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Industry Still Awaits Hours Reform

Reform of the 65-year-old rules governing how long interstate truckers can drive has been debated for years but it wasn’t until 1999 that there was significant movement on the issue.

January 13, 2000

TTNews.com to Close Monday for Martin Luther King Day

TTNews.com will be closed Monday, Jan. 16, for the Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday. Please check back on Tuesday, Jan. 17, for the latest trucking and freight transportation news.

January 13, 2000

Reefer Charges to Rise

On the heels of increases by dry van and truckload lines, carriers that haul refrigerated cargo are planning to raise freight rates by as much as 10% this year.

January 12, 2000

Truck Makers Set Production Cuts

Truck manufacturers are reducing production and cutting their payrolls, even before final sales figures are in for 1999, the biggest year in history for the sale of Class 8 trucks.

January 12, 2000

EPA Issues Latest Rules on Runoff, Waste Water

Two new clean water rules from the Environmental Protection Agency are likely to have a significant effect on trucking companies’ bottom lines — one that may save money and another that could be costly

January 12, 2000

The Century of Trucking

Looking back on the 20th century, we see major social and technological advances. It was the American Century, as we Americans like to say. It was also, arguably, the century of trucking.

January 12, 2000

ICC Transition Should Be Model For Carrier Office, Says Morgan

Surface Transportation Board Chairman Linda J. Morgan has some advice for employees of the new Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration: work hard and work fast to implement the instructions given you by Congress.

January 12, 2000

Y2K Debate: Was It Worth the Expenditure?

The country woke up New Year’s Day with no significant problems from the dreaded “millennium bug.” Now people are debating whether the millions spent on fixing the bug was worth it.

January 12, 2000

Ligon Will Keep Satisfactory Rating

Federal transportation safety officials decided to let Landstar Ligon retain its satisfactory safety rating after a review found the company to be in compliance with safety regulations.

January 12, 2000