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Showing posts with label DOT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DOT. Show all posts
Thursday, February 10, 2011
DOT Converts Hazmat Transportation Permits into Federal Regulations
“This rulemaking is another step in incorporating tested transportation technologies and operations from longstanding special permits into the regulations, promoting safety and streamlining our processes,” said PHMSA Administrator Cynthia Quarterman.
The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) recently announced its efforts to improve the safe transport of hazardous materials by incorporating the provisions of six widely used cargo tank special permits into Federal Hazardous Materials regulations. The agency hopes the new regulation will cut down on thousands of special permit applications each year.
The special permits incorporated into regulations have long established safety records. Like all special permits, these were used to approve processes for hazmat transport not explicitly spelled out in PHMSA regulations. Over years, the practices approved in these permits became commonplace and were proven safe.
“President Obama asked us to find ways to make our government better for the people of the United States,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood. “Getting rid of this cumbersome process will maintain safety and save businesses and the government both time and money.”
“This rulemaking is another step in incorporating tested transportation technologies and operations from longstanding special permits into the regulations, promoting safety and streamlining our processes,” said PHMSA Administrator Cynthia Quarterman.
Streamlining the hazardous materials special permit and approvals process is a major priority for PHMSA. Last year, the Department released an Action Plan to improve PHMSA’s safety oversight, processes, procedures, and policies for its hazardous materials special permits and approvals program.
Listed below are the six special permits that will be incorporated into the Hazardous Materials Regulations pertaining to the shipment of certain hazardous materials in cargo tanks.
Two of the special permits cover hazardous materials mounted on farm trucks used exclusively for agricultural purposes:
- Liquefied petroleum gas (LPG)
- Liquid soil pesticide (toxic substances)
- One special permit covers the transportation of hazardous materials used for striping roads.
- One special permit authorizes private motor carrier companies to transport propane tanks most commonly used for home heating and cooking.
- Two special permits address nurse tanks:
- The first covers the transportation of nurse tanks securely mounted on field trucks.
- The second authorizes the use of the nurse tanks carrying anhydrous ammonia under certain conditions when the tanks are missing or have illegible identification plates.
- The final rule is available on PHMSA’s website at www.phmsa.dot.gov.
Monday, January 24, 2011
FL DOT awards $2.19 million contract to repair bridge damaged Friday in fatal tanker crash.
Construction to repair a BeachLine Expressway overpass damaged by a deadly tanker fire will cause headaches for motorists traveling between the Space Coast and downtown Orlando for nearly a month, officials said.
The Florida Department of Transportation awarded a construction contract todayto repair the bridge at North Courtenay Parkway in Merritt Island in 25 days.
FDOT spokesman Steve Olson said that Lane Construction beat two other bidders to win a $2.19 million contract for replacing both spans of an overpass along the BeachLine. The company pledged to have the thoroughfare ready for traffic in less than a month.
Construction began today on the charred roadway, where two drivers were killed Friday afternoon in an explosive crash involving a gas tanker and a pickup. Crews working on the round-the-clock project have to demolish and rebuild two support beams that were damaged, said FDOT engineer Frank O'Dea.
Labels:
DOT,
Explosion,
fatal accident,
FL
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Mexican Hazmat Carriers Barred from DOT-Proposed Program
A new Obama Administration proposal to allow Mexican trucks to operate throughout the United States drew a lukewarm response from many in the trucking industry. A concept document outlining a framework for the new program was released January 6. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said the document will serve as a starting point to renew the cross-border program for Mexican truckers that was canceled in March 2009. Negotiations with the Mexico government are still to come, and no target date for implementation has been suggested at this point. The initial cross-border trucking program was launched in 2007 by the Bush Administration to comply with requirements under the North American Free Trade Agreement (javascript:void(0)NAFTA). Under that pilot program, Mexican carriers had to register their vehicles with the U.S. government and up to 100 Mexican fleets could operate at any given time inside the United States. Mexico’s government reciprocated by allowing a small number of U.S. carriers to operate inside Mexico. Read more here.
