Another week, another fiery truck crash on a Connecticut highway, this time in Norwalk on I-95.
You’ll remember it was just
last June when a similar inferno closed
I-95 in Philadelphia as a tanker truck blaze practically melted the steel,
collapsing the highway. And last April
there was another
tanker fire on the Gold Star bridge in New London.
If your memory is really good
you might recall a similar truck crash on I-95 in Bridgeport on the elevated
section of highway back
in 2004. The resulting fire melted
holes in the highway.
What the heck is going on?
As I’ve
written before, trucks are most often not to blame for highway
accidents. Their seasoned, professional
drivers are just trying to deliver their cargos to local stores and gas
stations and get home safely. But don’t
get me started on why big-rig trucks are driving illegally on the Merritt
Parkway, which they
are!
It will take some time for the Connecticut State Police to finish their investigation of who and what caused the most recent crash in Norwalk, but we should still be asking “is the state doing enough to keep unsafe trucks off our highways?”
Connecticut has weigh /
inspection stations in Greenwich, Danbury, Middletown, Union and Waterford
as well as roaming, portable scale teams.
When the trucks and buses roll in they are weighed, their drivers’ log
books and loads are inspected and, most importantly, their brakes are
checked. This is done by skilled State
Police and DMV staffers who take their job (and your safety) seriously.
Surprisingly, though I-95 sees
the most traffic, the Greenwich weigh station was open
the least but issued the most fines last year.
Connecticut receives federal
funding to pay for this work and violators are hit with stiff fines… the most
common tickets issued are for being overweight, having defective equipment,
fuel tax or registration violations and, my favorite, “failure to stop”. Of course, no trucks have to stop if the
inspection stations are closed, which they usually are.
Remember: overweight trucks are not only unsafe, they cause damage to our highways that we end up repairing and paying for with the gas tax.
For trucks just passing
through the state, the word goes out on the CB radios and social media as truckers
alert each other which stations are open.
If Greenwich is open, they avoid I-95 and take I-84 because Danbury
probably won’t be open, etc.
For trucks traveling up and
down I-95 and I-84 from other states, Connecticut participates in the PrePass Program, a kind of E-ZPass for
truckers. If a vehicle was inspected in,
say, Maryland, it can skip a stop at Connecticut weigh stations.
Trucking advocates (yes, there
are some) say the weight / inspection stations are a waste of personnel: that
troopers should be patrolling the highways looking for dangerous drivers not
standing around inspecting trucks, the majority of which are not violating any
rules.
But I still think all of
Connecticut’s weigh / inspection stations should be open all the time.
It looks like the Feds will
pick up the $20
million tab for last week’s Norwalk incident. But nobody can reimburse us all for the time
we lost waiting in detours and delays, nor the lost business to local
merchants.
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