Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

ATA: Keep NAFTA’s Mexican Truck Proviso to Curb Border Congestion

UPDATED: In no uncertain terms, the American Trucking Associations has made it clear it continues to support the provision within the North American Free Trade Agreement that allows approved Mexico-based motor carriers to operate in the U.S.

David Cullen
David Cullen[Former] Business/Washington Contributing Editor
Read David's Posts
October 2, 2017
ATA: Keep NAFTA’s Mexican Truck Proviso to Curb Border Congestion

Photo: México Secretaría de Comunicaciones y Transportes

3 min to read


Photo: México Secretaría de Comunicaciones y Transportes

UPDATED: In no uncertain terms, the American Trucking Associations has made it clear it continues to support the provision within the North American Free Trade Agreement that allows approved Mexico-based motor carriers to operate in the U.S.

ATA Chief Economist and Senior Vice President Robert Costello stated in a Sept. 29 letter to United States Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer that the trucking lobby supports the Mexican truck program because it has helped reduce congestion at U.S.-Mexico ports of entry.

Ad Loading...

“Congestion increases without NAFTA’s trucking provisions because trailers often return empty after delivering freight across the border,” he wrote. “Sometimes ‘Bobtails’ (tractors without trailers) deliver a trailer only one-way across the border and return solo; and, bobtails and empties are also required to be inspected at the port of entry just like loaded trailers.

“The additional unnecessary equipment increases congestion, delays, ‘overhandling’ of shipments, costs, and the potential for lost and damaged freight,” he added. “As the industry looks well into the future, this provision will be more important as trade increases. It would be shortsighted to end the program now.”

Costello indicated that ATA was stressing its support for the program now because “there are groups fearmongering about Mexican trucks driving beyond the commercial border zone.” He said this is “not an open door policy” as Mexican carriers undergo a case-by-case review before the U.S Department of Transportation grants them authority to operate here.

Ad Loading...

He also advised out that “the largest Mexican-domiciled carrier in the program, representing over half of all the Mexican drivers permitted to drive beyond the commercial trade zone, is actually owned by an American trucking company.”

Costello added that Mexican carriers operating beyond the commercial border zones have an excellent safety record. “They are operating equipment similar to U.S. motor carriers and must adhere to all U.S. laws and regulations,” he stated. “If North America is going to compete with Asia, South America, and Europe in the world economy, we must have an integrated supply chain and that includes a safe and efficient transportation system to support it.”

Of course, not everyone agrees with that assessment. As pointed out in Politico’s Morning Transportation blog, individual Members of Congress and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters have pushed Ambassador Lighthizer to scrap the Mexican carrier provision during the ongoing renegotiation of the NAFTA treaty.

In an op-ed published in The Detroit News on Oct. 4,  Teamsters President James Hoffa said that at the top of the union's agenda is "fixing the mistake of including long-haul trucking in the original NAFTA. The Teamsters have briefed U.S. and Canadian officials on suggested language that would provide a level playing field, improve truck safety and boost working conditions and wages for Mexican drivers."

Hoffa added that the Teamsters contend that this issue must be addressed. "Not only do truckers stand to benefit, but American lives are at stake. Old and unsafe trucks put our highways at risk and pollute our air, putting the public’s health in jeopardy. That’s not a price people should pay for bad policy."

Ad Loading...

The Teamsters have long held that “notoriously dangerous” Mexican trucks should be prevented from “driving anywhere on U.S. highways.”

A lawsuit filed by the labor union in 2015 charged that DOT did not produce enough inspection data during its three-year (2011-14) cross-border pilot program to determine if Mexican carriers were safe enough to operate in the U.S. The Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association joined the Teamsters in that suit.

In June, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that, regardless of any such data findings, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration holds the law-given discretion to grant operating authority and so the program has continued.

Editor's Note: Updated on Oct. 5 to include comments quoted from a newspaper op-ed written by Teamsters President James Hoffa.

Related: Talks to Revamp NAFTA Slated to Begin This Week

More Fleet Management

Cover of ATRI operational costs study with graph clip art and photo of trucks on highway in the background
Fleet Managementby Deborah LockridgeJuly 15, 2026

Trucking Fleets Faced Record Operating Costs During Third Year of Freight Recession

ATRI's annual operational cost report shows carriers trimmed fleets, delayed equipment purchases, and ran older trucks as expenses continued to outpace freight rates.

Read More →
Micheline AI Assistant.

Michelin Adds AI Assistant to MyConnectedFleet Platform

Michelin’s new generative AI tool delivers instant fleet insights, helping managers analyze fuel use, tire maintenance, vehicle status, and operational performance without manually creating reports.

Read More →
LytxOne Platform.

LytxOne Platform Now Features AI, Compliance, and Asset Tracking Tools

New enhancements add AI-powered insights, asset tracking, compliance automation, and configurable privacy controls to Lytx's all-in-one fleet management platform.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Container ship at the Port of Long Beach.

July Imports Poised to Set Container Record

The National Retail Federation projects July container imports will surpass the pandemic-era record as shippers frontload freight ahead of expected August tariff increases.

Read More →
Nine headshots of men and women with Truck Fleet Innovators logo and the word "Finalists"
Fleet Managementby Deborah LockridgeJuly 10, 2026

HDT Announces 2026 Truck Fleet Innovator Finalists

From AI and fleet electrification to safety, operations, and leadership, these HDT Truck Fleet Innovator finalists are changing how trucking gets done.

Read More →
DAT trucking conditions June 2026.

Van Spot Rates Top Contract Rates for First Time Since 2022

There’s more good economic news for the North American trucking industry according to the latest Truckload Volume Index report from DAT.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Carrier Transicold Fleet Refresh program.

Carrier Transicold Extends Refrigerated Trailer Life

Fleet Refresh enables refrigerated fleets to replace aging transport refrigeration units instead of entire trailers, while adding Lynx Fleet telematics and BluEdge service coverage.

Read More →
FTR TCI May 2026.

FTR Says Freight Rates Surged in May

FTR's Trucking Conditions Index surged to a record high in May, the analytics firm reports.

Read More →
Panel discussion

Meet HDT's Truck Fleet Innovators at Heavy Duty Trucking Exchange

Heavy Duty Trucking Exchange brings fleet managers and suppliers together for the deeper conversations that lead to ideas, partnerships, and solutions. Time is running out to apply for HDTX, September 23-25.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
thermo king heavy duty trucking
SponsoredJuly 1, 2026

Enhance Fleet Performance with High-Efficiency Auxiliary Power Units

Drive sustainable cost savings while increasing driver comfort during short- and long-haul logistics operations.

Read More →