Inches Too Tall for Tunnel, Rig Plies It Anyway
Jun 3, 2007 General Interest
It was just six inches!
That was what made the difference at 4:40 a.m. yesterday as Gilberto Cantu, a truck driver from Texas, and, an English speaking UNITED STATES CITIZEN, approached the New Jersey entrance of the Lincoln Tunnel in his big rig, loaded with bathtubs, toilets and plumbing fixtures. The truck was 13 feet 6 inches high. The tunnel has a height limit of 13 feet. Six inches can make a big difference.
Mr. Cantu drove the entire 1.5 miles of the tunnel from Weehawken, N.J., to Manhattan, tearing his way under the Hudson River in the tunnel’s center tube and peeling back the roof of his tractor-trailer as if it were a tin can. No one was injured, but an undetermined number of decorative tunnel ceiling tiles were ripped off.
It was unclear why Mr. Cantu did not heed warnings from flashing signs and a loudspeaker in New Jersey, said Steve Coleman, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates the tunnel. “There were enough bells and whistles going off that this should not have happened,” Mr. Coleman said. “He told the officers he didn’t know where he was going.”
Mr. Coleman said that accidents of this kind were almost always averted. When a too-tall vehicle enters the toll plaza, an electronic sensor is tripped, several stoplights are activated and police officers at the plaza use a loudspeaker to order the driver to stop.
Mr. Coleman said trucks were turned back for exceeding the height limit about once a week. And on the rare occasions when trucks have entered and scraped the tunnel’s ceiling, their drivers have invariably stopped, he said, and the police have employed a height-reducing technique of letting air out of the trucks’ tires so they could be backed out.
Roy Guzman, the safety director of U.S.A. Logistics Carriers of McAllen, Tex., Mr. Cantu’s employer, said in a telephone interview that “it was just a bad call” by Mr. Cantu. “He misjudged the height of the tunnel, and once he was inside it he didn’t realize the damage he was doing.”
Mr. Cantu, of Edinburg, Tex., declined to comment. He was issued nine misdemeanor moving violations, including reckless driving, failure to obey a traffic signal and failure to obey an officer’s command.
The Lincoln Tunnel’s center tube — one of three — was closed until 6:15 a.m., delaying by 15 minutes the beginning of express bus service for the morning rush. But Mr. Coleman said there was little disruption of traffic because of the early hour.
Mr. Guzman said Mr. Cantu had driven for U.S.A. Logistics for four years and had a spotless safety record. “We were very, very surprised this happened to him,” Mr. Guzman said. But he said there would be consequences.
“This is going to cost us, and it’s going to cost him,” he said. Whether that means Mr. Cantu will lose his job “has been discussed, but we have to wait and see until we have a talk with him,” Mr. Guzman added.
This post was read 178 times until now






























June 5th, 2007 at 10:34
I spoke to a person in Safety at USA Logistics today, who by the way spoke excellent English and the conversation turned to Mr. Cantu. And as expected, this was one of those boneheaded, head up the ass moments that most of us have at some time in our lives.
Gilberto Cantu is a veteran driver, speaks impeccable English and is a United States citizen and his ethnicity has nothing to do at all with this incident. PERIOD!
View this Comment in:
October 3rd, 2008 at 6:43
It says on the report that a plaza police would stop you from
going under the bridge. if we take in consideration that it was
about 4:30am maybe that sorry ass security guard was taking a siesta, as usual, at 4am, I say this because, I drive team, and
almost every time I go to a place to p/u a load that early in the
am the guards at the gates are sleeping OR MAYBE NOT, BUT THEY HA
TO BLAME SOMEBODY. MAYBE THEY NEED TO STOP THE TRUCKS AT THE BOOTH
WHEN THEY’RE ABOUT TO PAY THE TOLL.
View this Comment in: