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TRPA awards $11M in transportation grants at Lake Tahoe

RENO, Nev. — The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency has awarded $11 million in transportation grants at Lake Tahoe to reduce traffic congestion, provide free transit and expand bike and hiking trails around the mountain lake. The agency announced on Monday, Sept. 27, that the improvements will help the region recover from the Caldor Fire, combat the loss of lake clarity and provide added resiliency in the fight against climate change. The biggest grants are $3.7 million to help build new parking and trail extensions along State Route 28 between Sand Harbor and Incline Village and $3 million to complete the final phase of the State Route 89 roundabouts and Fanny Bridge replacement in Tahoe City, California. Others include nearly $2.5 million at South Lake Tahoe, California to extend sidewalks, bike lanes and transit stops near Ski Run Boulevard and the Heavenly Ski Resort. There’s also money for El Dorado County to replace a specialized truck used to clean roads and filter stormwater and hazardous runoff that will help in wildfire recovery, and $1 million to extend free bus travel that the Tahoe Transportation District launched during the COVID-19 pandemic. The South Tahoe Greenway project gets $500,00 to replace a washed out bridge with a new bike-pedestrian bridge over the Upper Truckee River.

USDOT announces 2021 Road Safety Student Art Contest winners

WASHINGTON – Budding artists from across the United States recently participated in the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s (FMCSA) 2021 Road Safety Student Art Contest. U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg and FMCSA Deputy Administrator Meera Joshi announced the winners in a congratulatory video. “Every year, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration asks young artists to help raise awareness about how important it is to keep people safe on the road – and this year’s submissions were terrific,” Buttigieg said.  “I want to thank every student who chose to share your art with us.” “You’ve used art to create powerful and important messages,” said FMCSA Deputy Administrator Meera Joshi in congratulating all of the winners, adding, “What you’ve done with color and images drives home the message of safety in a way words alone just cannot.” The winning artwork of the following 12 students will be showcased in the U.S. Department of Transportation headquarters building in Washington, D.C., as well as featured in the 2022 Road Safety Student Art calendar that will be available later this year. Grand Prize winners:                                                 FMCSA People’s Choice Art Contest Awards Winners:                                 Honorable Mention recipients: Pranav Balakrishnan, Plano, Texas Preetiggah Sudhakar, Simpsonville, South Carolina Karthikeya Vattem, McDonald, Pennsylvania Lynn Sun, Livingston, New Jersey   “This year’s Road Safety Student Art Contest challenged students ranging from kindergarten through high school to design and create motivational artwork providing safety messaging for all roadway users — truck and bus operators, passenger vehicle drivers, motorcyclists, scooter riders, bicyclists, skateboarders, and pedestrians,” an FMCSA news release stated. Conducted annually, the contest is sponsored under FMCSA’s Our Roads, Our Safety Partnership, which comprises more than 30 governmental, safety, industry and private organizations. “Every roadway traveler, young to old, can help save lives and reduce injuries by always making safety a priority,” according to the news release. “Always buckle up, avoid becoming distracted, stay alert, and pay attention when entering crossways.” Contest rules call on the young artists to remind commercial truck and bus operators to do their part for safety, while also reminding everyone to give large commercial motor vehicles extra room to maneuver. “Never cut in front of a large truck or bus, never tailgate, and most importantly, avoid lingering in the drivers’ blind spots – ‘The No Zone’ – along the sides, immediately in front, and behind the vehicle where you cannot be seen,” the news release stated. The art contest winners were announced during Trucker Appreciation Week earlier this month. “During National Truck Driver Appreciation Week, the Nation recognizes the absolute vitalness of the trucking industry to the Nation’s supply chain and overall health of our economy,” said FMCSA Deputy Administrator Joshi.  “All our food, medicines, fuel, supplies we need to survive – everything is transported by a professional truck driver.  In just the past eight months, millions of grateful Americans have been protected from the pandemic thanks to countless hero truck drivers who delivered the COVID-19 vaccines.  We owe them an incredible debt of gratitude.”

Mississippi preps to repair highway collapse from Ida

JACKSON, Miss. — Mississippi will soon start rebuilding a section of highway that collapsed during torrential rainfall brought by Hurricane Ida, the head of the state Department of Transportation says. Two people were killed and nine were injured Aug. 30 as seven vehicles plunged, one after another, into a deep pit that opened up on the dark, rural stretch of Mississippi Highway 26 near Lucedale. One of the injured people died in a hospital Sept. 11. Department of Transportation Director Brad White told legislative budget writers Friday that the department has completed a geotechnical review and will choose a company early next month to repair the damage for about $1.2 million. He said the highway could reopen in about 45 days. White said the area had already received more than double its average annual rainfall before the hurricane, and then Ida dumped more than 12 inches (30.5 centimeters) of rain in less than one day. The stretch of highway is on a hillside, and White said the deluge blew out a pipe that ran under the roadbed. “I don’t know of any preventative maintenance that could’ve been done prior to the storm,” White said.

