So what exact license should required of the driver of a 10,000 GVW tow vehicle and 15,500 lb 5th wheel? And should a holder of that license have to undergo a annual physical to maintain that license? What happens if he has to take a little prozac to get along? What if the driver is 50 but takes a heart medicine for a condition not likely to impair his ability to drive a vehicle?
What are the statistics that will be improved. And how would you change the current law to make that improvement?
Last week talked with a couple in their late 70's. She has cardiac problems, he has been diagnosed diabetic but refuses to take medication, he is almost totally deaf and refuses to wear any type of hearing aid, and both of them have very limited mobility. Their RV was a 45' MH with a gross weight approaching 54k. She told of how the previous week when she was driving she almost lost control coming down a steep grade on a 2 lane highway in TN, in heavy rain. She was afraid to hit the brakes and was running over 85 by the time she got to the bottom. Despite his medical issues, he was driving when they left, barely missing several vehicles, trees, and other obstacles,, totally oblivious to the other campers trying to help him get out.
There are, I know, others out there in their late 70's that would have no trouble at all, but the highway doesn't belong to anyone individual. I believe I have a reasonable right to expect that the person coming at me in a 25 ton vehicle is capable of passing by me without killing me or my loved ones. My concern is as I originally pointed out, the "size and weight" of rigs is increasing. The potential for horrendous damage goes up as the weight of the vehicle goes up. Without some type of requirements on operation of these big rigs, be it training or certification, we could and will be facing more and more of the couples like the one above.