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Long
Beach agrees to ban old diesel trucks from port
The
mayors of the cities agree to replace the fleet of 16,500 rigs
with cleaner models by 2012, but implementation is still
unclear
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By Louis
Sahagun
Los Angeles Times
November 6, 2007
In a
rare display of partnership, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa and Long Beach Mayor Bob Foster on Monday touted
a joint plan to scrap old diesel rigs and replace them with
newer, cleaner models as part of an effort to slash
port-related pollution linked to 2,400 premature deaths a
year.
Against a backdrop of massive cranes unloading a freighter as
it spewed dark columns of diesel smoke, the often rival
leaders embraced during a news conference held after the Long
Beach Board of Harbor Commissioners agreed to a progressive
truck ban identical to one approved last week by the adjacent
Port of Los Angeles.
FOR THE
RECORD:
Port trucks: An article in Tuesday's California section about
a plan to replace old trucks at the Port of Long Beach with
newer, cleaner models said the plan needed to be approved by
the Long Beach City Council. Actually, the effort requires
only the approval of the Long Beach Board of Harbor
Commissioners, which ratified it Monday. —
For the time being, however, it's a ban with out an
implementation plan. Unless the ports can reduce pollution,
expansion projects likely to produce thousands of local jobs
will face protracted legal challenges. With so much on the
line, Villaraigosa and Foster turned from competition to
cooperation.
"For the longest time, we were working on separate
tracks," Villaraigosa told a crowd of about 75 truckers,
environmentalists and shipping company representatives.
"Let's join hands and work together."
"Long Beach and Los Angeles," Foster added,
"continue to lead the world in pushing for cleaner air
and healthier environment with our shared goal of having the
cleanest ports in the world."
However, leaders from both cities forecast intense
negotiations to come as port authorities, truckers,
environmentalists, shippers and health officials begin
devising a plan to implement the program, which calls for
replacing the port complex's entire fleet of 16,500 trucks by
2012.
Now the big question is who will pay to own, operate and
maintain the new trucks, worth an estimated $1.6 billion.
Many of the fleet's mostly low-income, Spanish-speaking
independent contract truckers insist they cannot afford to buy
new trucks, let alone maintain them. They want trucking
companies and shippers to buy the trucks and hire the
truckers.
Trucking companies and shippers argue that the ports lack the
legal authority to force them to purchase the fleet. Employing
drivers also would attract union organizers, something most
port businesses would oppose.
"Ultimately, the consumer will pay for it -- a nickel on
a pair of tennis shoes and a quarter on every television
set," said S. David Freeman, president of the Los Angeles
Board of Harbor Commissioners. "So let's get on with
it."
The truck ban, which must be approved by both city councils,
is scheduled to begin Oct. 1, 2008. On that day an estimated
3,000 trucks built before 1989 would be denied access to the
nation's busiest port complex.
"In just 11 months the people of the Southland can begin
breathing easier," Villaraigosa said in a statement.
"We will no longer sacrifice public health for the sake
of adding a few pennies to the profit margins."
Pressure to reduce port pollution has been motivated in part
by booming trade. Annual trade at the ports, currently about
$305 billion, is expected to double by 2020, port authorities
said.
Cleaner trucks would save up to $5.9 billion in health costs
to workers and local residents, according to an economic
impact study commissioned by the Port of Los Angeles. The
study predicts the cleanup also would clear the way for port
expansion projects that could generate 300,000 to 600,000 jobs
by 2025.
But because the ports account for 25% of diesel particulate
emissions in the Los Angeles Basin -- and more
particulate-forming nitrogen oxide emissions than all 6
million cars in the region -- neither port has been able to
complete an environmental impact report for any infrastructure
improvement project in six years.
Julie Sauls of the California Trucking Assn. said the truck
ban, which is only a portion of the landmark Clean Air Action
Plan endorsed by the two ports a year ago, would improve air
pollution by only less than 10% during the next five years.
Also, the plan "does not spell out how to cover the
tremendous costs associated with such a transition," she
said in a prepared statement.
Long Beach Harbor Commissioner James Hankla believes a
compromise is inevitable.
"How are we going to pay for all this?" he said.
"I don't know. But I believe we will find a way, not that
it's going to be free or cheap, because if we are not able to
grow green, we will not see a million new jobs created for
this region."
louis.sahagun@latimes.com
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Copyright 1999-2007, California Coastal Coalition
Phone: (760) 944-3564
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