Push to speed zero-emission truck sales in works

BOSTON — Officials from companies with fleets of trucks are urging governors across the country to embrace a rule meant to speed the adoption of zero-emission trucks and reduce a potent source of greenhouse gases spewed from the large commercial vehicles. In a letter released on Sept. 24, representatives of companies including IKEA, Nestle, Siemens, Etsy, eBay, Ben & Jerry’s and Unilever joined with environmental activists and investors to call for the wide adoption of the Advanced Clean Trucks rule. Transportation is a leading cause of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S., with trucks being one of the top culprits, activists said. The rule requires manufacturers of medium- and heavy-duty vehicles to increase sales of zero-emission models over time in states where the policy is put in place. As production ramps up, the cost to manufacturers and buyers should come down, advocates said. Supporters of the rule say companies increasingly are demanding clean trucks and vans to help meet climate and pollution goals and to save on the costs of fuel and maintenance. Approval of the rule by state governments could help give an added nudge to truck makers, backers said. “The ACT rule will help bring down costs for zero-emission medium- and heavy-duty vehicles by requiring manufacturers to increase model availability to meet the needs of fleet operators and driving investment in clean transportation research and development,” the companies and advocacy groups said in the letter. “This will enable cost-effective electrification of commercial vehicles at the pace and scale needed to meet climate and air quality goals,” they added. The switch to zero-emission trucks also will help reduce pollution in lower-income neighborhoods, many of which border highways, major roads and shipping centers, and where residents often have health problems like asthma, advocates said. The rule has already been adopted in California and is being considered in several other states, including Oregon, Washington, New Jersey, Massachusetts, New York and Colorado. “Medium- and heavy-duty vehicles are an essential part of the logistics networks that millions of Etsy sellers rely upon to deliver items to their buyers around the world, but these vehicles contribute disproportionately to air pollution and global warming emissions,” Chelsey Evans, senior manager of sustainability for Etsy, said in a statement. “Widespread adoption of zero-emission vehicles, including through the Advanced Clean Trucks Rule, is key to combating climate change.” The letter was organized by the nonprofit group Ceres. States have begun to acknowledge the pollution linked to cars and trucks and its effect on the climate. The governors of three New England states and the mayor of Washington last year signed a regional pact aimed at dramatically reducing transportation pollution, an agreement they hope other states will eventually join. The Transportation and Climate Initiative Program is designed to reduce motor vehicle emissions by at least 26% by 2032 by requiring large gasoline and diesel fuel suppliers to purchase “allowances” for the pollution caused by the use of the fuels they sell in the region. Opponents say that could drive up gas prices. In New England, transportation is responsible for over 40% of greenhouse gas emissions.

Truck stops offering java deals for National Coffee Day

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — To celebrate National Coffee Day on Wednesday, Sept. 29, truck stops around the country are offering deals on cups of joe. Pilot Flying J is brewing free cups for guests as part of a limited time offer in the myRewards PlusTM app, according to a news release. Guests can choose from any size dispensed hot, iced or cold brew Pilot coffee. “While every day is coffee day here at Pilot Flying J, we are excited to celebrate National Coffee Day by offering a free cup of our amazing coffee to our guests,” said Jamie King, senior director of food and beverage for Pilot Flying J. “There are many options for guests to choose from, including our seasonal fall flavors. All it takes is one cup to know why Pilot Flying J is the best place to stop for the perfect cup of coffee on the road.” The truck stop touts that there are more than 500,000 different combinations of coffee available at its stores, including specialty creamers, syrups, toppings and “fall-inspired flavors.” At Love’s locations, customers can get any sized coffee or hot beverage for the reduced price of $1 on Sept. 29. When purchases are made through the Love’s Connect app, all proceeds go to Love’s annual Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals campaign, according to a Love’s news release. My Love Rewards members can use a free drink refill credit for the purchase, and Love’s will donate $1 on their behalf. “National Coffee Day is exciting because it’s our chance to reward our customers and improve kids’ health with donations,” said Jenny Love Meyer, executive vice president and chief culture officer of Love’s. “We appreciate our customers who are so generous with donating, even during difficult times.”  

FMCSA declares New York trucker an imminent hazard

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has declared New York-licensed commercial driver Bobir M. Kholmurodov to be an imminent hazard to public safety and has ordered him not to operate any commercial motor vehicle (CMV) in interstate commerce. Kholmurodov was served the federal order on Sept. 21, according to a FMCSA news release issued on Sept. 27. At approximately 11:18 a.m. on Aug. 4, Kholmurodov, a commercial driver’s license (CDL) holder, was operating a tractor-trailer in Courtland Township, Kent County, Michigan, when he failed to stop at a red light, colliding into another vehicle, the news release said. Kholmurodov left the scene of the crash but was later located and taken into custody in adjoining Montcalm County by the Michigan State Police, according to the FMCSA. At approximately 4:54 p.m. on Aug. 4, a blood alcohol test administered by the Michigan State Police revealed Kholmurodov possessed a blood alcohol content (BAC) of 0.17. Possessing an alcohol concentration of greater than 0.04 while operating a commercial vehicle weighing more than 26,001 pounds and requiring a commercial driver’s license (CDL) is a violation of federal safety regulations. During the subsequent inspection of Kholmurodov’s truck, Michigan State Police officers discovered open beer containers and liquor bottles in the cab, the FMCSA news release said. Kholmurodov has been charged by the State of Michigan with operating while intoxicated (second offense), failure to stop and identify after collision and alcohol-open container in vehicle. FMCSA’s imminent hazard out-of-service order states that Kholmurodov’s “…. blatant disregard for the safety of the motoring public … substantially increases the likelihood of serious injury or death to you and motoring public if not discontinued immediately.” Failing to comply with the provisions of the federal imminent hazard order may result in civil penalties of up to $1,951 for each violation.  Knowing and/or willful violations may result in criminal penalties. Kholmurodov may not operate a commercial motor vehicle until such time as he successfully completes the statutorily required return-to-duty process overseen by a substance abuse professional.

DOT asks drivers for input on industry ‘challenges’

The US Department of Transportation is seeking information from the trucking and other transportation industries, as well as the general public, on what it calls the “current challenges faced within the freight and logistics sector.” The survey is part of fulfilling President Joe Biden’s Feb. 24 executive order focusing on “the need for resilient, diverse, and secure supply chains to ensure U.S. economic prosperity and national security,” DOT officials said. Answers from the survey will be used to help compile a report to be given to the president. Topics include the following: The identification of major infrastructure or operational bottlenecks and chokepoints across all aspects of the freight and logistics supply chain — including shipping/receiving, intermodal transfer, rail/water/truck transportation, warehousing, etc .— that slow or impede efficient cargo movement within the freight and logistics sector, and the most effective investments and management practice improvements that could be made to alleviate those bottlenecks. Current and potential future shortages and/or distribution limitations of essential cargo-handling equipment, such as chassis and shipping containers, and how these challenges can be or are likely to be addressed by the freight and logistics industry over both the medium and longer term. Warehouse capacity and availability, and any challenges faced in operating and siting/constructing those facilities, as well as challenges faced by third-party logistics service providers and other stakeholders in the logistic system. Major risks to resilience within the freight and logistics sector (including defense, intelligence, cyber, homeland security, health, climate, environmental, natural, market, economic, geopolitical, human-rights, or labor-management risks). What factors help to mitigate, or conversely exacerbate, these risks? The effects of climate change on transportation and logistics infrastructure and its implications for supply chain resiliency. Technology issues, including information systems, cybersecurity risks, and interoperability, that affect the safe, efficient, and reliable movement of goods. Would greater standardization of those technologies help address those challenges? Key opportunities and challenges with respect to the existing and future workforce to ensure a well-functioning freight and logistics supply chain and achieve the President’s goal of increasing good-paying jobs with the choice of a union. Are there additional workforce or skill set opportunities and needs currently, or expected in the future? Current barriers (including statutory, regulatory, technological, institutional, labor and workforce, management, existing business models/practices issues) that inhibit supply chain performance. For any barriers identified, please address the actors involved and potential outcomes should those barriers be removed. Critical assets that the sector relies upon and their expected future availability. Would increasing domestic production of these assets be desirable or feasible as a means of ensuring greater supply chain resiliency (chassis, containers, etc.)? Technological practices, including data sharing, that are being implemented at various levels across the supply chain sector. What are the upsides, challenges, and drawbacks of further adoption? Actions that DOT or other agencies in the U.S. Government (USG) could take under existing authorities or in partnership with States, local governments, the private sector, or labor to address current and evolving challenges within the freight and logistics sector. Other policy recommendations or suggested executive, legislative, or regulatory changes to ensure a resilient supply chain that DOT/USG should consider, including means to collaborate more effectively across government agencies and suggestions based on state and international models. Recommended actions by non-Federal entities, including State and local governments, private firms, labor, and other participants in the freight and logistics sector that could be encouraged by DOT/USG. Click here to take the survey, which ends on Oct. 18.

Trucker uninjured after Indiana rollover

JASPER COUNTY, Ind. — Indiana State Police (ISP) responded to an early-morning 18-wheeler rollover crash on Sept. 24 on Interstate 65 southbound at the 2010 mile marker. The driver of the truck, Aaron Patterson, 44, of Indianapolis, was not injured. According to an ISP report, the “preliminary investigation revealed that a 2020 International tractor-trailer ran off the roadway for unknown reasons and rolled over onto its side, causing the right lane to be blocked.” No other vehicles were involved in the crash. The truck’s trailer contained 20,000 pounds of general freight for delivery in Indianapolis. All southbound lanes were closed for scene cleanup with traffic being diverted at exit 215 (State Road 114).

PA Turnpike’s $104 million in unpaid tolls draws senators’ scrutiny

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Pennsylvania senators grilled turnpike executives over their efforts to collect unpaid tolls that amounted to $104 million last year during a hearing Wednesday, Sept. 22. The hearing was prompted by an Associated Press report regarding some 11 million rides that generated no revenue for the debt-hobbled agency. Transportation Committee Chairman Wayne Langerholc (R-Cambria) scolded the turnpike brass for not alerting him to the growing problem that he said “should have been a red flag within your department.” “Why was this not shared with us until a Right-to-Know (Law) request of the media?” Langerholc asked. Sen. Marty Flynn (D-Lackawanna) called the $104 million figure “just unacceptable.” “We’re talking about a tenth of a billion dollars,” Flynn said. An internal turnpike report issued in July and obtained by The AP through a Right-to-Know Law request indicated that motorists who do not use E-ZPass have a nearly 1 in 2 chance of riding without paying under the “toll-by-plate” license plate camera system. Turnpike Chief Executive Mark Compton assured the committee the agency takes the issue “very seriously” and is working to lower the amount of “leakage,” an industry term for free rides. Compton noted his agency’s 93% overall rate of collection on all rides is typical for turnpike operations across the United States. The turnpike laid off hundreds of toll collectors last year and speeded up its long-planned conversion to a cashless, all-electronic tolling system. Ideas floated by lawmakers during the hourlong hearing included requiring front license plates to make identifying vehicle owners easier, adding tolls on about 30 miles of turnpike at the Ohio border, and lowering the amount of unpaid tolls that trigger vehicle registration suspensions in Pennsylvania, a level currently at $500 over a three-year period. “To be honest, I think you need to reduce that number,” said Sen. Mario Scavello (R-Monroe). “Very rarely is someone spending that kind of number.” Compton said the turnpike uses two collection agencies to go after toll-by-plate scofflaws, paying the turnpike 10% of what they recover. It also pursues private criminal complaints with the help of local district attorneys and have filed what Compton called “a lot of lawsuits.” After three years, the turnpike writes off unpaid tolls, although there was a suggestion that even those long-overdue bills are worth going after. The turnpike’s July report said that in nearly half the instances in which license plate camera images were not usable, the reason was the plate was not in the frame of the photo. About 41% of the image failures were blamed on an obstruction such as a bike rack. In about 1.1% of manually voided images, the problem was attributed to intentional obstruction of the license plate. Compton said the turnpike would like to get reciprocal agreements with other states to go after unpaid bills, but that has proven difficult, in part, because of variation among states in how they penalize those who do not pay up. “I must tell you, there have not been a lot of suitors” to their partnership hopes, Compton said. He touted the turnpike’s 86% use of E-ZPass and told senators that working toward the goal of not having to mail out bills will help control costs. Langerholc sought more information from turnpike officials and said he has plans for a follow-up hearing, perhaps next week. By Mark Scolforo, The Associated Press

US Border Patrol agents stop tractor-trailer smuggling attempt

SIERRA BLANCA, Texas – Agents with the U.S. Border Patrol recently foiled a human smuggler who was using a tractor-trailer to transport 49 undocumented immigrants into the country. On Sept. 16, agents conducting traffic check operations at the Interstate -10 immigration checkpoint near Sierra Blanca, Texas, encountered a tractor-trailer in the primary inspection lane. A nonintrusive K-9 inspection was performed on the vehicle, yielding a positive alert. The vehicle was directed to the secondary inspection lane, where agents opened the trailer doors and discovered a large group of people hidden in the cargo area. A total of 49 undocumented immigrants were concealed in the trailer, from the countries of Brazil, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala, Mexico and Peru. “Checkpoint operations are vital to monitoring the egress of illegal activity into the United States,” said Sean L. McGoffin, chief patrol agent for the Big Bend Sector. “Agents and their K-9 partners were able to positively identify a large smuggling scheme, saving multiple individuals from a potentially dangerous situation.” The driver of the tractor trailer, a visa holder, was turned over to Homeland Security Investigations for prosecution. All of the undocumented immigrants were medically evaluated and processed by the Border Patrol.

Oregon to fine drivers nearly $900 for tire chain violations

SALEM, Ore. — The Oregon Legislature has approved hiking the fine for trucks who don’t use tire chains when required during winter weather. According to a news release from the Oregon Department of Transportation (ORDOT), the fine will be $880 beginning Sept. 25. “Prepare for slippery weather travel now,” the news release said. “Oregon law requires all commercial vehicles to carry chains whenever road conditions might require their use during your trip and signs are posted.” The law also requires vehicles to chain up when signs note that conditions ahead require them. “Start carrying chains before the weather takes you by surprise,” the news release stated. The estimated cost of delays caused by trucks failing to follow Oregon chain laws is more than $8 million a year to the motor carrier industry and other highway users, according to ORDOT. Many other states carry similar chain law fines, but fines vary widely. In Colorado, drivers who do not follow chain laws will receive a $500 fine plus a surcharge of $79. If a truck is blocking the highway, the fine increases to $1,000 plus a $157 surcharge. In Connecticut, violations will start with a warning, but all subsequent offenses will result in a fine not more than $200. Montana’s fine for not abiding by chain laws is just $25.  

