An experienced HGV and racing driver; a Traffic Officer who keeps everyone safe and moving on the motorways in the Midlands; the Chief Constable of Sussex Police; the CEO of the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport and someone changing the face of road freight in sub-Saharan Africa and India – these are just some of the women who are breaking the bias in the world of transport.
Driving for Better Business is halfway through a year of videos, podcasts and features, launched to mark International Women’s Day (8 March). Women make up 47 per cent of the UK workforce yet remain underrepresented in the transport sector, accounting for only 20 per cent of workers. However, this is changing steadily, and women are represented at every level.
Listen to the podcast featuring Astrid Van Der Burgt, Head of Road Safety at Holcim, the company behind its Women on Wheels scheme. It recognises women drivers as four times safer than their male counterparts, and, in a move to increase the diversity of its workforce, actively recruits female truck drivers. She says there is also a strong business case with a marked improvement on miles driven without speeding and harsh braking, better fuel consumption, reduced maintenance costs and improved turnaround times.
Find out how National Highways Traffic Officer Emma Wilman helps to keep safe and moving the 4 million vehicles using the National Highways network every day. The team is involved in keeping road users informed through electronic message signs, clearing debris and abandoned or damaged vehicles from the carriageway, as well as coordinating the resources of the emergency services. The officers are the front line and offer advice to drivers on breakdown prevention such as checking fuel, tyres and oil before setting off.
Ruth Gore, Rachel Darling-Love and Sue Smith are working together to make roads in Humberside safe
If you’re looking for examples of real leadership, there’s a profile of Alison Moriarty, Managing Director of Driive, expert on work-related road risk and hugely successful in reducing the fleet risk and collision rates of several large fleets by focusing on driver behaviour and education. She sits on several high-profile boards and committees that focus on raising road safety standards and identifying and sharing best practise – subjects dear to Driving for Better Business.
Alison says: “I don’t think that my gender has held me back, but I do think that I had to maybe prove myself a bit more to get the same respect as male colleagues, in the early days. I hope that seeing other women achieving accolades will help encourage more women in the industry.”
In another podcast interview, Lorna McAtear, fleet manager for National Grid , talks about the 9000 vehicles she manages – along with “a few helicopters”. She’s working through a rigorous programme of improving efficiency and electrification of the fleet, as part of National Grid’s strategy for Net Zero by 2050. Part of this is taking drivers through the differences in handling EVs. She has found that, with fewer moving parts, the more cautious approach taken by drivers, even the quietness of the vehicle, EVs are making for a less stressed journey and fewer breakdowns.
Ashlee Field outlines the need to create a safety culture throughout delivery giant DPD . Meanwhile, Jo Shiner, Chief Constable of Sussex and the roads policing lead on the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) talks about her role and how collaboration is essential to the success of roads policing strategy.
Over the next six months, Driving for Better Business will talk to more women in high-profile roles in the emergency services, deliveries, recruitment, the law, road safety and academia. Watch out for more from Marie Biddulph, assistant regional safety co-ordinator at National Highways; fleet compliance specialist, Corinne Murphy; Julie Davies from Amey; Dr Lucy Rackliff, Senior Lecturer at Aston University; and Jessica Truong, Secretary General of the Towards Zero Foundation – among many others.
Driving for Better Business, is a National Highways programme led by Anne-Marie Penny, Senior Road Safety Policy Adviser, who says:
“This International Women’s Day initiative is a great opportunity to raise awareness of the thousands of women who work in this sector, from CEOs of large multinational corporates, national and local government officials, directors of influential safety charities, freelancers, apprentices and everything between. Transport – like all areas of life – benefits from a diverse range of influences to best serve everyone.”
Find profiles and podcasts of these and others throughout the year here: https://www.drivingforbetterbusiness.com/women-in-transport/