OSHP Weigh-in-Motion Scales

Status: Future

Description

This element represents the portable weigh–in–motion (WIM) scales owned and operated by the OSHP for commercial vehicle weight enforcement in the region.

Stakeholders

StakeholderRoleRole Status
Ohio State Highway Patrol (OSHP)OwnsPlanned
Ohio State Highway Patrol (OSHP)OwnsFuture

Physical Objects

Commercial Vehicle Check Equipment

Functional Objects

Functional ObjectDescriptionUser Defined
CVCE Citation and Accident Electronic Recording'CVCE Citation and Accident Electronic Recording' documents accidents, citations, and violations identified during roadside safety inspections and forwards the information to the Commercial Vehicle Administration Center for processing. It collects data from the vehicle to help characterize the circumstances surrounding the accident.False
CVCE Electronic Screening'CVCE Electronic Screening' supports electronic credentials and safety screening of commercial vehicles at mainline speeds. It processes the data from the commercial vehicles along with accessed database information to determine whether a pull–in message is needed. It may also generate random pull–in messages with provisions for facility operators and enforcement officials to have manual override capabilities.False
CVCE Safety and Security Inspection'CVCE Safety and Security Inspection' supports the roadside safety inspection process, including wireless roadside inspections that are conducted remotely. It reads on–board safety data at mainline speeds to rapidly check the vehicle and driver and accesses historical safety data after identifying vehicles at mainline speeds or while stopped at the roadside. The capabilities to process safety data and issue pull–in messages or provide warnings to the driver, carrier, and enforcement agencies are also provided. It includes hand held or automatic devices to rapidly inspect the vehicle and driver. Results of screening and summary safety inspection data are stored and maintained.

Since a vehicle may cross jurisdictional boundaries during a trip, it supports the concept of a last clearance event record carried on the vehicle tag. The last clearance event record reflects the results of the roadside verification action. For example, if the vehicle is pulled over in State A and undergoes credential, weight, and safety checks, the results of the clearance process are written to the vehicle s tag. If the vehicle continues the trip and passes a roadside station in State B, the State B station has access to the results of the previous pull–in because it can read the last clearance event record written by the State A roadside station. It associates high–risk cargo with the container/chassis, manifest, carrier, vehicle and driver transporting it.
False
CVCE Weigh–In–Motion'CVCE Weigh–In–Motion' measures and records axle weights and gross vehicle weight without requiring the vehicle to come to a stop. Both permanent and portable installations are supported and may be performed in conjunction with electronic clearance or as a separate application.False

Interfaces To

(View Context Diagram)

Commercial Vehicles
Drivers
OSHP Districts 3 and 4 Posts
OSHP Motor Carrier Enforcement Unit
PUCO Commercial Vehicle Registration System