Page 38 - Newcom
P. 38

                THE LAST WORD
Taking control of their own destiny
 By Derek Clouthier
SMITHERS, BRITISH COLUMBIA
Nestled in the tiny northwestern B.C. town of Smithers lies a rather unique delivery operation with a name representative of the area it has served for many years.
Bulkley Valley Wholesale is a small three – soon to be four – truck outfit that hauls product from the local Save-on-Foods to pretty much any business it can in the Bulkley Valley and beyond.
The carrier can best be described as an independent dis- tributor, delivering product to grocery stores, schools, camps, restaurants, and other regional customers within a 900-km radius of Smithers. It services an area that stretches north into the Yukon, into Prince George to the east, and Prince Rupert to the west.
Mike Dandenault is the direc- tor of wholesale for Save-on- Foods, with Bulkley falling under his umbrella, and he said where the local Save-on-Foods is differ- ent from its competitors is that they function as a cash-and-carry wholesale operation and ware- house, offering customers a place to come in and shop, but also with the ability to build and assemble orders and ship them using their own fleet.
“We are with our custom-
ers from start to finish,” said Dandenault. “Our team members are the ones who interact with our customers and the ones who are delivering to our customers. We’re not relying on someone else, it’s our family that is delivering to all these businesses, and that means a lot.”
Bulkley Valley Wholesale began in 1959 thanks to Bill and Herb Leach, along with their partner Archie Dunlop, delivering confec- tion and tobacco in the immediate area around Smithers.
After Tom and John Leach pur- chased the company from their
Mike Dandenault runs Bulkley Valley Wholesale, a unique delivery operation in northwestern B.C.
parents in 1973 and opened Bulkley to the public in 2000,
the carrier was purchased by the OverWaitea Food Group, which continued to operate the company in the same manner it had always been run.
Dandenault says his company is a unique operation in the Smithers area because they are able to control every aspect of food deliv- ery without having to contract out the work to another carrier.
“We’re the only ones that once the groceries are delivered to us, we actually repack them and ship them out ourselves on our equip- ment,” he said.
Finding a carrier in the Smithers area to contract out this type of work would have been difficult, said Dandenault, from a reliability standpoint.
“Our business is selling grocer- ies, and trucking is what we use to get it there. Being able to be consistent with new equipment and being on time, we are profes- sional,” he said. “Priority number one is our product and our gro- ceries, and when you control everything, you have control of your destiny.”
Making the job a bit easier has been Bulkley’s decision to enter an agreement with PacLease.
The carrier used to purchase trucks returned from lease, but Dandenault said maintenance and repairs were all too common problems.
With PacLease, the company now uses brand new Peterbilt trucks. They pay a monthly lease fee and a per kilometer rate, and under the PacLease warranty, downtime is no longer a concern, and planning on-time deliveries is more reliable for Dandenault and his customers.
And it’s not like the new equip- ment isn’t put through the ringer.
“We torture-test our equip- ment,” said Dandenault. “Our trac- tor-trailer can leave Smithers and it will be minus 15, it will head out and do its run to the coast and it will be plus two and raining, then it comes back into that minus
15. It’s actually very hard on the equipment...and we do that three times a week.”
“We’re not relying on someone else, it’s our family that is delivering to all these businesses, and
that means a lot.”
–Mike Dandenault
Though Bulkley has been part of the Save-on-Foods family for about 15 years, Dandenault said the carrier has always been run sepa- rately as its own entity.
Dandenault’s focus was solely on Bulkley before entering his current position, managing the carrier for a few years – an experience that was both rewarding from an edu-
cational side, but challenging at the same time.
“When I first started, one
of the drivers called me and I asked, ‘When are you back?’ and he said he was just pulled over to the side of the road doing a re-gen,” recalled Dandenault. “I said, ‘What the hell is a re-gen?’ I learned a lot about trucks, truck- ing, and equipment over the four years I was there.”
Dandenault and Bulkley are now operating on cruise control. With a fourth truck soon to be added
to the fleet, Dandenault said the new pieces of equipment have not only made his day-to-day job more enjoyable, they have also helped with driver retention.
“If you have old equipment that is constantly breaking down, the drivers are going to get frustrated,” he said.
Bulkley uses three Peterbilt Model 579 trucks, two daycabs and one sleeper, with a Model 348 straight truck on its way.
The carrier hauls 36-foot refrig- erated trailers and a 48-foot trailer for its longer runs carrying more freight.
For now, the company is happy with how its unique operation has progressed in the Bulkley Valley, which has come a long way since delivering out of a Volkswagen van in the late ‘50s. TW
Derek Clouthier can be reached by phone at (403) 969-1506 or by email at derek@newcom.ca. You can also follow him on Twitter at @DerekClouthier.
          Grip that weathers the elements
with the new Michelin® x One® Line Grip D tire Over 25% better snow traction
than leading competitive tires1
michelintruck.com
1 In a standardized snow test, the 445/50R22.5 MICHELIN® X One® Line Grip D tire travelled 54% faster than the 445/50R22.5 Bridgestone® GreatecTM M835TM EcopiaTM tire and 28% faster than the 445/50R22.5 Goodyear® G392A SSDTM DuraSeal + Fuel MaxTM tire. Actual on-road results may vary. 2 3PMSF (3 Peak Mountain Snow Flake) is from European R117 regulation. It has no regulatory Truck Tire reference in N.A. The tire must score at least 25% better in deep snow traction than the Standard Reference Test Tire on an ECE-certified ISO test procedure. 3PMSF always appears with the “M+S” mark. © 2018 MNA(C)I. All rights reserved. (C15898)
                     38 Truck West • August 2018
N
I
L
®
E
H
X
O
C
N
I
E
®
M
T
I
R
E
GUARANTEE
T
O
T
A
N
O
L
I
T
C
S
A
F
A
T
I
S

















   36   37   38   39   40