Calls for Congressional Hearings, Prevent Repeat of
Dubai Ports Debacle
February 23, 2007
(Washington, D.C.) – The Bush administration is expected to announce today it
intends to open the U.S. border to unsafe Mexican trucks in the next six to
eight weeks for a one-year experimental pilot program. The border has remained
closed, except for transfers within a 20-mile commercial zone, since the
implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) because of the
Mexican government’s failure to meet the truck safety and driver training
requirements of NAFTA.
“As with the Dubai Ports debacle, President Bush is willing to risk our
national security by giving unfettered access to America’s transportation
infrastructure to foreign companies and their government sponsors,” said Jim
Hoffa, Teamsters General President. “They are playing of game of Russian
Roulette on America’s highways. Mexico refuses to meet their end of the bargain
yet President Bush rewards them with open access to American highways. It is
the American driving public who will pay the consequences.”
The Teamsters Union has led efforts to keep the border closed for the past
twelve years. Just two years ago, the Department of Transportation Inspector
General found that the Mexican government and Mexican motor carriers did not
meet congressionally mandated requirements. An Inspector General audit report is
due in the next couple of months, raising serious questions as to why President
Bush is pushing this experimental program ahead of that report.
“Where is the Inspector’s General report that tells us that Mexico is meeting
U.S. standards?” Hoffa asked. “Why is the President willing to move forward when
his own Inspector General has stated that Mexico cannot meet its obligations?”
According to DOT sources, the Bush Administration will announce today that it
is initiating a one-year experimental program that will allow 100 Mexican
carriers to begin travel beyond the currently permitted commercial zones.
Apparently no hazardous material shipments will be permitted in order to avoid
the required background checks. The DOT is unable to say how many trucks will be
participating in the experiment or whether there will be a system in place to
differentiate between those trucks traveling to the 20-mile commercial zones and
those permitted to travel throughout the U.S.
The plan raises several serious concerns, including:
- The impact on homeland security initiatives. Will the drivers be
checked against the terror watch list or will our borders be open to anyone
with a Mexican driver’s license? Will the drivers be required to carry a
Mexican passport as U.S. citizens are required to present their passports
when entering the country from Mexico or Canada?
- The DOT has been disingenuous about this pilot program, indicating only
a few weeks ago that it was not pursuing this pilot program. What else are
they lying about?
- Enforcement of hours of service in Mexico, false log books and fatigued
drivers entering the U.S.
- The application of U.S. standards to Mexican drivers including the
requirement that U.S. drivers have a Commercial Drivers License, undergo
regular physicals and meet minimum age requirements.
- The integrity of drug and alcohol testing. Though testing will be done
in U.S. labs, it is unclear who will oversee the collection of random
samples creating a system ripe for abuse.
- Enforcement of U.S. wage and hour laws.
- DOT’s assertion that all trucks will be inspected by U.S. officials in
Mexico and at the U.S. border when less than ten percent of all Mexican
trucks entering the commercial zone are inspected now.
“The DOT has indicated that ‘this is as narrow experiment’ as they could
initiate. Yet it is an experiment that allows 100 companies and an unknown
number of Mexican trucks onto our highways and forces the U.S. traveling public
to serve as guinea pigs,” Hoffa said. “That is unacceptable. I call on Congress
to hold hearings immediately and to put an end to this nonsense.”
Related Links:
- Special Report - Holding the Line: The NAFTA Trucker, August 2006 Teamster
- Special Report - The NAFTA Trucker, November 1999 Teamster
- TAKE ACTION - Tell Congress: Stop Unsafe Mexican Trucks
- Teamster Delegates Stand Strong Against Cross-Border Trucking, June 28, 2006
- DOT Audit Supports Teamster Position on Cross-Border Trucking, January 26, 2005
- Supreme Court Hears Oral Arguments on Cross-Border Trucking, April 21, 2004
- GAO: Mexican Truck Safety Plan Behind Schedule, March 11, 2002
- Hoffa Questions Bush Administration Plan for Cross-Border Trucking, December 17, 2002
- GAO Reports Says Mexican Truck Safety Still Lags, January 10, 2002
- Murray-Shelby Amendment on Mexican Trucks is NAFTA-Compliant, November 27, 2001
- Hoffa: Teamsters Part of Diverse Coalition on Cross-Border Trucking, August 20, 2001
- Hoffa Warns Senate Committee Of Perils In Admitting Unsafe Mexican Trucks, July 19, 2001
- DOT Uses Fuzzy Math on Mexican Trucking Estimates, April 19, 2001