Teamsters seek to fire former Ariz. transportation director
February 8th, 2008, 2:11 pm · Post a Comment · posted by Le Templar

President Bush and Transportation Secretary Mary Peters (courtesy of the White House Web site)
U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary Peters soon will be out of a job if the International Brotherhood of Teamsters has anything to say about it.
The Teamsters have launched a media and lobbying campaign asking Congress to “fire Mary Peters” over President Bush’s plan to allow a limited number of Mexican tractor-trailers to deliver goods anywhere in the U.S. under a year-long pilot program. Peters is the former director of the Arizona Department of Transportation who is considered to be a possible candidate for governor in 2010.
The Mexican truck pilot program is the Bush administration’s latest attempt to carry out a requirement of NAFTA to allow U.S. and Mexican commercial semi-trucks to travel freely in both countries. Without the treaty, industrial and agricultural goods moving between countries must be unloaded from the home country’s deliver truck at a border port of entry and moved into a truck from the country where the goods are headed. This increases costs and reduces trade between the U.S. and Mexico.
While NAFTA was negotiated and signed by President Clinton, Democrats have been heavily urged by unions such as the Teamsters to undermine the delivery truck exchange provisions. Unions fear that Mexican truck drivers working for cheaper wages will steal jobs from U.S. drivers, ignoring the fact that increased trade should mean more work for everyone involved.
The unions’ complaints were largely ignored until Democrats took control of Congress in 2007 and the actual effective date of the delivery truck exchange came into sight. First, Congress sought to impede the treaty by requiring Mexican trucks and drivers to comply with all safety and environmental regulations that apply to U.S. trucks. That’s when Peters announced this pilot program a year ago to demonstrate Mexican trucks can pass U.S. inspections and comply with the law.
The unions didn’t relent, so in December a provision was snuck into a spending bill to deny any funding for the pilot program.
The Transportation Department has parsed the bill’s language and decided it doesn’t actually apply, despite what Congress intended. So the pilot program continues.
And the Teamsters now are trying to use public pressure to force Peters to back down or to lose her job. The campaign is something of a publicity stunt, as Congress can’t “fire” Peters, only Bush has that authority.
But we’ll see if the Teamsters can prompt Congress to take further action to thwart this provision of NAFTA.







