To increase safety for both members of the Amish community and motorists
who might encounter their horse-drawn buggies on the road at night, Rep. David
McCrea of Fort Fairfield has advocated for a bill to require reflective tape
and Lights on the rigs.
The area around Fort Fairfield and Easton have been home to dozens of
Amish families for over a decade, with many establishing businesses such as
carpentry shops, farms, and bakeries. In recent months, McCrea, who represents
Maine House District 148 which includes both communities in Aroostook County,
has met with dozens of members of the local Amish communities as well as officials
from the Maine State Police and Maine Department of Transportation to draft and
amend a bill that he said aims to help non-Amish residents notice buggies more
quickly while driving .
LD 198, "An Act to Require That Non-motorized Carriages Be Equipped
with Reflectors and Lights," proposes that any "animal-driven
vehicles" include 72 inches of white reflective
tape on the rear, 42 inches on the left and
right sides and At least 12 inches near the top on both sides. If passed, the
law would require Amish buggies to also have an oil lantern extending from the
left side of their buggy facing the road. All those requirements would only be
in place during night hours.
In 2017, McCrea worked with the Amish to draft and propose a bill that
allowed them to wear red instead of the blaze orange colors that state law
requires during hunting season. The religious beliefs of some Amish sects
prohibit their wearing "flashy" or "worldly Colors like blaze
orange. McCrea succeeded and the 128th Legislature passed LD 426.
The lawmaker said that some Amish groups, such as the Pennsylvania Dutch,
have more "liberal" beliefs that allow their members to display a
reflective orange triangle on the back of their buggies at night. But those who
live in Aroostook County are part of the Schwartzentrouber Amish subgroup,
whose religious values reconsidered the most conservative among the Amish.
Thus, McCrea met with Amish representatives in Fort Fairfield, Easton,
Sherman, and Whitefield, which is located southwest of Augusta, to get their
input on what a bill related to buggy safety might require. Though an initial
version of LD 198 proposed orange reflective
material Shaped like a triangle on the back of buggies, Amish leaders
objected to the suggestion due to their avoidance of bright colors.
"Their belief is based on the concept of not wanting to draw
attention to themselves, also a reason why they prefer not to be photographed
unless, in a way that does not identify them," McCrea said.
A retired teacher who lives near some of the first Amish families to
settle in Fort Fairfield, the lawmaker knows first-hand area residents also
have concerned about traffic safety at night since the Amish first arrived.
Many people, he said, have told him about Coming close to hitting buggies.
It is not clear how many accidents involving Amish buggies and vehicles
occur in Maine each year. But just in January, a tractor-trailer struck and
killed a horse hauling a buggy with seven children in it as it pulled out of a
driveway onto US Route 2 in Smyrna. Two of the children suffered minor
injuries, according to police.
In July 2015, a horse carrying a buggy on Route 10 near the border of
Easton and Presque Isle was euthanized after it was rear-ended by an SUV, whose
driver was distracted and didn't see the buggy, according to police. An Amish
mother and daughter were treated at The Aroostook Medical Center and released
that night.
In November 2013, a vehicle rear-ended a horse-drawn buggy on Route 1A in
Easton, in what police later determined was a hit and run. In that case, both
the teen-aged Amish driver and horse escaped injury, but the buggy was Damaged.
At this point, McCrea feels confident that the 129th Legislature will
pass L.D. 198. Nine state legislators signed McCrea's bill as co-sponsors,
including Sen. Mike Carpenter, D-Houlton, and Rep. Trey Stewart, R-Presque
Isle.
McCrea expected that a unanimous "ought to pass" vote from
members of the Transportation Committee would garner the approval of both the
House and Senate as well as the governor's signature.
"When a committee of 13 Democrats, Republicans, and Independents
unanimously support a bill it is unlikely that the House, Senate, and governor
won’t accept it," said McCrea, who is a Democrat.
Though many Amish community members have voluntarily begun using white
reflective tape and oil lanterns while riding buggies at night, McCrea said
that having an official law to require the practice has become more important
than ever. The reflective tape and lights will alert motorists to the presence
Of Amish buggies on the roads and give local police official guidelines if an
incident occurs.
"This law would set a minimum standard for buggies and allow
officers to arrest those who do not follow that law," McCrea said.
"But I don't expect any arrests to happen. Overall the Amish community is
in support of this bill."
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