Posted on 06/01/2002 3:09:02 AM PDT by sarcasm
SAN ANTONIO - Trucks from Mexico will be able to travel in the United States around mid-July as federal officials sort through the complicated process of how to inspect each rig, officials said Wednesday.
Previous plans had called for the border to open as early as June as part of the North American Free Trade Agreement. The state already has set up temporary inspection sites at eight Texas border crossings.
But Deputy Transportation Secretary Michael Jackson told those attending a NAFTA Land Transportation Conference on Wednesday that in addition to setting up the inspection process, several hundred employees must be hired to handle the workload.
"We made a solemn pledge to our countries, and we're getting closer to it," Jackson said. "This day has been a long time coming."
Mexico's No. 2 transportation official expressed frustration at the delay, but said he was more concerned about a double standard in safety rules for trucks from Mexico and Canada.
Under guidelines announced in March, carriers from Mexico must obtain temporary travel stickers every 90 days before they are allowed in the United States. The provisional stickers will be required until the trucking companies obtain permanent permits, a process that could take years.
Trucks from Canada, on the other hand, typically are issued permanent permits as soon as they pass inspections, said Aaron Dychter Poltolarek, Mexico's sub-secretary of transportation.
"We object if Mexican companies get a different regime of inspections compared to the U.S. and the Canadians," Dychter said. "The free-trade agreement called for an equitable and fair system."
Jackson, acknowledging the different processes for trucks from Canada and Mexico, said the temporary stickers, known as Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance decals, are simply a way to get the trucks on the road as soon as possible while still ensuring they are safe.
"We do not intend to discriminate against Mexican companies in any way," Jackson said. "We are harmonizing the standard for all three countries. The requirements will be the same for American companies, Canadian companies and Mexican companies."
Under the terms of the North American Free Trade Agreement, trucks from the United States, Canada and Mexico were supposed to be granted cross-border access, but President Clinton in 1995 signed a federal moratorium on trucks from Mexico after anti-NAFTA groups expressed safety concerns.
Currently, trucks from Mexico can cross into the United States but cannot venture beyond designated commercial areas in border cities such as Laredo and El Paso.
President Bush, a proponent of allowing the trucks to travel unimpeded, is expected to lift the moratorium once the safety inspection process is in place.
Meanwhile, some Mexican business owners already are submitting applications to travel in the United States in anticipation of the moratorium being lifted.
About 200 people, mostly business executives, attended the NAFTA conference to learn more about the inch-thick application for travel permits. In addition to safety inspections, truck owners must prove that they carry insurance, be familiar with weight requirements and learn the differing rules for trucks passing through various U.S. states.
"Our challenge is to ensure that regulatory control meets the needs of the market," said Louis Ranger, deputy transport minister for Transport Canada.
Jose Zendejas Mosqueda, an official with Quaker State's Mexico City headquarters, said he doesn't envision changing his routine anytime soon because of the new regulations.
this is a bad thing - believe me they should not open the border to these trucks...
Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance decals, are simply a way to get the trucks on the road as soon as possible while still ensuring they are safe.
©2002 San Francisco Chronicle
Altar Desert, Mexico -- Editor's Note: This week, the Bush administration is required by NAFTA to announce that Mexican long-haul trucks will be allowed onto U.S. highways - where they have long been banned over concerns about safety - rather than stopping at the border. The Chronicle sent a team to get the inside story before the trucks start to roll.
It was sometime way after midnight in the middle of nowhere, and a giddy Manuel Marquez was at the wheel of 20 tons of hurtling, U.S.-bound merchandise.
The lights of oncoming trucks flared into a blur as they whooshed past on the narrow, two-lane highway, mere inches from the left mirror of his truck. Also gone in a blur were Marquez's past two days, a nearly Olympic ordeal of driving with barely a few hours of sleep.
"Ayy, Mexico!" Marquez exclaimed as he slammed on the brakes around a hilly curve, steering around another truck that had stopped in the middle of the lane, its hood up and its driver nonchalantly smoking a cigarette. "We have so much talent to share with the Americans - and so much craziness."
