Poached this off another forum, but feel it is applicable to this situation and seems to shed light on the "legalities" of things. Now that I have read it I do recall when I ran commercial plates that you could register to what weight capacity you wanted, obviously the heavier you went the more it cost, but you do not want to get caught over your registered weight rating. Also note that this is a question posted and replied to by Canadian standards.
Originally Posted by xxxxxx
I hear a lot of people talking about trailer weights, overloaded trucks, etc. but has anyone actually been pulled over by the Ministry or by the cops for a weight check? If you were overloaded than what were you charged with? Has anyone been in an accident and had their insurance pulled for being overloaded? Has anyone actually talked to the M of T to get their take on overloaded private vehicles vis a vis travel trailers (hint; I have talked to 2 so far). Why ask? Why not ask. I want to know and maybe others do to.
Well, just for the sake of posting the information- I will put up exactly what the response was that my buddy gave me when I messaged him about this:
"It is not something we do. Transpot Compliance on the other hand do have scales and do vehicle weight ect...that is more their mandate than ours. However, we as a national police force do enforce and lay charges regarding any contravention of any Act. I do not pull over a vehicle for the sole purpose to determine its weight. I am busier with really bad guys in the area"
He's an RCMP member. Now, if you go through the Government information, you will see that the Ministry of Highways and Transportation (Transport Compliance) only has information on commercial vehicles. The reason behind this is because the private vehicles are actually governed by SGI here. SGI's information online regarding vehicle weights and regulations can be found here:
http://www.sgi.sk.ca/individuals/reg.../capacity.html
Pretty sparse, isn't it? My wife is an insurance broker- has been for years. She says that the rule here is- 2xGVWR is the maximum weight you can be, no matter the GCWR on your vehicle. You are insured accordingly, and you are required to obtain a special addition to your license for weight (for example I boost mine to 14,000lbs) which is really more of a tax than anything for road maintenance. 14,000lbs gives me room since that is more than 2x my GVWR.
Transport Compliance guidelines differ from province to province here. But, I think it was said best in his response: "I do not pull over a vehicle for the sole purpose to determine its weight. I am busier with really bad guys in the area"
This went on a bit further with him as well- but to paraphrase, his mandate is public safety. If he saw a vehicle that was grossly overloaded, and was wallowing and wandering around and didn't seem in control, he would absolutely pull it over based on the safety of the public at large and at that time, would get Transport Compliance involved in order to assess the charges he was allowed to lay. It's all common sense. If they (Transport Compliance or the RCMP) had the mandate of policing all of the private vehicles for weight compliance, they would be pulling over EVERY farmer in Saskatchewan. It's tough to tell what is actually overloaded. A vehicle with a travel trailer on ball might actually have less of a load than the next half ton with a bed full of parts heading to the field.