Okla. Stat. tit. 47 § 14-118

Current through Laws 2024, c. 453.
Section 14-118 - Motor carriers - Permits - Oklahoma Load Limit Map - Saddlemounts - Exemptions and restrictions - Driveaway permits
A.
1. Pursuant to such rules as may be prescribed by Oklahoma agencies of jurisdiction, Oklahoma motor carriers may engage in any activity in which carriers subject to the jurisdiction of the federal government may be authorized by federal legislation to engage. Provided further, the Transportation Commission shall formulate for the State Trunk Highway System, including the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways, and for all other highways or portions thereof, rules governing the movement of vehicles or loads which exceed the size or weight limitations specified by the provisions of this chapter.
2. Such rules shall be the basis for the development of a system by the Executive Director of the Department of Transportation for the issuance of permits for the movement of oversize or overweight vehicles or loads. Such system shall include, but not be limited to, provisions for duration, seasonal factors, hours of the day or days when valid, special requirements as to flags, flagmen and warning or safety devices and other such items as may be consistent with the intent of this section. The permit system shall include provisions for the collection of permit fees as well as for the issuance of the permits by telephone, electronic transfer or such other methods of issuance as may be deemed feasible.
3. The Department of Transportation is authorized to charge a fee of Two Dollars ($2.00) for each permit requested to be issued by facsimile machine or by any other means of electronic transmission, transfer or delivery. The fee shall be in addition to any other fee or fees assessed for the permit. The fee shall be deposited in the State Treasury to the credit of the Department of Transportation and the monies shall be expended by the Department of Transportation solely for the purposes provided for in this chapter.
4. It is the purpose of this section to permit the movement of necessary overweight and oversize vehicles or loads consistent with the following obligations:
a. protection of the motoring public from potential traffic hazards,
b. protection of highway surfaces, structures, and private property, and
c. provision for normal flow of traffic with a minimum of interference.
B. The Transportation Commission shall prepare and publish a map of this state showing by appropriate symbols the various highway structures and bridges in terms of maximum size and weight restrictions. This map shall be titled "Oklahoma Load Limit Map" and shall be revised periodically to maintain a reasonably current status and in no event shall a period of two (2) years lapse between revisions and publication of the printed version of the Oklahoma Load Limit Map. This map shall also be made available by the Department of Transportation on the Internet, and in no event shall a period of six (6) months lapse between revisions of the information provided on the Internet. Provided, further, the Secretary of the Department of Transportation shall prepare and publish a map of this state showing the advantages of this state as a marketing, warehousing and distribution network center for motor transportation sensitive industries.
C. The Executive Director of the Department of Transportation, or an authorized representative, shall have the authority, within the limitations formulated under provisions of this chapter, to issue, withhold or revoke special permits for the operation of vehicles or combinations of vehicles or loads which exceed the size or weight limitations of this chapter. Every such permit shall be carried in the vehicle or combination of vehicles to which it refers and shall be open to inspection by any law enforcement officer or authorized agent of any authority granting such permit, and no person shall violate any of the terms or conditions of such special permit.
D. It shall be permissible in the transportation of empty trucks on any road or highway to tow by use of saddlemounts, i.e., mounting the front wheels of one vehicle on the bed of another leaving the rear wheels only of such towed vehicle in contact with the roadway. One vehicle may be fullmounted on the towing or towed vehicles engaged in any driveaway or towaway operation. No more than three saddlemounts may be permitted in such combinations. The towed vehicles shall be securely fastened and operated under the applicable safety requirements of the United States Department of Transportation and such combinations shall not exceed an overall length of seventy-five (75) feet. Provided, a driveaway saddlemount with fullmount vehicle transporter combination may reach an overall length of ninety-seven (97) feet on the National Network of Highways.
E. The Executive Director of the Department of Transportation, upon application of any person engaged in the transportation of forest products in the raw state, which is defined to be tree-length logs moving from the forest directly to the mill, or upon application of any person engaged in the hauling for hire or for resale of round baled hay with a total outside width of eleven (11) feet or less, shall issue an annual permit, upon payment of a fee of Twenty-five Dollars ($25.00) each year, authorizing the operation by such persons of such motor vehicle load lengths and widths upon the highways of this state except on the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways. Provided, however, the restriction on use of the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways shall not be applicable to persons engaged in the hauling of round baled hay with a total outside width of eleven (11) feet or less.
F. The Executive Director of the Department of Transportation, upon application of any person engaged in the transportation of overwidth or overheight equipment used in soil conservation work with a total outside width of twelve (12) feet or less, shall issue an annual permit, upon payment of a fee of Twenty-five Dollars ($25.00) each year, authorizing the operation by such persons of such motor vehicle load lengths and widths upon the highways of this state except on the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways.
G. Farm equipment including, but not limited to, implements of husbandry as defined in Section 1-125 of this title shall be exempted from the requirement for special permits due to size. Such equipment may move on any highway, except those highways which are part of the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways, during the hours of darkness and shall be subject to the requirements as provided in Section 12-215 of this title. In addition to those requirements, tractors pulling machinery over thirteen (13) feet wide must have two amber flashing warning lamps symmetrically mounted, laterally and widely spaced as practicable, visible from both front and rear, mounted at least thirty-nine (39) inches high.
H. Any rubber-tired road construction vehicle including rubber-tired truck cranes and special mobilized machinery either self-propelled or drawn carrying no load other than component parts safely secured to the machinery and its own weight, but which is overweight by any provisions of this chapter, shall be authorized to move on the highways of this state. Movement of such vehicles shall be authorized on the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways only by special permit secured from the Executive Director of the Department of Transportation or an authorized representative upon determination that the objectives of this section will be served by such a permit and that federal weight restrictions will not be violated. The special permit shall be:
1. A single-trip permit issued under the provisions of this section and Section 14-116 of this title; or
2. A special annual overweight permit which shall be issued for one calendar year period upon payment of a fee of Sixty Dollars ($60.00). The weight of any such vehicle shall not exceed six hundred fifty (650) pounds multiplied by the nominal width of the tire. The vehicle shall be required to carry the safety equipment adjudged necessary for the health and welfare of the driving public. If any oversized vehicle does not come under the other limitations of the present laws, it shall be deemed that the same shall travel only between the hours of sunrise and sunset. The vehicle, being overweight but of legal dimension, shall be allowed continuous travel. The vehicles, except special mobilized machinery, shall be exempt from the laws of this state relating to motor vehicle registration, licensing or other fees or taxes in lieu of ad valorem taxes.
I.
1. When such machinery has a width greater than eight and one-half (8 1/2) feet, or a length, exclusive of load, of forty-five (45) feet, or a height in excess of thirteen and one-half (13 1/2) feet, then the permit may restrict movement to a fifty-mile radius from an established operating base, and may designate highways to be traveled, hours of travel and when flagmen may be required to precede or follow the equipment.
2. Possession of a permit shall in no way be construed as exempting such equipment from the authority of the Executive Director of the Department of Transportation to restrict use of particular highways, nor shall it exempt owners or operators of such equipment from the responsibility for damage to highways caused by movement of the equipment. Nothing in this subsection shall apply to machinery used in highway construction or road material production.
3. Upon the issuance of a special mobilized machinery driveaway permit as provided in this subsection, special mobilized machinery manufactured in Oklahoma shall be permitted to move upon the highways of this state from the place of manufacture to the state line for delivery and exclusive use outside the state, and may be temporarily returned to Oklahoma for modification and repair, with subsequent movement back out of the state. Special driveaway permits for such movements shall be issued by the Executive Director of the Department of Transportation, who may act through designated agents, upon the payment of a fee in the amount of Fifteen Dollars ($15.00) for each movement.
4. The size of the special mobilized machinery shall not be such as to create a safety hazard in the judgment of the Executive Director of the Department of Transportation. Permits for such special mobilized machinery shall specify a maximum permissible road speed of sixty (60) miles per hour, designate safety equipment to be carried and may exclude use of highways of the interstate system.
5. When such equipment has a width greater than eight and one-half (8 1/2) feet, or a length exclusive of load of forty-five (45) feet, or a height in excess of thirteen and one-half (13 1/2) feet, the permit may designate highways to be traveled, hours of travel and when flagmen may be required to precede or follow the equipment.
6. Possession of a special driveaway permit shall in no way be construed as exempting such equipment from the authority of the Executive Director of the Department of Transportation to restrict use of particular highways, nor shall it exempt the owners or operators of such equipment from the responsibility for damage to highways caused by the movement of such equipment.