Several hours ahead in the desert darkness was the border, the end of Marquez's 1,800-mile run. At Tijuana, he would deliver his cargo, wait for another load, then head back south.
But soon, Marquez and other Mexican truckers will be able to cross the border instead of turning around. Their feats of long-distance stamina - and, critics fear, endangerment of public safety - are coming to a California freeway near you.
Later this week, the Bush administration is expected to announce that it will open America's highways to Mexican long-haul trucks, thus ending a long fight by U.S. truckers and highway safety advocates to keep them out.
Under limitations imposed by the United States since 1982, Mexican vehicles are allowed passage only within a narrow border commercial zone, where they must transfer their cargo to U.S.-based long-haul trucks and drivers.
The lifting of the ban - ordered last month by an arbitration panel of the North American Free Trade Agreement - has been at the center of one of the most high-decibel issues in the U.S.-Mexico trade relationship.
Will the end of the ban endanger American motorists by bringing thousands of potentially unsafe Mexican trucks to U.S. roads? Or will it reduce the costs of cross-border trade and end U.S. protectionism with no increase in accidents?
Two weeks ago, as the controversy grew, Marquez's employer, Transportes Castores, allowed a Chronicle reporter and photographer to join him on a typical run from Mexico City to the border.
The three-day, 1,800-mile journey offered a window into a part of Mexico that few Americans ever see - the life of Mexican truckers, a resourceful, long-suffering breed who, from all indications, do not deserve their pariah status north of the border. But critics of the border opening would also find proof of their concerns about safety:
-- American inspectors at the border are badly undermanned and will be hard- pressed to inspect more than a fraction of the incoming Mexican trucks.
California - which has a much more rigorous truck inspection program than Arizona, New Mexico or Texas, the other border states - gave full inspections to only 2 percent of the 920,000 short-haul trucks allowed to enter from Mexico last year.
Critics say the four states will be overwhelmed by the influx of Mexican long-haul trucks, which are expected to nearly double the current volume of truck traffic at the border.
-- Most long-distance Mexican trucks are relatively modern, but maintenance is erratic.
Marquez's truck, for example, was a sleek, 6-month-old, Mexican-made Kenworth, equal to most trucks north of the border. But his windshield was cracked - a safety violation that would earn him a ticket in the United States but had been ignored by his company since it occurred two months ago.
A recent report by the U.S. Transportation Department said 35 percent of Mexican trucks that entered the United States last year were ordered off the road by inspectors for safety violations such as faulty brakes and lights.
-- Mexico's domestic truck-safety regulation is extremely lax. Mexico has no functioning truck weigh stations, and Marquez said federal police appear to have abandoned a program of random highway inspections that was inaugurated with much fanfare last fall.
-- Almost all Mexican long-haul drivers are forced to work dangerously long hours.
Marquez was a skillful driver, with lightning reflexes honed by road conditions that would make U.S. highways seem like cruise-control paradise. But he was often steering through a thick fog of exhaustion.
In Mexico, no logbooks - required in the United States to keep track of hours and itinerary - are kept. Marquez slept a total of only seven hours during his three-day trip.
"We're just like American truckers, I'm sure," Marquez said with a grin. "We're neither saints nor devils. But we're good drivers, that's for sure, or we'd all be dead." -- -- --
Although no reliable statistics exist for the Bay Area's trade with Mexico, it is estimated that the region's exports and imports with Mexico total $6 billion annually. About 90 percent of that amount moves by truck, in tens of thousands of round trips to and from the border.
Under the decades-old border restrictions, long-haul trucks from either side must transfer their loads to short-haul "drayage" truckers, who cross the border and transfer the cargo again to long-haul domestic trucks. The complicated arrangement is costly and time-consuming, making imported goods more expensive for U.S. consumers.
Industry analysts say that after the ban is lifted, most of the two nations' trade will be done by Mexican drivers, who come much cheaper than American truckers because they earn only about one-third the salary and typically drive about 20 hours per day.
