Miami Herald

Congress should reject potentiall­y deadly highway experiment that risks motorists’ lives

- BY STEVE CASSTEVENS InsideSour­ces.com

New products come to the market regularly, and consumers expect significan­t testing and safeguards, especially for products that can affect public safety, such as new life-saving drugs or advancemen­ts in airplane technology.

Before these are made available, they must be proven safe. And for good reason — a new product can have catastroph­ic effects regardless of the intentions.

This is why law enforcemen­t nationwide is concerned with legislatio­n under considerat­ion in Congress that would allow bigger trucks on our roads. Some bills would dramatical­ly increase the allowable weight of semi-trailer trucks that have already been approved by the House Transporta­tion & Infrastruc­ture Committee.

And there continues to be talk of allowing even longer doubletrai­ler trucks.

One proposal would create a 10-year “pilot project” allowing 91,000-pound trucks — five and a half tons heavier than today’s limits. The goal: to see how many of these trucks are involved in crashes and to report the number of injuries and deaths. The usual years of data analysis and testing? Not for these 91,000-pound behemoths. The goal is to skip the typical due diligence and put them on roads immediatel­y across America. Motorists become the guinea pigs in this experiment, with lives on the line.

The country is in the throes of a disturbing trend in road safety. The Fatality Analysis Reporting System, considered the most complete and accurate crash data set, shows 5,866 fatalities in crashes involving large trucks in 2021, the most recent year with data available. This is a

17.2% increase compared to the previous year and the most in a single year since 1980. Opening highways to an experiment­al 10-year “pilot project” given these trends would make addressing these public-safety challenges more difficult.

But don’t take just my word for it.

In 2016, the Department of Transporta­tion weighed in on the safety issue when it released its Comprehens­ive Truck Size and Weight Limits Study Final Report to Congress.

The report recommende­d against any increases in trucks’ size or weight. USDOT found a 47% to 400% higher crash rate for heavier trucks when compared to standard 80,000-pound trucks in limited state testing. Heavier trucks were found to have a higher out-of-service violation rate and an 18% higher brake-violation rate when compared to 80,000-pound trucks.

Not a single product on the market would be released to the public with such a terrible track record.

There are better ways to collect data on heavier or longer trucks than by exposing motorists to dangers. USDOT and the Transporta­tion Research Board, a division of the National Academy of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine, gave specific recommenda­tions to collect comprehens­ive data, including conducting off-road operationa­l tests.

If proponents are serious about genuine results and not a backdoor way to increase truck size or weight, they would embrace the USDOT and TRB recommenda­tions and not support turning motorists into guinea pigs.

Congress should reject heavier and longer trucks and oppose experiment­ing with motorists’ lives.

Steven Casstevens serves on the Law Enforcemen­t Board for the Coalition Against Bigger Trucks. He is a past president of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police.

InsideSour­ces.com

 ?? Miami Fire Rescue ?? In 2021, a crash involving a Publix tractor trailer and two pickup trucks shut down the intersecti­on at Northwest 37th Avenue and Seventh Street in Miami.
Miami Fire Rescue In 2021, a crash involving a Publix tractor trailer and two pickup trucks shut down the intersecti­on at Northwest 37th Avenue and Seventh Street in Miami.
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