David Barnes
| Senior CorrespondentMead: MCSA Must Fix Safety Problems
Days after President Clinton signed legislation creating a Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, the head of the Department of Transportation’s watchdog office encouraged the new agency to use the tools it has to improve truck and bus safety.
Transportation officials were optimistic about the agency’s ability to meet DOT’s goal of cutting the number of truck-related fatalities in half over 10 years. The department also unveiled a new World Wide Web site that will offer more information on motor carrier safety.
“I think we’ve come a long way over the past year in understanding what needs to be fixed and what the problems were,” Mead said. “That’s different from saying there’s been a lot of progress in improving motor carrier safety.”
Related Stories | |
Trucking's Wish List for MCSA Chief (Dec. 22) Clinton Signs Truck Agency Bill (Dec. 10) Opinion: Shaping the New Motor Carrier Administration (Dec. 8) Comments by ATA President Walter B. McCormick, Jr. on the bill (on Truckline) (Note: To return to this story, click the "Back" button on your browser.) | |
In a Dec. 15 interview with Transport Topics, Kenneth M. Mead, DOT’s inspector general, criticized earlier federal efforts at overseeing motor carrier safety and delays he saw in correcting problems.
For the full story, see the Dec. 20 print edition of Transport Topics. Subscribe today.