Tijuana, April 27. With the imminent start of rehabilitation work on 12th Street North in Otay Centenario, truckers are demanding that authorities provide information on alternate routes they must take to reach the Export Port, as this is an already critical area with traffic that will worsen with the closure.
Guadalupe Sandoval, president of the Baja California Independent Transporters Association, questioned the local City Council's failure to inform the community at large about the so-called Executive Project for the Hydraulic Concrete Reconstruction of 12th Street, between Bellas Artes Boulevard and the International Border.
The rehabilitation works on 808,852 meters of road, which according to previous information will require an investment of more than 43 million pesos, will begin next Monday.
According to information from the National Chamber of Cargo Transportation (Canacar), around 4,000 trucks travel through the area daily to cross the border, generating considerable traffic that mixes with private cars belonging to local residents or those who use this route for their activities.
