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e-Newsletter
Issue 28
4. Plan
assists Mexican trade
(December 4, 2003) Department of Homeland Security Secretary Tom
Ridge will announce a system to allow commercial trucks to clear
customs at the Mexican border in as little as 5 seconds by using
preregistered ID cards.
A similar system has had success regulating trucks from Canada,
but the less-secure southern border could pose challenges. "
We actually have gone through an enrollment program of enrolling
drivers, carriers and the companies that import goods," U.S.
Customs official Jayson Aherm said Tuesday at an industry homeland
security conference. Drivers "are then given a 'prox' card,
which is then shown and swiped when they come up to one of our
commercial crossing lanes on the southwest border," he said,
referring to an electronic ID document called a "proximity" or "prox" card.
Under the new program, trusted truckers, trucking companies, manufacturers
and importers will be screened, investigated and registered for
expedited crossings. When enrolled trucks approach the border,
information about their identification and contents will already
have been transmitted electronically so they "can actually
travel through the borders without impediment on our part," Mr.
Aherm said.
"
This will give us more efficient, more effective management of
our borders," he added.
The idea is popular with truckers.
"
We want to make sure that all the legal traffic and all the good
stuff that is supposed to come through doesn't get bogged down," Martin
Rojas, director of cross-border operations at the American Trucking
Association, said in an interview yesterday. "We want to be
sure that we can keep that balance of facilitation and enforcement."
Automated preregistration for trucks crossing the border with Canada — called
the FAST program — has been praised for speeding shipping
without compromising security.
The southern border, however, poses risks not present in the north.
"
Mexican society is more corrupt by many orders of magnitude than
Canada," said Mark Krikorian, executive director of the conservative
Center for Immigration Studies based in the District. "Because
this kind of program is based on a significant level of trust,
I would be very hesitant to apply it to Mexico, even though it
has been successful in Canada."
Mr. Krikorian said a program of preregistration for Mexican truckers,
trucking companies and manufacturers could leave the United States
vulnerable to several types of smuggling.
"
It could be illegal aliens — we've had truckloads of illegal
aliens — it could be drugs, it could be radiological weapons," Mr.
Krikorian said.
But George Grayson, a professor at the College of William and Mary
in Virginia and a specialist on the U.S.-Mexican border, said he
did not think the new program will pose significant new security
risks.
Mr. Grayson pointed out that only a small percentage of all cross-border
traffic is subject to invasive inspections and said presorting
trusted shippers would allow more of the other trucks to be checked.
He added that speeding up border crossings would make trade more
efficient.
By Thom J. Rose, United Press International
SOURCE:
http://www.washingtontimes.com/

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