Martins Stock Haulage and TIACS Driving Change for Mental Health in Transport

The release of the first-ever annual impact report from TIACS has highlighted the incredible strides being made in breaking down mental health barriers in Australia’s transport industry—thanks in no small part to the leadership of Martins Stock Haulage and a conversation that started over a beer with TradeMutt.

In 2024, Martins took a bold step by introducing a custom TradeMutt “Razzle Dazzle” print to its fleet—designed to spark conversations about mental health and promote TIACS, a professional telehealth counselling service for blue-collar workers that is free to access. Since rolling out, the truck has clocked up 275,000 kilometres as a moving billboard on B-Double and Road Train routes nationwide. Its striking design has become a powerful symbol of awareness and support, particularly in smaller and remote towns where access to mental health services is often limited.

One driver at the heart of the initiative is Aaron, who pilots the brightly wrapped truck, named Muttley, alongside his best mate—a Blue Heeler named Rocco. “Life on the road can be incredibly lonely when you’re hundreds of miles from home, stuck with your thoughts,” Aaron explains. “Having my dog with me helps, but I know not everyone has that. That’s why what TIACS is doing is so important—it takes away the barriers that stop people in our industry from getting help. It gives blokes and women someone to talk to when they need it most.”

The impact is already being felt across the industry. According to TIACS’ FY25 Annual Impact Report:

The report also showed that 63% of all clients lived in regional or remote areas, proving the value of initiatives like Martins’ “Razzle Dazzle” truck in spreading awareness where it’s needed most. TradeMutt’s conversation-starting prints are making a real difference, with 17% of clients hearing about TIACS through TradeMutt, 17% through family and friends and 28% from workplace and alliance partners—evidence of the ripple effect these initiatives create.

Martins’ leadership has also inspired others. In 2025, Mack Trucks joined the movement with the launch of Barkley the Truck—wrapped in its own Mack x TradeMutt print and unveiled at the Brisbane Truck Show. Together, operators, manufacturers, and advocacy groups are uniting behind a common goal: to normalise mental health conversations in transport and ensure support is never out of reach.

“It takes real courage to open up, especially in an industry where the culture often tells you to ‘just get on with it,’” said Sue Jankovic, CEO of TIACS. “But every time someone reaches out, it chips away at the silence and barriers that have kept people from seeking support for too long. The transport industry is showing that when we start the conversation, change follows.”

“We want to express our deep appreciation to Martin’s and Mack Trucks for their exemplary approach to raising awareness about the value of TIACS and the importance that one conversation can make. Their commitment and partnership are truly valued, and together we are making a real difference.”

The road ahead remains challenging, but with initiatives like Martins’ Muttley truck, Mack’s Barkley, and the growing uptake of TIACS’ free, no-barrier counselling service, Australia’s transport community is proving it’s ready to drive meaningful change.

For any Blue Collar workers or their loved ones please know that you can contact TIACS on 0488 846 988 (Monday to Friday 8am to 10pm AEST).”