The Arizona Republic

Arizona delegation seeks to relax inspection­s on imports from Mexico

- WILL SOWARDS CRONKITE NEWS NICK OZA/THE REPUBLIC

NOGALES — Engines roar and the smell of diesel wafts through the air as trucks steadily pass through the final checkpoint­s as they enter Arizona from Mexico.

About 300,000 commercial vehicles pass through the Mariposa Port of Entry every year on their way into the United States, and it’s one of the busiest ports on the border.

The federal government spent nearly $200 million to add booths and inspection dock spaces to help increase traffic between the U.S. and Mexico and cut wait times. Trucks began using the new lanes in October 2014.

So far, it appears to be working.

“Definitely the widening of the border has been good for us,” said Octavio Vasquez, a facility manager for the Nogales branch of ProTrans, an Indiana-based logistics company. “We have seen an extra amount of flow of trailers, and they are coming in faster.”

Since the four-year renovation ended, port traffic has increased nearly 7 percent and wait times have decreased as well, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection statistics.

“I have noticed a change,” said Juan Egera, a warehouse worker at the Mariposa Port of Entry. “There’s more traffic and more space for the trucks that are being looked over. Since the renovation­s, everything has been faster.”

But, there is some debate about how effective the renovation has been. A combinatio­n of stricter regulation and lack of infrastruc­ture has lead some to believe that Arizona is lagging behind other border states.

Though the Mariposa Port of Entry processes hundreds of thousand of trucks each year, it pales in comparison to some ports located in California and Texas – states that have benefited, some say, from more lax regulation and better highways.

The port serves as the busiest land port in Arizona for privately owned vehicles, according to the U.S. General Services Administra­tion. In addition, more than 3 million pedestrian­s cross the border at the Nogales port every year.

All that activity is important, officials said. Every day, Mexican visitors to Arizona spend more than $7 million in hotels, malls, restaurant­s and other businesses, according to a 2008 study from the University of Arizona.

But, the commercial traffic is critical to the region and beyond. According to the Arizona-Mexico Commission, Arizona brings in $16 billion from trade with its southern neighbor, about 38 percent of U.S.-Mexico trade.

The port is the main entry point for fresh produce entering from Mexico for the West Coast, according to the U.S. General Services Administra­tion.

And although the federal government may have improved the port, some elected officials have turned their attention to the regulation­s for commercial trucks.

“The state of Arizona has a different relationsh­ip with the federal Department of Transporta­tion than other states,” said Lance Jungmeyer with the Fresh Produce Associatio­n of the Americas, an organizati­on that focuses on U.S.-Mexico agricultur­al trade. “Some time ago, Arizona made an agreement to allow for stricter inspection­s by the federal government, but Texas and California did not.”

He said these stricter inspection­s increase wait times and create a trade barrier for truckers trying to enter Arizona.

On April 16, 10 of Arizona’s 11-person federal delegation signed a letter to the director of the Federal Motor Carrier and Safety Administra­tion asking for a reversal of these restrictio­ns.

“It is our understand­ing that both Mexican and U.S. carriers have deemed Arizona ports of entry to be more difficult to cross than those of other border states because of the frequency of inspection­s and out-of-service orders issued by (the administra­tion),” the letter said.

It went on to request a change to bring Arizona in line with other border states.

Jungmeyer said it’s a major issue that’s holding Arizona back from being one of the top states for imports from Mexico.

Truckers fear citations for small infraction­s.

In some cases, a quick run across the border only nets a trucker about $50, but fines can cost more than $3,000 for some minor mistakes, like incomplete paperwork.

“There are efforts right now to reverse (the inspection­s),” Jungmeyer said.

“A huge factor, is that federal elected officials are coming to the rescue on this.”

 ??  ?? The federal government spent nearly $200 million to add booths and inspection dock spaces to the Mariposa Port of Entry in Nogales.
The federal government spent nearly $200 million to add booths and inspection dock spaces to the Mariposa Port of Entry in Nogales.

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