WASHINGTON (AP) - The news that Mexican trucks
will be allowed to haul freight deeper into the United States drew an
angry reaction Friday from labor leaders, safety advocates and members
of Congress.
They said Mexico has substandard trucks and low-paid drivers that will
threaten national security, cost thousands of jobs and endanger
motorists on the northern side of the Mexican border.
The Bush administration on Thursday announced its plan to have U.S.
inspectors oversee Mexican trucking companies that carry cargo across
the border.
"This program will make trade with Mexico easier and keep our roads safe
at the same time," Transportation Secretary Mary Peters said Friday. She
announced details of the plan to let 100 Mexican trucking companies
travel beyond the border area while she was in El Paso, Texas, at the
Bridge of the Americas, which connects to Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.
Said Teamsters President Jim Hoffa: "They are playing a game of Russian
roulette on America's highways."
Access to all U.S. highways was promised by 2000 under the 1993 North
American Free Trade Agreement, as was access through Mexico for U.S.
carriers.
That aspect of NAFTA was stalled by lawsuits and disagreements between
the two countries, though Canadian and U.S. trucks travel freely across
the northern border.
The Bush pilot project will let Mexican truck companies travel from
Mexico throughout the United States and back. No hazardous material
shipments will be permitted.
According to the Transportation Department, U.S. inspectors will inspect
every truck and interview drivers to make sure they can read and speak
English. They'll examine trucks and check the licenses, insurance and
driving records of the Mexican drivers. Inspectors will also verify that
the trucking companies are insured by U.S.-licensed firms.
The first Mexican trucks are expected to drive into the United States
beyond the border area in about 60 days, the Transportation Department
says.
National Transportation Safety Board member Debbie Hersman questioned
how the U.S. could spare sending inspectors to Mexico when only a tiny
percentage of the hundreds of thousands of U.S. truck companies are
inspected every year.
"They lack the inspectors to conduct safety reviews of at-risk domestic
carriers," Hersman said. "That situation only gets worse if resources
are diverted to the border."
One-fourth of all U.S. trucks are taken off the road after random
inspections because they're so unsafe, she said. An even higher
percentage of Mexican trucks are taken off the road at Texas border
crossings, she said.
Mexican carriers insist their rigs meet U.S. standards. And according to
the Transportation Department, 240 federal and 300 state government
employees deal with Mexican truck issues.
Joan Claybrook, president of Public Citizen, said inspections will be
meaningless because the trucks won't have black boxes that record how
long a driver has been behind the wheel.
"They have no way of telling how many hours these truck drivers have
been driving before they get to the U.S., let alone when they get here,"
Claybrook said.
Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., chair of the Senate Appropriations
Subcommittee on Transportation, announced a March 8 hearing to determine
whether the arrangement meets safety requirements.
Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., chair of the House Highways subcommittee,
said Congress will keep a close eye on the program.
Mexico responded to the U.S. announcement by saying it will allow trucks
from 100 U.S. companies to travel across the border.
Business groups have wanted the border opened to avoid middleman costs
of transferring goods from Mexican to U.S. trucks.
The American Trucking Associations said it supports the program, but
wants to make sure that U.S. and Mexican truck companies are held to the
same standards.
"We also are waiting to see that when US carriers are allowed to travel
into Mexico that the regulatory and permitting process that U.S.
carriers undergo is fair and transparent," the ATA said in a statement.