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U.S. Supreme Court Finally Removes Decade-long Roadblock to U.S.-Mexican Trucking
Cato Institute Center for Trade Policy Studies ^ | 8. July 2004 | Cassandra Chrones Moore

Posted on 07/13/2004 11:06:00 AM PDT by 1rudeboy

On June 7, 2004, the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in the case of the U.S. Department of Transportation v. Public Citizen cleared the way for Mexican and American truckers to operate in each other's home markets. The ruling upheld the authority of Congress and the Bush administration to implement a freedom that had supposedly been granted a decade earlier under the North American Free Trade Agreement.

To eliminate the last legal barrier to giving Mexican trucks full access to American highways and vice versa, the Court overturned a 2003 ruling from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in California, which had found that the federal government violated environmental law when it announced plans to open highways to Mexican trucks without conducting air-quality impact studies. The administration had argued that the appeals court was incorrect because its ruling interfered with the ability of the executive branch to comply with NAFTA. Cutting to the central issue, Justice Clarence Thomas (writing for the majority) said that U.S. regulatory agencies were under no obligation to do a full review of the potential environmental impact, the requirement that had left Mexican trucks stalled at the border for a decade.

The final wrangle over the opening of the U.S.-Mexican border to international trucking stemmed from a much earlier contest over the deregulation of transportation in particular and free trade in general. Beginning in the late 1970s, the U.S. federal government enacted a wave of deregulatory legislation aimed at transportation. The airlines were deregulated in 1978, leading to dramatic reductions in the price of tickets. The deregulation of interstate trucking, begun in 1980, culminated with the abolition of the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1994. Intrastate trucking followed, also in 1994. In each case the freer flow of trade resulted in an upswing in commercial activity and lower prices for the consumer as such innovations as "just in time" deliveries lowered substantially the cost of producing and delivering goods throughout the United States.

The border between Mexico and the United States proved a bottleneck. Protectionist pressures kept Mexican trucks from crossing more than a few miles into the United States and made the crossing time-consuming and expensive; American trucks operated under similar restrictions when crossing into Mexico. The vision of free-flowing trade from Canada to Central America remained just that, a vision, while the perception that the United States might be promoting free trade in theory but undermining it in practice tarnished our reputation internationally and gave rise to resentments south of the border.

NAFTA and Cross-border Trucking
How did that happen? The Bus Regulatory Reform Act of 1982 imposed a moratorium on the granting of authority to Mexican and Canadian motor carriers to operate in the United States beyond a limited zone along the respective borders. The moratorium with respect to Canada was lifted the same year, giving U.S. carriers access to Canadian markets; but the restrictions on Mexican-domiciled trucks and regular-route buses remained. They could operate only in border commercial zones, generally 3 to 20 miles past a U.S. municipality's corporate limits. Beyond that limit Mexican trucks had to offload their cargo onto American trailers. When American truckers crossed the border into Mexico, they were required to do the reverse. In other words, an international shipment traveling from Mexico to the United States or vice versa demanded at least two drivers and two trailers to perform a single freight movement. The process was inefficient and therefore costly in terms of time and manpower.

NAFTA, designed to promote free trade among the United States, Mexico, and Canada, was ratified by the U.S. Congress in late 1993 and implemented on January 1, 1994. It was to have ended that inefficient procedure by liberalizing access for cross-border bus and truck services.

The agreement laid out sweeping modifications in transportation provisions:

Left unresolved were such issues as labor law, local driving restrictions, cargo security, and customer service. Primary political concerns still being debated included the safety of Mexican carriers, to say nothing of insurance requirements and cargo liability for Mexican drivers operating on U.S. roads.

NAFTA Promises Delayed
Under pressure from the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, as well as environmental and consumer safety groups, the Clinton administration changed course, announcing in December 1995 that it would delay implementation of the cross-border liberalization provisions. The shift was a particular embarrassment for Federico Peña, then U.S. secretary of transportation and a strong supporter of the accord, who had traveled to San Antonio, Texas, to announce progress in opening the border to international trucking, only to find that the border was still closed.

The Mexican government, stung by the affront, brought an action before an international arbitration panel that ruled, in February 2001, that the United States could not impose a blanket ban on Mexican trucking, despite its often-voiced safety concerns. Those concerns could, however, justify treating Mexican carriers differently than domestic and Canadian carriers when processing applications.

President George W. Bush had asserted during his 2000 campaign that the United States should honor its NAFTA commitments and assured Mexican president Vicente Fox that the border would be fully opened to international trucking and to regular-route bus services. In keeping with the new spirit of openness, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, in March 2002, proposed three regulations to allow Mexican trucks to operate beyond the commercial zones, setting forth safety-monitoring procedures for all Mexican-domiciled carriers operating anywhere in the United States.[1]

Before rules were issued, an FMCSA assessment found that the rules would have no significant environmental impact. The agency therefore concluded that a full Environmental Impact Statement was not necessary. It then issued a finding of no significant impact, followed by the interim final rules. On November 27, 2002, President Bush modified the1982 moratorium to clear the way for expanded truck and bus operations.

Claiming to be deeply concerned about the safety of the Mexican trucking stock and about the prospect of a decline in air quality, critics of NAFTA had already mounted an attack. Joan Claybrook, president of Public Citizen, in alliance with the Environmental Law Foundation and other environmental groups as well as the Teamsters, filed suit in federal court, claiming that the government had violated the National Environmental Policy Act and the Clean Air Act by opening the door to Mexican trucking, which would allegedly pollute the U.S. atmosphere. The Teamsters, it is reasonable to suggest, were less concerned with the putative environmental harm than with the threat posed by Mexican drivers competing for jobs.

The Supreme Court's unanimous ruling of June 7 finally closed the door to their legal challenges and opened the gate for cross-border trucking—more than a decade after enactment of NAFTA.

Backup at the Border
As a result of those concerns and of legal questions, crossing the border has remained a time-consuming process laden with administrative and legal requirements. Those who have been dealing with Mexico for many years have learned to maneuver through the maze with some degree of ease; novices would do well to follow their advice.

Much criticism and concern has focused on drayage or cartage, the step-by-step procedure according to which cargo coming from Mexico is transferred to another carrier legally able to operate in the United States. Drayage, it is said, results in air pollution as carriers park in line, belching exhaust as they wait to cross the border. In fact, the drayage/cartage requirement is unique to the Port of Laredo, where the trailers are transported across the border by a cartage or drayage company employed by the freight forwarder or customs broker to ensure delivery to a crossing facility from which cargo can be picked up and delivered to its final destination in the United States. The process adds seriously to costs and slows deliveries.

Laredo, the largest and busiest of the border ports, ships more than the port of New York. It has invested heavily in its infrastructure and has two relatively new commercial border-crossing facilities. The standard picture of trucks fouling the air is thus unfair to Laredo. The city has tried to keep waiting time and thus pollution to a minimum and prides itself on having some of the cleanest air in the country. State and local regulations cull out trucks with bald tires and rigs belching smoke, making it impossible for them to continue to cross at Laredo. The Columbia and World Trade bridges, restricted to commercial traffic, carry a steady stream of tractor-trailers. The first has 6 lanes; the second offers the impressive spectacle of 12 lanes of big rigs.

All other border ports, of which there are more than 20, allow the Mexican carrier to pick up the southbound cargo at the location of the U.S. freight forwarder and move the trailer cargo through customs to execute delivery at the appropriate customer locations. Northbound cargo is handled in similar fashion: the Mexican carrier picks up the trailer with its cargo from the shipper and moves it through customs inspection before making delivery to a U.S. freight forwarder location or directly to a U.S. carrier terminal facility.

Because import duties are still applicable on some items, administrative requirements still exist to support NAFTA compliance. To complicate matters, Mexican law requires that almost all duties be collected and submitted to the Mexican government prior to physical entry of cargo into Mexico. U.S. customs brokers, in contrast, are not required to collect applicable import duties at the time of entry since the law has provisions for delayed payment.

There has long been talk of streamlining this cumbersome process, but so important is trade between Mexico and the United States that shippers have been willing to cope with the problems. Eighty percent of the trade between the United States and Mexico now moves by truck, and the volume of shipments has grown steadily, especially since the advent of NAFTA. From 1993 to 2000, there was a fourfold increase in two-way trade between the United States and Mexico, with four million border crossings annually.

The standard horror story had unsafe and polluting rigs massed at the border, waiting to cross once the Court decided on deregulation. The reality is radically different. Perhaps 90 percent of Mexican truck owners have one truck, little insurance, and no desire to travel north to a land whose language they do not know. Thus the shortage of drivers north of the border is balanced by an equally serious dearth of drivers willing to go north. Opening the border is unlikely to result in a flood tide in either direction.

Progress in Mexico
NAFTA encouraged sweeping changes south of the border as well. In 1989 the Mexican trucking industry was deregulated, allowing the number of carriers to balloon from about 350 servicing monopolistic routes to 50,000 carriers with Mexico-wide authority. The most significant difference between Mexican carrier deregulation and deregulation in the United States and Canada in the l980s lies in the administrative control of tariffs and transportation contracts still exerted south of the border.

At the same time, the Mexican government moved to improve its highway infrastructure. The Toll Highway Development Program, initiated in 1989, led to the construction and operation of more than 5,000 miles of highway. Unfortunately, the high fees assessed by toll road operators have led many Mexican carriers to continue utilizing the non-toll federal highway system. Many issuers of bonds have, in fact, defaulted on their construction bonds. As a result, the infrastructure, although showing great improvement, is still far from the levels to which most U.S. and Canadian carriers are accustomed. Despite these difficulties, there has been a significant investment in Mexico's logistics infrastructure, including motor carrier terminals, roads, bridges, and carrier-support services.

In addition to its high cost, fuel poses another problem: sulfur content of Mexican diesel fuel is higher than the maximum levels allowed by the U.S. Department of Transportation for the domestic U.S. market. Truckers have feared that the high-sulfur diesel would reduce the efficiency of U.S.-based carrier equipment, and the low-sulfur diesel of the United States could have a similar effect on Mexican equipment if either crossed the border under the terms of NAFTA.

Critics of trucking liberalization continually raise safety issues. They paint a picture of decrepit rigs in the last stages of decay and unsafe at any speed. In fact, the older trucks in the Mexican fleet are concentrated in the drayage corridor outside Laredo; they never penetrate farther north. Long-haul Mexican trucks have become more modern, hence safer, over the past few years. The inspector general (IG) of the U.S. Department of Transportation has noted that the failure rate for Mexican trucks in California during 2000 was 27 percent, close to the U.S. national failure rate of 24 percent. The IG also reported that the failure rate for Mexican trucks had decreased from that of the preceding year.

In preparation for the Supreme Court's decision, the U.S. Department of Transportation recently announced that it was prepared to begin immediately inspecting Mexican buses and trucks to allow them to provide services between Mexico and the United States. There is nothing in NAFTA that will prevent inspectors from fully enforcing U.S. air quality and highway safety standards.

Conclusion
The preceding survey of the issues related to trucking that have been plaguing the Mexican border for so many years suggests once again the folly of protectionism. The ongoing vendetta against Mexican trucking has raised prices in the United States while discouraging the trucking industry south of the border. The efforts to prohibit Mexican drivers may have shielded American Teamsters, but they have certainly raised Mexican hackles. Given the current problems in foreign policy, it seems especially unwise to unnecessarily alienate an important neighbor to the south.

At the same time, when considering the difficulties along the border, it is worth noting the assiduity with which the trucking industries on both sides have managed to ameliorate problems and to forge ahead, despite the obstacles. A clear pathway from Canada through Mexico to Latin American may still be only a rosy vision of the future, but that vision is alive and well.

The Supreme Court has given greater substance to that vision by upholding NAFTA and allowing Mexican trucks to operate freely in the United States if they are in compliance with our regulatory structure. In deciding for the Department of Transportation, the Court has removed the remnants of trucking regulation and opened the doors to market solutions. It has clarified in no uncertain terms this country's support for free trade and the benefits that such trade confers.


