Corporate News
Transporters call for tougher laws to check overloading
Between 50 – 55 per cent of the trucks plying Kenyan roads are still overloaded, some with cargo of up to 60 tonnes. Photo/ANTHONY KAMAU
Posted Tuesday, September 7 2010 at 00:00
Transporters want the government to create legal measures to effectively curb overloading on Kenyan roads, saying the current laws are not weak.
Kenya Transport Association (KTA) said the Traffic Act, which outlines the punishment for overloading, only targets drivers who are not the real culprits.
“The law should punish all those responsible for overloading including truck owners as well as managers along all the loading points that generate the cargo,” KTA secretary Paul Maiyo said.
An inter-ministerial committee on overloading control formed in December last year which recommended the establishment of weighbridges at all the loading point has not been able to push this agenda, he added.
Axle load control measures, which the government put in place in 2008 have not effectively reduced damage to the roads due to widespread corruption and weak weighbridge management that allows overloading, a recent study said.
Between 50 – 55 per cent of the trucks plying Kenyan roads are still overloaded, some with cargo of up to 60 tonnes, according to a study titled “Analytical Comparative Transport Costs along the Northern Corridor” which was conducted by CPCS Transcom for the Northern Corridor Transit Transport Co-ordination Authority.
Out of 382,000 trucks weighed last year, 2,208 were penalised for overloading, earning the government Sh95.5 million, according to the managers of the Mariakani weighbridge.
Overloaded trucks
Mariakani and Athi River weighbridges have earned the State about Sh130 million in fines from overloaded trucks since they were privatised early last year.
However, this is far from a reflection of the reality since unscrupulous truckers who overload are not punished, Maiyo said.
As one of the measures to check corruption, the government early last year started the process of privatising the 15 weighbridges from the port of Mombasa to the Malaba border.
The government has already privatised Mariakani and Athi River weighbridges, which will from next month be operated by new managers after the contract of the current team, Otieno Odongo and Partners, expires.
In October 2008, President Kibaki issued a directive which reduced the number of axles allowed on Kenyan roads from four to three, lowering the limit of the gross weight of a truck to 48 tonnes.
Prior to this, trucks could carry upto70 tonnes, which caused massive road damage.
In Kenya, every axle, which is supposed to weigh nine tonnes, is weighed separately and the result added to determine the weight of the load.
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