If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
GPS Causing Truckers to Crash Into Bridges
Bridge Busters wrote:
> http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,...?loomia_ow=t0: > s0:a16:g4:r4:c0.000000:b28330382:z10 > > ALBANY, N.Y. ? New York state wants to crack down on truckers > who rely on satellite devices to direct them onto faster but > prohibited routes and end up crashing into overpasses that are > too low for their rigs. > > Gov. David Paterson on Wednesday proposed penalties including > jail time and confiscation of trucks to come down on drivers who > use GPS ? global positioning systems ? to take more hazardous > routes and end up striking bridges. > > "To our knowledge, no other state has similar legislation," said > Clayton Boyce of the American Trucking Associations, an industry > trade group based in Washington. > > "Most trucking companies rely on GPS services that are > specifically for trucks and route them away from restricted > roads," he said. "Most of our members also use dispatching and > fleet management systems that direct and track the vehicles by > truck GPS services." > > In New York, a truckers' group called the proposal unfair and > unwarranted. > > "We understand that bridge strikes have become an increasing > problem for Westchester County and the New York metropolitan > area," said Karin Kennett of the New York State Motor Truck > Association. Requiring all trucks in the state that are using > GPS to buy an enhanced device goes too far, she said. > > "It places an unfair and unwarranted financial burden on every > law-abiding trucking company doing business anywhere in New York > at a time when our state claims to be trying to improve our > business climate," Kennett said. > > A safety group said trucks taking restricted routes is a scary > fact of life on the nation's highways and parkways and something > other states will need to consider as more drivers turn to GPS. > > Gerald Donaldson, senior research director of Advocates for > Highway and Auto Safety, said GPS adds to the list of > electronics that also distract truckers, including radios, cell > phones and a computer keyboard to communicate with companies and > other drivers. > > "GPS is the heart of it," Donaldson said. "Absolutely ... other > states will be looking at Gov. Paterson's issue." > > GPS can direct truckers, many of them carrying hazardous > material, to restricted roads with overpass clearances too low > for the rigs. Hauling on restricted or residential routes also > pounds the life out of roads because the trucks are over weight > limits and clog traffic. > > "GPS for some truckers are crucial, and it also is part of a > much larger array of electronic devices," he said. "You get paid > by the mile, so it's your to your incentive to get as many miles > and routes as you can in your tour of duty." > > New York state alone has seen more than 1,400 bridge strikes in > the past 15 years, including 46 so far this year in suburban > Westchester County, testing many old bridges already in need of > repair, said County Executive Andrew J. Spano. One bridge in his > county was hit nine times this year. > > "This sort of culture of just following the GPS and almost > ignoring the road signs has created this public hazard," > Paterson told reporters. > > "Every week we hear of another truck striking a bridge on our > parkways," said Spano, standing with Paterson at the bill's > announcement. > > "It's only a matter of time before someone is killed or a truck > carrying chemicals or explosives hits a bridge," he said. > > The bill would increase penalties for illegally using parkways > and require all large commercial trucks to use GPS devices that > route them away from restricted roads. It would also stick > trucking companies or their insurance carriers with the bill for > repairs and cleanup after bridge strikes. > > The bill could hit the Legislature as early as January. > Garmin GPS, anyways, is largely useless in too many places. It has tried to send us on an old stage coach road that is not even passible my horse now days. It has taken us down one or two blocks over a few and back out one block down on the road we wanted to continue on anyways. It has tried to take us down old Saux Indian portages now covered by many feet of water. It has tried to turn us right onto a sidewalk and back along the shore of Lake Michigan underwater. It has show us in the middle of fields where the roads we are on have been there at least 30 years. It has tried to repeatedly take us to roads we knew would take us hundreds of miles out of our way. It has told us to turn right/left onto driveways/sidewalks/railroad tracks/streams/rivers/parking lots/alleys/paths. It has told us we are going north when we were going south. It has told us told us to turn after the turn is anywhere from a few hundred feet to a half mile already behind us. This last trip we grew so annoyed at it we turned it off and for a little more aggravation would have thrown it off the next bridge it told us to turn off of. |
Ads |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
GPS Causing Truckers to Crash Into Bridges | John David Galt | Driving | 10 | October 22nd 09 03:00 AM |
GPS Causing Truckers to Crash Into Bridges | [email protected] | Driving | 1 | October 19th 09 04:55 PM |
GPS Causing Truckers to Crash Into Bridges | PeterD | Driving | 0 | October 19th 09 02:15 PM |
GPS Causing Truckers to Crash Into Bridges | PeterD | Driving | 0 | October 19th 09 02:12 PM |
Woman Accused of Causing Deadly Car Crash | 223rem | Driving | 18 | July 18th 05 01:57 PM |