Unpaid tolls on Pennsylvania Turnpike result in revenue bleed for state

CARLISLE, Pa. — More than $104 million in Pennsylvania Turnpike tolls went uncollected last year as the agency fully converted to all-electronic tolling, with the millions of motorists who don’t use E-ZPass having a nearly 1 in 2 chance of riding without paying under the “toll-by-plate” license plate camera system. An internal turnpike report, issued in July and obtained by The Associated Press through a Right-to-Know Law request, showed nearly 11 million out of the total of about 170 million turnpike rides generated no revenue for the agency in the year that ended May 31. “We take this issue very seriously. It is a big number, there’s no question,” turnpike Chief Executive Mark Compton said. “But we, as an organization, are leaving no stone unturned in the way in which we’re going after that leakage.” Toll revenue “leakage” — an industry euphemism for uncollected tolls — has become the focus of turnpike agencies across the country as the use of E-ZPass transponders and license plate cameras continues to spread. It is a particular problem for the debt-strapped Pennsylvania Turnpike, where more than half of its total revenue goes to pay borrowing costs and tolls have more than quadrupled in 12 years for the minority of motorists who don’t have E-ZPass to pay for rides. At the gas pumps of a busy truck stop along the turnpike in Carlisle last week, driver Corin Bryant said he’s noticed tolls have become much more expensive in recent years and doesn’t much like the idea of free riders. “We should all pay for it or all not,” said Bryant, of Picayune, Mississippi. “One or the other.” The turnpike, touted as the nation’s first superhighway when a mostly four-lane segment opened in 1940, is a key part of the interstate highway system. The turnpike runs more than 500 miles (805 kilometers), including several sections that connect with a main stem linking the Philadelphia and Pittsburgh regions. Last year, license plates could not be identified in 1.8 million Pennsylvania Turnpike rides, bills were undeliverable in just over 1 million instances, and motor vehicle agencies failed to provide vehicle owner addresses more than 1.5 million times. An additional 6.7 million transactions were marked as “not paid.” “I’m kind of shocked at that,” said Rebecca Oyler with the Pennsylvania Motor Truck Association, representing truckers who mostly use E-ZPass. “If you think about it, they control the driver. Theoretically they could stop the driver from exiting before paying; that’s within their ability to do.” After tolls and fees go uncollected for about three years, the turnpike writes them off. State House Appropriations Chairman Stan Saylor, a York County Republican, said the revenue bleed has been a concern of his for years and thinks the new figures show a need for action. He said the Legislature should do more to pressure the agency to fix it and that the money could fund a lot of work. “That kind of loss is amazing,” Saylor said. “I’m sorry, when you have a debt, and the tolls are as high as they are on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, then you need to be more efficient.” There are several reasons state turnpike agencies experience revenue leakage, said Mark Muriello with the International Bridge, Toll and Tunnel Association, a trade group. It can result from faulty equipment, such as a dead battery in an E-ZPass transponder; from failure of the camera systems to capture a plate number properly; or from an inability to pursue out-of-state drivers, he said. The turnpike’s sprawling 552-mile system had 169 million transactions last year, with the lion’s share, about 145 million, going through E-ZPass. The E-ZPass system helped the turnpike collect tolls on about 93% of all trips. Toll-by-plate was successful 13.3 million times last year, bringing in more than $127 million in fees. Law-abiding drivers have seen cash or toll-by-plate costs for a cross-state turnpike ride climb from about $28 in 2009 to $95 this year. E-ZPass is far cheaper, currently $47 for a cross-state trip. After a pandemic-driven decision to lay off hundreds of toll collectors and auditors last year and end cash collections, the turnpike issued a 45% rate increase this year for drivers who do not have E-ZPass and instead must be billed. In place of the toll collectors are license plate cameras and employees of contractors who have to examine photos of vehicles when the system has not automatically generated an owner’s name and address for a paper bill to be mailed out. The turnpike’s July report said that in nearly half the instances in which license plate camera images were not usable, the reason was the plate was not in the frame of the photo. Examples provided in the report included lack of front license plates, which are not issued in Pennsylvania. About 41% of the image failures were blamed on an obstruction such as a bike rack. In about 1.1% of manually voided images, the problem was attributed to intentional obstruction of the license plate. The International Bridge, Toll and Tunnel Association, in establishing a task force on the topic earlier this year, said lost revenue can result from camera problems, equipment failure, unreliable information from state motor vehicle agencies, inefficient collection practices and “customer behavior.” Toll evaders around the country have been creative, using grease to obscure plate numbers and installing devices that deploy to cover up plates when drivers go past plate cameras. Weather conditions and camera malfunctions can also make plates impossible to read. Under a 2017 state law, the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission has gone through PennDOT to suspend Pennsylvania vehicle registrations, and as a result, about 10,000 are currently suspended. Those drivers had six or more unpaid toll violations, or at least $500 in toll violations, or defaulted on a payment plan for unpaid turnpike tolls or fees. The turnpike also asks county district attorneys to pursue theft-of-services charges for those who owe at least $2,000, and since 2002 has been referring overdue payments to debt collectors for drivers in Pennsylvania and beyond. Out-of-state drivers are a particular problem. The turnpike gets vehicle registration addresses from Pennsylvania and 48 other states — only Iowa does not provide them — but so far does not have agreements in place letting them currently suspend out-of-state registrations for unpaid toll bills. The Pennsylvania Turnpike is finalizing such an agreement with Delaware and is in talks with New York. State Transportation Secretary Yassmin Gramian, who chairs the turnpike board, said the state’s overall toll collection rates are consistent with those in other states and slightly better than the national average. Gramian said the turnpike commission wants more power to go after out-of-state toll scofflaws, but that requires legislation in those states. The variation among states about the penalties and fees they assess on turnpike drivers is another issue, said Compton, the turnpike’s chief executive. “Uniformity at the federal level would certainly be helpful in this area, and reciprocity between states is an ongoing conversation among tolling agencies nationwide,” Gramian said. Backers of all-electronic tolling say it improves traffic flow, curbs pollution and requires less maintenance than manned, cash-accepting toll booths. The 2020 layoffs cut the turnpike’s workforce from nearly 1,900 to more than 1,300 currently. Total toll revenues were about $1.3 billion last year, with E-ZPass accounting for more than $1 billion. The Pennsylvania Turnpike approved a $45 million contract in 2014 to develop and implement all-electronic tolling, and it currently pays vendor TransCore about $10 million annually to operate the toll-by-plate system. It is also spending $129 million to relocate tolling points to overhead gantry structures on the interstate rather than the brick-and-mortar facilities currently at interchanges, a project currently being designed and engineered.

