Enough! Stop More Giant Truck-Trailers on Your Highways

The big trucking industry now wants to roll back protections in 39 states, put longer double trailers on your roads and cut back on giving truck drivers the rest they (and you) need. Is there any limit on the supremacy of commercial greed over safety values?
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Are you one of the millions of people in the United States who drive a car every day? How do you react to the trucking industry, whose lobbyists, with ample campaign cash, swarm over Congress, pressing for a rider to a transportation appropriations bill to be passed to overturn laws in 39 states that currently ban unsafe double 33-foot tractor-trailer combinations? What is your opinion of another provision in this bill to permanently increase truck driver working and driving hours up to 82 hours per week, abolishing the "weekend off" for two nights of restorative rest? Or what is your view of various exemptions that allow current federal truck weight limits of 80,000 lbs. to reach up to 129,000 lbs., further damaging roads and bridges already in need of repair? Or what about families whose loved ones are killed or suffer costly and disabling injuries only to discover that the truck or bus company responsible for the crash does not have enough insurance because trucking industry lobbies, aided by their friends in Congress, are trying to freeze the absurdly low minimum insurance requirements? These assaults are being led by members of Congress who are owned by the trucking lobby that includes FedEx, UPS and the American Trucking Associations with their ample campaign contributions.

Your replies, given polls going back 20 years, are likely to match the large majorities of people opposed to further unleashing more oversized, overweight trucks and tired truckers (see Parents Against Tired Truckers at http://trucksafety.org/tag/parents-against-tired-truckers) onto our roads.

Members of Congress owned by the trucking industry such as Senator Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Senator Richard Shelby (R-AL) (a states' right advocate who should know better) pushed adoption of this rider in a Senate appropriations bill funding federal transportation and housing programs (H.R. 2577 which has already passed the House of Representatives) without any public input. Astonishingly, there have been no congressional hearings on the FedEx proposal to compel every state to allow double 33s! FedEx, UPS, the American Trucking Associations and others are looking to attach the double 33s mandate on any legislation that has a chance of passing Congress in the next few weeks. The big trucking industry lobbyists are now laser focused on a truck safety bill that is being considered by the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee next Wednesday, July 15. The truck safety bill will become part of the multi-year, multi-billion dollar highway and transit bill that Congress must act on before August 1 when highway construction funds are expected to run dry. Every bill moving through Congress is a target for attaching these anti-safety provisions so every Member of Congress urgently needs to hear from constituents.

The Appropriations Committee chairman, Senator Thad Cochran (R-Mississippi), supported vigorously by Dick Hall, the chairman of his state's Transportation Commission, voted against the trucking lobbies but lost the Committee by one vote late in June. Fortunately, the Department of Transportation and President Obama oppose increasing truck hazards on and to the highways.

The fight to stop this highway space grab now goes to the Senate floor, where the Democrats and some Republicans will try to get this rider deleted. Led by Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-California), Richard Durbin (D-Illinois) and Tom Udall (D-New Mexico), they have plenty of arguments. Listen to Jackie Gillan, the president of Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety:

Over the past five years alone (2009-2013), fatalities from large truck crashes have increased by 17% and injuries have increased by 28%. Every year, on average, there are 4,000 people killed and 100,000 more injured in large truck crashes which is equivalent to a major airplane crash every week of the year.

Imagine, the big trucking industry now wants to roll back protections in 39 states, put longer double trailers on your roads and cut back on giving truck drivers the rest they (and you) need.

Is there any limit on the supremacy of commercial greed over safety values? Go to these websites for "what you can do" details and factual rebuttals of the freight industry's assertions that double 33s will result in fewer trucks on the road, or that two trailer trucks are as safe as single-unit trucks:

In past battles with the powerful trucking industry and its insidious ally, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, headed by Thomas Donohue (the former head of the American Trucking Associations), the railroads could be counted on to challenge the truck lobby. Solid freights using the railways make for safer roads and transport. Lately, however, the railroad interests have been less of a counter to the trucking industry, in part due to their investments in trucking operations.

So it's up to all of you who outnumber even the number of dollars spent each year on your members of Congress by the freight industry coalition. (See http://www.citizen.org/documents/analysis-trucking-money-to-weaken-safety-rules-june-2015.pdf.) Yes, there are far more automobile drivers than the mass of dollars that the trucking companies float on Capitol Hill. But unlike those corporations supplying campaign cash, you have power, because you have the votes.

It should not take descriptions of grisly casualties in crashes with overturned cars and trailer trucks to motivate automobile drivers, the people whose lives are at stake when roads become less safe. You've driven by these dreadful roadside scenes, even if you haven't actually experienced them.

You can win this fight if you just spend a little time calling the senators and representatives who are advocating for the double trailers and weaker tired-trucker rules. Ask them either by telephone, letter or email to send you a letter reporting how much money they have taken from the trucking companies and their allies over the past five years. They have to report this information to the Federal Election Commission.

Tell your members of Congress what kind of safety you want for you and your families by demanding safer, tougher rules for giant trucks, their loads, braking systems and adequately rested drivers--not a rollback!

Call the congressional switchboard number (1-202-224-3121) and ask the always polite operator to transfer you to the senators or representatives whom you wish to admonish and advise. After all, if they are supposed to work for you, they need reminding that you'll remember in November.

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