Borderlands: Odessa, Texas, Ranked #4 City For Truck Drivers

Borderlands is a weekly rundown of developments in the world of United States-Mexico cross-border trucking and trade. This week: Odessa, Texas, ranked #4 city for truck drivers; New U.S. Ambassador arrives in Mexico; Surgere sets its sights on Mexico supply chains; and Love's Travel Stops opens location in Brownsville, Texas.

Study: Odessa, Texas, ranked as #4 city nationwide for truck drivers to live

Odessa, Texas, was ranked as the number four overall city nationwide for heavy-duty and tractor-trailer truck drivers according to a new 384-city study by AdvisorSmith.

The study looked at cities across the U.S. to see how the job market is for people who drive heavy-duty and tractor-trailer trucks.

Truck drivers in Odessa earn an average of $48,010, or 5 percent more than the national average, while the cost of living is 13 percent lower than the rest of the United States, according to the study.

Odessa is located four hours west of the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex. The city's economy has been primarily driven by oil production.

In recent years, Odessa has become a growing logistics center. The city became a major distribution center for Family Dollar in 2003 and Coca-Cola in 2007.

Odessa is also one of the stops along Entrada al Pacifico or Trade Corridor 56, which serves as the route from the Pacific Ocean port of Topolobampo in the Mexican state of Sinaloa to Texas.

According to the study, Joplin, Missouri was the number one overall city for people who drive heavy-duty and tractor-trailer trucks; followed by Danville, Illinois, and Fayetteville, Arkansas.

Other Texas cities to make the list include Midland, Wichita Falls, Victoria, Laredo and El Paso.

The AdvisorSmith study, which was released August 22, examined three main variables in quantifying the best cities for heavy-duty and tractor-trailer truck drivers – average annual salaries, density of jobs and cost of living.

New York City-based AdvisorSmith is an online business insurance advising firm.

New U.S. Ambassador Landau arrives in Mexico with "hand extended"

Christopher Landau, the new United States Ambassador to Mexico, officially arrived in Mexico City on August 16.

Landau's new diplomatic role will put him at the center of continued disputes between Mexico and the U.S. on trade and immigration.

"I arrive with my hand extended," Landau said to reporters in a press conference at the Mexico City airport August 16, according to Reuters. "Obviously, there are challenges in the bilateral relationship, but they're the challenges expected in any close relationship."

Landau succeeds Roberta Jacobson, a long-time diplomat who resigned and retired in distress for what she called President Trump's "un-American" immigration policies.