Coalition Warns Congress About Bigger, Heavier Trucks

  • May 21, 2018
150 150 Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety

May 21, 2018

The Honorable Sam Graves, Chairman
The Honorable Eleanor Holmes Norton, Ranking Member

Subcommittee on Highways and Transit
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20515

Dear Chairman Graves and Ranking Member Norton:

As you prepare for tomorrow’s hearing, FAST Act Implementation: Motor Carrier Provisions, our coalition of consumer, health, and safety groups, families of truck crash victims and survivors, law enforcement, first responders, truck drivers, rail labor, short lines and regional railroads, and railway suppliers and contractors writes to urge you to oppose any attempt to increase federal truck size and weight limits. Congress has rejected these unsafe proposals in the past and should reject them again given the unabated rise in truck crashes and decline in the condition of our Nation’s infrastructure. These efforts include proposals to increase truck lengths, to permit heavier trucks, and to grant industry and state-based exemptions as well as so-called “pilot programs.” Given the state of our infrastructure and truck safety, allowing bigger trucks on the roads will significantly diminish any efforts to rebuild America’s roads and bridges and improve public safety.

 

Truck crashes, and the resulting injuries and fatalities, continue to go up. From 2009 to 2015, truck crashes increased by 45 percent in the U.S. Additionally, 2016 data showed that truck crash fatalities rose 5.4 percent from 2015, totaling 4,317 deaths. In 2015, the most recent year for which crash and injuries figures are available, there were 415,000 truck crashes and more than 300 people were injured each day in crashes involving large trucks. These grim statistics are unacceptable, and they come with a cost. In addition to the trauma and grief that thousands of Americans suffer due to truck crashes, all American taxpayers experience the effects of commercial motor vehicle crashes by footing the $118 billion in costs.

 

Permitting the operation of larger trucks would undermine efforts to improve the United States’ infrastructure. Nearly 40 percent of our 615,000 bridges in the National Bridge Inventory are 50 years or older and one out of 11 is structurally deficient. Our roads do not fare much better. America’s roads continue to receive a grade of “D” from the American Society of Civil Engineers, and 20 percent of highway pavement is in poor condition. To make matters worse, there is a significant and growing backlog of rehabilitation needs. Increasing truck size and weight will exacerbate these problems, dilute potential benefits from investments in infrastructure and divert rail traffic from privately owned freight railroads to our already overburdened public highways.

 

The public does not want longer and heavier trucks. There is overwhelming opposition to any increases to truck size and weight. In a nationwide poll released earlier this year, 7 of 10 respondents opposed longer and heavier trucks. A letter signed by over 1,000 local government officials that was recently sent to Congress urging rejection of any attempts to increase truck size and weight echoed the public sentiment. During the last Congress, both the House and Senate voted against attempts to allow bigger trucks in strong bipartisan votes. The U.S. Department of Transportation’s (U.S. DOT) recommendation remains the same: no changes should be made to federal truck size and weight laws. The only thing that has changed is that truck crash deaths went up and the quality of our infrastructure went down.

 

Longer and heavier trucks are less safe and more damaging to our infrastructure. The 2016 U.S. DOT Comprehensive Truck Size and Weight Study found that introducing double 33-foot trailer trucks, known as “Double 33s,” would be projected to result in 2,478 bridges requiring strengthening or replacement at an estimated one-time cost of $1.1 billion. This figure does not even account for the additional, subsequent maintenance costs which will result from longer, heavier trucks. These longer trucks also come with operational difficulties such as requiring more time to pass, having larger blind spots, crossing into adjacent lanes and swinging into opposing lanes on curves and turns, and taking a longer distance to adequately brake. In 2016, violations related to tires and/or brakes accounted for five of the top ten most common vehicle out-of-service violations. Not surprisingly, trucks heavier than 80,000 pounds have a greater number of brake violations, which are a major reason for out-of-service violations. According to a 2016 North Carolina study by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS), trucks with out-of-service violations are 362 percent more likely to be involved in a crash. This is also troubling considering that tractor-trailers moving at 60 mph require 310 feet to stop– the length of a football field – once the brakes are applied. Actual stopping distances are often much longer due to driver response time before braking and the common problem that truck brakes are often not in top working condition. Moreover, increasing the weight of a heavy truck by only 10 percent increases bridge damage by 33 percent. The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) estimates that the investment backlog for bridges, to address all cost-beneficial bridge needs, is $123.1 billion. The U.S. would need to increase annual funding for bridges by 20 percent over current spending levels to eliminate the bridge backlog by 2032.

