Search
Showing 10 of 74414 results
DOD Will Not Drop Billing Plan
Despite complaints primarily from munitions haulers, the Department of Defense is moving forward with a plan to use a third-party electronic freight payment system to compensate freight carriers.
April 7, 1999Military, Carriers at Odds Over Moving Contracts
The Department of Defense and the moving industry are feuding over how best to ship the household goods of service members.
April 7, 1999Tank Driver Gets Highway Hero Award
Wayne Carpenter is the newest trucking Good Samaritan to win the title of Highway Hero.
April 7, 1999Authorities Warn of Insurance Scam
The U.S. Attorney’s office in Phoenix is warning trucking companies and owner-operators to check the validity of their insurance after the indictment of four people for embezzling more than $1.5 million in premiums.
April 7, 1999Reflective Tape Retrofit Goes Ahead
A rule requiring trucking companies to install reflective tape or reflectors on the sides and rears of older trailers will cost at least $228 million, according to the Federal Highway Administration.
April 7, 1999Roadway Seeks Ventures Outside Core Business
The chairman of Roadway Express said a slow recovery from a threatened strike in 1998 has forced the company to look for opportunities outside of its core freight hauling business.
April 7, 1999Justice Continues Reviewing Engine Decrees
The Department of Justice has not finished reviewing public comments on the consent decrees to settle charges that six diesel engine manufacturers cheated federal emissions tests.
April 7, 1999Editorial: Critics Build Nothing
The imbroglio stirred up by the group called Citizens for Responsible and Safe Highways over Werner Enterprises’ automated log system is the latest chapter in CRASH’s campaign to ensure that no good deed by the trucking industry or federal regulators to improve road safety goes unpunished.
April 7, 1999Opinion: Memo to Railroads: Give Up War on Trucking
Feuds, viewed from the sidelines, can draw laughter or tears or just yawns. This comfortable detachment, however, can quickly vanish when the scrap begins to inflict on the spectators what the military likes to call collateral damage.
April 7, 1999Opinion: Intersection of Interests
When ATA President Walter B. McCormick Jr. spoke of seeking talks with the Association of American Railroads and its members, I was reminded of a story that has circulated around our two industries for decades.
April 7, 1999