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Nine States Form Emissions Test Bloc
Nine northeastern states have banded together to get tough on trucks that pollute the air. Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont agreed to begin roadside smoke testing and ticketing trucks and buses that are in violation by July 1, 2001.
June 30, 1999TT's Seth Clevenger, Michael Freeze and Keiron Greenhalgh break down what ACT Expo revealed about trucking's road to sustainability.Â
Terminal Properties Attract Investors
Investors may be shunning trucking stocks, but a small but growing number of firms think there is money to be made in owning truck terminals. Long viewed as a financial backwater, freight terminals are being touted as good long-term investments and a way for trucking companies to free up money to invest in other parts of their business.
June 30, 1999Diesel Prices On Upswing Again
In a continuation of the yo-yo-like gyrations that many analysts said were over, the national average price of diesel fuel has risen 2.3 cents a gallon over the past two weeks, after dropping 2.4 cents over the previous four weeks. On June 21, the price stood at $1.082 a gallon, 1.4 cents above the previous week’s level of $1.068 and 0.1 cent below the level on May 10, according to the Department of Energy.
June 30, 1999Intermodals Pinched By Conrail Woes
Spokesmen for two of the nation’s major railroads — Norfolk Southern and CSX — conceded that their service has "just not been good enough" in the wake of their split-up of Conrail. However, both companies insist things were improving. But some intermodal trucking companies suffered along with the two railroads, as shippers turned to over-the-road truckers.
June 30, 1999Slater: DOT, Trucking Must Cooperate
Transportation Secretary Rodney Slater declared his commitment to working with American Trucking Associations to reduce truck-related fatalities, despite criticism from safety groups. "While some have criticized the department for working in partnership with ATA, I do not apologize for that," Slater said in a June 18 speech to the group’s board of directors.
June 30, 1999FHWA Should Oversee Truck Safety
Jurisdiction over truck and bus safety should remain within the Federal Highway Administration, Transportation Secretary Rodney Slater said. In a June 18 speech to American Trucking Associations board of directors, Slater said the department’s goal of cutting in half the number of truck-related fatalities over the next decade would best be achieved by beefing up existing programs.
June 30, 1999ATA Forms Committee On Info. Tech.
Citing the increased use of information technology within the industry, American Trucking Associations has created a new policy committee devoted to the issue. ATA’s board of directors voted June 18 to create a new Technology & Engineering Committee that incorporates the current Technology Advisory Committee and the engineering component of the Safety & Engineering Committee.
June 30, 1999You Load, Consolidated Hauls
Consolidated Freightways says it has a better idea for people who plan to move but don’t feel like paying to hire a moving company. CF will send a 28-foot trailer to your house, let you load it yourself and then come and get it. The service, which went “live” June 21, is being offered through the Menlo Park, Calif., company’s new e-commerce division.
June 30, 1999Patent Issue Delays Warning System
Legal worries over patents are blocking adoption of an official standard for trailer-to-tractor warning communications. The patent issue frustrates backers of the electronic protocol called PLC4Trucks because they face a looming federal deadline to establish an accepted way to warn the driver of a faulty antilock braking system in a trailer.
June 30, 1999Report: DaimlerChrysler Eyes Volvo
Volvo, rumored in the past to be a possible purchaser of at least two other companies, has surfaced as the possible object of an acquisition by DaimlerChrysler. Dagens Industri, a daily business newspaper in Sweden, cited unnamed sources in reporting that the German-U.S. automaker will bid at least $17.7 billion for Volvo, the maker of transportation, construction, marine and aerospace equipment based in Stockholm, Sweden.
June 30, 1999