Inside a nuclear verdict: Florida jury renders $1 billion ruling

A Florida jury ruled on Aug. 27 that two trucking companies were complicit in the 2017 death of an 18-year-old honor student, awarding the family of the late Connor Dzion a total of $1 billion in damages. And the jury’s message, according to Dzion family defense attorney Curry Pajcic, was this: “Companies that don’t follow the law will pay the price.” Not everyone in the trucking industry agrees with the price set in this particular case, however. “Such a verdict is so detached from reality that one can only conclude that it’s more about the message from the most lucrative niche of the legal profession that the sky is the limit when pursuing the trucking industry,” said Todd Spencer, president of the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association. “Unpredictable and out-of-line awards will cause insurers to stop writing policies for truckers.” In the nine-year period between 2010 and 2018, the most recent statistics available, jury verdict awards against trucking companies grew at a rate of 51.7% per year. Using data collected from a trucking-litigation database, the Americana Transportation Research Institute (ATRI) studied detailed information about 600 cases between 2006 and 2019. In the first five years of the study, 2006-2010, there were 26 cases in which jury awards totaled over $1 million. In the most recent five years (2015-2019), there were 300 such awards. Pajcic described the Dzion family’s experience as a “nightmare” that began about 9 p.m. on Labor Day 2017, while Dzion was stopped on Interstate 95 near Jacksonville, Florida. An 18-wheeler driven by Russell Rogatenko of AJD Business Services Inc. had crashed into another vehicle and caught fire, halting traffic. While Connor Dzion sat in his car waiting for the wreck to be cleared, a rig driven by Kahkashan Carrier Inc.’s Yadwinder Sangha of Canada slammed into a parked line of cars behind the initial wreck, pancaking Dzion’s sedan and causing his head to be crushed between Sangha’s grill and the car in front of him. Pajcic said Sangha was traveling with the cruise control at 70 mph, and the truck’s on-board data recorder showed he did not attempt to brake until one second before the fatal crash. Pajcic said Sangha was looking at his phone instead of the road when he “steamrolled” into Dzion’s car. Sangha also reportedly could not read English, so the flashing electronic signs that were put up miles before the standstill, warning drivers to be prepared to stop, were not understood. Pajcic said the drivers of both of the rigs involved in the crash, and their companies, didn’t “play by the rules” and were dangerous. He also asserted that the companies the drivers worked for were cutting corners in order to make more profit. Pajcic told The Trucker that Rogatenko didn’t have a valid CDL at the time of the crash, and alleged that he had a habit of watching porn on his cell phone while operating his rig. “Both of these guys were really bad,” he said, adding that both Sangha and Rogatenko had previous hours-of-service violations. Additionally, Pajcic said Rogatenko had been involved in several other crashes on I-95 before the one that caused the traffic jam and ultimately resulted in Dzion’s death. The Nassau County Circuit Court ruled that Sangha’s negligence caused Dzion’s death, and the jury set a monetary amount they felt the young man’s family was entitled to. The jury also found that AJD owed Connor’s mother, Melissa Dzion, $16 million for negligent infliction of emotional destress. The jury further ruled that Melissa Dzion was owed $49 million in wrongful death damages from both companies, and that Connor’s father, David Dzion, was due $37 million in wrongful death damages from the two carriers. The jury ruled that Kahkashan Carrier is liable for 90% of the wrongful death damages, leaving 10 percent against AJD. The biggest chunk of money awarded in the case, however, came in the form of punitive damages against AJD. The jury ruled that the company must pay $900 million for its role in Connor’s death. Attempts to reach attorneys for either carrier or the defendants were unsuccessful. A man, who refused to identify himself, answered a phone number listed for AJD, and said only that the company “is no longer in business.” A message left for Sean McDonough, the attorney listed in court documents as the legal representative for Kahkashan Carrier, was not returned. AJD was not represented in court, according to court documents. According to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, both Kahkashan and AJD are listed as inactive and out of service. Pajcic said that, while the family is unlikely to ever see a substantial amount of money from the case, “we will work as hard as we can to get what we can. I may never see any money from it, but we are going to keep trying.” In a court filing after the verdict, attorneys for AJD wrote that the punitive damage award is “clearly excessive because it would bankrupt some of the defendants” and that the most the “plaintiff should be entitled to (is) a nominal award.” Court documents show that AJD’s insurance carrier, Falls Lake National Insurance Co., “tendered its policy limits of $1 million to Melissa Dzion in exchange for a release of the wrongful death claim against AJD and its driver.” AJD’s defense team has also filed a motion for a new trial. In their motion for a new trial, Kahkashan’s attorneys wrote that “a verdict that awards almost a billion dollars in damages against two defendant trucking companies by itself reflects a verdict that should shock to conscience of the Court and demonstrates that the jury was unduly influenced by passion or prejudice or other factors besides the evidence and law presented to them.” Pajcic said that, above all, the Dzion family “just wants to make sure no one ever has to go through anything like this again.” “Most trucking companies are good,” he said. “They hire safe drivers; they play by the rules that protect us all. We need truckers because they bring us the things we need and use. There is a reason you never hear about these kinds of cases against major companies like JB Hunt or CR England. They play by the rules, spend the money to do it right. These regulations that they follow protect us all.”

Reality TV star sentenced for trucking business Ponzi scheme, fraud

ATLANTA — A former cast member on the reality television show Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta has been sentenced to more than 17 years in federal prison for conspiracy and wire fraud related to a Ponzi scheme and related charges involving a fraudulent Paycheck Protection Program loan application. U.S. District Judge Mark H. Cohen sentenced Maurice Fayne, also known as Arkansas Mo, to 17-and-a-half years behind bars and five years of supervised release. Fayne, 38, of Dacula, Georgia, also was ordered to pay restitution of nearly $4.5 million to the victims. Fayne, who was indicted on the charges in 2020 pleaded guilty to the charges on May 11. Those also included charges of bank fraud and making false statements to a financial institution involving a loan application for the Paycheck Protection Program, or PPP. “Fayne planned to use the PPP program as a cover for his long-running Ponzi scheme,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Kurt R. Erskine in a news release Sept. 15. “The funds the program supplies serve as a lifeline to many businesses desperately trying to stay afloat during the pandemic, and unfortunately his fraud helped deplete those precious dollars.” Erskine said from March 2013 through May 2020, Fayne ran a multistate Ponzi scheme that defrauded more than 20 people who invested in his trucking business. Instead of using investors’ money to operate the business, he used the funds to pay personal debts and expenses and to fund an extravagant lifestyle, Erskine said. During the scheme, Fayne spent more than $5 million at a casino in Oklahoma, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia said. In April 2020, Fayne submitted a $3.7 million loan application to United Community Bank, falsely claiming that his trucking business had 107 employees and an average monthly payroll of $1.4 million. Prosecutors said that instead of using the money to retain workers and other business expenses, Fayne used the loan to cover expenses including $40,000 in past-due child support, $50,000 for restitution owed in a previous fraud case, $85,000 for custom-made jewelry, $136,000 to lease a Rolls-Royce and $907,000 to start a new business in Arkansas. Fayne appeared on season 8 of VH1’s Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta as the love interest of longtime cast member Karlie Redd.

