CARB May Seek Clean Air Act Waiver to Make Fleets Buy Cleaner Engines
The California Air Resources Board may seek a waiver from federal Clean Air Act rules in order to allow a Southern California air-quality agency to require public fleets to buy cleaner-running engines, industry officials said.
ATRI Study Says Larger Trucks Would Cut Fuel Use, Emissions
Operating trucks at weights equal to or greater than existing federal limits resulted in improved fuel efficiency and lower emissions, the American Transportation Research Institute said a study it conducted with engine manufacturer Cummins Inc. concluded.
Customs Workers Drop Border Pickets in Canadian Public Employee Strike
Canadian customs workers stopped picketing at the U.S.-Canadian border last week, where the action, part of a broader public employee strike, had caused traffic delays.
Congress Approves Measure on Tire, Heavy-Vehicle Taxes
Congress approved a $136 billion corporate tax bill last week that would change the payment structure of the excise tax on tires and eliminate quarterly payments of the heavy-vehicle use tax.
Storm Compounds Problems for Southeast Truckers
Hurricane Jeanne's recent strike on the Southeast, besides causing flooding and disrupting power and port activity, also placed an added burden on truckers to deliver relief supplies in addition to their regular loads, trucking officials said.
ATA Names Brown Driver of Year; Honors Safety Director Dunbar
American Trucking Associations named its driver and safety manager of the year at the associations’ Safety and Loss Prevention Management Council fall conference Sept. 22 and announced the winners of its 2004 National Truck Safety Contest the same day.
Small Shippers’ Group Eyes Capacity, Other Factors Constraining LTLs
ATLANTA — Tightened capacity, outdated infrastructure and driver shortages will be key issues hampering less-than-truckload carriers in the coming year, analysts and less-than-truckload industry executives said at a shippers’ conference here.
EPA Drops Fuel-Testing Offer as Trucking Has Little Interest
The Environmental Protection Agency said the trucking industry’s lack of interest prompted the agency to cancel its plan to develop “clean corridors” in which fleets could buy ultra-low-sulfur fuel in 2005 to test 2007 diesel engines under actual operating conditions. br clear=all>
Calif. Lawmakers Vote Tougher Rules for Truck Entry
California lawmakers passed a bill that would require all trucks entering the state to meet federal emissions standards that were in effect the year the truck was manufactured and drivers would have to provide evidence that the truck meets those standards.
Calif. Bill Would Target Ship Lines, Intermodal
The California Legislature passed a bill that officials said would prevent shipping lines from unilaterally terminating business relationships with intermodal trucking companies.