DPS Joins National Commercial Vehicle Inspection Effort

 

AUSTIN – Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) troopers, inspectors and investigators will conduct intensified commercial vehicle inspections through June 8 as part of Roadcheck 2017, an annual three-day enforcement effort across North America to increase motor carrier, vehicle, driver and cargo safety and security. DPS Troopers will be on the lookout for commercial vehicles, including 18-wheelers and buses, with serious equipment violations and drivers out of compliance with state and federal requirements.

“The Roadcheck program is an integral enforcement effort designed to encourage commercial vehicle compliance and overall highway safety,” said DPS Director Steven McCraw. “By always practicing safe driving practices and proper vehicle maintenance, drivers of both commercial and passenger vehicles can do their part to help save lives and reduce crashes on our roadways.”

In addition to Roadcheck, DPS periodically carries out additional enforcement efforts in targeted areas where a high volume of trucks or buses may be operating.

During Roadcheck 2017, specially trained troopers and civilian personnel will inspect commercial vehicles for equipment violations involving brakes, tires, lights and loading standards. Troopers will check driver licenses and log books, which document how long the driver has been on the road.  In conjunction with these efforts, DPS will also be watching for aggressive, distracted, fatigued or impaired passenger vehicle drivers, the cause of most commercial vehicle crashes.

In 2016, DPS and other Texas law enforcement agencies participating in Roadcheck inspected 7,795 commercial vehicles. The inspections found that approximately 22.5 percent of the vehicles had serious violations that required the truck or bus be placed out of service until repairs could be made. Inspectors also placed 224 drivers out of service for various violations, including driving over the maximum number of hours and failing to have the proper type of driver license for the vehicle being driven.

Each year, the Roadcheck program, which is sponsored by the Commercial Vehicle Safety Association (CVSA), places special emphasis on a category of violations. This year, CVSA will be highlighting cargo securement as a reminder of its importance to highway safety. For more information on the Roadcheckprogram, please visit: http://cvsa.org/program/programs/international-roadcheck/, and click on 2017 International Roadcheck.

As Roadcheck begins, DPS is also reminding motorists to slow down or move over for vehicles on the side of the road. By law, drivers in Texas must move out of the lane closest to police, fire, EMS, Texas Department of Transportation vehicles and tow trucks that are stopped on the side of the road with emergency lights activated – or drivers must slow down to 20 MPH below the speed limit. DPS encourages Texas motorists to show the same courtesy to fellow drivers stopped along the road.

 

Subscribe to the LIVE! Daily

The LIVE! Daily is the "newspaper to your email" for San Angelo. Each content-packed edition has weather, the popular Top of the Email opinion and rumor mill column, news around the state of Texas, news around west Texas, the latest news stories from San Angelo LIVE!, events, and the most recent obituaries. The bottom of the email contains the most recent rants and comments. The LIVE! daily is emailed 5 days per week. On Sundays, subscribers receive the West Texas Real Estate LIVE! email.

Required

Most Recent Videos

Comments

by law enforcement for no good reason whatsoever, just buy a HD pickup and tow a trailer behind it. You will not be able to drive on any local highway (Loop 306, Hwy 87, etc.) without being pulled over and questioned without probable cause like you live in some fascist country virtually every time you make a trip. It's ridiculous. It would be one thing if they actually saw a violation, but no, they are just on fishing expeditions that BTW are unconstitutional, but who cares about minor details like that when somebody might be driving with a burned out marker light bulb or other heinous safety violation.

Post a comment to this article here:

X Close