Negotiations continue on cross-border trucking program with Mexico

Washington – Negotiators from the United States and Mexico continue to work to resolve a cross-border long-haul trucking dispute, White House officials announced March 3.

A fact sheet from the Office of the Press Secretary outlines the cross-border program and states President Barack Obama and President Felipe Calderon directed the creation of a high-level regulatory cooperation council tasked with collaborating on cross-border regulations. Once a final agreement is reached, Mexico will suspend its retaliatory tariffs imposed after the United States ended a cross-border pilot project in 2009.

Members of the Grain Valley, MO-based Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association expressed outrage at the agreement, stating in a press release that the decision by the Obama administration to open up U.S. highways to Mexican trucks after the country imposed retaliatory tariffs would destroy small trucking companies. Todd Spencer, executive vice president of OOIDA, called Mexico’s tariffs an “economic bullying tactic” that should not be tolerated.

- Digital Partners -

The Arlington, VA-based American Trucking Associations said it supports the agreement, which so far upholds previous requirements for Mexican trucks to meet safety standards to operate on U.S. highways.

- Digital Partners -

Next Webinar

When HOP Meets AI: A New Tension for Safety Leaders

Date: Thursday July 9th, 2026

Time: 12:00pm-1:00pm CDT

Sponsored By: Intelex

Register Now

Current Issue

What's Trending

From our Partners

Earn recertification points

Board of Certified Safety Professionals

Take a quiz about this issue of the magazine and earn recertification points from the Board of Certified Safety Professionals.