 

Bigger trucks have never resulted in and will not result in fewer trucks. Following every past increase to federal truck size and weight, the number of trucks on our roads has gone up. Since 1982, when Congress last increased the gross vehicle weight limit, truck registrations have more than doubled. The U.S. DOT study also addressed this assertion and found that any potential mileage efficiencies from the use of heavier trucks would be offset in just one year. Improving the safety and integrity of our Nation’s infrastructure is a goal that we all share. It should not be hindered and hampered by attempts to increase or circumvent truck size and weight limits. We urge you to reject any and all proposals to put longer and heavier trucks on our roads.

 

Sincerely,

 

James P. Hoffa, General President

International Brotherhood of Teamsters

 

Jeff Solheim, 2018 President

Emergency Nurses Association

 

Catherine Chase, President

Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety

 

Joan Claybrook, Chair

Citizens for Reliable and Safe Highways (CRASH)

and Former Administrator, National Highway Traffic

Safety Administration

 

Georges C. Benjamin, MD, Executive Director

American Public Health Association

 

John Risch, National Legislative Director

SMART-TD (UTU)

 

Dominick Stokes, Vice President

for Legislative Affairs

Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association

 

Steve Owings, Co-Founder & President

Road Safe America

 

Dawn King, President

Truck Safety Coalition

 

Brad Roseberry, Vice President

Coalition Against Bigger Trucks

 

Dave Tennent, Executive Director and CEO

Railway Engineering-Maintenance Suppliers

Association

 

Jennifer Tierney, Board Member

CRASH Foundation

 

  1. Michael O’Malley, President

Railway Supply Institute

 

Chuck Baker, President

National Railroad Construction and Maintenance

Association

 

Linda Bauer Darr, President

American Short Line and Regional

Railroad Association

 

Jack Gillis, Director of Public Affairs

Consumer Federation of America

 

Daphne Izer, Co-Chair

Parents Against Tired Truckers

 

Jason Levine, Executive Director

Center for Auto Safety

 

Stephen W. Hargarten, M.D., MPH

Society for the Advancement of Violence and

Injury Research

 

Andrew McGuire, Executive Director

Trauma Foundation

 

Janette Fennell, Founder and President

KidsAndCars.org

 

Santiago Calderon

Arcata, CA

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Injured in a truck crash 4/10/14

 

Michelle Lemus

Los Angeles, CA

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Injured in a truck crash 4/10/14

 

Tami Friedrich Trakh

Corona, CA

Board Member, CRASH

Sister of Kris Mercurio, Sister-in-Law of Alan Mercurio, Aunt of Brandie Rooker & Anthony Mercurio

Killed in a truck crash 12/27/89

 

Tina Silva

Ontario, CA

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Sister of Kris Mercurio, Sister-in-Law of Alan Mercurio, Aunt of Brandie Rooker & Anthony Mercurio

Killed in a truck crash 12/27/89

 

Beth Badger

Columbus, GA

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Daughter of Bill Badger

Killed in truck crash 12/23/04

 

Vickie Johnson

Hartwell, GA

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Wife of Curt Johnson, Step-mother of Crystal Johnson

Killed in a truck crash 10/1/09

 

Marc Johnson

Hartwell, GA

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Brother of Curt Johnson

Killed in truck crash 10/1/09

 

Kate Brown

Gurnee, IL

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Mother of Graham Brown

Injured in a truck crash 5/2/05

 

Warren Huffman

Odessa, MI

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Brother of Tim Huffman

Killed in a truck crash 5/6/13

 

Tammy Huffman

Odessa, MI

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Sister-in-law of Tim Huffman

Killed in a truck crash 5/6/13

 

Bruce King

Davisburg, MI

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Son-in-law of Bill Badger

Killed in truck crash 12/23/04

 

Lisa Shrum

Fayette, MO

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Daughter of Virginia Baker, Step-daughter of Randy Baker