Okla. Stat. tit. 47, § 14-118

Amended by Laws 2022 , c. 116, s. 11, eff. 7/1/2022.
Amended by Laws 2014 , c. 239, s. 2, eff. 5/9/2014.
Amended without change by Laws 2013 , c. 15, s. 31, eff. 4/8/2013.
Amended by Laws 2013 , c. 15, s. 30, eff. 4/8/2013.
Laws 1972, HB 1640, c. 56, § 1, emerg. eff. 3/20/1972; Amended by Laws 1977, SB 180, c. 55, §5, emerg. eff. 5/16/1977; Amended by Laws 1980, HB 1756, c. 125, § 2, emerg. eff. 4/16/1980; Amended by Laws 1980, SB 526, c. 127, § 1, eff. 10/1/1980 (repealed by Laws 1980, HB 1352, c. 265, §3, emerg. eff. 6/9/1980); Amended by Laws 1980, HB 1352, c. 265, § 2, emerg. eff. 6/9/1980; Amended by Laws 1985, HB 1269, c. 290, § 3, emerg. eff. 7/1/1985; Amended by Laws 1987, SB 280, c. 232, §1, emerg. eff. 7/5/1987; Amended by Laws 1991, HB 1064, c. 156, § 3, emerg. eff. 5/6/1991; Amended by Laws 1993, SB 187, c. 252, § 3, emerg. eff. 5/26/1993; Amended by Laws 1995, HB 1923, c. 308, § 2, eff. 7/1/1996; Amended by Laws 1996, HB 2414, c. 220, § 1, emerg. eff. 5/23/1996; Amended by Laws 1998 , HB 2819, c. 125, § 4, eff. 11/1/1998; Amended by Laws 2000 , HB 1960, c. 189, § 6, emerg. eff. 7/1/2000; Amended by Laws 2001 , HB 1086, c. 309, § 5, eff. 11/1/2001; Amended by Laws 2002 , HB 2302, c. 397, § 26, eff. 11/1/2002; Amended by Laws 2006 , SB 1365, c. 65, § 1, emerg. eff. 4/17/2006; Amended by Laws 2007 , HB 1702, c. 55, § 1, eff. 11/1/2007; Amended by Laws 2011 , SB 499, c. 153, § 1, eff. 11/1/2011; Amended by Laws 2012 , SB 1247, c. 283, § 11, emerg. eff. 7/1/2012; Amended by Laws 2012 , HB 2325, c. 162, § 1, eff. 11/1/2012.