On Jan. 22, the U.S. mandated non-citizens entering the country by land via Mexico and Canada to be vaccinated against COVID-19. Truckers were included in this mandate.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Assistant Director of Field Operations Armando Taboada said his team encountered 111 unvaccinated drivers during the first three days following the mandate's effectivity. Taboada, who is assigned at CBP's Laredo, Texas field office, is in charge of overseeing eight ports of entry along the Texas-Mexico border.
"We were capturing the numbers the first few days to give us an idea. For the most part, I believe the carriers got the message that vaccine requirements were being enforced," he said.
According to Taboada, non-compliant drivers returned to Mexico. Those with empty trucks were returned with the tractor-trailer still attached. Meanwhile, loaded shipments were processed for import into the U.S. regardless of the vaccination status of the drivers transporting them.
"The non-compliant drivers with loaded shipments [or] trailers were temporarily held in the cargo import facilities. The non-compliant driver was sent back to Mexico, but the trailer with loaded shipment was allowed to proceed with a replacement vaccinated, compliant driver to keep the flow of trade moving. This was done at all of our ports of entry." (Related: Biden bans unvaccinated truckers from entering the US, accelerating collapse of supply chains.)
The U.S. allows trucks from Mexico – called drayage trucks – to travel short distances northbound to drop off shipments. However, these drayage trucks are only permitted to travel generally within a 25-mile zone. The drayage trucking industry along the southern border sees hundreds of trucking companies transporting both raw materials and finished products back and forth across the border daily.
Several trucking companies have spoken out about the COVID-19 vaccine mandate for truckers coming into Mexico. They warned that the mandate can potentially exacerbate the current supply chain crisis.
Cold Chain Solutions CEO Gerardo Alanis Barrios said the vaccine mandates have strained the already-tight market for truck drivers. The head of the Laredo-based firm said: "Drayage capacity has been strained for the better part of two years. The vaccine mandate has come to dent it even more."
Barrios elaborated: "In our fleet, about four percent of our drivers have refused to get vaccinated. Some argue they can't get it because of medical conditions, while others simply don't want unknown substances in their bodies. A few have gone so far as to ask for other jobs within the company to support their decision."
Luis Garcia, carrier relations head at digital logistics platform Nuvocargo, said the company saw a few northbound shipments coming from Mexico face delays following the COVID-19 vaccine mandate for drivers imposed by the United States. Aside from unvaccinated drivers, he also mentioned the impact of COVID-positive truckers calling in sick.
"We've seen a few cases. One of our carriers had to change drivers last minute after they got [COVID-19 test] results from an internal policy of testing that they carried out. That made one of our pickups take two hours longer than expected," said Garcia.
The Nuvocargo executive pointed out that most of the drivers his company works with "have accepted [COVID-19] vaccines." He continued: "However, what they're suffering is sick leaves from their driver base and are hamstrung with [the] capacity to move the loads – and it is backlogging capacity."
EXPECT SHORTAGES: Canadian truckers not exempt from new vaccine mandate despite recent announcement.
Food shortages begin in Canada following trucker covid vaccine mandate.
Vaccine mandates in Canada now affecting pig and feed shipments.
Watch the video below of Harrison Smith explaining the impact of vaccine mandates on the food supply.
This video is from the InfoWars channel on Brighteon.com.
MedicalTyranny.com has more about COVID-19 vaccine mandates on truckers entering the United States.
Sources include: