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Long
Beach harbor panel OKs plan to reduce pollution
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By Dave Downey
Los Angeles Times
February 20, 2008
Over
the objections of environmental, public health and labor
organizations, the Long Beach harbor commissioners on Tuesday
unanimously approved a clean-air plan that continues to place
the burden of owning and maintaining diesel big rigs on
drivers rather than on shipping companies that hire them.
Port authorities called the move a "victory for clean
air" and a final element of a clean trucks program that
will replace and modernize the entire fleet of trucks serving
the Long Beach ports.
The vote by the Board of Harbor Commissioners followed a
six-hour meeting marked by emotional testimonies from dozens
of drivers.
The truckers said they could not afford to buy or maintain new
trucks and urged the port to compel shipping companies to hire
the drivers.
Also testifying before the board were representatives of the
Natural Resources Defense Council and the American Lung Assn.,
who blasted the plan as a "tarted-up" version of the
current system, which allows trucking companies to use
employee drivers, independent contractor drivers or a
combination of the two.
As a result, the representatives argued, commodities are kept
low at the expense of drivers. They criticized the board for
passing the plan without the support of the Port of Los
Angeles Board of Commissioners.
A letter to the board from the Natural Resources Defense
Council said, "Perhaps the most glaring flaw in the
port's program is the lack of its key partner and neighbor,
the Port of Los Angeles."
"If Los Angeles decides to go in a different direction in
its clean-trucks program, the result could be chaos at the
ports," the letter said. "Staff has failed to
address what will happen if a Long Beach-approved truck is not
allowed access to the Port of Los Angeles or vice versa."
Long Beach board members, however, said they worried about the
health risks of delaying the program. They also questioned
their authority to force a company to hire drivers. "I'm
not entirely comfortable with the proposal," said board
President Mario Cordero. "But time is of the
essence."
louis.sahagun@latimes.com
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Copyright 1999-2008, California Coastal Coalition
Phone: (760) 944-3564
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