Killed in a truck crash 10/10/06

 

Jackie Novak

Hendersonville, NC

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Mother of Charles “Chuck” Novak

Killed in a truck crash 10/24/10

 

Paul Badger

Davidson, NC

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Son of Bill Badger

Killed in truck crash 12/23/04

 

Alan Dana

Plattsburgh, NY

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Son of Janet Dana, Uncle of Caitlyn & Lauryn Dana, Brother-in-law of Laurie Dana

Killed in a truck crash 7/19/12

 

Monica Malarczyk

Hastings-on-Hudson, NY

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Injured in a truck crash 12/29/15

Daughter of Ryszard and Anita Malarczyk

Killed in a truck crash 12/29/15

 

Peter Malarczyk

Hastings-on-Hudson, NY

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Injured in a truck crash 12/29/15

Son of Ryszard and Anita Malarczyk

Killed in a truck crash 12/29/15

 

Michelle Novak

Delevan, NY

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Aunt of Charles “Chuck” Novak

Killed in a truck crash 10/24/10

 

Amy Fletcher

Perrysburg, OH

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Wife of John Fletcher

Killed in a truck crash 1/24/1

 

Kim Telep

Harrisburg, PA

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Wife of Bradley Telep

Killed in a truck crash 8/29/12

 

Laurie Higginbotham

Memphis, TN

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Mother of Michael Higginbotham

Killed in a truck crash, 11/18/14

 

Randall Higginbotham

Memphis, TN

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Father of Michael Higginbotham

Killed in a truck crash, 11/18/14

 

Ashley McMillan

Memphis, TN

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Girlfriend of Michael Higginbotham

Killed in a truck crash 11/18/14

 

Cindy Southern

Cleveland, TN

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Wife of James Whitaker, sister-in-law Anthony Hixon and aunt of Amber Hixon

Killed in a truck crash 9/18/09

 

Debra Cruz

Harlingen, TX

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Injured in a truck crash 8/8/08

 

Wanda Lindsay

New Braunfels, TX

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Wife of John Lindsay

Killed in a truck crash 5/7/10

 

Sandra Lance

Chesterfield, VA

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Mother of Kristen Belair

Killed in a truck crash 8/26/09

 

Frank Wood

Falls Church, VA

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Father of Dana Wood

Killed in a truck crash 10/15/02

 

Marchelle Wood

Falls Church, VA

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Mother of Dana Wood

Killed in a truck crash 10/15/02

 

Morgan Lake

Sunderland, MD

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Injured in a truck crash 7/19/13

 

Jane Mathis

St. Augustine, FL

Vice President, TSC

Board Member, PATT

Mother of David Mathis

Mother-in-Law of Mary Kathryn Mathis

Killed in a truck crash 3/25/04

 

Nancy Meuleners

Bloomington, MN

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Injured in a truck crash 12/19/89

 

Larry Liberatore

Severn, MD

Board Member, PATT

Father of Nick Liberatore

Killed in a truck crash 6/9/97

 

Ed Slattery

Lutherville, MD

Board Member, PATT

Husband of Susan Slattery

Killed in a truck crash 8/16/10

Sons Matthew & Peter Slattery critically injured in a truck crash 8/16/10

 

Melissa Gouge

Washington, D.C.

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Cousin of Amy Corbin

Killed in a truck crash 8/18/97

 

Ron Wood

Washington, D.C.

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Son of Betsy Wood, Brother of Lisa Wood Martin, Uncle of Chance, Brock, and Reid Martin

Killed in a truck crash 9/20/04

 

Christina Mahaney

Jackman, ME

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Injured in a truck crash 7/19/11

Mother of Liam Mahaney

Killed in a truck crash 7/19/11

 

Steve Izer

Lisbon, ME

Board Member, PATT

Father of Jeff Izer

Killed in a truck crash 10/10/93

 

Linda Wilburn

Weatherford, OK

Board Member, PATT

Mother of Orbie Wilburn

Killed in a truck crash 9/2/02

 

Julie Branon Magnan

South Burlington, VT

Volunteer, Truck Safety Coalition

Injured in a truck crash 01/31/02

Wife of David Magnan

Killed in a truck crash 01/31/02

 

cc: Members of the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure