September 10, 2008
Truckers Air Frustrations With Fmcsa And Bush
Recently, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) released an announcement about extending a trucking pilot program. This particular program provides trucking jobs to Mexican owned and operated rigs. Why did FMCSA do this? Because they want to have one hundred Mexican trucking companies working American roads.
Letas be clear. This could kill the American trucking business. With cheaper alternatives available, local trucking jobs could disappear. How did this happen? Congress had not supported this plan. The Bush administration circumvented Congress by enacting this plan while Congress was in recess for the summer.
There are standards of safety and security that every American truck must meet. The FMCSA has decided that Mexican trucks do not have to meet these same standards. This gives the Mexican truckers an unfair advantage. It also places the American public in danger. After all, those safety and security standards have a reason! It is another source of contention between truckers and the FMSCA.
There is no denying that fuel costs are up and that this is destroying truck driversa profits. There is already a shortage of about 11,000 drivers in America and as the price of fuel continues to rise this shortage will continue to grow. The shortage will be felt most acutely on long-haul routes (like the Wal-Mart driving jobs) because of new economic realities.
Truckers feel that the way the FMCSA (and President Bush) have gone about supporting the plan to put Mexican truckers on American roads is wrong. It has largely been done in secret, or while no one could stop them (like enacting out while Congress was out of session). Why have they gone about it in this way? One theory is that the agency is trying to avoid the level of scrutiny that happened when the public found out about Dubai companies running U.S. ports.
Naturally, people associated with the trucking industry are calling their congressperson to found out information about this program. Congress, who opposed letting Mexican owned and operated trucks free access to American roads and trucking opportunities, is in a terrible position because they never voted on this issue! The FMCSA is not giving out any information about the program. They will not even return phone calls.
Senator Byron Dorgan, D-North Dakota amended the Senate Transportation Appropriations Bill to stop the Mexican Truck Demonstration Program, but this has been ignored, and has lead to truckers frustrations with FMCSA and Bush. This wall of silence has helped keep the news quiet.
Independent truckers are still hoping that the issue will garner the attention that it deserves. With a general election mere months away, the Bush administration is frantically attempting to push through legislation while it still can, and at this point it’s a race against time.
Filed under Autos, Trucks and More by Jim Arnold,