Featured News In The News December 2009
In The News


LA, Long Beach Set to Ban More Dirty Trucks PDF Print E-mail
In The News
Wednesday, 23 December 2009 13:45
Bill Mongelluzzo | The Journal of Commerce Online - News Story

Jan. 1 deadline looms for 1994-03 models

LONG BEACH, Calif. -- The ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach will enter 2010 with more than 6,000 clean-diesel and alternative-fuel vehicles in the harbor trucking fleet as the industry works to comply with the ports’ clean-trucks mandates.

In addition to the 6,000 clean trucks already in service, motor carriers have approximately 1,300 trucks on order and scheduled for delivery soon. The trucks meet or exceed the Environmental Protection Agency’s standards for 2007-model clean-diesel vehicles.

Read more...
 
Small-business bankruptcies rise 81% in California PDF Print E-mail
In The News
Tuesday, 22 December 2009 11:30

With credit tight and consumers still pinching their pennies, many business owners find they can't go on.

By Nathan Olivarez-Giles;  LATimes

The Obama administration's new plan to give a boost to small businesses reflects continued trouble in that sector, which is facing new failures even as much of the nation's economy is stabilizing.

Read more...
 
Caltrans confirms number of new but idle vehicles PDF Print E-mail
In The News
Monday, 21 December 2009 10:47

More than 12 percent of the 2,667 new vehicles that Caltrans has bought since 2007 are sitting unused and gathering dust on state lots, according to newly released data confirmed by the department.

Read more...
 
A Reality Check for California's Excessive Borrowing PDF Print E-mail
In The News
Thursday, 17 December 2009 11:49

Payments on bond borrowing are becoming uncomfortably high, crowding out funds for universities, healthcare, parks -- and all the other government services being slashed these days.

Read more...
 
House Jobs Package and Extension Details Released PDF Print E-mail
In The News
Thursday, 17 December 2009 10:49

The House of Representatives today voted 217 to 212 to pass legislation, H.R. 2847—“The Jobs for Main Street Act”, that would supplement the core federal transportation programs with $37.2 billion in new transportation infrastructure investments and extend the authorization for the federal highway and transit programs through FY 2010.  It is important to note all Republicans and 38 Democrats voted against the measure.

Read more...
 
State's transportation investment deficit Costs Californians $40 billion a year PDF Print E-mail
In The News
Thursday, 17 December 2009 10:45

Decades of neglect of California’s transportation infrastructure amounts to an annual burden of $40 billion a year for the motoring public, according to a report released Thursday by TRIP, a Washington, DC transportation think tank.

Read more...
 
California’s diesel rule gets renewed scrutiny PDF Print E-mail
In The News
Thursday, 17 December 2009 09:56

When Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger traveled to Copenhagen to tout his record battling global warming, at home a very different story developed. He told his top air-quality regulators to change – and, critics fear, potentially weaken -- a premier regulation curbing diesel soot.

Read more...
 
State lost 47,000 employers in 2008 PDF Print E-mail
In The News
Thursday, 17 December 2009 09:51

One of every six U.S. employers that closed permanently in 2008 was in California, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration using bankruptcy court data.

Read more...
 
Bay Bridges Fees to Jump 122% for Truckers PDF Print E-mail
In The News
Wednesday, 16 December 2009 12:15

A proposed toll increase for the seven state-owned bridges that crisscross the San Francisco Bay could double the cost for trucks.

Under the proposal, a typical five-axle truck would pay $25 to cross any one of the seven bridges. A trip today is only $11.25. This is a 122% fee increase at a time when few can pass it on effectively, especially construction trucks.

Read more...
 
FMCSA Raises Safety Requirements for New Truck and Bus Companies PDF Print E-mail
In The News
Wednesday, 16 December 2009 11:24

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) today will begin enforcing its New Entrant Safety Assurance Process rule, which requires newly registered truck and bus companies to meet stricter safety requirements.

Register to read more...
 


Banner