Mexican Trucks stay Home after Border opens

ChanceMaster

Expert Expediter
via business week :

Mexican Trucks Stay Home After 17-Year Push to Open U.S. Border - BusinessWeek

It took 17 years and $2.4 billion in trade tariffs to get the U.S. Transportation Department to let a Mexican long-haul truck cross the border last month. It's unlikely that many more will line up, the head of Mexico's biggest trucking organization said

Different work rules, cost structures, language, and equipment that won't run on the fuel available in the other country are among the non-political barriers preventing the seamless trade envisioned by NAFTA, said Derek Leathers, president and chief operating officer of Werner Enterprises.

It's more efficient to have Mexican drivers working in Mexico, where they know the territories and traffic laws, and U.S. drivers on U.S. routes, Leathers said.

The U.S. legal system will scare some Mexican companies off, said Herb Schmidt, president of Con-way Truckload in Joplin, Missouri. For example, liability in Mexico might be limited to $1,500 per trailer, even if the cargo is worth $1 million, he said. In the U.S., “a million's worth a million,” Schmidt said.
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
There ya go..what we've been saying all along....nothing to fear but fear itself....the Mexican trucks were never a real threat....
 

jjoerger

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
US Army
I wonder if anyone ever thought to ask the Mexican trucking companies if they even wanted to be able to come here.
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
I wonder if anyone ever thought to ask the Mexican trucking companies if they even wanted to be able to come here.

I imagine some wanted to...just as some American trucks wanted to be able to go to Mexico...now they have that "freedom" to be able too...
 

ChanceMaster

Expert Expediter
There ya go..what we've been saying all along....nothing to fear but fear itself....the Mexican trucks were never a real threat....

Those Mexicans read the newspaper you know. They realize how dangerous it is here ! :):):)

Your reply reminds me of a recent trip to Nuevo Laredo from.. Laredo.I travel with a bicycle in my truck, and was researching how to ride across the border once in Laredo. I asked a lot of drivers in the US on the way down there, and everyone of them told me horror stories, including dead children , beheadings, and kidnappings. ( dead children stories are always invoked to add weight to the serious subject at hand). Upon arrival in Laredo and subsequent layover, i pedaled myself across the border, and this gringo got to spend a great afternoon of cervesa and music before riding back to the hotel. No children were killed during my visit to Nuevo Laredo.
 
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