SRC-MKV S.C.R. 25 77(R)   BILL ANALYSIS


Senate Research Center   S.C.R. 25
77R6487 RVH-DBy: Lucio
Business & Commerce
2/18/2001
As Filed


DIGEST 

The current presidential administration has indicated that it will allow
Mexican trucks at least partial access to U.S. highways beyond the
commercial border zone that was established in 1993 to limit the movement
of Mexican trucks until certain basic infrastructure and safety concerns
has been addressed.  The opening of the Texas border to Mexican trucks will
impact three border transportation districts in Pharr, Laredo, and El Paso
without proportionate increase in the commitment of money by the federal
government. 

The Texas Senate Special Committee on Border Affairs (committee) was given
several study charges during the 1999-2000 interim, including assessing the
long-term intermodal transportation need of the Texas-Mexico border region,
evaluating the planning and capacity resources of the three Texas
Department of Transportation (TxDOT) border districts.  The committee
reported that the Texas border crossings account for approximately 80
percent of United States-Mexico truck traffic, but the state is only
awarded 15 percent of the federal funds allocated for trade corridors.
Recent estimates by TxDOT indicate that even though Texas is the second
largest state in the nation, the state currently receives only 49 cents on
the dollar in federal highway discretionary program funds. 

The border points of entry are the primary gateway for commerce in Texas
and the nation but have become an economic point of congestion as a result
of the staggering volume of traffic they must handle.  In July 1999, the
General Accounting Office (GAO) reported that NAFTA-related traffic along
the border region has taxed the local and regional transportation
infrastructure and that the resulting lines of traffic are associated with
air pollution caused by idling vehicles.  The GAO also cited federal and
local officials' concerns about congestion affecting safety around ports of
entry and noted that congestion can have a negative impact on businesses
that operate on a just-in-time schedule and rely on regular cross-border
shipments of parts, supplies, and finished products. 

The committee reported that in the last decade total northbound truck
crossings, from Mexico into Texas, increased 215.8 percent, vehicle
crossings increased by 18.5 percent, southbound truck crossings, from Texas
to Mexico, increased by 278.1  percent, vehicle crossings by 53.9 percent,
and pedestrian crossings by 30.8 percent.  According to some estimates,
heavy truck traffic is expected to increase by 85 percent during the next
three decades and severely degrade existing roads and bridges.   

The Texas Department of Economic Development (TDED) reported that Mexico is
Texas' largest export destination and has been a chief contributor to the
state's export growth.  TDED has concluded that Texas accounts for 20.8
percent of the total U.S. exports to the North American market, largely
because of high export levels to Mexico.  In recent years, Mexico has
become the nation's second largest market, and Texas' ties to Mexico are
the primary contributors to the state's high share of overall U.S. exports.

The comptroller of public accounts of the State of Texas has reported that
exports account for 14 percent of our gross state product and in 1999 $100
billion in two-way truck trade passed through the Texas-Mexico border.
NAFTA activity has tripled on the border and trade with Mexico accounts for
one in every five jobs in Texas. 


 
PURPOSE

As proposed, S.C.R. 25 submits the following resolutions:

Provides that the 77th Legislature of the State of Texas hereby
respectfully urge the Congress of the United States and the president of
the United States to recognize the unique planning, capacity, and
infrastructure needs of Texas' border ports of entry and the high-priority
transportation corridors, and the impact of this federal policy that will
further open the border areas to Mexican truck travel by earmarking $3
billion to fund the construction of one-stop federal and state inspection
facilities that are open 24 hours per day along the Texas border region, as
well as to fund infrastructure improvements and construction projects at
border points of entry. 

Provides that the Texas Legislature urge the congress to rectify the
funding imbalance that Texas has experienced from the federal government,
and that congress and the president also increase the percentage in federal
discretionary money that Texas has received by earmarking $4 billion for
critical NAFTA-related planning, capacity, and right-of-way acquisition
needs and $3 billion for certain immediate needs for rural roadways that
are impacted by NAFTA-related traffic.  Provides that the Texas Legislature
urge congress and the president to earmark $1 billion for law enforcement
needed to prepare for the influx of Mexican trucks with access to travel
throughout the border and beyond. 

Provides that the Texas secretary of state forward official copies of this
resolution to the president of the United States, to the speaker of the
house of representatives and the president of the senate of the United
States Congress, and to all the members of the Texas delegation to the
congress with the request that this resolution be officially entered into
the Congressional Record as a memorial to the Congress of the United States
of America.