Although Mexican truckers would have to obey the U.S. legal limit of 10 hours consecutive driving when in the United States, safety experts worry that northbound drivers will be so sleep-deprived by the time they cross the border that the American limit will be meaningless. Mexican drivers would not, however, be bound by U.S. labor laws, such as the minimum wage.
"Are you going to be able to stay awake?" Marcos Munoz, vice president of Transportes Castores jokingly asked a Chronicle reporter before the trip. "Do you want some pingas?"
The word is slang for uppers, the stimulant pills that are commonly used by Mexican truckers. Marquez, however, needed only a few cups of coffee to stay awake through three straight 21-hour days at the wheel.
Talking with his passengers, chatting on the CB radio with friends, and listening to tapes of 1950s and 1960s ranchera and bolero music, he showed few outward signs of fatigue.
But the 46-year-old Marquez, who has been a trucker for 25 years, admitted that the burden occasionally is too much.
"Don't kid yourself," he said late the third night. "Sometimes, you get so tired, so worn, your head just falls."
U.S. highway safety groups predict an increase in accidents after the border is opened.
"Even now, there aren't enough safety inspectors available for all crossing points," said David Golden, a top official of the National Association of Independent Insurers, the main insurance-industry lobby.
"So we need to make sure that when you're going down Interstate 5 with an 80,000-pound Mexican truck in your rearview mirror and you have to jam on your brakes, that truck doesn't come through your window."
Golden said the Bush administration should delay the opening to Mexican trucks until border facilities are upgraded.
California highway safety advocates concur, saying the California Highway Patrol - which carries out the state's truck inspections - needs to be given more inspectors and larger facilities to check incoming trucks' brakes, lights and other safety functions. -- -- --
Marquez's trip started at his company's freight yard in Tlalnepantla, an industrial suburb of Mexico City. There, his truck was loaded with a typical variety of cargo - electronic components and handicrafts bound for Los Angeles, and chemicals, printing equipment and industrial parts for Tijuana.
At the compound's gateway was a shrine with statues of the Virgin Mary and Jesus. As he drove past, Marquez crossed himself, then crossed himself again before the small Virgin on his dashboard.
"Just in case, you know," he said. "The devil is always on the loose on these roads."
In fact, Mexican truckers have to brave a wide variety of dangers.
As he drove through the high plateaus of central Mexico, Marquez pointed out where he was hijacked a year ago - held up at gunpoint by robbers who pulled alongside him in another truck. His trailer full of canned tuna - easy to fence, he said - was stolen, along with all his personal belongings.
What's worse, some thieves wear uniforms.
On this trip, the truck had to pass 14 roadblocks, at which police and army soldiers searched the cargo for narcotics. Each time, Marquez stood on tiptoes to watch over their shoulders. He said, "You have to have quick eyes, or they'll take things out of the packages."
Twice, police inspectors asked for bribes - "something for the coffee," they said. Each time, he refused and got away with it.
"You're good luck for me," he told a Chronicle reporter. "They ask for money but then see an American and back off. Normally, I have to pay a lot." -- -- --
Although the Mexican government has pushed hard to end the border restrictions, the Mexican trucking industry is far from united behind that position. Large trucking companies such as Transportes Castores back the border opening, while small and medium-size ones oppose it.
"We're ready for the United States, and we'll be driving to Los Angeles and San Francisco," said Munoz, the company's vice president.
"Our trucks are modern and can pass the U.S. inspections. Only about 10 companies here could meet the U.S. standards."
The border opening has been roundly opposed by CANACAR, the Mexican national trucking industry association, which says it will result in U.S. firms taking over Mexico's trucking industry.
"The opening will allow giant U.S. truck firms to buy large Mexican firms and crush smaller ones," said Miguel Quintanilla, CANACAR's president. "We're at a disadvantage, and those who benefit will be the multinationals."
