I know Texas Officers do many details after hours for local companies, but who would want to decal their own vehicle?
tom said:I've seen this guys videos before. He has other videos of blocking roadways and such. If I remember correctly, is he in TX?
Nice looking truck though..
K9Vic said:Ammmmm well yes it is Texas as the OP said Texas and in many of his videos you can see TEXAS on the license plate.
These Texas Peace Officers make very good money and some of them have dedicated vehicles for just this purpose. A few of them may also use same vehicle for their department as well if it is a smaller municipality, this is not uncommon. Most of the time they use magnet decals, but even if they do not so what. They are Police and can have the vehicle as such per Texas law. They are a valuable part of the needed security at road side construction zones and are much needed so the local Police department can keep those officers on the street and not tied up at a construction zone. Texas may have some odd practices with off-duty Police, but it makes for a safer state.



K9Vic said:Ammmmm well yes it is Texas as the OP said Texas and in many of his videos you can see TEXAS on the license plate.
These Texas Peace Officers make very good money and some of them have dedicated vehicles for just this purpose. A few of them may also use same vehicle for their department as well if it is a smaller municipality, this is not uncommon. Most of the time they use magnet decals, but even if they do not so what. They are Police and can have the vehicle as such per Texas law. They are a valuable part of the needed security at road side construction zones and are much needed so the local Police department can keep those officers on the street and not tied up at a construction zone. Texas may have some odd practices with off-duty Police, but it makes for a safer state.
Retired1 said:...and my co-workers Explorer - permanent graphics
(he has 4 CVPIs also - 2 with permanent graphics & 2 with no graphics)
SafetyLighting said:Why so many?
NC lawdog said:Kind of a cool idea to be able to use a vehicle of your choice. How does it affect your insurance? Is it one of those "don't ask don't tell" things?

HILO said:Its easy money for alot of small town cops. Most of the cities in the DFW area will not allow their officer's to have equipment in their POV's. Dallas PD forbids it, and if your caught working an off duty job with out approval, you get into serious trouble. If the companies use Dallas PD, they have to rent the car as well, which runs about $150 plus fuel. So the small town cops get eh good scratch and the construction companies dont have to pay the city rentals. I dont undersatnd the need for all the lighting they have, its really overkill. They never write tickets, becasue they dont have ticekt books for the JP courts. they just get paid to sit in their cars and sleep. Everynow and then they will direct traffic, butthat is few and far between after a out of county constable was ran over and hurt real bad.
Cam said:The white truck with the minibar in front of the full size bar with about six dash lights is so far over the top I don't know what to say. Is it Photoshopped?

NC lawdog said:Kind of a cool idea to be able to use a vehicle of your choice. How does it affect your insurance? Is it one of those "don't ask don't tell" things?
Retired1 said:Understand that normally, only select lighting is activated to accomplish a desired result while the other lighting remains dormant until needed. More often than not, only one amber traffic director is in use.
...and I don't sleep while doing this work
Cam said:I guess I don't really understand the purpose of the wacked out POVs. Are they used for enforcement and making stops within the work zone? I can't remember the last time I was on a job that used marked law enforcement vehicles for traffic control on a state project but it would have been a around the time an officer was killed on a TNDot job when his car was struck when trying to do a lane closing. Most DOT that we do work for don't allow anything less then a NCHRP 250 TMA with a 2 ton plus host truck with some wanting NCHRP 350 certification now.
The white truck with the minibar in front of the full size bar with about six dash lights is so far over the top I don't know what to say. Is it Photoshopped?
NC lawdog said:Aren't there some states that require a law enforcement presence at road construction sites? I may be wrong but I think Massachusetts is one of them.
tom said:9 times out of 10, there will be a police detail with construction, even if it is a side road. We had a big to-do a while ago because people wanted to switch to flaggers instead of LEOs. It would have save us a bunch of money....
Zack said:The other large drawback is that flaggers have no legal authority to stop or redirect traffic, or temp close a road. It's fine as long as all the motorists play nice, but the LEO has more power in the event something goes down.
If a company wants to have flaggers... so be it... but all the "benefits" are pretty mediocre.... or non-existant.
$0.02
That's just uncalled for....no need ....no excuse!Retired1 said:No, I enter high traffic intersections many times throughout my 11 hour a day / 7 days a week workday and stop all traffic. Anything I can do to catch the attention of motorists caught up in their own world raises my chances of stopping all traffic and allowing my convoy to clear the intersection with no one hurt.
...and I don't sleep while doing this work!
It is not photoshopped. In fact, it is still missing about 40% of the lighting that is going on it. I have not had time off to install this (especially the extra side lighting). Understand that normally, only select lighting is activated to accomplish a desired result while the other lighting remains dormant until needed. More often than not, only one amber traffic director is in use.
...and I don't sleep while doing this work
Here is an example of the side lighting as installed on one of my previous trucks. 8 feet of LEDs: two 3 ft blue 911 TAs and one 2 ft red 911 TAs on each side, a pair of r/b dual Raiders at the front of the bed and single r/b Raiders on the rear bumper under the taillights:
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Yes we require Cops! not special wannabees with every blinky thing you can buy and attach to a car! Holy hell!!! what the hell is going on!?!?!?NC lawdog said:Aren't there some states that require a law enforcement presence at road construction sites? I may be wrong but I think Massachusetts is one of them.
tom said:9 times out of 10, there will be a police detail with construction, even if it is a side road. We had a big to-do a while ago because people wanted to switch to flaggers instead of LEOs. It would have save us a bunch of money....
Zack said:The other large drawback is that flaggers have no legal authority to stop or redirect traffic, or temp close a road. It's fine as long as all the motorists play nice, but the LEO has more power in the event something goes down.
If a company wants to have flaggers... so be it... but all the "benefits" are pretty mediocre.... or non-existant.
$0.02
Retired1 said:HILO,
Texas does not certify pilot cars or flaggers (OK, KS, CO, & UT do - among others). Only law enforcement can direct traffic in TX. That is why I have the job I do: escorting pilot cars. I control the traffic, the pilot cars escort the equipment.
Terry
SafetyLighting said:Sooooo only PO's have the authority to stop or redirect traffic? Is that really an argument you are going to use?As much as it may piss some cops off, there is no requirement to be a cop to alter the flow of traffic. Case in point, every MASSDOT worker.
Shawn L said:Im sorry .. but a stop sign is a stop sign, it doesn't matter who is holding it, walmart parking lot or not, its a regulatory sign .. if its white and red or white and black its a regulatory sign .... open ANY federal traffic control manual and it will show what signs are regulatory signs. a person can be cited for many different things depending , in oregon for instance on PRIVATE property ,IE the walmart parking lot you would be cited for careless or reckless driving, if the officer wanted to cite you. if I recall correctly you can receive about 5 tickets on private property , DUII, No insurance, reckless driving, careless driving and handicap parking space violations
Retired1 said:
Zack said:You are getting some things confused here...
"Altering the flow of traffic" because of an authorized public works project is one thing. Stopping vehicles, which constitues a "seizure" in the eyes of the law is something completely different.
Sure, any Flagger, or Mass Highway / MassDOT can put up a "STOP" sign and people can obey it on their own, but there is no legal authority behind it. It's like a stop sign in a walmart parking lot. The sign has no legal authority and thus it is not unlawful to run it. I affectionately refer to signs like this as "Stoptionals."
Now I'd have to check, but it could be very likely that there are some things buried in the CMRs (540 and 720) that may give Mass Highway / Turn Pike employees some sort of quasi legal authority. If you could cite them that would be great, but my statement stands that when it comes to the authority to seize vehicles and their occupants, flaggers don't posses it.