[1]The first regulation would establish an application process for Mexican truckers seeking permission to travel outside U.S. cities and commercial zones along the border, and a separate application process would be set up for trucks that would remain in the border areas. The application process would require Mexican carriers to file reports on their safety practices, certifying that they follow safety regulations while in the United States. Finally, Mexican trucking companies would have to complete a safety audit every 18 months that would include information on maintenance and repairs to vehicles as well as information about the drivers.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: mexico; nafta; trade; trucking
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Long, but comprehensive.
1 posted on 07/13/2004 11:06:02 AM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy
Well, this ruling has been in effect for over a month now, with no serious problems reported...no thanks to inept American unions who were so busy kissing Senator Kerry's pro-NAFTA rear-end that they failed to do so much as even hold a roadside protest.
2 posted on 07/13/2004 11:10:07 AM PDT by Southack (Media Bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: 1rudeboy
Our highways will have hundreds of unsafe Mexican vehicles speeding along carrying hidden cargoes of weapons and/ or illegals seeking higher wages. Can you imagine a truck from Mexicali speeding along at 65 mph and having its brakes fail dumping illegals or dirty bomb materials on the Los Angeles freeways? News at 11:00 covers the story by helicopter showing broken bodies strewn across the road --paid for by a Taco Bell commerical.

LOL, LOL, LOL! Even the Supremes are buying into NAFTA and other PC idiocy as our society grown more vulnerable every day.

3 posted on 07/13/2004 11:18:17 AM PDT by ex-Texan
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To: Southack

Did you notice that Clarence Thomas, socialist WTO-lover goose-stepping his way toward the New World Order, dared to stand-up against true conservative and anti-globalist Ralph Nader and his legion of altruistic, pro-American Teamsters?


4 posted on 07/13/2004 11:22:15 AM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy
This is truly splendid. DHS has as much as finally admitted that what Customs and Coast Guard has known for many years. We have almost no control over the volume of materiel entering US ports because of the use of tens of thousands of intermodal container units. DHS presented this in the best bureaucrat happy face mode announcing a 'major initiative' to i stop, inspect and identify all incoming cargo shipments before they unload in the US. Now the actual fine print discloses the usual double talk of 'initial demonstration projects' and 'limited sampling' of a few percent of shipments. The proposal contingent upon 'adequate funding' aims at a full program being put in place in a decade or two and the full program really means just stopping ships at a location before entering harbor and checking manifests and other documents closely and then sampling a very small per cent of actual containers.

Now comes this initiative to open the US to a torrent of uncontrolled container shipments by surface transport. I am sure this warms the heart of every alien smuggling coyote, drug smuggler and most important AlQuida-Atzlan terrorist cell.
5 posted on 07/13/2004 11:23:40 AM PDT by robowombat
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To: ex-Texan
Our highways will have hundreds of unsafe Mexican vehicles speeding along carrying hidden cargoes of weapons and/ or illegals seeking higher wages.

My impending sense of doom was mitigated by the following passage, as well as the section that states that inspections will continue at the same level as before:

Critics of trucking liberalization continually raise safety issues. They paint a picture of decrepit rigs in the last stages of decay and unsafe at any speed. In fact, the older trucks in the Mexican fleet are concentrated in the drayage corridor outside Laredo; they never penetrate farther north. Long-haul Mexican trucks have become more modern, hence safer, over the past few years. The inspector general (IG) of the U.S. Department of Transportation has noted that the failure rate for Mexican trucks in California during 2000 was 27 percent, close to the U.S. national failure rate of 24 percent.

6 posted on 07/13/2004 11:25:20 AM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: robowombat
Now comes this initiative to open the US to a torrent of uncontrolled container shipments by surface transport.

Open? Please explain how this is different than before, when Mexican trucks regularly were allowed up to twenty miles inside the border, without any of the dire consequences that our fellow Texan fears.

7 posted on 07/13/2004 11:27:17 AM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy

Because now Mexican trucks can drive all the way from Nowhere, Mexico to New York City.


8 posted on 07/13/2004 11:48:29 AM PDT by RonF
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To: RonF

And the instant a Mexican truck crosses that magic twenty-mile barrier, it inherently becomes more dangerous?


9 posted on 07/13/2004 11:51:57 AM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy

Do not believe failure rate statistics of Mexican trucks from Californicated. Their failure rate must be well above 30% or even higher. California has hundreds of tire outlets selling used truck tires run by illegals. You may buy a used car tire for $ 5 if you happen to speak Spanish and look the part. How many of these Mexican truckers buy their tires from these used tire outlets? How many repair their trucks in hundreds of repair shops selling "brand name" parts manufactured in Mexico? Time to wake up and smell the coffee my friend.


10 posted on 07/13/2004 12:05:18 PM PDT by ex-Texan
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To: 1rudeboy

The danger is inherent in the abiliity to access a densely populated urban area that is a likely terrorist target. There's very few of those within 20 miles of the Mexican border. There's a lot more past that, such as L.A., Chicago, New York, Boston, etc., etc.


