Restoring Order and Human Rights to Trucking and Immigration Will Help Improve Economy: CTA to PM and Premiers

Jul 28, 2025 | News Updates

Following a meeting this week between the prime minister and premiers to discuss Canada’s economic future, the Canadian Trucking Alliance (CTA) is encouraging provincial and federal leaders to remain steadfast in their commitment to get the Canadian economy moving while putting aside regional and national politics for the betterment of Canadians.

CTA specifically cited immigration oversight, which the provinces want more control over.

CTA recently met with transportation deputies from across Canada to discuss improvements to productivity and competitiveness that could be brought to trucking – namely combatting the underground economy that utilizes immigration schemes linked to forced labour, abuses newcomers to Canada, while embarrassing Canada internationally and dramatically increasing the risk to public safety.

“While tax policy, infrastructure investment and streamlining permitting and licensing regimes remain key, our sector urgently needs the provincial and federal governments to immediately address the underground economy. Part of that solution involves reforming the immigration system – a crisis that will require the regulatory and political leadership of the Council of the Federation and each provincial legislature,” said Stephen Laskowski, president of the CTA.

In the past CTA has outlined to the Council of the Federation the need for immigration reform and a known employer program to prevent the abuse of newcomers and protect road users.

“The underground economy in trucking uses immigration abuse schemes that see thousands of truck drivers in Canada on work permits being paid archaic wages, like from the 1980s,” said Laskowski. “These drivers are operating on roads in Canada and the U.S. with little, to no training and are being forced to work in exploitative conditions and are subjects of economic servitude. It’s time this system ends. If the Council of Federation is looking for provincial control over immigration, it must recognize the problem it inherits and begins working with the trucking sector to restore order to a broken and abused system.”