Mexican Truck Company
With Poor Safety Record Drops Out Of Cross-Border Pilot Project
February 7, 2008
(Washington, D.C.) – The
Teamsters Union demands to know why U.S. inspectors opened the border to a
Mexican truck company with an abysmal safety record.
The company last week
dropped out of the cross-border trucking pilot program with no explanation from
the Transportation Department.
Transportation Secretary
Mary Peters claimed her inspectors had carefully checked Mexican trucks before
they were permitted to use American highways as part of her cross-border
trucking pilot project.
One of the companies,
Trinity Industries de Mexico, withdrew its 16 trucks from the program on
February 1.
“Mary Peters has some
explaining to do,” said Jim Hoffa, Teamsters general president. “She claimed
that she only opened the border to Mexican trucks after they passed rigorous
safety inspections. Now we learn that Trinity Industries averaged 112 safety
violations per truckaccording to the Transportation Department’s own
statistics—in the year before it was allowed to use American highways.”
Hoffa questioned whether it
was a coincidence that Trinity dropped out of the pilot program shortly after a
declaration was made to the federal court about the company’s many serious
safety violations.
The Teamsters, Public
Citizen, the Sierra Club and the Owner-Operators Independent Drivers Association
are challenging the legality of the cross-border pilot program in the 9th
Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco. Oral arguments will be heard on February
12.
The U.S. Senate voted 75 to
23 and the House voted 411 to 3 to keep the border closed to unsafe Mexican
trucks. The legislation became law on December 26, 2007 as part of the Omnibus
budget bill. Under Peter’s direction, the Department of Transportation has
refused to comply with the law.
The declaration to the
court states that Trinity received 1,123 safety violations in the year before
the border was opened, or 112 violations per vehicle.
Trinity drivers and trucks
were put out of service 75 times, but according to the criteria used by the
Transportation Department they should have received another 476 out-of-service
orders.
Federal law defines
out-of-service violations as conditions “where an imminent hazard” is present.
“Imminent hazard” is defined by federal law as “any condition of vehicle,
employee or commercial motor vehicle operations which substantially increases
the likelihood of serious injury or death if not discontinued immediately.”
Today, the Teamsters
launched a “Fire Mary Peters” campaign to alert the public to the Transportation
Secretary’s lawless actions.
For more information about
the campaign, go to
www.FireMaryPeters.com.