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U.S. Department of Transportation
Office of Public Affairs
Washington, D.C.
http://www.dot.gov/affairs/briefing.htm
March 14, 2002
Contact: Dave Longo
Telephone: 202-366-0456
North American Free Trade Agreement -
U.S. Department of Transportation Regulations
- Regulations issued today explain how Mexican-domiciled
carriers may apply for operating authority beyond the U.S.-Mexico border
commercial zones. The rules include requirements that meet the terms
of the Transportation and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2002.
- Mexican-domiciled carriers and U.S. and
Canadian carriers are governed by the same safety standards when operating
in the U.S.
- Mexican-domiciled carriers applying to
operate to and from the United States are required to have a distinctive
USDOT number, undergo safety monitoring initially and during an 18-month
provisional period.
- During operations under provisional operating
authority, and for 36 months after receiving permanent authority, Mexican
vehicles operating beyond the border commercial zones into the U.S.
must display a valid Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance inspection decal.
- The regulations require all Mexican-domiciled
carriers entering the United States to have a drug and alcohol-testing
program, a system of compliance with U.S. federal hours-of-service requirements,
adequate data and safety management systems, and valid insurance with
a U.S. registered insurance company.
- Mexican commercial vehicles with authority
to operate beyond the commercial zones will be permitted to enter the
United States only at commercial border crossings and only when a certified
motor carrier safety inspector is on duty.
- Federal and state safety inspectors will
be required to inspect and verify the status and validity of the license
of each driver of a long-haul Mexican-domiciled motor carrier (1) when
carrying a placardable quantity of hazardous material; (2) when undergoing
a full vehicle driver Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance inspection;
and (3) 50 percent of other long-haul
- Mexican drivers engaged in cross-border
operations.
Mexican-domiciled carriers planning to operate solely within the commercial
zones along the U.S-Mexico border will be required, within 18 months,
to apply for provisional Certificates of Registration, which grant temporary
authority to operate in the United States. The provisional Certificate
of Registration cannot be made permanent for at least 18 months, until
the carrier has successfully completed a safety audit.
- DOT will provide all Mexican-domiciled
carriers educational and technical assistance before the restrictions
on Mexican carrier operations are lifted.
- DOT and States will also do the following:
- Equip all U.S.-Mexico commercial border
crossings with scales suitable for enforcement action.
- Equip five of the ten locations with
the highest volume of commercial vehicle crossings with weigh-in-motion
(WIM) scales before reviewing or processing carrier applications
beyond the border zones. Three are operational (Otay Mesa, Nogales,
Bridge of Americas/El Paso) and two more (Columbia-Solidarity Bridge/Laredo
and Eagle Pass, Texas) should be in place by April 1.
- Equip the remaining five of the highest
volume of commercial vehicle crossings (World Trade Bridge/Laredo;
Pharr, Texas; Veterans' Bridge/Brownsville; Calexico, Calif. and
Ysleta/El Paso) with weigh-in-motion devices within 12 months. An
additional five will be in place by December 2002.
NAFTA - Truck and Bus Provisions
- Approved by Congress in 1993 and entered
into force in 1994, the North American Free Trade Agreement was based
on a simple premise -- that all of the countries in North America would
be integrated into one free trade area.
- Under NAFTA's original timeline, the U.S.
and Mexico agreed to permit access to each other's border states by
December 18, 1995. Reciprocal access beyond the border states was promised
by January 1, 2000. (Canadian carriers have been operating throughout
the United States since 1982.)
- The NAFTA timetable also called for the
United States and Mexico to lift all restrictions on regular route,
scheduled cross-border bus service by January 1, 1997.
- In December 1995, President Clinton postponed
implementation of NAFTA cross-border trucking provision, which continued
to limit Mexican trucks to operations in designated commercial zones
within Arizona, California, New Mexico, and Texas.
- A NAFTA arbitration panel concluded in
February 2001 that the U.S blanket refusal to process the applications
of Mexican carriers seeking U.S. authority because of concerns over
the carriers' safety was in breach of its NAFTA obligations. President
Bush has assured President Fox that the U.S. will move in a timely manner
to meet our NAFTA obligations.
- In February 2001, the Bush Administration
announced it would fully comply with NAFTA obligations regarding truck
and bus access.
- U.S. Congressional concerns regarding
safety compliance and monitoring of Mexican-domiciled commercial vehicles
were resolved in the Transportation and Related Agencies Appropriations
Act, 2002, which President Bush signed on December 18.
- Since then, the United States announced
its commitment to open the border to Mexican-domiciled commercial vehicles
by midyear 2002 and to implement a regime of regulations to ensure safety.
- DOT has been inspecting Mexican trucks
and buses at the border since 1995. By mid-2002, DOT will have 274 enforcement
personnel in place, more than four times the number it had in place
in mid-2001.
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