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House Subcommittee Looks At Congestion

Speaking on behalf of the American Trucking Associations at a U.S. House subcommittee hearing on highway congestion, a trucking company executive recommended allowing longer, heavier trucks on the nation’s highways as one way to combat the problem

by Staff
May 21, 2002
2 min to read


Speaking on behalf of the American Trucking Associations at a U.S. House subcommittee hearing on highway congestion, a trucking company executive recommended allowing longer, heavier trucks on the nation’s highways as one way to combat the problem.

Michael S. Card, president of Combined Transport in Central Point, Ore., testified Tuesday before the House Subcommittee on Highways and Transit of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. Card is chairman of ATA’s Highway Policy Committee.
Pointing out the growth in truck transport of America’s freight, Card noted that “more trucks will be traveling more miles on a highway system that will see very little capacity expansion over the next dozen years. This is not a sustainable trend, and it should not be allowed to continue.”
Road-building, however, is not enough to solve the problem, he said. A “multi-front assault on congestion” should include improvements in trucking productivity, better federal funding, the elimination of bottlenecks, effective Intelligent Transportation Systems, and the encouragement of telecommuting and carpooling.
“Perhaps the most promising approach to mitigating congestion is to reduce the number of trucks on American roads,” Card said. He compared this approach to carpooling – increasing capacity without increasing road lane-miles. Federal size and weight regulations must be reformed, he said. Federal law limits states’ ability to control size and weight on their own highways – limits that are lower than those in Mexico and Canada.
In addition, he said, driver productivity could be improved by changing hours of service regulations. And when highway planning is done at the state and local level, the process needs to address freight needs.

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