Quintanilla said U.S. firms will lower their current costs by replacing their American drivers with Mexicans, yet will use the huge American advantages - superior warehouse and inventory-tracking technology, superior access to financing and huge economies of scale - to drive Mexican companies out of business. Already, some U.S. trucking giants such as M.S. Carriers, Yellow Corp. and Consolidated Freightways Corp. have invested heavily in Mexico.
"The opening of the border will bring about the consolidation of much of the trucking industry on both sides of the border," said the leading U.S. academic expert on NAFTA trucking issues, James Giermanski, a professor at Belmont Abbey College in Raleigh, N.C.
The largest U.S. firms will pair with large Mexican firms and will dominate U.S.-Mexico traffic, he said.
But Giermanski added that the increase in long-haul cross-border traffic will be slower than either critics or advocates expect, because of language difficulties, Mexico's inadequate insurance coverage and Mexico's time- consuming system of customs brokers.
"All the scare stories you've heard are just ridiculous," he said. "The process will take a long time." -- -- --
In California, many truckers fear for their jobs. However, Teamsters union officials say they are trying to persuade their members that Marquez and his comrades are not the enemy.
"There will be a very vehement reaction by our members if the border is opened," said Chuck Mack, president of Teamsters Joint Council 7, which has 55, 000 members in the Bay Area.
"But we're trying to diminish the animosity that by focusing on the overall problem - how (the opening) will help multinational corporations to exploit drivers on both sides of the border."
Mexican drivers, however, are likely to welcome the multinationals' increased efficiency, which will enable them to earn more by wasting less time waiting for loading and paperwork.
For example, in Mexico City, Marquez had to wait more than four hours for stevedores to load his truck and for clerks to prepare the load's documents - a task that would take perhaps an hour for most U.S. trucking firms.
For drivers, time is money. Marquez's firm pays drivers a percentage of gross freight charges, minus some expenses. His three-day trip would net him about $300. His average monthly income is about $1,400 - decent money in Mexico, but by no means middle class.
Most Mexican truckers are represented by a union, but it is nearly always ineffectual - what Transportes Castores executives candidly described as a "company union." A few days before this trip, Transportes Castores fired 20 drivers when they protested delays in reimbursement of fuel costs.
But Marquez didn't much like talking about his problems. He preferred to discuss his only child, a 22-year-old daughter who is in her first year of undergraduate medical school in Mexico City. Along with paternal pride was sadness.
"Don't congratulate me," he said. "My wife is the one who raised her. I'm gone most of the time. You have to have a very strong marriage, because this job is hell on a wife.
"The money is OK, and I really like being out on the open road, but the loneliness . . ." He left the thought unfinished, and turned up the volume on his cassette deck.
It was playing Pedro Infante, the famous bolero balladeer, and Marquez began to sing.
"The moon of my nights has hidden itself.
"Oh little heavenly virgin, I am your son.
"Give me your consolation, "Today, when I'm suffering out in the world." Despite the melancholy tone, Marquez soon became jovial and energetic. He smiled widely and encouraged his passengers to sing along. Forgoing his normal caution, he accelerated aggressively on the curves.
His voice rose, filling the cabin, drowning out the hiss of the pavement below and the rush of the wind that was blowing him inexorably toward the border.
How NAFTA Ended the Ban On Mexico's Trucks The North American Free Trade Agreement, which went into effect in January 1994, stipulated that the longtime U.S. restrictions on Mexican trucks be lifted.
Under NAFTA, by December 1995, Mexican trucks would be allowed to deliver loads all over the four U.S. border states - California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas - and to pick up loads for their return trip to Mexico. U.S. trucking firms would get similar rights to travel in Mexico. And by January 2000, Mexican trucks would be allowed throughout the United States.
However, bowing to pressure from the Teamsters union and the insurance industry, President Clinton blocked implementation of the NAFTA provisions. The Mexican government retaliated by imposing a similar ban on U.S. trucks.
As a result, the longtime status quo continues: Trucks from either side must transfer their loads to short-haul "drayage" truckers, who cross the border and transfer the cargo again to long-haul domestic trucks.