Labels:
DOT,
Mexico,
NAFTA,
Obama Administration,
Transborder Trucking
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Former ODOT exec sentenced
Dennis Kratoch nets seven years in prison.
(Cleveland) - Former ODOT District 12 Facilities Manager Dennis Kratochvil was sentenced to seven years in prison Thursday.
Kratochvil has paid $110,000 in restitution to the Ohio Department of Transportation and was ordered to pay $11,000 in fines.
On October 18, the 68-year-old pleaded guilty to 14 felony counts. The Chagrin Falls resident was the main target in this ODOT corruption case.
The Ohio Inspector General’s Office and the Ohio State Highway Patrol conducted the investigation. In April 2007, an allegation was made that Kratochvil had committed ethics violations by fishing with vendors over whom he had contract authority.
The investigation revealed Kratochvil at the center of a massive interlocking web of schemes involving ODOT contracts. For over a decade, he, former District 12 Equipment Supervisor Terry Kosmata and ODOT storekeeper Kevin Horrigan rigged and steered hundreds of competitively bid contracts to favored vendors in exchange for gratuities.
These gratuities included hunting and fishing trips to Texas and Alaska, gambling junkets to Las Vegas, expensive meals and bar tabs, boating trips and hot tub parties with strippers, and cash bribes delivered to Kratochvil at ODOT District Headquarters in Garfield Heights.
Under indictment, Kratochvil threatened another co-defendant who was also a State’s witness against Kratochvil. On the day this co-defendant was waiting on the judge outside the courtroom to enter a plea of guilty, Kratochvil called him on his cell phone and threatened his life.
Sixteen of the seventeen defendants in this ODOT case have been sentenced on corruption-related charges and have paid a total of $611,840 in restitution.
The center of this criminal activity was ODOT’s District 12 headquarters located in Garfield Heights. The case of ODOT vendor Dennis B. Kratochvil (Dennis L. Kratochvil’s son) is pending.
(Copyright 2011 Clear Channel and/or the Associated Press, all rights reserved.)
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
State Department of Transportation to accept claims for motorist towing costs
The state Department of Transportation will reimburse motorists for "reasonable towing costs" associated with last week's storm.
In a statement issued by the department Monday, motorists who required towing during the historic blizzard can apply for reimbursement.
State officials said people can apply if their vehicle was stranded on state highways due to the inclement weather and circumstances beyond their control.
The reimbursement process has not been finalized yet, but, officials said information about how to file a claim and eligibility details will be announced in the coming days.
This is a one-time reimbursement program, officials said.
Labels:
Department of Transportation,
DOT,
towing costs
Monday, January 3, 2011
Toyota Pays Maximum $32 Million Fine For Two Safety Defect Recalls
By JOSEPH RHEE
Dec. 21, 2010
Toyota has been hit with a record $32.425 million in new civil penalties - the maximum allowed under federal law -- because the automaker failed to properly report safety defects to federal regulators.
The fines were levied after two separate Department of Transportation (DOT) investigations into Toyota’s handling of recall relating to sudden acceleration and steering issues. The steering rod probe was spurred in part by an ABC News report on a Toyota truck crash that killed an Idaho teenager.
"Safety is our top priority and we take our responsibility to protect consumers seriously," said U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood in a statement. "I am pleased that Toyota agreed to pay the maximum possible penalty and I expect Toyota to work cooperatively in the future to ensure consumers' safety."
In one of the cases, Toyota agreed to pay $16.375 million after the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) found that Toyota was late in notifying the federal government that accelerator pedals in its vehicles could became entrapped by floor mats and cause vehicles to accelerate out of control.
Toyota initially recalled 55,000 floor mats because of sudden acceleration concerns in September of 2007.
However, it wasn't until October of 2009, in the wake of a highly publicized fatal crash in Santee, California, that Toyota conducted a more comprehensive recall involving almost four million vehicles. Federal law requires automakers to notify regulators of safety defects within five days.
