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An upcoming federal rule mandating speed limiters on heavy-duty trucks will include the requirement that current vehicles be retrofitted as well  as new trucks rolling down assembly lines, according to an official of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
Christopher Bonrulti, NHTSA associate  administrator for rulemaking…, said the Federal Motor Cru1.ier Safety Administration has joined the rulemaking process, so that  the speed limiter mandate can  apply to all trucks and not just new models.
A recent Department of Transportation report on rulemakings had said the speed-limiter proposal could be out as early as March. However,  Bonanti said  that  date  could  be delayed now that FMCSA has joined the process.
‘We hope to get that [notice of proposed rulemaking] published … later in 2014,” Bonanti said at American  Trucking Associations’ Management Conference & Exhibition in Orlando, Fla., late  last month.  ‘We normally do our rule, and then  FMCSA does its rule, but this rule is going to be a joint rule,” Bonanti said.
‘We’re taking into consideration the safety requirements  associated with what is being considered, and also the  enforcement mechanisms associated with it.”
FMCSA spokesman Duane DeBruyne said the agency expects the rule to reduce 1,115fatal accidents  annually.
Bonanti said a federal study showed that speed limiters could save lives and increase  fuel economy.
The   rule   is  being  crafted  in response to petitions filed in 2006 by American Trucking Associations, Road Safe America and nine motor carriers.
In early 2011, NHTSA  said in a Federal Register announcement that the petitions merited “further consideration through the agency’s rule making process.”
At that time, NHTSA originally said it expected to complete  the  proposed rule in 2012. Despite the delay, Bonanti’s announcement last month was well-received.
“We’ve been waiting for years, and we’re hopeful that DOT will take some action in 2014 to make this a reality, or at least take steps toward making it a reality,” said Dave Osiecki, ATA’s senior vice president for policy and regulatory affairs. “Speed  management  Has not gotten  the attention that it .
In 2006, ATA said a rule should require that speed limiters be set no higher than 68 mph. However,  ATA has since revised its policy and asked that the maximum be 65 mph, Osiecki said.  Although ATA wanted both new and in-use trucks to be governed  by speed limiters, its petition focused on new trucks.
‘We wanted the limiters to be set at the time of manufacture and be tamperproof, but also have the existing trucks be speedlimited,” Osiecki said. “But it’s a little
more costly to go back and make them tamperproof. In fact, I don’t know if it’s doable.”
Steve Owings , co-founder of Road Safe America,  called  the decision to include FMCSA in the rulemaking “a great development.”
“We’ve   emphasized  in   our numerous discussions  with the  agencies that it’s crucial that existing trucks  that have the equipment, which we understand
goes all the way back to model year 1992,  be included in the rule,”   Owings said. “There’s virtually no expense to it.”
Timothy  Blubaugh, executive vice president of the Truck  & Engine Manufacturers, said that while the speed-limiter feature exists on most 1998 and newer engines,  retrofitting the in-use engines with tamperproof capability is not practicable.
“It would be prohibitively expensive to reprogram the electronics of those engines with a speed-limiter feature that is tamperproof,” Blubaugh told TRANSPORT TOPICS.
“Essentially, retrofitting & tamper¬proof  capability would  require numerous development programs to write new software for every old version of engine electronics.”
Owings said that roughly 70% of the trucks in the  United  States  already have their speed limiters set and as a result have reported that they have reduced crashes
and saved money on fuel and maintenance.
However, the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association does  not agree  that  the speed limiter rule will reduce highway accidents or fatalities.
“If  speed  limiters  actually improved safety, you would expect to see carriers  that  use them to  have fewer crashes,” said OOIDA spokeswoman Norita Taylor. “But they don’t they have more.”  The quality of the data relied upon for the safety claims made by the petitioners has shown to be incomplete, Taylor said.
“Virtually everything coming from D.C. these days is rhetoric, devoid of any direct connection to  safety,” she said. “The safest high¬ way speeds are uniform while differentials among vehicles  increase the likelihood for unsafe interactions and maneuvering.”

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