The Commercial Appeal

Slow your roll

Feds propose electronic device to cap speed limit in trucks, buses

- By Tom Krisher

Associated Press

Federal regulators want to limit the speed of trucks, buses and other large vehicles on the nation’s highways. A new proposal Friday would impose a nationwide limit by electronic­ally capping speeds with a device on newly made U.S. vehicles that weigh more than 26,000 pounds. Regulators are considerin­g a cap of 60, 65 or 68 miles per hour, though that could change. Whatever the speed limit, drivers would be physically prevented from exceeding it.

The government said capping speeds for large vehicles will reduce the 1,115 fatal crashes involving heavy trucks that occur each year and save $1 billion in fuel costs.

The proposal from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion and Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administra­tion is subject to public comment before becoming final.

While the news is being welcomed by safety advocates and nonprofess­ional drivers, many truckers say that such changes could lead to dangerous scenarios where they are traveling at much lower speeds than everyone else.

The rule has been ensnared in a regulatory maze in the decade since the nonprofit group Roadsafe America issued its first petition in 2006. The group was founded by Atlanta financial adviser Scott Owings and his wife, Susan, whose son, Cullum, was killed by a speeding tractor-trailer during a trip back to school in Virginia after Thanksgivi­ng in 2002. The nonprofit was later joined by the American Trucking Associatio­ns, the nation’s largest trucking industry group.

“This glacial process, if you can call it a process, is not effective,” Owings said before the latest proposal arrived. “It’s easy to see why so many citizens are angry about the ineffectiv­eness of government.”

The government agencies involved will take public comment for 60 days, then determine the final limit and decide if the regulation should be put in place.

Norita Taylor, spokeswoma­n for the 157,000-member Owner Operator Independen­t Drivers Associatio­n, said her group has opposed the speed limiters because they create dangerous interactio­ns between vehicles as faster cars slow down for trucks.

“Differenti­als in speed increase interactio­ns between vehicles, which increases the likelihood of crashes,” Taylor said.

An investigat­ion last year by The Associated Press found that 14 states have speed limits for big trucks that are equal to or higher than their tires were designed to handle. Most truck tires aren’t designed to go faster than 75 mph, and tire manufactur­ers say traveling faster than that can cause tires to fail and blow out, creating safety issues.

 ?? TED S. WARREN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Truck and automobile traffic mix on Interstate 5, headed north through Fife, Wash., near the Port of Tacoma. The federal government proposed a new regulation Friday that would require new vehicles weighing more than 26,000 pounds be outfitted with a...
TED S. WARREN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Truck and automobile traffic mix on Interstate 5, headed north through Fife, Wash., near the Port of Tacoma. The federal government proposed a new regulation Friday that would require new vehicles weighing more than 26,000 pounds be outfitted with a...

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