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I might be able to help on this.
I looked into this 10 years ago and found that the EPA
"in it's infinite wisdom" has written certian laws regarding transportation of hazardous materials. The states simply rubber stamp these laws by making thier laws the same. You can carry up to 110 gallons of gas on your car, truck and maybe trailer (for agricultural purposes). Then one might have to deal with the CDL or the drivers licence or the placards on all four sides of the vehicle or the 20# co2 extinguisher---or not. But how I can be most helpful is to tell you that you can call your local state police department and ask for the haz-mat officer. He has been trained to know and enforce those laws and can refer you to where you can get a copy of them. HTH
Larry Mac Donald
lm4@juno.com
Rochester N.Y.
Do not achcive
On Tue, 28 Feb 2006 11:34:53 -0600 "Russell Duffy"
<russell.duffy@gmail.com> writes:
Just to chip in my 2 cents here.. keep in mind that transporting on
public roads more than 55 gallons (or perhaps 60..) of hazardous
material (such as gas, diesel, jet A) LEGALLY requires placarding, a
commercial drivers license with a haz-mat endorsement and commercial
vehicle insurance.
All good points Dave. This is all just so frustrating.
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