Union Boss
Blasts Mexican Truck Decision
AP | Sept. 9, 2007
By JOHN PORRETTO
President Bush has
"sucker punched" American workers and threatened national security
by opening the nation's southern border to Mexican truckers,
Teamsters President James Hoffa said Saturday.
Speaking to the union's annual women's conference, Hoffa said the
Bush administration's new pilot program, which took effect Thursday,
shows a lack of concern for homeland security.
"Oh, George Bush is so worried about national security," said Hoffa,
adding that his biggest problem with the program is not knowing
enough about the truckers and what they are hauling.
"And they're going to be coming across that border driving all over
Canada and the United States. That's his vision of America, that's
not our vision," Hoffa told about 1,000 women and guests in a
downtown hotel ballroom.
The U.S. Transportation Department granted permission Thursday to
Transportes Olympic, based in a suburb of Monterrey, Mexico, to haul
cargo anywhere in the United States as part of the North American
Free Trade Agreement. In turn, Mexico granted authority to
Stagecoach Cartage & Distribution Inc. of El Paso to travel anywhere
in Mexico.
Government lawyers
said the program is a necessary part of the North American Free
Trade Agreement and that trucks enrolled in the program would meet
U.S. regulations.
Hoffa said he would go to Congress next week to try to get the
program halted.
"Does anybody know how all the drugs are coming into America?" he
asked the gathering. "They're going to be coming in trucks pretty
soon. It's only a matter of time."
The government says it has imposed rigorous safety protocols in the
program, including drug and alcohol testing for drivers done by U.S.
companies. Additionally, law enforcement officials have stepped up
nationwide enforcement of a law that's been on the books since the
1970s requiring interstate truck and bus drivers to have a basic
understanding of written and spoken English.
A report by the transportation department's inspector general said
the U.S. Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, which
regulates truck safety, had made progress addressing Congress'
requirements.
But it also said the administration had no coordinated plans for
checking trucks and drivers participating in the test program, and
that the motor carrier safety group needed to do more to help
enforce the English requirement for drivers.
Neither trucking company began crossing immediately, needing first
to determine new routes, said John Hill, who runs the Federal Motor
Carrier Safety Administration.
Hill said the Mexican carrier indicated it would begin crossing into
the U.S. during the weekend; the American outfit was expected to
start sometime next week.
Canadian trucking companies already have full access to U.S. roads,
but Mexican trucks can travel only about 20 miles inside the country
at certain border crossings. The new pilot program is designed to
study whether opening the U.S.-Mexico border to all trucks can be
done safely.
Even before the first truck crosses, detractors like Hoffa have
spoken out.
Dozens of truckers protested at border crossings in Texas and
California on Thursday, denouncing as dangerous and unfair the
program that will allow up to 100 Mexican trucking companies to
cross a total of 1,000 vehicles into the U.S. In Laredo, Texas,
protesters carried signs reading "NAFTA Kills" and "Unsafe Mexican
Trucks."
By the end of the month, the U.S. plans to give up to 25 Mexican
firms permission to haul cargo and will add another 25 per month
until reaching 100 by the end of the year under a one-year pilot
program.
Mexico also has committed to allow trucks from up to 100 U.S. firms
to travel anywhere in Mexico by year's end.
The Teamsters, Sierra Club and watchdog group Public Citizen sued to
stop the program, arguing there won't be enough oversight of drivers
entering the U.S. from Mexico. But a federal appeals court ruled
last week the Bush administration could move ahead.
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