1958 - House Boosts Coal Truckers' Load Limits

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Wed Mar 5 21:20:45 EST 2008


Roanoke Times - March 5, 1958

House Boosts Coal Truckers' Load Limits

Cantrell Believes Measure Will Help Over 2,000 Persons

RICHMOND, March 4 - Hundreds of truckers who haul coal from mines
to railroad sidings and processing plants were given higher load
limits today by the House in an amendment to a bill recodifying
Virginia's motor vehicles laws.
The bill, to which several amendments were added by the House,
including the one which will allow bigger loads on the coal trucks,
now goes back to the Senate for action on the amendments.
Del. Orby L. Cantrell of Wise County, patron of the amendment,
said he believes it will help between 2,000 and 3,000 truckers who
haul coal from the small mines which have no railroad sidings.
Cantrell and other coalfield legislators introduced a bill earlier
in the session raising the load limits on these trucks but in the
legislative mill it was bypassed and the amendment accomplishing the
same purpose was attached to the recodification bill by the House
Road Committee when the bill came from the Senate.
But in doing so the House committee threw up certain safeguards
sought by the State Highway dept.
The truckers, in order to haul bigger loads must obtain permits
from the highway department and they cannot haul the coal more than
25 miles from the mine.
And the higher load limits are permissive only until Oct. 1 of
next year, so the highway department can determine whether the bigger
loads are causing excess wear and tear on the roads the trucks use.
The highway department can give a coal hauler permission to carry
an extra ton on single axle trucks and two extra tons on tandem axle trucks.
Coalfield legislators in working for the legislation said that
actually the trucks use only a few miles of public roads to and from
the mines - that most of it is on private mountain roads cut out by
the mine operators.
Because of this terrain, legislators said, the trucks wear out in
two years and unless the owners can get heavier loads they cannot
meet payments.
Hundreds of small mines are now being opened in the coal producing
counties, most of them miles from railroad sidings. Trucks are the
only means of transporting the coal from the mines to the railroads
because the mines are not big enough to justify building a railroad
siding to the mine tipple.

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- Ron Davis, Roger Link







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