Collins
Pushing For Higher Truck Weight Limits
Wants To Keep Tractor Trailers Off Local Roads
Washington, DC - Following a public hearing in Augusta
about highway weight limits, Senator Susan Collins
reasserted her efforts to increase the truck weight
limit on all interstate highways in Maine in order
to direct more heavy tractor trailer traffic off
of smaller, local roads. A recent transportation
study found that raising the highway truck weight
limit would be safer and more cost effective.
"As Congress considers highway reauthorization
legislation, it is my hope that we will be able
to adequately address what I believe is the most
pressing transportation safety issue in our State,"
said Senator Collins. "The greatest issue is
safety. A uniform truck weight limit would keep
trucks on the interstate where they belong, rather
than on roads and highways that pass through Maine's
cities, towns, and neighborhoods. Maine's citizens
and motorists are needlessly at risk because too
many heavy trucks are forced off the interstate
and on to local roads."
Senator Collins and Senator Olympia Snowe have introduced
legislation that would direct the U.S. Secretary
of Transportation to establish a commercial truck
safety pilot program in Maine. Under the pilot program,
the truck weight limit on all Maine highways that
are part of the interstate highway system would
be set at 100,000 pounds for three years.
During that period, the Secretary would study the
impact of the pilot program on safety, and would
receive the input of a panel that would include
State officials, safety organizations, municipalities,
and the commercial trucking industry. The uniform
weight limit would become permanent if the panel
determined that motorists were safer as a result.
"A recent study determined there will be less
accidents if we keep heavy trucks on the Interstate.
Maine's extensive network of State and local roads
will be better preserved without the wear and tear
of heavy truck traffic, decreasing the need for
expensive repair," said Senator Collins. "A
uniform truck weight limit of 100,000 pounds on
Maine's interstate highways would also be beneficial
for the trucking industry and the state. If truck
drivers were allowed to stay on interstate highways,
it would reduce the miles and travel times necessary
to transport freight through Maine, resulting in
economic and environmental benefits."
Under current law, trucks weighing as much as 100,000
pounds are allowed to travel on Interstate 95 from
Maine's border with New Hampshire to Augusta. At
Augusta, trucks weighing more than 80,000 pounds
are forced off Interstate 95 and are forced onto
smaller, secondary roads.
A study conducted by the Maine Department of Transportation
examined the impact a uniform 100,000 pound weight
limit on Maine's Interstate System would have on
safety, pavement, and bridges. The study predicted
that crashes involving trucks would decrease by
more than 3 crashes per year. The study also estimated
that it would save the State of Maine between $1
million and $1.65 million in pavement rehabilitation
each year and around $300,000 each year in bridge
maintenance and rehabilitation costs.