Open container law diverts millions from Missouri roads

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Missouri’s decision to allow open containers of alcohol in vehicles forces the state to divert millions of federal dollars intended for road construction to safety programs, according to a public radio report. The state’s policy of letting passengers drink in moving vehicles violates federal safety laws. Because of the violation, Missouri has moved about $370 million in highway construction funds to safety programs since 2001, KCUR-FM reported. Congress established federal standards prohibiting open containers of alcohol in 1998. “It’s an interesting dilemma, because it does take money away from what I’ll call our everyday road and bridge projects,” says Jon Nelson, assistant to the state highway safety and traffic engineer for the Missouri Department of Transportation. “But it does still get spent on the roadway through those safety improvements.” In the last few years, Missouri has diverted between 1.5% and 3% of its construction money for safety programs, according to the Missouri Department of Transportation. Currently, the penalty is 2.5% — about $22.7 million per year. Around $17 million of that goes to infrastructure improvements like guard cables and rumble strips. Nelson said the funding has paid for most of the safety features on major roadways like Interstate 70. The remaining $5.7 million is used for behavioral campaigns, primarily DWI enforcement and DWI media campaigns. Federal crash data suggests that the safety spending might have improved safety on Missouri roadways. Between 2001 and 2019, traffic fatalities across the country have decreased by 14%. But during the same time, traffic fatalities in Missouri decreased by nearly 20%, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Experts say allowing passengers to drink in vehicles can lead to several safety problems. “The safety improvements are saving lives, but then you also have to also be able to think about what impact is the policy itself having on causing those behaviors in the first place,” Nelson says. Advocates point to data that indicates Missouri is falling behind other states in reducing drinking and driving. Polling by the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention released in 2018 found that 2.2% of Missouri adults said they had driven after drinking too much, higher than the national rate of 1.7%. CDC data also shows that, as of 2018, Missouri had an alcohol-impaired driving death rate of 3.9 deaths per 100,000, compared to 3.2 per 100,000 nationally. Along with allowing open containers, Missouri lawmakers in 2017 defunded sobriety checkpoints. The Missouri State Highway Patrol has not conducted sobriety checkpoints since 2017. Patrol spokesman Lt. Eric Brown said the patrol catches intoxicated drivers with patrols and DWI saturations. The group Mothers Against Drunk Driving wants Missouri to do more to prevent drunken driving — starting with enforcing open container policies and bringing back sobriety checkpoints. “Right now, Missouri is behind in our impaired driving prevention, as far as what our officers are able to do out on the road,” says regional executive director Allyson Summers.

IRS hikes per diem rate for owner-operators

WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has announced it will increase the allowable per diem rate for owner-operators from $66 to $69 beginning Oct. 1. Truck driver per diem pay is an IRS reimbursement designed to cover meal and incidental expenses incurred by drivers while they are away from home. It gives drivers more take-home pay because less taxes are withheld. While self-employed individuals can generally deduct any expenses incurred to earn their income, company drivers are limited to non-reimbursed expenses required by their employer. For every day of work, owner-operators can deduct $55.22 from their income. Even though the rate will be $69, the IRS only allows 80% of that amount to be deducted. The per diem rate for owner-operators has been $66 since Oct. 1, 2018, when the IRS increased the rate from $63.

Semis banned from Delaware I-95 construction zone

NEW CASTLE COUNTY, Del. — The Delaware Department of Transportation (DelDOT) has banned big rigs on Interstate 95 northbound from Interstate 495 to north of the Brandywine River Bridge in Wilmington after two dozen wrecks involving 18-wheelers in a construction zone. Major construction on I-95 began in February and the project, which includes the repair of 19 bridges and several ramps, will take years to complete. According to a DelDOT news release, the area will be restricted to two-axle vehicles and buses only. New signage regarding the restriction is now in place approaching the I-95/I-495 northbound split. DelDOT said it is enacting this temporary restriction following discussions with the Delaware State Police as the agencies work to reduce the number of crashes occurring in the I-95 construction zone. “Since the beginning of the I-95 rehabilitation project there have been nearly two dozen crashes involving tractor-trailers in the construction zone,” said Delaware Secretary of Transportation Nicole Majeski. “While the tractor-trailer operators are not always at fault in these incidents, these crashes have shut down the roadway for lengthy periods of time, and this is an additional step we are taking to increase safety in this construction zone.” The restriction does not apply to I-95 southbound due to multiple access points and difficulty enforcing the restriction, however, DelDOT urges tractor-trailers and other vehicles with more than two axles to useI-495 as an alternate route. The northbound restriction will remain in place until the project is completed. The announcement created a mild stir on some trucking-related social-media pages. On the Everything Trucking Facebook page, Stewart Vance said, “If they really wanted to improve safety through there, they would ban cars instead.” User Eric Hoss Shimer echoed Vance, saying, “Got that right, and most of the accident times are during rush hour. Usually local jerks in a hurry who could go another route and get where they need to be with time to spare.”

Car slams into semi’s trailer on Indiana interstate

LAKE COUNTY, Ind. — A Pontiac Grand Am struck the trailer of an 18-wheeler in the early morning hours of Sept. 17 on an Indiana interstate onramp, sending the car’s driver to the hospital, according to an Indiana State Police report. A 2019 Freightliner tractor-trailer was parked on the right shoulder ramp of Interstate 65 northbound to Interstates 80 and 94 in Indiana when the Pontiac Grand Am left the roadway and struck it from behind, according to the report. The 18-wheeler driver was not mentioned in the report. The report said Stephanie K. Sanders, 25, of Griffith, Indiana, was found trapped in the Pontiac and had to be extricated from the vehicle by the Gary Fire Department. “(She was taken by) EMS to Northlake Hospital before being flown to the University of Chicago for treatment of serious, life-threatening injuries,” the report said. “Evidence at the crash scene led troopers to suspect that alcohol/drugs may have been a factor.” The ramp’s right lane was closed for approximately three hours during the crash investigation.