The complicated arrangement is time-consuming and expensive. Mexico estimates its losses at $2 billion annually; U.S. shippers say they have incurred similar costs.
In 1998, Mexico filed a formal complaint under NAFTA, saying the U.S. ban violated the trade pact and was mere protectionism. The convoluted complaint process lasted nearly six years, until a three-person arbitration panel finally ruled Feb. 6 that the United States must lift its ban by March 8 or allow Mexico to levy punitive tariffs on U.S. exports. -----
COMPARING TRUCKING REGULATIONS
The planned border opening to Mexican trucks will pose a big challenge to U. S. inspectors, who will check to be sure that trucks from Mexico abide by stricter U.S. truck-safety regulations.
Here are some of the differences:
Hours-of-service limits for drivers: In U.S.:
Yes. Ten hours' consecutive driving, up to 15 consecutive hours on duty, 8 hours' consecutive rest, maximum of 70 hours' driving in eight-day period.
In Mexico:
No Driver's age
In U.S.: 21 is minimum for interstate trucking
In Mexico: 18
Random drug test In U.S.: Yes, for all drivers
In Mexico: No Automatic disqualification for certain medical conditions
In U.S.: Yes
In Mexico: No
Logbooks In U.S.: Yes. Standardized logbooks with date graphs are required and part of inspection criteria.
In Mexico: A new law requiring logbooks is not enforced, and virtually no truckers use them.
Maximum weight limit (in pounds) In U.S.: 80,000
In Mexico: 135,000
Roadside Inspections
In U.S.: Yes
In Mexico: An inspection program began last year but has been discontinued.
Out-of-service rules for safety deficiencies
In U.S.: Yes
In Mexico: Not currently. Program to be phased in over two years.
Hazardous materials regulations
In U.S.: A strict standards, training, licensure and inspection regime.
In Mexico: Much laxer program with far fewer identified chemicals and substances, and fewer licensure requirements.
Vehicle safety Standards
In U.S.: Comprehensive standards for components such as antilock brakes, underride guards, night visibility of vehicle.
In Mexico: Newly enacted standards for vehicle inspections are voluntary for the first year and less rigorous than U.S. rules.
Chronicle Graphic Sources: Public Citizen, California Department of Transportation and Chronicle research
©2002 San Francisco Chronicle Page A - 1
It's a bad idea at any time, let the goods be transported to US trucks at the border, but this timing shows no common sense.
I hope and pray American truckers are fully prepared.
I lived in El Paso, Texas and I witnessed on I-10 the potential for all kinds of bad things to happen with the trucks that come up from Mexico...I'm normally a free trade believer, but after spending a few weeks in Monterrey a few years back I'd just as soon not allow Mexican "trucks" (many of which are complete pieces of modell) on our freeways. Mexican drivers are bad enough.this is a bad thing - believe me they should not open the border to these trucks...
-Eric
Then they came for the jobs in the stinky packing houses in little towns all across rural America ... but why should I care ... I work in a clean white shirt, in a secure little office for a fed/state/municipality. We live comfortably in the 'burbs, and my future in another 8yrs, is nothing if not secure.
Then they came for the well paid computer jobs, but hey, 'What me worry'? about a few foreign H1b's(?) they don't bother me ... I enjoy my retirement, still doin' OK with my investments and dabbling in the stock mrkt ... and those nerdy programmer-types are simply undereducated and/or kind of disposible anyway, right?
Then they came for the truck driver jobs all across America, but again, why should I care ... my kids are all headed to college, they're hardly looking at any future in 'truck driving.
Well, you get the idea. Unfortunately too many of our fellow citizens care anything at all about the brutal effects of Glo-baloney until they or one of theirs suddenly finds themselves 18yrs into a 30yrs Mortgage with no clue as to how to keep up the pymts and provide for their family ... then they wake up to the scorge on our society of NAFTA/GATT/WTO and not-so-happy-and-Free Trade
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.