OSSGA Staff and committees are now studying the results of the pilot and meeting with the Ministry of Transportation in an effort to develop long-term solutions to the enforcement of axle weights.
The pilot program outlined below resulted in more than 140 trucks participating and more than 600 data points collected.
From July 2017:
OSSGA Needs Aggregate Producers to Help Recruit Truckers
The Axle Weight Pilot Project was launched on May 15th in cooperation with the Ministry of Transportation, the Ontario Stone, Sand & Gravel Association (OSSGA), The Ontario Aggregate Truckers Association (OATA) and the Ontario Road Builders Association (ORBA).
The objective of the pilot project is to develop a database that will help standardize the way allowable gross weights and axle weights are collected, stored and used for compliance. After some initial testing in week 1 of the pilot, it was determined that the most effective way to move forward is to carry out the measure up, issue new digital white sheets, and capture actual data from MTO scales on the pilot trucks – regardless of whether they are in or out of compliance. This data will quantify how vehicles are performing under real life conditions.
As you know, the ‘Axle Weight’ issue has been on-going for many years in Ontario. Here’s your chance to be part of the solution to solve this problem. For the pilot to be a success, we need a total of 225 trucks of various types and manufacturers to gather enough data.
We still need trucks. We had great participation in week 1 of the pilot – let’s keep the momentum going! We have included a flyer that we would like you to distribute to your vendors at the scale house. Or, even better, if you are able to call your vendors directly to encourage them to join the pilot, you can help ensure its success!
How the pilot program will work
We are looking for a total of 225 truck drivers to volunteer to enter a pilot that will track actual weights observed at MTO scales for the purposes of better understanding of how vehicles perform under real life conditions.
Why should drivers, trucking company owners or fleet owners participate?
What do you need to do as a shipper during the pilot?
This is an exciting pilot project that will help define the transportation of aggregate in Ontario. Be a part of it!