A Review of Kentucky’s Extended-Weight Hauling Programs

Abstract

Kentucky established its Extended Weight Coal or Coal By-products Haul Road System (EWCHRS) to increase the state’s competitiveness within the coal industry and reduce financial burdens on coal haulers. A new extended-weight haul system for unrefined petroleum products will come online in 2022. To facilitate enforcement of weight limits throughout Kentucky, this report surveys literature on how overweight vehicles affect roads and bridges, describes statutes and regulations governing weight limits in the state, discusses policies and strategies used throughout the US to handle overweight vehicles, and makes recommendations for improving extended-weight policies in Kentucky. It is apparent that pavements and bridges repeatedly exposed to overweight vehicles have shorter life-cycles, but methods for quantifying deterioration rates are lacking. In both Kentucky and throughout the US, agency personnel find that not enough revenues are collected from permitting fees to offset damage caused by overweight trucks. The enforcement landscape is made complex by exemptions that apply to specific industries and commodities. Without adequate staffing and weigh station operations, robust enforcement of weight limits is very challenging. Some of the recommendations for Kentucky to improve its extended-weight policies include studying the feasibility of a statewide long-haul network that accommodates all commodities, modifying the EWCHRS fee structure to generate enough funds to repair damage inflicted by overweight vehicles, strengthen enforcement of weight limits on the EWCHRS, mandate installation of GPS systems on vehicles that travel the EWCHRS to streamline mileage reporting and improve driver awareness of prohibited routes, and eliminate inconsistencies, ambiguities, and redundancies in regulatory and statutory language

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