Posted on 03/10/2008 10:12:18 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
WASHINGTON A senator wants Congress' investigative arm to determine whether the Transportation Department has broken the law by spending federal money on a program allowing Mexican trucks on U.S. roads.
Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., called for the investigation by the General Accountability Office a few hours after Transportation Secretary Mary Peters warned of economic losses if Mexican trucks are prohibited from driving deep into the U.S.
Peters has been fighting in court to prevent the program's end. But Dorgan and others say Congress prohibited spending money on the program last year.
When Congress passes a law that says no funds can be used for this program, we mean no funds can be used for this program, Dorgan said in a news release. The Department of Transportation cannot simply pick and choose which laws they want to follow and which laws they want to break.
Dorgan said the agency is violating the Antideficiency Act, which prohibits spending federal money that has not been authorized or appropriated.
The North American Free Trade Agreement gave Mexican trucks greater access to U.S. roads beginning in 1995. But the U.S. only opened the roads to a few trucks when the pilot program began last September.
Long-standing opposition from labor and safety groups had kept the trucks off most U.S. roads. Without the program, Mexican trucks are confined to about 25 miles beyond the border, where goods they bring are picked up by U.S. truck drivers.
Peters said Monday the agency is not violating the law. The law prohibits using funds to establish the program, she said, but the money is being used on the existing program. The agency has made similar arguments in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which is considering an appeal by the International Brotherhood of Teamsters to stop the program.
The action was a prelude to a potentially bitter Senate committee hearing on the program planned for Tuesday, with Peters scheduled to testify.
Earlier Monday, Peters said U.S. business would suffer if the trucking program is stopped.
Should Congress ... end the cross-border trucking, Mexico has every right to impose fees and tariffs on the very goods we see before us this morning and many more, Peters told a news conference. Before her were tables loaded with apples, ham, soybeans, rice, eggs, canned chili and meat, beef, milk, whiskey and other products.
Todd Spencer, vice president of the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association, called Peters' claims economic fear-mongering.
The program is supposed to work both ways across the border, and yet there are very few signing up on either side, Spencer said in a statement. Big businesses want the cheap labor, but for a number of reasons trucking companies on both sides of the border don't want to get involved.
The latest numbers from the Transportation Department show 18 Mexican carriers with 62 trucks and six U.S. carriers with 46 trucks are participating in the program. Up to 500 trucks from 100 Mexican carriers can participate.
Mexican trucks have made 322 crossings into the U.S., while U.S. trucking companies have made 683 crossings into Mexico.
James Hoffa, International Brotherhood of Teamsters president, said he doesn't buy Peters' argument that Mexico will sanction U.S. goods with higher tariffs in retaliation. Mexico has a $70 billion trade surplus because of NAFTA and they'd be foolish to do it, Hoffa said.
Ricardo Alday, spokesman for the Mexican Embassy in Washington, said Mexico is keeping its options open.
Oh, just great. Beef, eggs and milk are coming from Mexico? I sure wish there were some "made in the USA" labels. If given the choice, I think people would willingly pay the market price. Of course, Congress has blocked that, too, leaving the consumers unable to make an informed decision.
We try to stay away from all the food that we can that is not from the USA. Let this food get higher in price that way we know what is coming from Mexico. We don’t want their food.
We try to stay away from all the food that we can that is not from the USA. Let this food get higher in price, that way we know what is coming from Mexico. We don’t want their food. They are filthy down there. They don’t have the same health standards as we do.
Some of the newer manufacturing plants are not bad. And I don’t have any problem with processed or canned type goods (other than the diversion of US jobs to cheap foreign labor). But I really prefer that fresh foods stay as close to home as possible. It eliminates so many possibilities for contamination. I had no idea fresh milk and eggs were coming from Mexico. I’ve looked for labels on beef and most are notably silent as to where they are packaged, let alone the source of the livestock.
I agree with my Senator Dorgan for a change. The only thing Mexican Truckers in the U.S. will do is increase the supply of truckers, thereby lowering the price (wage) of truckers.
If we can import Mexican truckers, why not Chinese slave labor? It’s a cheap supply of labor, and we can keep them in camps and put GPS trackers in their butts.
I have no problem with trade. I have no problem with legal immigration.
I have a problem with a purposeful dilution of a specific worker pool in the U.S. by foreign workers working here, that merely decreases the wage of the U.S. trucker.
There. I’m a capitalist and manager. Truckers, unite!
Yep. I also have a problem with the need to build new highways, bridges and ports to accommodate the longer distribution route of products, with taxpayer dollars, thereby artificially keeping the cost of foreign products low. I have a problem that the relative price of those products remains low because our politicians continue to put limitations on U.S. productivity (global warming regs, anyone?), increase the minimum wages, and a slew of other laws that our trading partners are not required to follow.
We need to reduce regulations in the U.S. and quit subsidizing foreign products. What we see now is anything but "free" trade.
There. Im a capitalist and manager. Truckers, unite!
There. I'm a capitalist and fed up with government! LOL.
Finally, Dorkan does something useful. This is surprising, coming from a Rat but it might reflect badly on Bush so he is Johnny on the spot.
I’ve spoken to several US truckers. Mexican trucks are breaking all the rules established by NAFTA and are helping to further destroy the US trucking market.
There are many compelling reasons to not allow Mexican trucks outside of border enterprise zones. Safety, truck safety and equipment, driver training/driving standards, and the ability to read/understand English are all reasons to limit their access to US roads. In addition, the potential for large-scale human smuggling cannot be ignored, PARTICULARLY with the push from many government sources for the TTC.
Didn’t read the article and don’t care about the senator’s reasons, I support anything he can/will do on this issue on principle alone.
Ping!
If you want on, or off this S. Texas/Mexico ping list, please FReepMail me.
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