Senate Drives through Bill Creating Oversize/Overweight
Annual Permit for Truckers
The Senate approved legislation
Wednesday that will help trucking companies save
time and money - cost savings that can be passed
on to customers. SB 1184, by Sen. Bryce
Marlatt, would create an oversize and/or overweight
annual permit to replace the current permits which
have to be requested with each delivery.
"The current permit system isn't working.
Our permitting offices are overwhelmed with calls
and simply can't meet the needs of all of the
state's trucking companies, and our companies
are wasting time calling for a permit every time
they have to make a delivery," said Marlatt.
"Having an annual permit just makes good
sense, good financial sense for everyone involved."
Marlatt explained that for years, trucking companies
and drivers have experienced significant delays
getting oversized and/or overweight permits because
of the Department of Public Safety's limited staff
and resources. Those delays directly impact oil-and-gas
companies' ability to safely and quickly move
rigs and equipment, which adds significantly to
their cost and slows their ability to drill for
natural gas and oil. Each delay, depending on
the time, can potentially cost a company tens
of thousands of dollars.
Other states like Texas and Louisiana currently
offer annual permits. Oklahoma’s annual
permit would be modeled after Texas’, which
costs $4,000 a year.
SB 1184 would also require trucking companies
to continue to stay off weight-restricted highways
and weight-limit bridges as determined by the
Oklahoma Department of Transportation (ODOT).
ODOT does not track city or county roads so the
permit would not apply.
The new annual permit would not apply to loads
over 120,000 pounds or those over twelve feet
in width, fourteen feet in height or 110 feet
in length. Heavy or oversized loads such as those
would still require individual load permits.
“The new permit will not create more truck
traffic on the roads, but will simply enable trucks
carrying equipment to more efficiently move their
permitted loads without the delays encountered
in the current permitting process,” said
Marlatt. “This will allow us to address
this problem without having to hire more staff
in our permit offices especially right now when
the state needs to be saving money, and it will
also make a tremendous difference for the companies
who use these permits.”
SB 1184 will next be heard in the House.
For more information contact:
Sen. Marlatt's Office: 405-521-5626