In the other announced case, Toyota agreed to pay a $16.050 million fine over allegations that it improperly delayed a recall of almost one million trucks and SUVs over defective steering rods. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) decided to conduct its own inquiry this May, reviewing new information suggesting that Toyota knew of complaints over breaking steering rods in the U.S. prior to its announced recall in September of 2005.
The new cases emerged during a lawsuit filed against Toyota by the family of 18-year-old Levi Stewart of Fairfield, Idaho, who was killed when his Toyota truck rolled over. Stewart's family blamed the crash on a defective steering rod and says the accident could have been prevented if Toyota had issued the recall in a timely manner.
During discovery in the case, Toyota turned over 40 previously undisclosed cases where American owners had complained directly to Toyota about steering rod problems before October 2004, when Toyota issued a recall in Japan of 330,000 vehicles to replace the steering relay rods, which were prone to breaking under stress. NHTSA did not learn of the cases until an ABC News investigation earlier this year.
At the time of the Japanese steering rod recall, a Toyota official in Washington, D.C., told NHTSA that a recall in the U.S. was unnecessary because it had no reports of similar problems in this country, and that driving conditions were different in Japan. However, in a deposition for the Stewart court case, the official said under oath that company executives in Japan kept the U.S. complaint information from him.
Toyota did not issue a steering rod recall in the U.S. until almost a year after the recall in Japan, when it acknowledged that the rods were defective. The U.S. recall affected older models of the Toyota T100 pickup truck (model years 1993-98), Toyota 4Runner (1989-95) and the Toyota Truck (1989-95).
Levi Stewart's accident took place in 2007 on a country road outside Fairfield, Idaho. Levi's father Michael was one of the volunteer firemen who responded to the scene.
"When we got there, the devastation was just more than you could handle," said Michael Stewart.
Three months after Levi's death, a long-delayed recall notice from Toyota arrived in the mail at the Stewart home. In the worst case, the notice said, the steering relay rod might fracture, causing a loss of vehicle steering control and thus increasing the possibility of a crash.
"That immediately explained how the wreck happened," said Michael Stewart. "I was just shocked. How could they wait so long to send out a recall on something so important?"
"Automakers are required to report any safety defects to NHTSA swiftly, and we expect them to do so," said NHTSA Administrator David Strickland. "NHTSA acknowledges Toyota's efforts to make improvements to its safety culture, and our agency will continue to hold all automakers accountable for defects to protect consumers' safety."
In a statement released yesterday, Toyota said it agreed to pay the fines "without admitting to any violation of its obligations under the U.S. Safety Act", and that recall decisions are no longer being made solely by officials in Japan.
"As we have demonstrated in recent months, our North American operations now have a greater voice in making safety decisions, and we are taking appropriate action whenever any issues emerge," said Steve St. Angelo, Toyota's Chief Quality Officer for North America. "These agreements are an opportunity to turn the page to an even more constructive relationship with NHTSA and focus even more on listening to our customers and meeting their high expectations for safe and reliable vehicles," said St. Angelo.
However, Toyota has not yet closed the door on the steering rod relay issue. This July, Toyota confirmed that it is the subject of a criminal investigation by a federal grand jury in New York, which has subpoenaed documents about possible steering rod defects.
CLICK HERE to follow the ABC News Investigative Team's coverage on Twitter.
Toyota spokeswoman Celeste Migliore said a subpoena was issued on June 29 for documents "related to defective, broken and/or fractured steering relay rods." "[Toyota Motor Corp.] and its subsidiaries intend to cooperate with the investigation," said Migliore.
Labels:
$32 Million Fine,
D.O.T.,
Department of Transportation,
DOT,
OSHA Fines,
Toyota
Gray names interim DDOT director
By Washington Post Editors
Terry Bellamy, who was deputy director of operations for the District Department of Transportation, will serve as interim director while Mayor Vincent C. Gray searches for a replacement for Gabe Klein.
According to his DDOT biography, Bellamy served in Arlington's transportation department before joining the D.C. government and has more than 27 years of experience in transportation.
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