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A Trucker's Tribute

by Steve Macleod

The news that 35-year-old owner-operator Adam Goron had died in a collision shocked his friends and co-workers, but they gathered themselves to send him off with a special memorial convoy.

Adam Goron, just 35 years old, was living his dream as an owner-operator.
Adam Goron, just 35 years old, was living his dream as an owner-operator.

On Dec. 6, Goron died when his truck collided with the back of a slower moving semi merging onto Highway 401 near Tilbury, Ont. The impact of the collision dislodged a load of sheet-metal coils from his flatbed trailer and crushed the cab.

"I couldn't believe it was Adam," says co-worker and friend Ben Hamilton.

"With the knowledge of trucking and professional attitude he had, I couldn't believe it could be him," he adds. "After first hearing about the accident we began to put some pieces together and it ended up being the sad thing that it was Adam."

Hamilton and Goron had been friends for about five years, mostly through work and some weekend activities. Most recently they were both working for Laidlaw, but in different divisions.

According to Hamilton, news of the accident and Goron's death changed the mood at the carrier.

"It was basically very quiet and sombre," he says. "A lot of people broke down in tears, it was a tough week. Some people took the week off and lots of people worked but didn't want to."

Although not a co-worker, Danny Daneluk was one of Goron's friends who took a day off work after learning of the accident.

"It hurt and it was a shock," recalls Daneluk. "I didn't go into work the next day and just stayed home to get my head straight. He was one of the best guys you could ever meet in your life and he made the best of any situation."

"He was awesome," he adds. "He would help you if you needed it at any time of day, and if he couldn't, he would find someone else who could and help you out in some way.

"It's hard to accept and still seems surreal. It can happen so easy; life is precious and you realize it with something like this."

Daneluk and Goron had been working on and off together for 15 years, and first met on the job when they were both hauling scrap in Canfield, Ont. It was at the beginning of Goron's trucking career which, his friend says, was a lifelong dream come true.

Growing up in the Canfield-Dunnville region of southern Ontario, Goron had always wanted to be a trucker.

"He was one of those guys always working on fixing something; working on cars and trucks," says Hamilton. "He always dreamed of driving a truck."

By the late-'90s he was able to purchase a rig of his own and beginning had quite a few spectators.

Adam Goron's friends put plates on the first truck the young driver owned and used it as the lead rig in a memnorial convoy.
Adam Goron's friends put plates on the first truck the young driver owned and used it as the lead rig in a memnorial convoy.

"People were coming out of their houses to see what was going on," explains Hamilton. "Canfield is a town of about 500 people and when we arrived it seemed like half the town was out on their front lawns trying to figure out what was going on."

A trucker Hamilton hired to drive one of his three trucks videotaped the whole event and even placed it on YouTube. It's a seven-part series and runs about an hour, but it's clear the convoy became a community event.

Apparently one of Goron's favourite things to say was, "wowzers," and according to Daneluk, the convoy would have been a "wowzers" moment for his friend.

"If he could've seen it he would have just sat and laughed, it was one of the craziest things to see," he recalls. "It started on Broad Street and the OPP came and blocked it off 'cause they'd never seen anything like it and then they blocked off the highway for our ride from Dunnville to Canfield. I've never seen anything like it. It was a very emotional day."

Seems like a fitting tribute for a young trucker gone too soon.

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