11 posted on 07/13/2004 12:19:03 PM PDT by RonF
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To: RonF
Again, what makes the Mexican truck more dangerous? What about American trucks coming back from Mexico? What's to keep a terrorist from using one of those?
12 posted on 07/13/2004 12:20:35 PM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: RonF
This is the real problem that is often overlooked, the kind of hide in plain sight, lose oneself in the crowd effect. Dropping things off in the middle of nowhere, which might aptly describe the previous 20-mile boundary, might at first glance seem a better bet for concealment than an urban area, but it depends. Blending into a crowd in a big city with a large immigrant population might pose an easier problem.

So now we have a possibility of a truckload of illegals being run all the way into LA or NYC and blending into the immigrant communities there, versus being dropped off in the desert somewhere in West Texas.

13 posted on 07/13/2004 12:27:28 PM PDT by chimera
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To: 1rudeboy

The fact that it is an American truck, driven by an American, who would be more likely to have concern for America, and who would also have to follow American legal and corporate procedures regarding identifying and tracking what's in his truck.


14 posted on 07/13/2004 2:54:00 PM PDT by RonF
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To: RonF

Mexican trucks are subject to the same regulations and liabilities as American ones. As for an American driver being more likely to "have concern for America," I'm sure you are aware that the all-time record for illegal alien deaths while in transport belongs to a truck driver named Williams (from New York State).


15 posted on 07/13/2004 3:12:24 PM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy
All this is to me is just another wide open avenue for the enemies of this country to pre-position men and material for anything they desire.

The enemies already established within can be plainly seen by their actions. They do everything possible to handicap our defense and place stumbling blocks and obstacles to our military and intel. The enemy without is given the broadest interpretation of laws in their favor and all the free PR they need.

This has nothing to do with road safety or illegal aliens. It has to do with our survival IMHO.
16 posted on 07/13/2004 4:28:58 PM PDT by martian_22 (Who tells you what you are?)
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To: chimera

".This is the real problem that is often overlooked, the kind of hide in plain sight, lose oneself in the crowd effect."

Most people don't consider this, I once stayed in a motel that had just opened up and the assistant manager told me that before the grand opening a truck had parked and two men had gone into room after room and taken the brand new color television sets ( which were a much more expensive item in 1971) and loaded them onto the truck. For padding they wrapped each set in a brand new bed spread which was custom made with the motel logo embroidered on it. They did this in broad daylight and were seen by many people who all naturallly assumed that they were supposed to be doing whatever they were doing. It is amazing what can be gotten away with by someone who is bold enough.


17 posted on 07/14/2004 2:34:33 AM PDT by RipSawyer ("Embed" Michael Moore with the 82nd airborne.)
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To: 1rudeboy

I didn't say a thing about illegal alien deaths. I'm worried about someone putting a bomb or some kind of hazardous material on a truck and blowing it up in NYC or something such. I don't know if the regulations for trucks and cargo are the same in Mexico as in America or not. But my consideration is not so much what's down on paper; I have a whole lot less confidence that those regulations will actually be attended to and enforced in Mexico than in the United States.


18 posted on 07/14/2004 5:31:24 AM PDT by RonF
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To: RonF
I don't know if the regulations for trucks and cargo are the same in Mexico as in America or not.

If it crosses our border, it is subject to our regulations. On July 1st, the Depatment of Homeland Security started a new program for containerized shipping arriving from anywhere in the world. As for your typical 48' van trailer, I suppose anything goes as far as customs inspections, etc.

19 posted on 07/14/2004 5:38:15 AM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy
Critics of trucking liberalization continually raise safety issues. They paint a picture of decrepit rigs in the last stages of decay and unsafe at any speed.

Note what happened in my city: Drunken illegal Mexican drove head-on into woman's car, killing her instantly; Fled to Mexico and Fox shielded him. Our city authorities can't touch him. They appealed to higher powers in America, who told them to go jump. Welcome to the American Union, where are Judicial system has throughly been European Unionized.

20 posted on 07/14/2004 7:07:01 AM PDT by swampfox98 (We are at war! We have been at war since 9/11. How smart do you have to be to understand this?)
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