Illinois Governor Pat Quinn has signed legislation aimed at enhancing truck safety in the state by making truck routing and restrictions more accessible to the commercial trucking industry.
The new law also provides a program to educate truck drivers about the differences between truck and car GPS devices.
The law, which goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2012, requires local jurisdictions to provide the most up-to-date truck route information to the Illinois Department of Transportation, which in turn will post this information online.
A state task force, made up of government and industry representatives, made three key recommendations that are part of the legislation:
Merge together databases containing key truck routing data such as overpasses and legal restrictions;
Require local jurisdictions to report their designated truck networks and preferred routes via a simplified reporting process; and
Educate truck drivers on the differences between GPS devices designed for trucks and those used in cars.
Truck-specific restrictions for Illinois municipalities now will become more transparent to the public as well as to manufacturers of products designed to serve the commercial transportation industry. In addition, by educating truckers on appropriate routing for trucks instead of that for cars, this law is intended to increase safety on the roads and decrease the potential for dangerous bridge strikes that cause traffic congestion and infrastructure damage.