Illinois GOP Congressman Seeks Farm Equipment Safety Standards
Illinois Congressman Aaron Schock says he wants to improve the safety of rural roads by standardizing lights and markings on farm equipment that travel on public streets.
The Peoria Republican says legislation he proposed last week would ensure the lights and markings on new machinery have been scientifically proven as effective in warning other drivers.
Schock says 55 percent of all traffic fatalities occur on rural, two-lane roads where agricultural equipment is moved from field to field at dawn or dusk.
University of Illinois Extension safety specialist Bob Aherin agrees that safety is an issue when it comes to farm machinery on rural roads. He says there is an average of about 200 crashes a year with motorists and farm equipment in Illinois.
- Texas Snow Storm Threatens to Unleash Blackouts and Travel Chaos
- Judge Won’t Dismiss Suit Claiming Poland Spring Water Isn’t From a Spring
- Deep Freeze Will Send Some US Temperatures Plunging
- He Saved the Chocolates But Lost His Workers’ Compensation Insurance
- Colorado Adds Record Insurance Coverage for Sanders and Hunter With Both Playing in Alamo Bowl
- Mississippi High Court Tells USAA to Pay up in Hurricane Katrina Bad-Faith Claim
- Two Plane Crashes Lead to Deadliest Year in Skies Since 2018
- AccuWeather’s 2024 White Christmas Forecast Calls for Snow in More Areas