First Truck to operate in Mexico

Editors Note: For all the hype and hysteria that has been thrown around out there by the critics of this program, the exaggerations, the bald faced lies, “poor roads” “bandits” , “corrupt cops”, “no drug testing program”, a picture is worth a thousand words, something no one in their right mind can dispute. And seen from the eyes of the owner of Stagecoach, as he debunks more myths of the program, and further raises the credibility of Mexico Trucker, as he confirms what I have been saying for more than a year! I realize the opposition would like for it to be as they believe, but unfortunately, that is not the case. Read on!!!

Scott McLaughlin with first Mexican plate issued to a U.S. CarrierWhen the Department of Transportation started its binational trucking program, many on the U.S. side wondered why U.S. truckers would want to drive into Mexico. Why would U.S. carriers send their drivers into unknown territory? And why would their customers spend more for higher-paid U.S. drivers when they had standing relationships with Mexican carriers?

But Scott McLaughlin was interested.

This month, McLaughlin’s El Paso-based Stagecoach Cartage & Distribution became the first U.S. company to send a truck deep into Mexico.

McLaughlin, the company president, followed the truck in a rented car.

“It was memorable. I don’t think I’ll ever forget it,” he said. “It went well. It was a brand-new piece of business I had never been able to service before.”The truck, a 600-cubic-foot bulk tank filled with plastic pellets to be melted into disposable razors, crossed the border at Nogales, Ariz., and headed south to Obregon, near Hermosillo, about 370 miles from the border.

Most trucks now are limited to operating inside a 20-mile-wide border zone.

Under the pilot program that started this month, up to 100 pre-screened Mexican carriers will be allowed onto U.S. roads and up to 100 U.S. carriers onto Mexico roads for a year. So far, two U.S. companies and three Mexican companies have been given permits. Stage coach is the only local company of the bunch.

But the program is under pressure from labor groups and environmentalists on both sides of the border. In the United States, an amendment to the Transportation Spending Bill could kill all funding for the pilot program if the bill passes.John H. Hill, administrator of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, vowed to continue issuing permits until otherwise ordered.

“Mexican trucking companies, vehicles and drivers are meeting or exceeding the tough standards in place for this program — as well as those in place for U.S. truckers — to maintain safety on American roads,” he said in a statement. “Under the demonstration project, companies and consumers from both countries are benefiting from new markets and more efficient trade across our shared border.”

Thousands of Mexican commercial trucks already operate every day in U.S. border cities such as San Diego and El Paso, Hill pointed out.

Last year, such trucks made more than 4 million crossings into the United States. U.S. commercial trucks, however, had never had the authority to operate in Mexico.

A historic trip

McLaughlin wanted to be ahead of the curve, but he didn’t necessarily want to be first.

In the highly controversial atmosphere surrounding the trucking program, he would have been happy maintaining a lower profile. But it was not to be.

It all started when McLaughlin, intrigued about the announced pilot program, e-mailed Hill.

He was referred to the Mexican transportation department, Secretaría de Comunicaciones y Transportes. After about 2åmonths of gathering and translating documents and guiding Mexican inspectors through the Stagecoach truck terminal on El Paso’s East Side, McLaughlin received the word. His company would get the first permit.

“That’s what gave us the last push, because it was pretty trying the last couple of days,” said John Plote, director of equipment maintenance at Stagecoach. Plote worked on the project.

McLaughlin said he spent “not a small amount of money” on getting into the pilot.

Driver recieved Mexican Medical and Drug Test CertificateStagecoach driver undergoes drug alchol test in mobile lab, the same that PFP uses to check Mexican truckers at randomOn Sept. 14, one of Stagecoach’s 200-plus trucks went through Mexican customs in Nogales with shiny new Mexican plates. The thorough inspection lasted several hours, and the two Stagecoach drivers were tested for drugs and alcohol on the spot.

The rest of the trip was smooth sailing, McLaughlin said.

SCT does level one inspection on Stagecoach truckTruck enters 20km check south of Nogales SonoraThe roads were “excellent,” but the drivers encountered no fewer than four tolls in the 370 miles to their destination, and truck stop facilities were lacking.

Customs officials and highway police were very friendly, McLaughlin said.

They seemed glad to see it finally going through,” he said.

Under NAFTA, the border was to open up to trucks more than 10 years ago, but lawsuits by the Teamsters and other U.S. groups stalled the process.

Special cargo

Driving into Mexico means competing with Mexican carriers that pay their drivers a fraction of what American drivers receive.

Such cross-border trips won’t be an everyday occurrence, at least not for another 15 to 20 years, McLaughlin predicted.

But U.S. companies can still find a competitive niche now.

“It would be worth it for specialized transportation. Some companies may want the same trucks to go all the way,” he said. “Our goal is not to be cheaper; it’s to offer specialized service.”

For more-common assignments, Stagecoach will continue to work with Mexican partners, McLaughlin said.

Such binational business arrangements are common on the border, where drayage is the rule. Drayage consists of shuttling cargo from Mexico to warehouses in El Paso and turning it over to U.S. drivers, who take it farther inland.

Mexican companies are looking into some special cross-border shipments as well.

Grupo Cementos de Chihuahua, or GCC, a Mexico cement maker with several plants in the United States, also enrolled in the pilot trucking program and awaits a permit to send trucks into the United States.

“That wouldn’t be for regular portland cement. It would be for specialty cement that we produce in Mexico and sell in the United States,” said Humberto Urranga, a spokesman for the company.

No rush

McLaughlin said the response to his test trip was overwhelmingly positive. Clients asked for quotes for Mexico service, and drivers volunteered for future trips.

But McLaughlin has no immediate plans to send other trucks south.

“We wanted to get in early. We wanted to position ourselves, understand what it takes,” he said.

After initially worrying about their livelihood, American truckers seemed to be trying to figure out the possibilities.

Albert Luna, owner and president of Sky Transportation of El Paso, said he did not relish the idea of delivering cargo into Mexico.

But “if I have to get down and dirty and compete with the Mexican guys and go into the interior (of Mexico) and all the way back, I can do that,” he said. “You put it all into one package and it becomes one price, so you can compete in Mexico and make it up on the U.S. side.”

Luna, who has not registered for the pilot program, said U.S. trucks may have an edge because they may be more fuel-efficient than Mexican trucks.

The participants in the pilot program are restricted to cross-border shipments and forbidden to take on deliveries from two in-country points, a practice known as cabotage.


View this Post in: Spanish

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2 Responses to “First Truck to operate in Mexico”

  1. Genie Says:

    Sad to see an interesting and informative blog being attacked by a bunch of trolls. This church going grandma is not in the least concerned about the blog owners morals, but his thoughts and ideas on his border life. Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson and many of the others we so admire for their words lived less than moral lives.


    View this Comment in: Spanish


  2. Trailero 1 Says:

    Genie,

    Pay them no mind. These are not trolls but one uninformed little assklown in the Kansas City area. He began posting here, not on the subjects at hand, but trying to throw the neo con perspective on illegal immigration, where it was not appropriate. He then made this ridiculous assertion that he had DRIVEN AN OVERSIZE LOAD INTO MONTERREY, and proceeded to tell the readers how bad the roads were and of all the bribes and Police harassment he was forced to endure. I challenged him on this point, and called the company who he claimed to have pulled the load for. They confirmed what I already knew, that they did not send American drivers, under any circumstances, into Mexico. When I mentioned this, he got all huffy and put up his free site in an effort to defame me.

    Joining him, in this smear campaign, is a husband wife team of dubious repute from south Arkansas who can not stand the fact that someone would dare disagree with them. They too have put up a silly little blog in an effort to defame me. But as this moron does, they choose to write anonymously.

    In addition to being a trucker of 32 years, I design, code, build and maintain websites. As long as they are legal and do not violate any State, Federal or International laws, I could care less about the content.

    The website he keeps bitching about, DOES NOT, PROMOTE PROSTITUTION, DRUG USE, nor is it a directory of prostitutes. The members, more than 600 active at the moment, discuss everything imaginable from current events to what’s happening in the border towns. Some of the members come to the border on the weekends to party and play. Some go to Monterrey for business or the cultural attractions and they discuss it. There is a lot of locker room humor, manly hijinks, and basically just a bunch of friends shooting the shit. Most or single or divorced. It is the furthest thing from a porn site as one can get.

    The other things he is quoting me as having written, never came from my keyboard. That is not my lifestyle nor has it ever been, nor will it ever be. I can see this idiot in my minds eye, reading these things and trying to type with one hand while his other is busy elsewhere. One of these lurkers who is jealous of another’s perceived lifestyle.

    Fortunately, his little plan has backfired. People don’t enjoy attack sites such as his. He is angry because I will not permit him to post on this site and continually ban him with each new IP he appears with. He’ll give up eventually. Most do.

    It is interesting to note though, that since he and the others who do not share my opinions and refuse to accept the facts, since they differ from their version of the truth, choose to attack since they have nothing to back up their position. But that is the way it normally is.

    My only regret is good people like you Genie, have to be subjected to idiots like this.


    View this Comment in: Spanish


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