to award scholarships
to so many deserving students," stated Don Orr, Chairman of the Scholarship
Fund. "This year we were able to raise the number of scholarship distributed
from fifteen to eighteen and we hope to continue increasing our help to deserving
students in the industry as we grow the fund."
Recipients Receiving Memorial Scholarships in honor
of Thomas Welby and Kai Norris in the amount of $3,000
are:
- Susana Lucar-Cuculiza, a former employee of
UPS and Choice Cargo, and a TCA scholarship recipient
last
year recently transferred to Grand Valley
State
University where she plans to major in International Business Administration.
Upon graduation
she hopes to work for a trucking or logistics company. When informed
of her scholarship, Lucar-Cuculiza said that it will
make
her year "perfect."
- Joleen Kotnik, works in the Human Resources
department of Anderson Trucking Services and is majoring
in Business
at St. Cloud State University. She
hopes to continue working for Anderson after graduation as a fleet
manager and
takes pride in being a role model for her daughter. Kotnik was brought
to tears upon
hearing that she won a scholarship and explained that no one could
know how much it meant to her.
Recipient of our Truck Writers of North America Scholarship
of $2,500 is:
- Susanne Hansen, a student at the University of
Kansas, wrote that although trucking is often seen
in a negative light, she has seen the
opposite
through the windshield of her father's truck. She stressed her
respect for the hard work and hours that truck drivers
sacrifice, which she learned first hand
through her father's career as a driver for Interstate Distributor,
Inc.
Recipients Receiving $2,000 Scholarships are:
- Johanna Anderson thanks her husband's job
as a FedEx driver for enabling her to stay home and
raise her children. Now that her children are grown
she
is fulfilling her goal of going back to school and she hopes that
one day she can enable her husband to "trade
in his big rig for his fishing pole." Anderson
said that her scholarship means a lot to her because she recently
realized that without TCA's scholarship help
she was not going to be able to pay for school and
books.
- Craig Bannon worked for UPS for 4 years where
he gained first hand experience in the transportation
industry and developed an interest in logistics.
This
employment
experience combined with Craig's interest in law fueled his aspirations
to work for the Department of Transportation where he could play a role
in the transportation issues affecting the economy.
- Matthew Brand,
a TCA scholarship recipient last year, is entering
his senior year at the University
of South Dakota and explained that he learned many
skills
through his work at Midwest Coast Transport that he couldn't have
learned in the classroom. He will be earning a degree in business management
this year.
- Keith Fanelli, a student at Pennsylvania State
University, credits trucking for his interest in
business and entrepreneurship. His grandfather started
Fanelli
Brothers Trucking in 1958 and it continues to be a strong company today.
Keith was recently accepted to the Smeal College
of Business Administration at Penn
State. Fanelli couldn't believe his luck in being chosen as a scholarship
recipient and exclaimed "are you serious?"
- Mindy Headrick, has seen the trucking industry
impact both her mother and father in very different
ways. He mother is a claims adjuster for National
Carriers
and this extra source of income has made it easier for Mindy to attend
Friends University. Her father is a farmer and the
use of trucks to haul his grain
has helped him to be able to profit from farming.
- Michelle Lambert, a Driver Recruiting Agent
for Schneider National, is majoring in Political
Science
at the University of Wisconsin – Green Bay.
Working for a trucking company has shown her the
importance of teamwork, and that although
people work individually, each person has an important role to perform.
- Kristi Leal, an employee of Contract Freighters,
Inc. since 1999, is working toward a career as
a Family and Consumer Science teacher and believes
that
her work experience in the trucking industry will prove invaluable.
Once
in the classroom
she hopes to promote trucking as a career choice to her students.
- Steven Limbaugh, a safety advisor at Dart Transit
Company has been in the industry for over 20 years
and can't fathom leaving it. He is working
toward a business administration degree at the
University of Phoenix and hopes to continue working
in commercial vehicle safety.
- Jessica Meek, who received a scholarship last
year, said the trucking industry has affected both
her life
and academic career. Jessica's mother works
for G&P Trucking and Jessica also worked there and credits
the job with teaching her responsibility, commitment, and integrity.
More than anything else upon the
death of her grandfather Jessica learned that G&P and the entire
trucking industry is a family.
- Janice Mitchell is a former truck driver, her
husband Mike currently drives for Shaffer Trucking.
Janice
has always wanted to be a professional nurse and
is fulfilling her dream at Tennessee Technical College. She credits her
husband's
driving career with making it possible for her to go to school. Mitchell
shared with TCA staff that she had been praying to
receive a scholarship since she sent
in the application and that she believed it to be a blessing.
- Wojciech Napierala, a former driver, now works
as a national salesman for Auscor Transportation
as well as at the front desk of a hotel. Napierala
finds
that
his experience as a driver helps him with both of his current jobs, at
the hotel he is known for giving the best directions
and
as a salesman for the trucking
company he can accurately estimate the time it will take to deliver a load.
Napierala, a native of Poland, is working towards
his degree at the University of Central
Oklahoma.
- Ashley Southern, a student at Pittsburgh State
University, explained how the trucking industry
dramatically affected her life when her hometown
was struck
by a tornado. The American Red Cross and Salvation Army trucks quickly
arrived to tend to the residents while other larger
trucks hauled away debris. Ashley
is working towards a nursing degree and hopes to one day help others the
way trucking helped her. She said that getting the
scholarship news made her day.
- Ruthie Umthun, a student at Northwestern College,
comes from a long line of truckers, her grandfather
is the retired president of Umthun Trucking Company
and her father works in sales for Smithway Motor Express. Umthun remembers
a
time when she was ashamed of her ties to the trucking industry before
she realized
how vital it is to the economy. She has grown to be grateful for the
influence the industry has had on her.
- Brett Vaughn, who received a scholarship last
year, is a mechanic at Sitton Motor Lines, has had
an opportunity
many other people haven't; he has worked
with his father since the age of 17. Vaughn wouldn't trade the
experience for the world and hopes to continue working for Sitton Motor
Lines after he receives
his degree in business administration.
- Natasha Vaughn has seen the trucking industry
positively impact many of her family members. Her
uncle, step
father, two aunts, husband and father-in-law
all work in trucking. Vaughn wrote, "The trucking industry impacts
everyone in some way. Maybe it is just by bringing the products that
stock our shelves,
but for me it has been so much more."
Truckload Carriers Association Scholarship applications
for the 2005-2006 school year will be available in
September, 2004. For more information,
call Aimee
Cirucci at (703) 838-1950 or visit www.truckload.org/scholarships/.
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TCA is the only national trade association whose collective
sole focus is the truckload segment of the motor carrier industry.
The association represents dry van, refrigerated, flatbed,
and intermodal container carriers operating in the 48 contiguous
states as well as Alaska, Mexico, and Canada. Representing
operators of over 200,000 trucks, which collectively produce
an annual revenue of over $20 billion, TCA is an organization
tailored to specific truckload carrier needs.
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