She says there are a few short-term fixes the government could look into to protect drivers while they rest. “[The government] could take some existing municipal property and turn it into rest areas,” Ritchie says. Alternatives include transforming closed-down scales into safe parking areas.
Those properties are ideal, she says, as they have already been cleared and paved. But currently, they’re blocked off by barriers and ditches to prevent truckers from parking illegally.
Governments don’t want to open the gates haphazardly and accept the insurance and liability issues, she says.
Derek Hurst, of Utopia, Ont., makes daily runs between Toronto and Buffalo, but prior to that, he trucked through the U.S.
He says the Americans have done a better job of supplying rest areas on major highways than Canada, but he says many aren't "adequate to meet the needs of all the trucks that are on the highway,” he says.
When the American and Canadian governments created the current hours-of-service (HOS) rules, nobody thought about where drivers would park when they ran out of hours, says Ritchie, who adds that the problem could be more pronounced when regulators mandate EOBRs.
Stateside, at least, there’s hope. If Jason’s Law is passed, the amount of safe and available parking in the U.S. will increase substantially over the next six years.
Here, a solution is only possible if the entire supply chain pitches in.
And, as Ritchie, notes, "I don’t know how we’re going to that, given the complexity of it all."
Learn more about Hope's campaign at www.jhlrivenburg.com.
-- by Farrah Cole