 |
 |
DOT 43-07
Monday April 30, 2007
Contact: Brian Turmail
Tel.: (202) 366-4570
U.S., Mexican Trucks Will Begin Cross-Border Demonstration Program at Same
Time
WASHINGTON – U.S. Secretary of Transportation Mary E. Peters today announced
that U.S. trucks will begin operating in Mexico for the first time ever starting
at the same time Mexican trucks begin operating north of the commercial border
zone in the U.S. The Secretary noted that the improvements to the demonstration
program are a result of recent conversations with the Mexican government and
Congress.
“We are working to give American truckers an unprecedented opportunity to
compete in a substantial new market,” Peters said. “This announcement puts the
program on track to lower costs for U.S. consumers, make our economy more
competitive and give U.S. truckers new business opportunities.”
In February, the Department of Transportation announced a year-long
demonstration program to expand cross-border trucking operations with Mexico.
The program is designed to eliminate the current cumbersome, outdated and costly
system of moving freight across the border, and replace it with an efficient,
transparent and safe cross-border trucking process.
The program’s safety developments have been guided by, but not limited to,
requirements established by Congress in 2002. The Department’s independent
Inspector General has also certified that the program substantially meets eight
criteria addressing inspector training, inspection facilities and the
development of safety procedures. The Department has invested $500 million since
1995 to modernize border safety facilities and hire and train the more than 500
federal and state inspectors who inspect trucks crossing the border every day.
As part of the program, U.S. inspectors will conduct in-person safety audits to
ensure participating Mexican companies comply with U.S. safety regulations. The
Department also will require all Mexican truck drivers to hold a valid
commercial drivers license, comply with U.S. medical requirements, comply with
all U.S. hours-of-service rules and be able to understand questions and
directions in English. Mexican truck companies that are allowed to participate
must have insurance with a U.S.-licensed firm and meet all U.S. safety
standards, including drug and alcohol testing. Companies that meet these
stringent standards will be allowed to make international pick up and deliveries
only.
The elements of the trucking program are discussed in a Federal Register notice
issued today. The Department is seeking comment over the next 30 days on the
program. The notice is available online at
http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov.
# # #
Briefing
Room