Truck

Group Pushing For International Autonomous Truck Route preview image Group Pushing For International Autonomous Truck Route article image

Group Pushing For International Autonomous Truck Route

BISMARCK, ND -- No sooner than the first autonomous driving truck got a licence to hit the highways in the U.S. earlier this month, one group is hoping to take things a step further by having such trucks move freight from Mexico to Canada along their own route. According to a CBC News story, the Central North American Trade Corridor Association wants to have a self-driving truck corridor along U.S. 83, which connects with Mexico in Brownsville, TX and Manitoba in Canada. Members reportedly discussed and planned a feasibility study last week in a meeting in Bismarck, ND and hopes to work the Canadian, U.S. and Mexico governments.

Orders, Purchases for New and Used Trucking Equipment Down preview image ACT Research

Orders, Purchases for New and Used Trucking Equipment Down

COLUMBUS, IN -- Demand for new and used trucking equipment slowed in April, according to new reports from commercial vehicle data provider ACT Research. Net orders for new Class 8 trucks in North America fell to a 17-month low of 22,400 units while Class 5 through Class 7 posted 17,700 new orders. "These are numbers that would be close to an average monthly reading in an expanding economy, but the current context is that the prior six months' net orders run-rate was 400,000 on an annualized basis and some correction from these unsustainable levels was inevitable," said Jim Meil, principal, industry analysis.

Trucking Investigation Leads to Convictions, Including Murder preview image Trucking Investigation Leads to Convictions, Including Murder article image

Trucking Investigation Leads to Convictions, Including Murder

ALBANY, GA -- The long arm of the law has caught up to two people in the U.S. in case that started with charges of violating federal trucking regulations, but expanded to include one person receiving a life sentence in prison for trying to kill a co-conspirator. According to news releases from the Office of Inspector General at the U.S. Transportation Department, on May 15, a federal court in Georgia granted a motion filed by federal prosecutors to dismiss charges against Devasko Lewis for conspiracy to criminally violate an imminent hazard out-of-service order issued by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA). The dismissal of the federal case was based upon the sentencing of Lewis on April 17 to life in prison without the possibility of parole for the murder of a relative of a federal witness.