| Prepare for Higher Border
Crossing Costs
Single Trip Border Crossing Charges
Set to Increase June 1st
(OTTAWA:
May 28, 2007) - It now appears certain that the US
will proceed with its plan to impose a border crossing
fee of $US 5.25 per truck on June 1st. The levy is
designed to fund additional agricultural quarantine
inspections on the Canada – US border. It will be applied
to trucks that pay to enter the United States on
a per crossing basis – regardless of what they
are carrying - but will not impact those carriers
who have already purchased a 2007 user fee transponder.
“We
had remained hopeful up to now that the US Animal
and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) would
further delay land border implementation in light
of ongoing discussions with the Canadian government,
and a wide range of US and Canadian interest groups,
on alternative means to reduce threats to US agriculture
from foreign pests”, noted Canadian Trucking
Alliance CEO David Bradley. “But discussions
CTA has had with US and Canadian officials over the
past week have indicated that no further delay will
take place, and individual ports have begun to issue
notices warning of higher fees on June 1st. It’s
frustrating, but carriers and their drivers who pay
on a single crossing basis should get prepared.”
Under
an interim rule issued last summer, Canada’s
long-standing exemption from US Agricultural Quarantine
Inspection (AQI) fees was removed. All modes of transportation
are impacted. In the case of trucking, those who
buy an annual border crossing transponder saw their
fees more than double from $100 to $205 when they
purchased their 2007 transponders last fall. Beginning
June 1st, trucks that currently pay a single crossing
fee of $5.50 to US Customs and Border Protection
will see an increase to $10.75. In total, the US
government expects to raise $15 million in agricultural
quarantine inspection fees from the trucking industry
in 2007, and $78 million from the transportation
industry as a whole.
“The cost of moving
goods across the border is about to go up again,
and once more governments are looking to the trucking
industry to foot the bill,” said Bradley. “Carriers
are frustrated because there seems to be no end in
sight to rising border costs...whether it be for
APHIS, for compliance with security programs such
as C-TPAT or for new electronic manifest requirements,
charges in Canada to offload goods for customs inspections,
Canada’s Administrative Monetary Penalty System – even
CBP has jumped in the act by raising its per crossing
fee earlier this year. Carriers have been attempting,
with varying degrees of success, to pass these fees
along to their customers. But regardless of who pays,
it is getting more expensive to move goods across
the border with our largest trading partner. This
can’t be allowed to continue if Canada is to
remain competitive in the US market with goods from
China, India, and other developing economic powerhouses.”
Source:
Canadian Trucking Alliance
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