What if Canada suddenly says no one with a pet can enter Canada, or you have to have all red lights on your truck or you have to have blue lights in the corners of your windshield, all lettering on your truck must be black or all tires must be 20 ply.
Where does this end?
I don't think it will ever end. Multi-jurisdictional chaos is something truckers and carriers have been dealing with for a long time. Doubles are legal in some state, tripples in others, Rocky Mountain doubles in others, turnpike doubles in still others. With their axle rules, Michigan is a tire salesperson's dream but other states are not. Expidters get tickets in Louisiana for having their lift axle control in the cab but not in California. You can idle in Louisiana but will be ticketed for doing so in California. Tire chain rules vary from state to state. The list is long.
Central to this discussion is the introduction and coming enforcement of a new speed limiter law by two provinces in Canada. The law is new but multi-jurisdictional chaos is not.
For some of us at FDCC, the issue must be considered on many levels. The first is the law itself. Regardless of the carrier you are with, are these new provincial laws something you are willing to comply with or not?
Next comes your carrier's position on the issue, which at this point is murky at best. A fleet bulletin that goes out to only some contractors and uses the word "requirement" is different than a letter that goes to all contractors and uses the word "encourage."
From the reports I am getting from contractors, contractor coordinators are not of one voice on this. Granted, people sometimes hear what they want to hear and coordinators sometimes mis-speak. But clearly, they have no company-provided statement about this that they can use to read the same words to everyone who asks.
If this is a true requirement and a condition of continuing as a contractor, it would make things easier on everyone if FDCC would come out with a clear, offical statement saying exactly that.
Following that can come the effort to uniformily enforce the requirement if one in fact exists. Prior exceptions to Canada policy have been noted by others above. Clearly, many contractors dislike the speed-limiter law and would not comply without heavy pressure from their carrier. Uniformly enforcing the carrier rules across the fleet would make it easier for those who reluctantly and grudgingly live under them.