Hearing set on Clean Trucks Program

April 21, 2010

 | by: Jill Dunn

A U.S. House subcommittee has scheduled a May 5 hearing to assess the Clean Truck Programs for the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

The Subcommittee on Highways and Transit has listed “Assessing the Implementation and Impacts of the Clean Truck Programs” for the two ports, but did not elaborate.

The Port of Los Angeles and the American Trucking Associations were scheduled to battle in court yesterday, April 20, over the employee requirement of its Clean Truck Program.

The civil trial in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles is to consider ATA’s request for a permanent injunction to block requiring all drivers to be employees of approved trucking companies. The port has argued this is the only way to help truckers buy and maintain new lower-emissions trucks.

However, its sister port of Long Beach instituted the same Clean Truck Program and emission requirements, minus the employee requirement. In January, Long Beach announced it had met its clean air goals nearly two years ahead of schedule.

In October, the Los Angeles Harbor Commission extended a contract with a lobbying firm, founded by former Democrat U.S. Rep. Richard Gephardt, to lobby for changes to the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act. Nationwide, several ports have expressed interest in obtaining an FAAA exemption from Congress for port operations related to trucking.
 
Motor carriers and shippers vigorously oppose this effort, contending unions have sought this exemption because if truckers are employees instead of owner-operators, they could unionize.

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