Truckers call on U.S. Trade Rep to Move Ahead with USMCA Agreement
OOIDA says members have suffered economically from Mexican trucking companies taking away jobs
Owner-Operator
Independent Drivers Association urges the U.S. Trade Representative to continue
moving forward with the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement approval process
and forthcoming implementing legislative language in a timely manner.
The U.S., Mexico, and Canada signed a trilateral pact nearly six months ago
which included annex language establishing a regulatory process to restrict
Mexican trucks to the commercial border zones. The deal also addresses cabotage
and states “only persons of the U.S., using U.S.-registered and either
U.S.-built or duty-paid trucks or buses, may provide truck or bus services
between points within the U.S.”
“OOIDA believes these provisions will help end the current program that allows
Mexican carriers and drivers who are not held to the same, rigorous U.S.
safety, security, or environmental regulations to operate on American
roadways,” said OOIDA president, Todd Spencer.
For decades, OOIDA has opposed the original NAFTA provisions that established
today’s cross-border Mexican trucking regulations which harm American
small-business truckers and jeopardize highway safety.
The Association believes that the USMCA deal provides a chance to amend those
rules and end the non-reciprocal system in place.
“Our members have suffered economically from Mexican trucking companies taking
away jobs and profits from American drivers and motor carriers. At the same
time, Mexican trucks are endangering the motoring public as U.S. DOT’s own
safety statistics show that the crash rate for Mexican-domiciled carriers is
2.8 times higher than U.S. carriers,” said Spencer.
OOIDA says the USMCA agreement is the best opportunity to stop unregulated
Mexican drivers and trucks from continuing to transport freight on our nation’s
roads. OOIDA will continue working with the Administration and Congress to
ensure the cross-border trucking Annex language remains in any final agreement.
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