Posted by
Latina Republican on Wednesday, March 11, 2009 12:00:00 AM
Obama just signed off on a bill that will reduce the Mexico truck operation and is already hurting our NAFTA agreement.
Defazio, D-Ore., must be pleased right now.
It looks like Obama is in a hurry to violate international agreements with our soil neighbors.
Beyond appropriations, the bill’s 1,132 pages carry with them
legislative provisions touching on an array of issues. State attorneys
general are given new powers to pursue truth-in-lending cases. The bill
terminates an 18-month pilot program to allow Mexican-licensed trucks
to compete for long-haul routes in the United States. And down to the
last hours, a set of Cuba travel provisions required the Treasury
Department to step in to ease differences among Democrats that
threatened passage.
The
Mexico truck program began in September 2007 as a way for the United
States to meet its commitment under NAFTA to allow freer trucking
operations on both sides of the border. But it has faced persistent
opposition in Congress, and a recent Transportation Department report
found that only 29 of 100 projected Mexican carriers were admitted to
the project, and this “level of participation is not adequate to yield
statistically valid findings.”
Read more.
And the
Mexico Trucker Online writes:
“Mexico would expect that at a time of global recession and economic
distress, the U.S. would play by the rules, fulfill its international
treaty obligations and ensure that bilateral trade is a level playing
field, rather than erect trade barriers that undermine much needed
incentives to foster growth,” he said, predicting the action would
increase consumer costs.
He said the decision has never been about safety. “During the
cross-border trucking demonstration program’s 18 months of operation,
26 carriers from Mexico, with 103 trucks, and 10 from the U.S., with 61
trucks, crossed the border over 45,000 times without a significant
incident.”
When do Mexican trucks disappear from our highways?
The short answer, they don’t! Cross border drayage rigs will
continue to travel within the commercial zones, generally 25 miles from
the border, 75 miles in Arizona. This means these trucks can
conceivably travel US highways from Brownsville to Del Rio Texas as
they have done for years.