Watch for slick, wet roads in northwest this weekend

Heavy rains across portions of northern California and southern Oregon this weekend could make driving treacherous on the state’s roadways. According to a report from the National Weather Service, a flash flood watch is already in effect for north central and southeast Siskiyou County in Oregon. Washington State is also forecast to see heavy rains this weekend. “A strong, wet frontal system will produce periods of moderate to heavy rain across the area, including over the Whitney Glacier and Whitney Creek, which has already produced debris flows this year,” the NWS report said. “Debris flows and rock falls could create problems for cars along highway 97 east of Lake Shastina and West of Tennant (in northern California). This will include the Lava Burn Scar.” Areas of Interstate 5 could also prove dangerous during the forecasted heavy rain, according to the NWS. The Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) has issued a travel advisory ahead of the weather, saying drivers “should prepare now for the first significant rainfall of the season, which will lift oils and grime to the road surface causing slick patches on highways. The hazard often catches motorists by surprise and are often followed by an increase in crashes.” The alert further stated: “Drivers typically get caught by not slowing down and end up either sliding off the road or crashing into other vehicles or the barrier. It’s critical you change your mindset to the season and drive according to conditions of the road.” ODOT offers the following safety trips for driving in the rain: Be aware of conditions: Rain can create dangerous driving conditions with reduced visibility, reduced traction between tires and the road. When it’s raining, be cautious, and give yourself more time to get where you are going. Slow down, especially when driving through standing water. Driving through several inches of water at high speeds can cause you to lose control. Lowering your speed helps you watch out for sudden stops caused by disabled cars, debris and other hazards. Turn on your headlights to improve visibility. Disengage your cruise control. Watch your following distance. A vehicle needs two to three times more stopping distance on wet roads. Watch for emergency responders. Slow down. Give them space to work and move over.    

Ohio cuts ribbon on 33 Smart Mobility Corridor

EAST LIBERTY. Ohio — Officials from across Ohio and around the globe opened what is being dubbed as “the world’s most connected highway” on Sept. 15 in the state’s central area. The 33 Smart Mobility Corridor runs from the City of Dublin on the east end through the City of Marysville, past industry partner Honda’s manufacturing and vehicle development operations. It concludes at the gates of the Transportation Research Center (TRC) Inc. in East Liberty, Ohio. The 33 Smart Mobility Corridor is designed to test smart mobility technology in hopes of “enhancing safety, reducing congestion and improving fuel economy,” according to a news release from DriveOhio. “The tech infrastructure being deployed on the 33 Smart Mobility Corridor will help develop and advance transportation technologies that will make travel safer for everyone,” said Ohio Lt. Governor Jon Husted, who is also the director of InnovateOhio. “Through the creation of InnovateOhio, our administration has prioritized the use of technology to better serve our customers — the people of the state of Ohio. This project is another example of how we can utilize technology to improve quality of life and grow an innovative economy that will fuel the jobs of the future.” Project partners include the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT), DriveOhio, U.S. Department of Transportation, Logan County, and the NW 33 Council of Governments (COG), which includes the City of Dublin, the City of Marysville, Union County and the Marysville-Union County Port Authority. “Transportation is evolving, and mobility technology solutions that have and will be tested on the 33 Smart Mobility Corridor will save lives,” said Jack Marchbanks, ODOT director. “As we develop the transportation system of the 21st century and beyond, Ohio will continue leading the way.” With a 35-mile redundant loop of fiber connectivity, the corridor includes 432 strands of available fiber, 63 roadside units and 45 connected intersections. “At DriveOhio, we know that connected and automated vehicle technology will continue to mature and scale at an ever-increasing pace, said Howard Wood, Executive Director of DriveOhio. “The opportunity for Ohio is now. As these systems are tested and refined, infrastructure plays a major role in the development cycle as mobility technology interphases with our legacy transportation system,” Brett Roubinek, president and CEO of Transportation Research Center, Inc., echoed Wood, saying that “Research along this corridor, like our other work here at TRC and The Beta District, is focused on one essential goal: making the world’s vehicles, highways and traffic management systems safer. Ohio will be a leader in making that happen and the 33 Smart Mobility Corridor will be where it all started.” In support of the project, Honda has deployed more than 200 connected vehicles along the corridor to study the technology. “Ohio’s 33 Smart Mobility Corridor enables us to conduct real-world testing of Honda’s SAFE SWARM™ technology, which uses vehicle-to-everything communication to help mitigate collisions, improve traffic flow, increase fuel efficiency for all road users, and prepare for higher-levels of automated driving features,” said Sue Bai, chief engineer at Honda Research Institute USA, Inc. “This initiative is helping us develop the transportation ecosystem of the future with like-minded partners in the auto industry, government, academia, and the private sector.” The corridor has supported the Connected Marysville and the Connected Dublin programs. The City of Marysville is the first connected city in the nation, with all 29 traffic signals connected. The Connected Dublin program features connective vehicle technology being utilized in a multi-lane roundabout. Both pair connected signals, pedestrian crosswalks and infrastructure with a vehicle’s on-board unit to communicate real-time information to the driver. “We would not be here today without like-minded innovators coming together and partnering on a vision for the future,” said Tim Hansley, NW 33 COG President and Union County Administrator. “The 33 Smart Mobility Corridor and the entire Ohio mobility development ecosystem cannot function effectively without coordination and teamwork. Local, state, and federal institutions partnering with industry and academic institutions to promote innovation is what differentiates Ohio from the rest of the pack. We are building the future here in The Beta District and across the state.”