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Montana Motor Carrier Association Chooses New Executive VP

Brian Cavey is leaving the rarefied atmosphere of Washington's Capitol Hill for the Big Sky of Montana. He will be the new executive vice president of the Montana Motor Carrier Assn. Mr. Carvey replaces Ben Havdahl, who will retire before the next legislative session begins in January.

November 3, 1998

New Mexico Group Will Lobby For Tax Reporting Change

The New Mexico Motor Carriers Assn. is trying to change the deadline for filing state weight-distance tax reports from the 25th day to the last day of each month.

November 3, 1998

Fatal Crash Rate Continues Decline

The fatal crash rate for large trucks fell slightly to 2.39 per million miles in 1997, down from 2.41 the year before, according to newly released statistics from the Federal Highway Administration.

November 3, 1998

FHWA May Expedite Hours-of-Service Rule

A top Federal Highway Administration official said the agency was seriously considering a 鈥渘egotiated鈥 rulemaking to rewrite hours-of-service standards for truck drivers.

November 2, 1998

Unity, Record Turnout Mark ATA Conference

American Trucking Associations took a giant step toward unifying its splintered federation last week with a management conference that drew record attendance and generated more than a half-million dollars in political contributions.

November 2, 1998

U.S., ATA to Train Drivers

The U.S. Department of Labor and the American Trucking Associations will launch a pilot program next month to train as long-haul truck drivers 200 workers who lost their jobs in other industries.

November 2, 1998

CVSA: Out-of-Service Rates Not Good Safety Indicator

Out-of-service rates may not be an accurate measure of the safety of the trucking industry, according to the Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance, the international organization of state, provincial and federal truck safety inspectors.

November 2, 1998

EPA's Engine Settlement Still Faces Judicial Review

Before the $1 billion settlement negotiated by diesel engine manufacturers, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Justice is final, it must past a judicial review.

November 2, 1998

'EPA Betrayed Us': Engine Makers Say Agency Knew About Test

Diesel engine manufacturers feel betrayed by the Environmental Protection Agency and continue to deny accusations that they illegally polluted.

November 2, 1998

Customs Gets Money for X-Ray Machines

Truckers hope the $54 million that the U.S. Customs Service will get next year for drug interdiction technology will also lead to fewer trucking delays on the Mexican border.

November 2, 1998