Part 3 - Driver Inc, Dual Safety Certificates and Competitive Distortion
The Minister identified Driver Inc. and inter-jurisdictional trade as systemic concerns in Canada’s trucking sector.
They are often treated as separate policy problems.
They are not separate. They are structural.
Driver Inc Survives in Regulatory Seams
Driver Inc is typically framed as a tax enforcement issue.
But its persistence reflects fragmentation:
No single authority sees the full operational picture of a carrier and its drivers across all regulatory domains at once.
Fragmentation allows misclassification to persist between regulatory seams.
But fragmentation does something else. It shapes competitive cost structures.
Two Safety Fitness Regimes, Two Competitive Environments
Canada operates under a constitutional dual framework:
Enforcement intensity, exemption structures, administrative requirements, and compliance costs can differ.
That difference matters.
The Money Reality
Federally regulated carriers must comply with federal Hours of Service rules, including Electronic Logging Device (ELD) requirements.
In some provinces, intra-provincial carriers are not subject to identical ELD mandates or cumulative cycle limitations.
ELDs are not symbolic.
They involve:
Across a fleet of 50, 100, or more power units, that becomes a material operating cost.
In addition, federal cycle rules limit how many hours a driver may accumulate over 7 or 14 days. Where provincial frameworks provide different cycle structures or greater flexibility, scheduling and dispatch capacity can differ.
The difference is not philosophical. It is financial.
It affects:
Where regulatory burdens differ, competitive advantage can follow.
Inter-Jurisdictional Trade and Regulatory Arbitrage
Trade barriers in trucking are often discussed as paperwork or technical inconsistencies. Try to permit and ship a wide load from PEI to Victoria BC and you will understand inter-jurisdictional trade barriers.
But structural asymmetry goes deeper.
When provinces apply different:
carriers will make strategic decisions about domicile, operating structure and fleet allocation.
Regulatory arbitrage is predictable behaviour within a fragmented framework.
If one structure reduces compliance cost, increases scheduling flexibility, or lowers administrative overhead, market forces respond accordingly.
The Link Between Driver Inc and Cost Pressure
Driver Inc does not operate in a vacuum.
It exists in an environment where:
When cost pressures rise under one regulatory structure, some operators will seek structural positioning that reduces exposure.
That can include:
Driver Inc is partly a labour issue. It is also an economic signal.
The Structural Question
If:
then Driver Inc and trade distortion are not anomalies. They are structural outputs.
Addressing them requires more than targeted enforcement or public announcements.
It requires coordinated data sharing modernization across:
No carrier should gain competitive advantage simply because the regulatory map is uneven.
If we are serious about safety, fair competition and labour integrity, then we must acknowledge that structural differences influence behaviour.
Until compliance obligations are viewed through both a safety lens and an economic lens, the same problems will continue to reappear under different names.