Go To Dart


Sponsored By:

   The Nation  |  Business  |  Equipment  |  Features

View the latest edition of The Trucker

Reuters: Calderon to press Obama for resolution to Mexico truck dispute

The U.S. agreed in NAFTA to allow Mexican commercial trucks to transport goods within four U.S. border states in 1995 and throughout the country in 2000, but delayed implementation on safety grounds.

The Trucker News Services

8/6/2009

WASHINGTON — Mexican President Felipe Calderon will press President Barack Obama Sunday for a quick resolution to a cross-border trucking dispute that prompted Mexico to retaliate on $2.4 billion of U.S. goods, a news agency reported today.

"President Calderon will press forward our position and it will be great if we can get this solved at the latest by the end of this year," a Mexican official told Reuters on Wednesday, speaking on condition that he not be identified.

Calderon will host Obama and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper at a meeting in Guadalajara of the leaders of the North American Free Trade Agreement beginning Sunday.

The U.S. agreed in NAFTA to allow Mexican commercial trucks to transport goods within four U.S. border states in 1995 and throughout the country in 2000, but delayed implementation on safety grounds.

A Cross Border Demonstration Project was initiated in 2007, but the pilot program was killed by a vote of Congress earlier this year, prompting Calderon's administration to retaliate with $2.4 billion U.S. manufacturing and agricultural goods tariff.

"When Congress decided to defund the program, we were told at the time they would come forward with something concrete relatively soon," the Mexican official said.

Almost immediately after Obama signed the bill ending the demonstration project, Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood held a round of meetings with Congressional leaders and trucking industry stakeholders after the White House told LaHood to work with Congress, the Transportation and State departments and Mexican officials to come up with legislation to create a new trucking project that will meet concerns over North American Free Trade Agreement commitments.

Reportedly, that proposal has been sent to the White House.

Meanwhile, Rep. Kevin Brady, a Texas Republican who wrote Obama in March to urge quick action on the issue, is quoted on www.Mexicotrucker.com as saying he found it unimaginable that Obama would go to Mexico without some positive news for Calderon.

“The president going to Mexico and not trying to resolve the trucking dispute would be like going to the G20 and ignoring the financial crisis,” Brady said, according to the Web site. “This is a very real dispute. The clock is ticking and there’s a lot of American farmers and manufacturers that are paying a pretty steep price.”

Lyndon Finney of The Trucker staff can be reached to comment on this article at editor@thetrucker.com.

Follow The Trucker on Twitter at www.twitter.com/truckertalk.

Koch Trucking