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Ponce
15th November 2011, 11:07 AM
I like the part of "and with flat tires".......by the way, are US truckers allowed to go into Mexico?
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Mexican Trucks Entering US Cited for 1 Million Violations.

November 15, 2011 by POPEYE
Fil
(FOXNEWS) Inspectors from the Texas Department of Public Safety have found a million violations in trucks coming from Mexico into El Paso, Texas between 2007 and 2011, according to a report by the El Paso Times. The report comes just weeks before Mexican trucks will be allowed to begin shipping long-haul freight into U.S. territory.

The statistics, obtained by Fox News Latino, show that between the fiscal years of 2007 and the first six months of 2011 the state completed 1.2 million inspections at the El Paso state facilities by the Bridge of Americas and the Zaragoza International Bridge. Inspections led to 1,004,213 violations including brake problems, defective lights, and flat tires.

According to the El Paso Times, the violations found by U.S. officials, many of them repeat offenses, caused 31,519 trucks and 625 drivers to be placed out of service during this time period.

The data comes months after a bilateral agreement was signed earlier this month which will allow Mexican trucks to begin shipping long-haul freight far into U.S. territory. Up to now, Mexican trucks could enter the United States but were restricted to a narrow border zone.

Critics, led by U.S. labor groups like the Teamsters union, say the statistics only reinforce their stance that the new cross-border trucking program will put lives in danger on America’s highways.

“This report confirms what we have been saying for years – Mexican trucking companies and their fleets are not held to the same stringent safety standards as American carriers,” said Jim Hoffa, general president of Teamsters, to Fox News Latino. “Until they meet every safety, training and environmental standard that our trucking companies meet, we should not allow these unsafe Mexican trucks to drive freely through our country.”

State Rep. Joe Pickett, D-El Paso, told the El Paso Times that the number of violations for the trucks from Mexico is in line with U.S. industry standards. He also assured that the trucks undergo inspections in Mexico and the United States.

“They are either no worse than U.S. trucks or better in some cases,” he said.

Regarding the amount of violations among Mexican trucks a spokeswoman for the Texas Department of Public Safety said, “It’s a big number but it’s not out of line when compared to our inspection of American vehicles.”

The U.S. Transportation Department has assured that the new deal will put safety first and lift tariffs on more than $2 billion in U.S. manufactured goods and agricultural products while “providing opportunities to increase U.S. exports to Mexico and expanding job creation.”

In an attempt to assure the safety of the program, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration released the requirements that Mexican trucks and their drivers will have to specifically follow. Under the program, all trucks entering the United States will be equipped with electronic onboard recorders which track how many hours the trucks are in service. The recorders will be paid for by the Department of Transportation at a cost of $2.5 million from the federal Highway Trust Fund. All drivers will have to pass safety reviews, drug tests, and be required to read and speak the English language sufficiently to understand highway traffic signs and signals.

Mexico can demand the same requirements of US drivers entering their territory as well.

Some like Bill Graves, the President and chief executive officer of the American Trucking Associations, believe the new requirements are enough to ensure the safety of Mexican trucks on the road.

“American Trucking Associations welcomes this latest step in improving the efficiency of trucking and trade at our southern border,” Graves said in a July press release. “We also note that Mexican fleets participating in the program will be bound by the same rules and regulations applicable to American carriers, and we are pleased that the agreement allows for U.S. carriers to compete in Mexico.”

Trucks transport roughly $275 billion worth of goods – 70 percent of the total – that pass between the two countries annually, according to a report by the wire service EFE. The prospective accord is expected to create savings of up to $675 million on cross-border shipping costs.

http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2011/08/22/mexican-trucks-entering-us-cited-for-1-million-violations-report-says/?test=latestnews#ixzz1dlbugtze

gunDriller
15th November 2011, 12:50 PM
I like the part of "and with flat tires".......by the way, are US truckers allowed to go into Mexico?

yes, sort of. it REALLY helps if you have $500 for the cops you meet along the way and some serious firepower - that the cops can't see - to deter any criminales.

goldleaf
15th November 2011, 01:09 PM
I used to haul potloads of dairy heifers across the border at Laredo. We'd go about 30 miles in to a stockyard and unload
them for water and rest. They woud then be reloaded onto Mexican trucks and finish the trip to Aguacalientes. At the turnoff to the stockyards there would be Police or military all dressed up like frito bandito's blocking the through route to make sure we didn't go all the way through.

I wouldn't want to do too much trucking down there as one of my buddies had his whole rig stolen.

Ponce
15th November 2011, 01:23 PM
When I was in Mexico on "business" many many many years ago......I would go inland very early in the morning in a super crowded bus and every time there would be a cops car parked by the road right out of town, all that he would do was to shine his flashlight at a bus, the bus would stop and the driver would give him his bribe......... I would say that there always was about three time more passenger that the bus was supposed to take on.

horseshoe3
15th November 2011, 01:28 PM
I like the part of "and with flat tires".......[/url]

It's surprisingly easy to miss on an inside dual with a light load. I've ruined a couple tires that way because I never knew they were flat until after I had ruined the bead. I've also caught a few when I checked them before putting on a heavy load.

JDRock
16th November 2011, 07:11 AM
what a trojan horse scenario! trucks full of military and mex operatives WELCOMED past out borders while congress sends the last remnant of our military to iran...

JDRock
16th November 2011, 12:39 PM
bump....