I have to throw in with FWJ.
Does anyone not agree that the driver of a 9500 gallon flammable liquid tanker truck should meet the same equipment and licensing requirements, regardless of whether the fuel or its transportation thereof is defined as "commercial" versus "non-commercial?" If said truck uses the public road system, it presents the same potential danger to the public regardless of the enterprise causing it to happen.
If one agrees with that premise, then at what point (gallonage) does the commerical/non-commercial distinction represent less threat to the public? Certainly a container holding far less than the fuel tank of the transporting vehicle itself would seem to merit exemption, no matter what kind of vehicle is hauling it.
It seems to me the line should be drawn through a number of gallons being transported, not how those gallons are going to be used.
Does anyone not agree that the driver of a 9500 gallon flammable liquid tanker truck should meet the same equipment and licensing requirements, regardless of whether the fuel or its transportation thereof is defined as "commercial" versus "non-commercial?" If said truck uses the public road system, it presents the same potential danger to the public regardless of the enterprise causing it to happen.
If one agrees with that premise, then at what point (gallonage) does the commerical/non-commercial distinction represent less threat to the public? Certainly a container holding far less than the fuel tank of the transporting vehicle itself would seem to merit exemption, no matter what kind of vehicle is hauling it.
It seems to me the line should be drawn through a number of gallons being transported, not how those gallons are going to be used.